News Focus
News Focus
Followers 75
Posts 113850
Boards Moderated 3
Alias Born 08/01/2006

Re: nlightn post# 286118

Thursday, 08/09/2018 6:16:50 AM

Thursday, August 09, 2018 6:16:50 AM

Post# of 575648
nlightn, i counted "control" some nine times which had me wondering where the hell all the European billionaires of like-mind with Bannon were. Is it possible Bannon could ever control all of them? Unlikely, eh. They didn't get much more than a halfhearted mention in the send last paragraph

'After World War II, America’s billionaires took control of, first western Europe, and, then, after 1990, once the Soviet Union and its communism and its Warsaw Pact military alliance ended, they gradually took all of Europe. They did this not only by expanding NATO after 1990 (even as its mirror-organization the Warsaw Pact had disappeared and thus NATO’s nominal raison d’etre was actually gone) but by means of the EU, which was created in the 1950s as a joint effort by American and European billionaires and their agents — all of them being anti-Russian (or, as the public line at the time went, ‘anti-communist’). Their real aim was conquest, first of all absorbing all allies of Russia, and then ultimately of absorbing Russia itself — complete global conquest."

of the part before the Daily Beast link. Damn informative article, just felt the "control" frame had a conspiracy tingle to it, and secondly that it gave Bannon way too much credit for the uniting he aims to contribute to. Jason Horowitz's article in the New York Times i think you'll find gives a much more realistic picture of Bannon's more likely contribution toward uniting European far-right forces. It's here

Steve Bannon Is Done Wrecking the American Establishment. Now He Wants to Destroy Europe’s.
https://investorshub.advfn.com/boards/read_msg.aspx?message_id=139195494

-

Bannoon Hate Break



-

One other Bannon European vision ego-trip.

Steve Bannon’s bold plan to start a populist revolution in Europe

Bannon’s plan to start an organization called “the Movement” says more about him than about Europe.

By Zack Beauchamp@zackbeauchampzack@vox.com Jul 25, 2018, 3:40pm EDT


Steve Bannon in Prague in May 2018. Sean Gallup/Getty Images

Trump’s former consigliere Steve Bannon has a new project. He wants to bring the entire European far right together to take down the EU — and he’s founding an organization, called the Movement, to try to make it happen.

The basic idea behind the Movement, Bannon told the Daily Beast .. https://www.thedailybeast.com/inside-bannons-plan-to-hijack-europe-for-the-far-right , is to try to provide policy, polling, and strategic support for far-right parties across the continent in the runup to the May 2019 European Parliament elections. The goal is to turn the EU legislature, historically a consensus-minded body, into a battleground that the far right can use to undermine the coherence of the entire European project.

“Next May is hugely important,” Bannon told the Daily Beast. “This is the real first continent-wide face-off between populism and the party of Davos .. https://www.thedailybeast.com/heres-how-and-why-trumps-going-to-blow-up-the-foundations-of-davos . This will be an enormously important moment for Europe.”

This all sounds scary! But as usual with Bannon, it’s more bark than bite. There really is a kind of pan-European far-right bloc forming, centering on leaders like Hungary’s Viktor Orbán and Italy’s Matteo Salvini. The growing influence of these politicians really does pose a threat to the coherence of the European Union.

But the idea that a largely disgraced American political strategist will be the person to unite them in a fearful movement — with only a handful of staff members and unclear funding — is questionable at best. The breathless attention this has gotten in the press speaks more to the way Bannon has built up a mythology around himself than it does to the actual state of European politics.

Reasons for skepticism about the Movement

Bannon has long dreamed of an international right-wing uprising against the “globalist” establishment. He sees the world in broadly ideological terms, positioning a pro-migration and pro-trade elite against a global middle class that believes deeply in the virtues of nationalism.

“We believe — strongly — that there is a global Tea Party movement,” he said in a 2014 interview .. https://www.buzzfeednews.com/article/lesterfeder/this-is-how-steve-bannon-sees-the-entire-world . “I think you’re seeing a global reaction to centralized government, whether that government is in Beijing or that government is in Washington, DC, or that government is in Brussels.”

Europe is a natural place to try to turn these dreams into reality. Right-wing populism is ascendant across the continent: It gave us Brexit and anti-migration leaders in countries like Austria, Italy, and Hungary. Nationalist parties in different countries should in theory have trouble cooperating — but they share a common enemy in the European Union, which facilitates free movement of people across the continent. These parties could benefit from more coordination in their anti-migration and anti-EU efforts; it’s not crazy to see why it would help to have an organization dedicated to this alone.

But is Steve Bannon really the guy to do it? This is a man who was, by most accounts, outmaneuvered by his rivals inside the Trump administration .. https://www.vox.com/world/2017/8/18/16169486/steve-bannon-departure-foreign-policy — like Jared Kushner and Gary Cohn — and forced out in the wake of an impolitic phone call .. https://www.vox.com/policy-and-politics/2017/8/18/16145188/steve-bannon-fired-resigns .. to left journalist Robert Kuttner. He then returned to Breitbart in 2017, briefly, before he was quoted saying something insulting about Trump in Fire and Fury .. https://go.redirectingat.com/?id=66960X1516588&xs=1&url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.amazon.com%2Fdp%2FB077F4WZZY%2Fref%3Ddp-kindle-redirect%3F_encoding%3DUTF8%26btkr%3D1 — which lost him both his Breitbart job and backing from his principal source of funding, conservative billionaires Rebekah and Robert Mercer .. https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/morning-mix/wp/2018/01/05/rebekah-mercer-the-billionaire-backer-of-bannon-and-trump-chooses-sides/ .

As a result, Bannon is operating on a shoestring budget: According to the Daily Beast, Bannon plans to hire “fewer than 10 full-time staff” at the Movement in the runup to the 2019 EU elections. This includes “a polling expert, a communications person, an office manager and a researcher.”

Bannon himself isn’t necessarily planning to be full time; he aims to spend “50 percent” of his time in Europe in the runup to the 2019 elections. That’s because he has other projects: He’s simultaneously working on a cryptocurrency project that will provide, in his words, “utility tokens for the populist movement .. https://ethereumworldnews.com/steve-bannon-utility-tokens-populist-movement/ .”

So to be clear: Bannon is founding an organization aiming to sway European elections — which he has zero experience doing — with a skeleton staff and no announced source of external funding .. https://www.bloomberg.com/view/articles/2018-07-24/steve-bannon-wants-to-divide-and-conquer-in-europe-too , all while experimenting with starting up his own version of Bitcoin.

We don’t have to indulge Bannon’s self-image

Steve Bannon has always cast himself as a world-historical kind of supervillain. He famously told Michael Wolff .. https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/steve-bannon-trump-tower-interview-trumps-strategist-plots-new-political-movement-948747 .. that “darkness is good,” adding: “Dick Cheney. Darth Vader. Satan. That’s power.”

But when you dig into the substance of Bannon’s work, things start to fall apart. He co-wrote the first edition of the Trump administration’s Muslim ban, but paid so little attention .. https://www.vox.com/policy-and-politics/2017/8/18/16145188/steve-bannon-fired-resigns .. to the details of the policy implementation that the administration was forced to rescind his version and rewrite it with input from actual lawyers. His grand ideological vision is centered on a faux-visionary idea of history’s “four turnings ..

[Insert excerpt here
Strauss (who died in 2007) and his collaborator, Neil Howe, another onetime Hill aide, have vaulted back into the news lately as intellectual influences on Steve Bannon, President Donald Trump’s chief strategist. Their 1997 historical manifesto The Fourth Turning, an iteration of their generational theories, posits that the tides of history have placed America on the cusp of a world-historical crisis—akin to the Revolutionary War, the Civil War and World War II—that could plunge the nation into disaster. And Trump’s self-styled intellectual guru reportedly is so taken with the book that, according to the New York Times, he has read it three times and shelves a marked-up copy alongside his most admired volumes at his father’s Virginia home. Bannon has described the book’s arguments as central to his worldview, and his 2010 documentary, “Generation Zero,” rested on its claims. As a result of his reported regard for it, The Fourth Turning is now a No. 1 Amazon best-seller—in the category of “divination.”

Back in 1993, though, Strauss and Howe didn’t yet have a cult following.]

https://www.politico.com/magazine/story/2017/04/20/stephen-bannon-fourth-turning-generation-theory-215053 ,” a theory that one actual historian described as “crackpot .. https://www.politico.com/magazine/story/2017/04/20/stephen-bannon-fourth-turning-generation-theory-215053 .”

In his public rhetoric, Bannon speaks in such broad strokes, with so little attention to detail, that his ideas often end up being substanceless or incoherent. Look, for example, at this recent interview with the Spectator .. https://spectator.us/2018/06/steve-bannon-rome/ ’s Nicholas Farrell. Here’s what Bannon said when asked about the Italian election:

-
I have to be very careful. Nick, we’re in a global war, right. That goes from Japan and the Philippines to the peninsula of Korea right around the world. It’s been ten years coming, It is just starting. What’s happening in Italy is a defining moment.
-

Wait, what? What connects South Korea’s left-wing president, Japan’s center-right prime minister, and autocratic Philippine populist Rodrigo Duterte, other than the fact that they’re all in Asia? What do any of the political conflicts in any of those countries have to do with the Italian election or European anti-immigrant populism more broadly?

Who knows! But it sure gives Bannon the appearance of having a sweeping vision and a brilliantly restless mind, which is the real point of it. Ultimately, that’s the lens through which “the Movement” should be viewed — as a Bannon vanity project — until proven otherwise.

The European right is a real and important force, a major sign that the post-Cold War liberal consensus is in trouble in the same way as Donald Trump’s initial victory was. In both cases, though, it feels more like Bannon hitched his star to an ascendant political force rather than being the guy who was behind its rise (recall that he was the third person to head Trump’s campaign).

Bannon wants everyone to think of him as a deep political thinker and a modern intellectual. But little that he’s done, either inside the White House or outside, suggests he deserves that status. We shouldn’t grant it to him.

https://www.vox.com/policy-and-politics/2018/7/25/17611982/steve-bannon-europe-eu-parliament-the-movement


It was Plato who said, “He, O men, is the wisest, who like Socrates, knows that his wisdom is in truth worth nothing”

Discover What Traders Are Watching

Explore small cap ideas before they hit the headlines.

Join Today