In just the last few days, Israel, Kuwait, and Bulgaria have all dissolved their governments. Is this portending something coming? Something that cannot be stopped?
I don't know. It just seems weird that three country's governments would be collapsing so close to each other in time.
Israeli government dissolves parliament and calls fifth election in three years
Kuwait crown prince dissolves parliament, calls for early election
This isn't good for them, but this is how Parliaments work.
If they can't form consensus, they dissolve Parliament and restack the pecking order until there is consensus.
The only reason this looks dire is because Parliamentary Governments and Republic Congresses (Pretty much only U.S.) are wildly different and we simply haven't been exposed to their way of doing things.
You have to look at the word.
Parliament.
https://www.etymonline.com/word/parley?ref=etymonline_crossreference#etymonline_v_7226
"True" Root word: Parlay / Parley.
parlay (n.)
1701, parloi, a term in the card game faro involving applying money won to a continuing bet, from French paroli, from Italian parole (Neapolitan paroli) "words, promises," plural of parolo (see parole (n.)). Verbal meaning "exploit to advantage" is by 1942.
parley (v.)
late 14c., parlen, "to speak, talk, confer," probably a borrowing of Old French parler "to speak" (see parley (n.)). Related: Parleyed; parleying. Meaning "to discuss terms," especially "to confer with an enemy," as on exchange of prisoners, a cease-fire, etc., is by 1560s, from the noun.
Effectively, a Parliament is when either the Government or the Mob is held hostage by the other and negotiations take place to decide how to resolve the hostage situation.
When Parliament dissolves, it simply means the Hostage-taker broke the cell-phone they gave him and they need to give him another to restart negotiations.
With this in mind, does it make sense now why European Nations are so fucked up in the head? Everything they do is a hostage situation, where someone is the victim and someone is the offender.
Our Founding Fathers wanted nothing to do with that, so they formed a Constitutional Republic where they expressly declared that the Government is ALWAYS subservient to the People, and never the other way around. It's currently debatable what Government we have in modern times...
Thank you for the very detailed background on the differences between Parliaments and Republics. Very much appreciated u/sleepydude
Despite their differences, it still seems a bit odd to me that there is such turmoil in these countries.
If the US was a parliamentary system, I am pretty sure we would be going through chaos as well, due to the election fraud of 2020.
I think it is probably somewhat fair to say that if/when the Election Steal of 2020 in the US is fully in the open, nearly every other "free" country is going to be questioning their own elections.
We saw a similar Global, Nationalist effort occur in 2016. First with Brexit, England taking their sovereignty back form the EU, and then of course Trump taking the US in the nationalist (patriotic) direction.
My gut is just telling me that there is more turmoil in governments around the world right now than normal.
The global cabal has reached its dirty fingers into governments worldwide, so in my opinion, all these things are connected.
Time will tell.
It is a marker that negotiations are not going well.
In a less hectic time, Parliaments under consensus can basically do whatever the hell they want, no matter what the People desire.
Protests are completely fake in Parliamentary government. If a Parliament retires or dissolves, it's not because there is an uproar from the people but because the pockets of the MP (Members of Parliament) were not sufficiently greased.
Unions holding a Company hostage during a Worker's Strike is exactly the same as a Parliamentary Procedure. It's simply just a more pompous hostage negotiation, and it is why Unions and the U.S. have never been fully compatible, because they are hallmarks of Parliamentary thinking and have no place in a Representative Congress.
I'm rambling now, but I need to clarify that you are correct.
When workers go on strike, they typically have a good reason to do so. When the company hires scabs, it too has a reason to do so. A well-established company, however, will never undergo a strike and never have to resort to scabbing.
That the negotiations had to happen to begin with, let alone terms be redrawn at the drafting table, means that these Parliaments cannot agree on how to divvy up the loot from the citizenry. If they are that strapped for cash, when they have authoritative power to do anything they please, then it means they aren't sitting happy.
It's bad for them because otherwise they'd just be happily chugging along, looting everything from the coffers of the suckers -- erm, I mean, citizenry.
In other words, Union/Company negotiations always end with the Unions getting more power, Companies getting more power, and the Worker getting rammed in the ass with either more regulations, less pay or more hours. It was never about the worker, it's always about "getting yours."
Thank you for the additional insights. Very much appreciated u/sleepydude ππ»
Haha, but this is all going down at the same time at this time in history. I think its significant.
Did you notice that on jan 6 they used the word "parlamentary" in Congress towards Pence?
Damn, thanks u/panamax ππ»
Let's see how big the list grows.
I can't wait for the news that the US Government has dissolved due to the election fraud of 2020.
That's the moment my knees will hit the ground like a ton of bricks and I thank the Lord for saving humanity.
New elections, shifting and aligning powers. Macron lost majority and may face a βno confidenceβ vote.
https://flipboard.com/topic/naturaldisasters/le-lame-duck-humiliated-macron-faces-vote-of-no-confidence-as-french-voters-mak/a-4uPdMZPKSnmaoaZwXIL1JQ%3Aa%3A2679760903-8a3f23b73b%2Fco.uk
Thank you. I already forgot about France. Too many to count!
Do yo see it? Do you see "The Plan" in action?
MAGA