It’s official, and everybody is talking about it.
Apparently, a panel of “experts” on an obscure blog has come to the conclusion that the Prime Minister is no longer the most powerful person in Australia, so it must be true, because we should always trust the experts.
Actually, they’re right. Today’s resignation of NSW Premier Gladys Berejiklian will not make an iota of difference either. The reasoning is only slightly off:
“The pandemic has resulted in a real shift in how power is exercised within the federation,” Stutchbury said.
“That’s based on the extreme risk aversion within the population, which the premiers have responded to.”
The “extreme risk aversion” has been socialised into Australians over many decades, which has been well covered by Adam Piggott and Mark Moncrieff. Whether by design or just bumbling through, we are seeing the consequence of this extreme risk aversion. People have been conditioned to sacrifice freedom for the illusion of safety. The irony is that the State now has so much power that it can brutalise anybody at any time with impunity.
In essence the State offers safety in return for freedom, then removes both.
Regarding Scott Morrison himself, a kind analysis is that this extreme risk aversion extends to the Prime Minister. ScoMo has no balls. He has not lifted a finger to overrule any Premier to free Aussies out of lockdowns, nor intervened when Premiers allowed their security forces to beat their citizens senseless.
Not only has Victoria become a Police State, it has become an armed camp, with heavily armed and armoured police now patrolling Melbourne. Hundreds of millions of dollars were poured into the equipment, training and infrastructure required to coordinate their swift deployment to any location in the city to quash any ember of rebellion.
The harsher analysis is that Morrison is in lockstep with the Premiers, and is merely playing his preplanned role of good cop to the Premiers’ bad cop. Scott Morrison has never countered the policy that the only way to open up Australia is through mass-vaccination, nor discrimination against people who do not want to inject a dangerous substance.
His smirk says it all. He is a wolf in sheep’s clothing.
A few other names on the top ten list should raise eyebrows.
Australia’s top 10 most overtly powerful people:
- (Combined) State Premiers Gladys Berejiklian, Daniel Andrews, Annastacia Palaszczuk and Mark McGowan
- Prime Minister Scott Morrison
- Treasurer Josh Frydenberg
- (Combined) State Chief Health Officers
- RBA Governor Philip Lowe
- Brittany Higgins
- Deputy PM Barnaby Joyce
- Commonwealth Bank CEO Matt Comyn
- Opposition Leader Anthony Albanese
- Defence Minister Peter Dutton
It’s a bit rich to include the Chief Health Officers at number 4. They are either puppets of the Premiers, the UN or both. Either way they are being told what to say, and are pawns of the globalists intent on using Covid to install global communism.
Only two bankers appear on the list. They are clearly hiding their power level.
Finally, listing Brittany Higgins at number 6 is one hundred percent true. The chick basically rose to prominence because she is slightly pretty, she had buyers’ remorse and she has the right connections. A well coordinated media campaign ensured she will be able to wield identity politics in her favour for many years to come.
The only surprise here is that in including her on the list they have basically admitted this.
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