Dimitri Orlov and Jay Taylor discuss how the USA is following in the footsteps of the USSR, how financial collapse is progressing, how the various stages of collapse relate and what's in his new book.
Dmitry Orlov engineer and author of ‘ Reinventing Collapse: The Soviet Experience and American Prospects ‘ says : America must work on starting a new economy and not restarting the old one or it will resemble the former Soviet Union .It´s true the Soviet Union collapsed mainly because they overextended themselves the US is facisn similar problems since they are overextending themselves right now if not a complete collapse then it WILL most likely be secession movements that will make the first civil war look like a lovers embrace!! The collapse can be avoided when we tie the political whores’ hands behind their backs, getting rid of the Fed, going to an honest currency. Socialism seems to be what this guy is advocating. Let us earn honest money, pull the troops back, stop foreign aid, end the drug war, fire half the bureaucrats, who damage the economy with their ridiculous regulations. People should buy some junk silver or gold coins.
The central bankers control 167 of the what 178 countries.Once we wake up and realize that paper money is worthless and has no value but what we give to it (Based on faith nothing more), then and only then will we be free from our enslavement!! Problem is, convincing and more importantly educating people to just what that means--and with how we've been dumbed down to such a level to insure the people in mass will not rise up against this false system--well ya only need two words--those two words being Good Luck!!
Learn from the Soviets - personal relationships are the best currency, says Russian-born Dmitry Orlov, the author of "Reinventing Collapse: The Soviet Example and American Prospects." The American empire is following the USSR into collapse, he asserts, with financial collapse happening first, followed by commercial and then political collapse. Dmitry, an America resident for several decades, suggests lowering our needs and expectations and replacing money transactions with barter and exchanges.