Wednesday, October 15, 2014

Bolivia, Bosnia, and Hungary

Across the Globe we see peoples turning against the West and the economic $y$tem it promotes:

"Bolivia’s Morales expected to coast to third term" Associated Press   October 13, 2014

EL ALTO, Bolivia — Evo Morales easily won an unprecedented third term as Bolivia’s president Sunday on the strength of the economic and political stability brought by his government, according to an unofficial quick count of the vote and an exit poll.

The unofficial count by the polling company Ipsos for ATB television gave him 59.5 percent of the vote against 25.3 percent for cement magnate Samuel Doria Medina, the top vote-getter among four challengers.

An exit poll by Equipos Mori for Red Uno television, Unitel, and El Deber newspaper gave Morales 61 percent support. and Doria Medina 24 percent If confirmed, it would give him an outright victory without a second round of voting.

While known internationally for his anti-imperialist and socialist rhetoric, the 55-year-old coca growers’ union leader is popular at home for a pragmatic economic stewardship that spread Bolivia’s natural gas and mineral wealth among the masses.

A boom in commodities prices has fostered economic growth, which has averaged 5 percent annually, well above the regional average.

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Related: Bolivia, Bulgaria, and Brazil

The next two countries won't be making New World Order globalists happy, either:

"Bosnians elect new leaders amid old divisions"  Associated Press   October 13, 2014

SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina — Bosnians voted in general elections Sunday that will show whether people are more concerned about the 44-percent unemployment rate or still mired in wartime nationalist divisions that could further split the country.

Polls closed in the evening and election commission head Sjepan Mikic said, based on information he was getting, the turnout will be higher than two years ago, when more than 56 percent of 3.3 million eligible voters cast their ballots in local elections. Preliminary results will be announced early Monday.

The incumbent leader of the Serb half of the country based his campaign on promises of Serb secession and Russian support for it, while his opponents focused on fighting poverty and corruption.

The second part sounds like the lip service we get here, and that first bit will certainly provide new impetus for war with Russia.

The country’s Bosniaks and Croats, who share the other half, have their own nationalistic disputes but are more focused on the economy.

It's always bad Serbs, isn't it? 

Even that version of events is a lie when it comes to my agenda-pushing, war-promoting pos.

But many in Bosnia believe it will be hard for anyone to raise the living standard and create jobs.

During two decades of nationalistic quarrels, the country became one of the poorest and most corrupt in Europe, and the broken promises after six postwar elections have made people believe their leaders do not really care about them.

That last part is also an epidemic across the globe.

Whoever wins will, for the next four years, face the challenge of creating jobs in a country with one of the most complex bureaucracies in the world.

Voters were choosing more than 500 officials, including a three-member state presidency and Parliament.

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Btw, the globalists that own and publish the new$papers hate nationalists.

"Nationalists probable winners in Bosnian election" Associated Press   October 14, 2014

SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina — Preliminary results presented by election officials on Monday indicate that parties that ruled Bosnia over the past four years marked by economic stagnation and social unrest have been punished by voters in the general election.

We are seeing a WAVE of that everywhere, and AmeriKa's elections are only weeks away!

Still, it remains unclear whether any change is forthcoming since the composition of the ruling structures at the many different levels of government will probably depend on complex coalition negotiations.

Been there, done that!

The results from Sunday’s election indicate that although concerned about the 44 percent unemployment rate, Bosnians remain mired in wartime nationalist divisions. All three groups in Bosnia — Bosniaks, Croats, and Serbs — tend to vote along sectarian lines.

I'm smelling a rig job.

According to some 80 percent of the ballots counted, Bosniaks — the largest group — elected their national Party of Democratic Action over the mixed Social Democrats, which had received most of their votes four years ago. 

The Bosniaks dumped the $ociali$ts, huh?

The country’s Croats remained loyal to their nationalist party, the Croat Democratic Union. The Serbs seemed equally divided between two nationalist options: the hardline party of Milorad Dodik and his milder opponents from a coalition led by the Serb Democratic Party, which was established by the Serb wartime leader Radovan Karadzic. He is now on trial before a UN war crimes tribunal.

See: Karadzic’s Conviction

For more than two decades Bosnia’s three groups have quarreled over what their country should look like, and the dispute continues over whether Bosnia’s territory should be divided among the three or remain unified and mixed.

Their 1992-95 war over this dilemma ended with a compromise that divided the country in two self-administering regions — one for the Serbs, the other shared by Bosniaks and Croats. The latter is further divided in 10 cantons. Everything is tied together by a central government.

In this complex political setup, Bosnians were choosing a three-member state presidency and a Parliament.

Voters in the Serb half voted for a president and a Parliament of Republika Srpska. Voters in the Bosniak-Croat half chose lawmakers for their regional Parliament and for parliaments of their 10 cantons.

Bakir Izetbegovic, the unofficial leader of the Party for Democratic Action, will continue to occupy the Bosniak seat in the three-member presidency, and his party won more seats in the state Parliament that was previously dominated by the Social Democrats.

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And I'm sure this is raising alarms bells in some chosen quarters:

"Hungary’s far-right Jobbik gains in rural areas" Associated Press   October 14, 2014

BUDAPEST — The far-right Jobbik party has made significant gains in rural areas in Hungary’s municipal elections, where it has become the main challenger to Prime Minister Viktor Orban’s Fidesz party.

Jobbik, led by Gabor Vona, won elections in 14 mostly smaller cities and towns on Sunday, while another six independent winners ran with the party’s support. In 2010, they won in only three cities.

Although remaining far behind Fidesz, especially in Budapest, Jobbik is now second in all but one of Hungary’s 19 county assemblies, an important foundation looking ahead to the next national elections, set for April 2018.

Jobbik first attracted voters in some of the poorest areas in eastern Hungary by promising to fight ‘‘Gypsy crime,’’ usually petty offenses too small to warrant police attention, and speaking out against Jewish or Israeli investments in the country.

In other words, they are against the war-criminal state of Israel and likely protested "Operation Protective Edge."

With the success it achieved all over the country, ‘‘Jobbik is now a party at the national level and it continues to have potential for growth,’’ said Kornelia Magyar of the Magyar Progressive Institute.

How long before we see the word "Nazi" in the jew$paper in regards to Hungary?

Jobbik has benefited from the fragmentation of the left-wing parties and also has drawn some voters disillusioned with the government.

You see what happens on "that side" when the order of the day is betrayal?

‘‘Jobbik has also achieved success by stressing law and order,’’ Magyar said.

Like I said.

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