FIRST, we note and link the prophetic word from the Lord shown in the original post and quote the opening paragraph and provide a direct link here to absorb in its full import

“My children, you have entered a time when things will no longer be the same. Normal will no longer be normal. Things that you thought were true are not. Things that you thought were real are fake. You even believed many things about Me that you heard from some of the churches, but this is not Who I am or how I work at all…”
Further to Monday’s post on WEFF and my insertion of a postscript link to The Times, some queried claims about PM Keir Starmer’s motives and abilities. Being cynical like me, I was asked whether or not he’s really made such an announcement about the death of globalism.
So here’s his published statement, opening paragraphs quoted below with emphasis mine for ease of reference:

“First it was defence and national security. Now it is the global economy and trade. Old assumptions can no longer be taken for granted. The world as we knew it has gone. We must rise to meet the moment.
We are ready for what comes next. The new world is less governed by established rules and more by deals and alliances. It demands the best of British virtues – cool heads, pragmatism and a clear understanding of our national interest…” continue reading.
Also see….

Nick Timothy’s opening paragraphs of the above article shred the PM’s policy claims:
“This weekend, as the Prime Minister declared globalisation dead and boasted of his economic leadership, his jobs tax – the £25 billion hike in employers’ National Insurance Contributions – came into effect.
The juxtaposition of the PM’s words and actions was glaring. But it was far from an aberration. Like his response to the withdrawal of American support for Ukraine – in which Britain has made risky military commitments without a plan or partnerships with other countries – this new posture is all politics and little policy substance.
For if the Government really believed “the world as we knew it has gone”, and “old assumptions can no longer be taken for granted”, it would surely have come up with a policy prospectus that parted with its own old assumptions. Instead, Keir Starmer has chosen to double down on his “Plan for Change”, the programme for government he published four months ago – before, by his own admission, he realised the world economy had changed….”
You must be logged in to post a comment.