Catch us live on BlogTalkRadio every



Tuesday & Thursday at 6pm P.S.T.




Sunday, February 21, 2010

Predictive Linguistics Update 2-19-2010

OFF THE WIRE
*/Coping: The Revolution Meme Goes Active/*
Although the idea of 'revolutionary change' in the USA was nearly
unthinkable when it began to appear in HPH modelspace based on
predictive linguistics as early as 2005, one has to admit at least the
/possibility/ that GlobalPop (e.g. humans) may be in the 'prequel'
movements toward planetary change related to power structures and how an
elite class of humans claims supremacy over another based on little
besides paper and titles.
Getting little press this week are reports out of Greece that at least
one bomb was reportedly set off outside American banks this week. While
there were no reported, the bank was JP Morgan
. I report of a
second bank bombing (again with no injuries) was reported in the Greek
press, but not picked up in English translations I've been able to find yet.
A reasonable expectation now, since there is a growing wave of
'revolution' meme in Greece/Mediterranean Europe, would be over the next
several months for the meme to sweep in a broad arc from east to west as
far as the British Isles. There's been a major increase in verbiage of
a rebellious tone as relates to the PowersThatBe in Ireland and the
astute observer will no doubt take notice of seemingly 'routine'
headlines such as the report that the "Bank of Ireland Warned it must
pay State EUR280 M by Deadline
" as possible
precursor events.
To be sure, others are sketching out a similar progression. The Richard
Parker piece in The Nation refers to "Athens: The First Domino?
" as it very easily could be.
Part & parcel of the dataset suggestive of 'revolution meme' was last
December's HPH Shape of Things to Come report (used with exclusive
permission here) that saw 'revolution' becoming active as part of a more
complex movement which would reveal the intricacies of global power:
These data sets include sub sets in the supporting aspect attribute
accretion patterns that include [illusionary posture (or isolation)
exposed], [cabalistic control revealed]. These areas of support are
themselves supported by sets indicating that [complex (symptoms)] of
[relationship (between military, populace, government, controllers)
change]. There is some potential for mischief here as the data sets
include both [internal policing], as well as [coup de'tat]. There
are new sets that are growing in support of [conflict[ at a great
many levels emerging between, and [among] the [usofa military], and
the [officialdom], and the [populace/usofa]. As may be expected the
totality of these sets are in support of, or dominated by, the
[revolution] meta data level.
The report from December (still available here)
goes on to discuss evolving
events that "will create an emotional tone that will be able to be
described as [black world meets dream world]."
Indeed the series of headlines about the Israeli Mossad's purported use
of British passport in a mission to kill a Hamas commander

is but this week's example of black world meets dread world. It's a big
example, too, becoming the talk of Europe again today as the Dubai
police chief is calling for the arrest of the head of Mossad
if the link to the
killing of the Hamas leader can be proven.
But the 'revolution meme going active' more or less on schedule doesn't
confine itself to overseas actions.
The frustration level of Joseph Stack of Austin, was clear in the
suicide note he left behind before crashing a small plane into IRS/FBI
offices in Austin Thursday
.
Coverage of the suicide crash by the MSM may be indicative of how in
touch various media are with the uprising of global anger and the
revolution/rebellion meme going viral. The linguistics seem to suggest
that the Stack case will be followed with copy-cat type action which, in
turn, will fan the revolution meme in North America.
The site Hot Air, for example headlines: "WaPo columnist: That insane
pilot sounds kind of like a tea partier, huh?
"
an apparent reference to the "Alienated in Austin" piece by Jonathan
Capehart.

While the Capehart piece referred to a 34-paragraph screed (a long more
monotonous harangue) other media called it an "Insane Manifesto"
. But before officialdom
took down Joe Stack's web site, his suicide note was already out.You can read it in its entirety here
and
form your own opinion, but if you're aware, as we've been since 2005, to
be watching for the 'revolution meme' to get contagious in this period,
the Stack note fits with the leading edge of a global
rebellion/restructuring which now seems destined to become more violent,
especially this:
"I know I'm hardly the first one to decide I have had all I can
stand. It has always been a myth that people have stopped dying for
their freedom in this country, and it isn't limited to the blacks,
and poor immigrants. I know there have been countless before me and
there are sure to be as many after. But I also know that by not
adding my body to the count., I insure nothing will change. I
choose to not keep looking over my should at "big brother" while his
strips my carcass. I choose not to ignore what is going on all
around me, I choose not to pretend that business as usual won't
continue; I have just had enough..."
Since our 'rickety time machine' project has given us a couple of years
of 'heads up' time ponder such events in advance, the simple reality
that's not yet emerged on editorial pages is that America now has its
first home-grown suicide bomber.
The complexity of the revolution meme is, at one level, quite
staggering. Globalism is an remarkably complex system. Yet it's also
quite simple: As the ratio of regular working people to
controllers/rulers increases beyond a certain point, the size and power
claimed by 'powers' exceeds some unmarked threshold as a tipping point
is passed, Then, as was the case of Rome, the problems begin in the
provinces, whether you're talking the Sandbox, FSU Eastern Europe, or
more recently Greece.
Then you got trouble in Rome itself, or yesterday Austin.
Joseph Tainter points out in his book The Collapse of Complex Societies
(New Studies in Archaeology)

that societies collapse when the marginal rate of return on additional
work falls below zero.
Or, when working you butt off doesn't gain you anything beyond the
chance to work harder still, that's when trouble comes-a-calling.
There are a couple of ways this could play out - the global revolution
meme. One optimistic track would be for / humans/ to form a /global union/.
As terrifying as that concept might be to globalists and their captive
bankers and governments, it has worked somewhat in the past. Take for
example the Wikipedia discussion of an old Merle Travis (circa 1946) and
Tennessee Ernie Ford song (circa 1955) and its roots:

"The chorus of "Sixteen Tons" is:
You load sixteen tons, what do you get?
Another day older and deeper in debt.
Saint Peter, don't you call me, 'cause I can't go;
I owe my soul to the company store.
According to Travis, the line from the chorus "another day older and
deeper in debt" was a phrase often used by his father, a coal miner
himself. [citation needed] This and the line "I owe my soul to the
company store" is a reference to the truck system and to debt
bondage. Under this system workers were not paid cash; rather they
were paid with unexchangeable credit vouchers for goods at the
company store, usually referred to as scrip. This made it impossible
for workers to store up cash savings. Workers also usually lived in
company-owned dormitories or houses, the rent for which was
automatically deducted from their pay. In the United States the
truck system and associated debt bondage persisted until the strikes
of the newly-formed United Mine Workers and affiliated unions forced
an end to such practices.
However, "Sixteen Tons" is not simply sociology. While the choruses
refer to the difficulties of life in coal camps, the verses depict a
mythos of toughness in the face of adversity.
While the widespread availability of the Internet might make a "global
human union" possible, it's likely to be just too much for the existing
PowersThatBe to allow. No doubt internet licensure is on their agenda,
but a /human union/
And thus, by failing to see a peaceful way forward, the economic system
saddled with excessive debt seems bound to bring about its own demise as
Tainter's tipping point has been passed many other times in history.
If you were an epidemiologist, you could properly label Joe Stack
"Patient 1" of revolution virus, North American strain. Linguistically,
we're about to find out what the incubation period is.--
In the evolving context, stories like "Food Stamps Create Jobs... in
India " just
ram the revolution forward and the globalists seem incapable of
comprehending that their use of 'free trade' to stop move jobs around to
least-cost sources just fuels the rebellion/revolution buzz.
But no worries, the imagery of banksters being killed in a gated
community (in the Northeast) aren't due in the media stream for several
months.
Linguistic meta sets are large not quite amorphous things. But in this
morning's survey of events, you should be able to make out the shape of it.