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THE GREAT TRANSFORMATION - CALL TO WARRIORS OF LIGHT


THE GREAT TRANSFORMATION - CALL TO WARRIORS OF LIGHT






THE AWAKENING

AWARENESS
CALL TO
WARRIORS OF LIGHT
THE TRUTH
IS WITHIN YOU
We are
fallen angels learning to fly. WHY HE CAME TO YOUR MEETING
I wanted
to see and I have found.
We are like the phoenix rising from the ashes, WE ARE
PRINCES OF BEGGARS WITH draperies, TRAVELERS who have forgotten the reason for their
adventure. IN OUR LIGHT BUT THERE WILL PREVAIL SHADOWS.
AND REMEMBER OUR LINEAGE AND REALEZA, THE KING HAS COME TO YOUR MEETING
AND A DRESS NEW LEADS
IN HIS HANDS EMBRACE OF WELCOME WILL BE THE STAMP CORONE YOUR
HEAD IS WHY HE CAME TO YOUR
MEETING , had wanted to see you and I HAVE FOUND
Do not let
the darkness DELAY YOUR daring. WARRIOR
EPIC BATTLES OF COSMIC MIL. NOTHING WILL BE WITH LIGHT. Do not stop
NOW.
AWAKE


Seductive not listen PROPOSALS
OF THOSE CAUGHT lying ina dark world ILLUSION IS LIE,
IS THE SIRENS SONG SCREAMING IN YOUR INTERIOR. IS THE TIME TO TAKE BACK THE
WEAPONS OF LIGHT IS TIME FOR CASTLE CONQUEST OF INNER.
WE ARE THE DECLINE AND THE DAWN, THE DEATH AND LIFE. INNOCENCE LOST LOVE THAT RETURNS . I longed to
see you and have found.
We are fallen angels apprentice, WE ARE WHAT WE ARE NOTHING WITHOUT pretend anymore. We're, YA eturned. THERE IS NO TURNING BACK NOW.
LOOKS THAT
EVERYTHING IS WILLING.


THE BANQUET


Thalamus WAIT YOUR BELOVED WHERE ASLEEP
We are fallen angels learning to fly. WHY HE HAD COME MEET YOUR
DESIRE TO SEE YOU AND YOU HAVE FOUND.

© misteri1963 this publication can be reproduced freely on condition of respecting its integrity and mentioning the author, the translator and mystery1963 as a source of it

LA GRAN TRANSFORMACIÓ - CRIDA ALS GUERRERS DE LA LLUM




EL DESPERTAR
DE LA CONSCIÈNCIA
CRIDA A ELS GUERRERS DE LA LLUM
LA VERITAT  ESTÀ DINS TEU, SOM ÀNGELS CAIJUTS APRENENT A VOLAR. PER AIXÒ HE SORTIT A LA TEVA 
TROBADA TENIA GANES DE VEURE'T I ET HE TROBAT.

SOM COM L'AVE FÈNIX renaixent D'ENTRE LES CENDRES, SOM 
PRÍNCEPS AMB vestidures de CAPTAIRES, VIATGERS QUE HAN OBLIDAT EL MOTIU DE LA SEVA AVENTURA. DINS NOSTRE HI HA OMBRES PERÒ LA LLUM prevaldrà.
JA RECORDEM EL NOSTRE LLINATGE I REIALESA, EL REI HA SORTIT AL TEU TROBADA I UN VESTIT NOU PORTA A LES SEVES MANS L'ABRAÇADA DE LA BENVINGUDA , SERÀ EL SEGELL que coroni TEU  CAP, PER AIXÒ HE SORTIT A LA TEVA TROBADA TENIA GANES DE VEURE'T I ET HE TROBAT.
NO PERMETIS QUE LA FOSCOR  RETARDI LA TEVA GOSADIA. DE GUERRER ÈPIC DE MIL BATALLES CÒSMIQUES. RES PODRÀ AMB UN SER DE LLUM. No t'aturis 
ARA.
DESPERTA

 No escoltis LES PROPOSTES seductores D'AQUELLS que jeuen ATRAPATS en un MÓN DE TENEBRES, ÉS MENTIDA D'IL·LUSIÓ, ÉS EL CANT DE LES SIRENES que criden en TEU INTERIOR. ÉS L'HORA DE REPRENDRE LES ARMES DE LA LLUM, ÉS L'HORA DE LA CONQUESTA DEL CASTELL INTERN.
SOM L'OCAS I L'ALBA, LA MORT I LA VIDA. L'INOCÈNCIA PERDUDA QUE L'AMOR RETORNA . 
SOM ÀNGELS CAIJUTS APRENENT A VOLAR, SOM EL QUE SOM I SENSE PRETENDRE MÉS RES. JA ESTEM, JA vam tornar Y NO HI HA MARXA ENRERE.
MIRA QUE TOT ESTÀ DISPOSAT.

EL BANQUET ,EL TALAM ON ESPERA EL TEU ESTIMADA DORMIDA
SOM ÀNGELS CAIJUTS APRENENT A VOLAR. PER AIXÒ HE SORTIT AL TEU TROBADA. TENIA GANES DE VEURE'T I T'HE TROBAT.
misteri1963 aquesta publicació pot reproduir-se lliurement amb la condició de respectar la seva integritat i esmentar a l'autor 

LA GRAN TRANSFORMACIÓN - LLAMADA A LOS GUERREROS DE LA LUZ



EL DESPERTAR
DE LA CONCIENCIA
LLAMADA A
LOS GUERREROS DE LA LUZ
LA VERDAD
ESTÁ DENTRO DE TÍ
SOMOS
ÁNGELES CAIDOS APRENDIENDO A VOLAR. POR ESO HE SALIDO A TU ENCUENTRO
TENÍA GANAS
DE VERTE Y TE HE ENCONTRADO.
SOMOS COMO EL AVE FÉNIX RENACIENDO DE ENTRE LAS CENIZAS, SOMOS
PRÍNCIPES CON ROPAJES DE MENDIGOS, VIAJEROS QUE HAN OLVIDADO EL MOTIVO DE SU
AVENTURA. DENTRO NUESTRO HAY SOMBRAS PERO LA LUZ PREVALECERÁ.
YA RECORDAMOS NUESTRO LINAJE Y REALEZA, EL REY HA SALIDO A TU ENCUENTRO
Y UN VESTIDO NUEVO LLEVA
EN SUS MANOS EL ABRAZO DE LA BIENVENIDA
, SERÁ EL SELLO QUE CORONE TU
CABEZA, POR ESO HE SALIDO A TU
ENCUENTRO
, TENIA GANAS DE VERTE Y TE HE ENCONTRADO
NO PERMITAS
QUE LA OSCURIDAD RETRASE TU OSADÍA. DE GUERRERO
ÉPICO DE MIL BATALLAS CÓSMICAS. NADA PODRÁ CON UN SER DE LUZ. NO TE DETENGAS
AHORA.
D E S P I E R T A

 NO ESCUCHES LAS PROPUESTAS SEDUCTORAS
DE AQUELLOS QUE YACEN ATRAPADOS ENUN MUNDO DE TINIEBLAS, ES MENTIRA DE ILUSIÓN,
ES EL CANTO DE LAS SIRENAS QUE GRITAN EN TU INTERIOR. ES LA HORA DE RETOMAR LAS
ARMAS DE LA LUZ, ES LA HORA DE LA CONQUISTA DEL CASTILLO INTERNO.
SOMOS EL
OCASO Y EL AMANECER, LA MUERTE Y LA VIDA. LA INOCENCIA PERDIDA QUE EL AMOR
DEVUELVE
. TENÍA GANAS DE
VERTE Y TE HE ENCONTRADO.
SOMOS
ÁNGELES CAIDOS APRENDIENDO A VOLAR, SOMOS LO QUE SOMOS Y SIN PRETENDER MÁS NADA.
YA ESTAMOS,
YA VOLVIMOS. YA NO HAY MARCHA ATRÁS.
MIRA QUE
TODO ESTÁ DISPUESTO.

EL BANQUETE

EL TALAMO DONDE ESPERA TU AMADA DORMIDA
SOMOS
ÁNGELES CAIDOS APRENDIENDO A VOLAR. POR ESO HE SALIDO A TU ENCUENTRO TENÍA
GANAS DE VERTE Y TE HE ENCONTRADO.

©misteri1963 ésta publicación puede reproducirse libremente a condición de respetar su integridad y mencionar al autor/a

Behind China’s $1 Trillion Plan to Shake Up the Economic Ordered


Chinese workers and engineers at a tunnel being created near Vang Vieng, Laos, as part of a $6 billion Chinese rail project that will connect eight Asian countries. Credit Adam Dean for The New York Times
By Jane Perlez and Yufan Huang
  • May 13, 2017

VANG VIENG, Laos — Along the jungle-covered mountains of Laos, squads of Chinese engineers are drilling hundreds of tunnels and bridges to support a 260-mile railway, a $6 billion project that will eventually connect eight Asian countries.
Chinese money is building power plants in Pakistan to address chronic electricity shortages, part of an expected $46 billion worth of investment.
Chinese planners are mapping out train lines from Budapest to Belgrade, Serbia, providing another artery for Chinese goods flowing into Europe through a Chinese-owned port in Greece.
The massive infrastructure projects, along with hundreds of others across Asia, Africa and Europe, form the backbone of China’s ambitious economic and geopolitical agenda. President Xi Jinping of China is literally and figuratively forging ties, creating new markets for the country’s construction companies and exporting its model of state-led development in a quest to create deep economic connections and strong diplomatic relationships.
The initiative, called “One Belt, One Road,” looms on a scope and scale with little precedent in modern history, promising more than $1 trillion in infrastructure and spanning more than 60 countries. To celebrate China’s new global influence, Mr. Xi is gathering dozens of state leaders, including President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia, in Beijing on Sunday.
It is global commerce on China’s terms.
Mr. Xi is aiming to use China’s wealth and industrial know-how to create a new kind of globalization that will dispense with the rules of the aging Western-dominated institutions. The goal is to refashion the global economic order, drawing countries and companies more tightly into China’s orbit.
 
A Chinese worker welding a tube for a new rail bridge near Vang Vieng. Credit Adam Dean for The New York Times

The projects inherently serve China’s economic interests. With growth slowing at home, China is producing more steel, cement and machinery than the country needs. So Mr. Xi is looking to the rest of the world, particularly developing countries, to keep its economic engine going.
“President Xi believes this is a long-term plan that will involve the current and future generations to propel Chinese and global economic growth,” said Cao Wenlian, director general of the International Cooperation Center of the National Development and Reform Commission, a group dedicated to the initiative. “The plan is to lead the new globalization 2.0.”
Mr. Xi is rolling out a more audacious version of the Marshall Plan, America’s postwar reconstruction effort. Back then, the United States extended vast amounts of aid to secure alliances in Europe. China is deploying hundreds of billions of dollars of state-backed loans in the hope of winning new friends around the world, this time without requiring military obligations.
Mr. Xi’s plan stands in stark contrast to President Trump and his “America First” mantra. The Trump administration walked away from the Trans-Pacific Partnership, the American-led trade pact that was envisioned as a buttress against China’s growing influence.
“Pursuing protectionism is just like locking oneself in a dark room,” Mr. Xi told business leaders at the World Economic Forum in January.
As head of the Communist Party, Mr. Xi is promoting global leadership in China’s own image, emphasizing economic efficiency and government intervention. And China is corralling all manner of infrastructure projects under the plan’s broad umbrella, without necessarily ponying up the funds.
 
The bridge site near Vang Vieng. The work is a small piece of China’s “One Belt, One Road” initiative, whose scope and scale has little precedent in modern history.CreditAdam Dean for The New York Times
China is moving so fast and thinking so big that it is willing to make short-term missteps for what it calculates to be long-term gains. Even financially dubious projects in corruption-ridden countries like Pakistan and Kenya make sense for military and diplomatic reasons.
The United States and many of its major European and Asian allies have taken a cautious approach to the project, leery of bending to China’s strategic goals. Some, like Australia, have rebuffed Beijing’s requests to sign up for the plan. Despite projects on its turf, India is uneasy because Chinese-built roads will run through disputed territory in Pakistan-occupied Kashmir.
But it is impossible for any foreign leader, multinational executive or international banker to ignore China’s push to remake global trade.
Germany’s minister of economics and energy, Brigitte Zypries, plans to attend the meeting in Beijing. Western industrial giants like General Electric and Siemens are coming, as they look for lucrative contracts and try to stay in China’s good graces.
The Trump administration just upgraded its participation.
Originally, it planned to send a Commerce Department official, Eric Branstad, the son of the incoming American ambassador to Beijing, Terry Branstad. Now, Matthew Pottinger, senior director for Asia at the National Security Council, will attend instead — a signal that the White House is enhancing its warm relationship with Mr. Xi by honoring his favorite endeavor with the presence of a top official.
Influence Via Infrastructure
As the sun beat down on Chinese workers driving bulldozers, four huge tractor-trailers rolled into a storage area here in Vang Vieng, a difficult three-hour drive over potholed roads from the capital, Vientiane. They each carried massive coils of steel wire.
Half a mile away, a Chinese cement mixing plant with four bays glistened in the sun. Nearby, along a newly laid road, another Chinese factory was providing cement for tunnel construction.
Nearly everything for the Laos project is made in China. Almost all the labor force is Chinese. At the peak of construction, there will be an estimated 100,000 Chinese workers.
When Mr. Xi announced the “One Belt, One Road” plan in September 2013, it was clear that Beijing needed to do something for the industries that had succeeded in building China’s new cities, railways and roads — state-led investment that turned it into an economic powerhouse. China did not have a lot left to build, and growth started to sputter.
Along with the economic boost, tiny Laos, a landlocked country with six million people, is a linchpin in Beijing’s strategy to chip away at American power in Southeast Asia. After Mr. Trump abandoned the Trans-Pacific Partnership in January, American influence in the region is seen to be waning. The rail line through Laos would provide a link to countries that China wants to bring firmly into its fold.
Each nation in Mr. Xi’s plan brings its own strategic advantages.
The power plants in Pakistan, as well as upgrades to a major highway and a $1 billion port expansion, are a political bulwark. By prompting growth in Pakistan, China wants to blunt the spread of Pakistan’s terrorists across the border into the Xinjiang region, where a restive Muslim population of Uighurs resides. It has military benefits, providing China’s navy future access to a remote port at Gwadar managed by a state-backed Chinese company with a 40-year contract.
Many countries in the program have serious needs. The Asian Development Bank estimated that emerging Asian economies need $1.7 trillion per year in infrastructure to maintain growth, tackle poverty and respond to climate change.
A new road to a construction site that is part of the Chinese railway project near Luang Prabang. Laos is a linchpin in Beijing’s strategy to chip away at American power in Southeast Asia.CreditAdam Dean for The New York Times
In Kenya, China is upgrading a railway from the port of Mombasa to Nairobi that will make it easier to get Chinese goods into the country. The Kenyan government had been unable to persuade others to do the job, whereas China has been transforming crumbling infrastructure in Africa for more than a decade.
The rail line, which is set to start running next month, is the first to be built to Chinese standards outside China. The country will benefit for years from maintenance contracts.
“China’s Belt and Road initiative is starting to deliver useful infrastructure, bringing new trade routes and better connectivity to Asia and Europe,” said Tom Miller, author of “China’s Asian Dream: Empire Building Along the New Silk Road.” “But Xi will struggle to persuade skeptical countries that the initiative is not a smokescreen for strategic control.”
Calculating the Risks
Although Chinese engineers just started arriving in this tourist townseveral months ago, they have started punching three tunnels into mountains that slope down to roiling river water. They are in a race to get as much done as possible before the monsoon rains next month slow down work.
It is a fast start to a much-delayed program that may bring only limited benefits to the agrarian country.
For years, Laos and China sparred over financing. With the cost running at nearly $6 billion, officials in Laos wondered how they would afford their share. The country’s output is just $12 billion annually. A feasibility study by a Chinese company said the railway would lose money for the first 11 years.
A Chinese worker from Sichuan at the railway project near Luang Prabang. Credit Adam Dean for The New York Times
Such friction is characteristic.
In Indonesia, construction of a high-speed railway between Jakarta and Bandung finally began last month after arguments over land acquisition. In Thailand, the government is demanding better terms for a vital railway.
China’s outlays for the plan so far have been modest: Only $50 billion has been spent, an “extremely small” amount relative to China’s domestic investment program, said Nicholas R. Lardy, a China specialist at the Peterson Institute for International Economics in Washington.
Even China’s good friends so far are left wanting. Mr. Xi attended a groundbreaking ceremony in 2014 in Tajikistan for a gas pipeline, but the project stalled after Beijing’s demand waned.
Mr. Putin will be at the center of the Beijing conference. While two companies owned by one of his closest friends, Gennady Timchenko, have benefited from projects, there has not been much else for Russia.
“Russia’s elites’ high expectations regarding Belt and Road have gone through a severe reality check, and now oligarchs and officials are skeptical about practical results,” said Alexander Gabuev, senior associate at the Carnegie Center in Moscow.
China is making calculations that the benefits will outweigh the risks.
The investments could complicate Beijing’s effort to stem the exodus of capital outflow that have been weighing on the economy. The cost could also come back to haunt China, whose banks are being pressed to lend to projects that they find less than desirable. By some estimates, over half the countries that have accepted Belt and Road projects have credit ratings below investment grade.
A poster for a Chinese high-speed train at the construction site for a bridge over the Mekong River near Luang Prabang. Credit Adam Dean for The New York Times
“A major constraint in investor enthusiasm,” said Eswar Prasad, professor of trade policy at Cornell University, “is that many countries in the Central Asian region, where the initial thrust of the initiative is focused, suffer from weak and unstable economies, poor public governance, political stability and corruption.”
Laos is one of the risky partners. The Communist government is a longstanding friend of China. But fearing China’s domination, Laos is casting around for other friends as well, including China’s regional rivals Japan and Vietnam.
After five years of negotiations over the rail line, Laos finally got a better deal. Laos has an $800 million loan from China’s Export-Import Bank and agreed to form a joint venture with China that will borrow much of the rest.
Still, Laos faces a huge debt burden. The International Monetary Fund warned this year that the country’s reserves stood at two months of prospective imports of goods and services. It also expressed concerns that public debt could rise to around 70 percent of the economy.
As construction gathers steam, nearby communities are starting to rumble.
Farmers are balking at giving up their land. Some members of the national assembly have raised questions about property rights.
At Miss Mai’s Noodle Shop here, a customer, Mr. Sipaseuth, who said he used only one name, pondered the project over a glass of icy Beer Lao.
In the past, he said, the government had promised $10 for an acre of land worth about $100. “But then they never paid it,” Mr. Sipaseuth added.
Was the rail project good for Laos?
“We need civilization. Laos is very poor, very underdeveloped,” he said. “But how many Chinese will come here? Too many is not a good idea.”
A version of this article appears in print on May 14, 2017, on Page A1 of the New York edition with the headline: Remaking Global Trade in China’s Image. 

La pobreza mata en España: Los habitantes de las poblaciones ricas viven 6 años más que los de las pobres...


En 40 años de fallida democracia, España ha robado a los catalanes 400.000 millones de euros.
Una cantidad que hubiera convertido a Catalunya en una de las naciones más ricas del mundo.
Ese expolio se ha perpetrado con la excusa de la "solidaridad", la convergencia de los pueblos.

Los resultados demuestran que es una gran mentira. 
Hay pueblos con un 7% de paro y otros con el 40%.
Lugares que se vive hasta los 86 y en otros que no se llega a los 80.
Y ciudades con rentas que superan 4 veces a las más pobres...

Desigualdades en un sistema pervertido que solo ha beneficiado a Madrid, región inventada e improductiva.

Evolución PIB sobre media española (100):
Madrid:
1980: 116,2
2004: 124,5
2016: 136,5

Catalunya:
1980: 107,7
2004: 109,6
2016: 119,3

(Aunque no esté actualizado, interesante que vean este post sobre evolución del PIB por comunidaes:
https://spaincrisis.blogspot.com/2017/04/renta-per-capita-el-estado-de-las.html)
Volviendo al tema de la esperanza de vida...
Los datos son demoledores...


La media estatal de esperanza de vida es de 82,7 años. Y si se acude a los municipios grandes, entre los 20 primeros puestos de España aparecen todas las ciudades con rentas altas: Pozuelo es el segundo, con 85,48 años de media. Majadahonda el tercero, con 85,19 años. Las Rozas el quinto (84,68 años), Getxo el noveno (84,42 años) y San Cugat ocupa el puesto 11 (84,23 años).

En el sentido contrario, también funciona la correlación. Los puestos más bajos de la tabla de esperanza de vida los ocupan La Línea de la Concepción (79,74 años), Melilla (80,31 años), Ceuta (80,46 años), Cádiz (80,57 años), Sanlúcar de Barrameda (80,7 años), El Puerto de Santamaría (80,79 años), Algeciras (80,84 años) y Torrevieja (80,88 años). 

La excepción a la regla es Rivas-Vaciamadrid. Es, precisamente, el municipio con mayor esperanza de vida de España: 85,83 años. Y su renta está en medio de la tabla: 13.269 euros per capita.

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