Vision of harvest judgement followed by global collapse of liberalism

Significance in End-times and location of Veronika West’s vision of harvesting and judgement

Extracts from the above two-part posting with its ’22’ God-incidental timing, posted on 11.12.24 as The Ninth Hour: Dream-Vision of Harvest and Judgement at HKP:

“…In that moment I heard these words, ”I say again, the Horse and its Rider shall go forth upon The Nations, for a simultaneous move of My Spirit shall be seen, as the Sickle flies and the Sword falls.
Listen! The hour of Great Harvest and Judgement has come upon The Nations of the Earth.
Pay attention! Watch and Pray — for the writing is on the wall.
Nations have been weighed in the balance and found wanting!
I say again, for this is the Ninth Hour! Yes! Daniel 9 — For a Stitch in time shall save nine!”

Part 2: Significance in End-times…

“…Then I heard these Words ”Watch for the clash of kingdoms! The fall of mighty Titans shall be seen in the days ahead!” As I heard The Spirit Speak, ”Judgement is at hand!” I saw as the Warring Rider raised his Sword high over the Seas.

I then Prophesied again saying, ”The Waves shall rise and the tides shall now begin to shift and turn over The Nations. For the works of the wicked will be exposed and overturned, and the House of the Righteous Remnant shall Rise and Rule over the Earth!”

…I then heard these Words, ”Watch and pray — for a Divine Order and Reset has now begun over The Nations!”

GLOBAL COLLAPSE OF LIBERALISM

Philippe Besnard’s posting as shown above, validates Veronika’s prophecy by bringing news of the judgemental shaking of nations:

The Global Collapse of Liberalism: How France, the UK, Canada, Australia, Germany, Italy, Spain, the Netherlands, and Sweden Are Playing the Same Failing Game.

It’s not a coincidence, it’s a pattern. Nine Western powers, nine liberal governments, all spiralling in the same direction at the same time. France, the UK, Canada, Australia, Germany, Italy, Spain, the Netherlands, and Sweden, each led by leaders who sold the same promises of progress, equity, and global cooperation, are now facing a wall of economic chaos, political rebellion, and public outrage.

The globalist dream is cracking, and the same script is playing out across the board.

France: Macron’s Government in Freefall

In France, President Emmanuel Macron’s administration is collapsing in real time. He’s on his fourth Prime Minister in less than a year, a revolving door of damage control as his government bleeds public trust. France is in open revolt, with protests raging, the cost of living through the roof, and citizens fed up with endless migration policies that strain communities and public services. The “European experiment” that Macron once paraded as inevitable progress is now exposing itself as a bureaucratic nightmare run by elites detached from reality.

The UK: Starmer’s Labour Government in Trouble

Across the Channel, Britain isn’t doing any better. Keir Starmer’s Labour government is collapsing in popularity before it’s even had a chance to deliver. The Reform Party is rising fast, not because it’s flashy or radical, but because the public has simply had enough of being lectured by leaders who can’t balance a budget, control borders, or keep the lights on. People are realizing that “progressivism” has turned into a political brand that delivers slogans, not solutions.

Canada: Carney’s Economic Illusions

In Canada, Mark Carney and the Liberal governments lead is in deep trouble. What was supposed to be a transition to competent, technocratic leadership has become a front-row seat to chaos. The national debt is spiralling, inflation is relentlessly eating away at household budgets, and Canadians are losing faith in a government that talks about progress while the country teeters on the brink. Creative accounting and political spin are barely keeping the illusion of stability alive. From coast to coast, citizens are realizing that promises of fiscal responsibility, social equity, and “managed transition” are little more than rhetoric. The Liberal Party’s hold on power is faltering under the weight of economic collapse, political mismanagement, and public outrage, Canada’s once-stable democracy now looks dangerously fragile. Canadians are tired of the theft, the control, and the steady loss of freedoms.

Australia: PM Albanese’s Struggle for Relevance

Down under, Australia isn’t faring any better. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, once riding high on promises of climate action and progressive reform, is now facing mounting challenges. While his approval ratings have recently improved, the country grapples with rising unemployment, economic uncertainty, and public disillusionment. In a desperate bid to shift focus, Australia, like its counterparts, has recognized Palestine as a sovereign state. This move, timed to coincide with similar declarations by the UK and Canada, appears more about political optics than genuine diplomatic progress.

Germany: Coalition Collapse and Far-Right Surge

In Germany, the political landscape is in turmoil. Chancellor Friedrich Merz leads a new coalition government formed after the collapse of the previous administration. The far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) has surged in popularity, securing its highest-ever showing in federal elections. The country faces economic challenges, including the impact of U.S. tariffs on its auto industry, and internal divisions threaten the stability of the new government.

Italy: Fiscal Strain and Political Tensions

Italy’s government, led by Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni, is grappling with fiscal challenges. The administration plans to raise over €11 billion from banks and insurance companies to fund tax cuts and social spending aimed at supporting low- and middle-income families. However, the proposal has faced opposition from coalition partners and concerns about its impact on the banking sector. Additionally, Italy’s hard-right nationalist policies on migration and social issues have sparked domestic and international criticism.

Spain: Political Instability and Regional Tensions

Spain’s government under Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez is experiencing political instability. The Socialist-led coalition faces mounting scandals and declining public support, with the opposition center-right People’s Party widening its lead in opinion polls. The government’s reliance on pro-independence parties has revived questions about constitutional limits, particularly regarding the Amnesty Law for those involved in the 2017 Catalan secessionist crisis. Calls for early elections are growing, and the far-right’s influence is on the rise.

The Netherlands: Government Collapse and Migrant Exploitation

In the Netherlands, the government collapsed in June 2025 after the far-right Party for Freedom (PVV) withdrew from the coalition over a dispute on asylum policy. The country now faces political uncertainty as Prime Minister Dick Schoof’s cabinet faces a no-confidence motion in parliament. Meanwhile, the housing crisis has exposed severe exploitation of migrant workers, who often face exorbitant rents and substandard living conditions. Despite contributing significantly to the Dutch economy, these workers are wrongly blamed by far-right political parties for the worsening housing crisis.

Sweden: Economic Uncertainty and Political Polarization

Sweden is experiencing economic uncertainty, with a recovery that began in late 2024 interrupted by high tariffs imposed by the U.S. against the EU. The country’s high exposure to housing and commercial real estate requires continued vigilance, and household debt remains a concern. Additionally, political polarization is increasing, with far-right parties gaining influence and challenging the traditional political establishment. The risk of financial instability has increased, and the Swedish government faces pressure to safeguard resilience amid global uncertainties.

The Pattern: Symbolic Gestures Over Substance

When you can’t fix the economy, when your people are angry, when faith in government is collapsing, you change the subject. You create symbolic victories. France, the UK, Canada, Australia, Germany, Italy, Spain, the Netherlands, and Sweden have all suddenly turned toward foreign policy grandstanding, and the recognition of Palestine is the perfect example. It’s not about justice or peace; it’s about distraction. The United States itself admitted it interfered in that “peace process”, not for diplomacy, but for optics. The timing was too perfect. Each government, in crisis at home, needed a global headline to look compassionate, moral, and in control.

This isn’t a coordinated conspiracy, it’s an ideological reflex. Liberal governments worldwide follow the same playbook because they’re built on the same assumptions: that people can be pacified with emotion while power is preserved through distraction. Recognize Palestine, announce “justice reforms,” pretend to toughen crime laws, it’s all theatre designed to keep the public from asking the real question: why is everything falling apart?

Liberalism, in its modern form, is no longer about freedom or equality. It’s about narrative control. It’s the illusion of compassion masking a failure of competence. And now, the illusion is fading.

France can’t hold its government together. The UK is one election away from a populist earthquake. Canada is teetering on economic collapse while pretending it’s just another “transition.” Australia is struggling to maintain relevance on the global stage while facing internal challenges. Germany’s new coalition is fragile, Italy’s fiscal policies are under scrutiny, Spain’s political landscape is shifting, the Netherlands’ government is in disarray, and Sweden’s economy is burdened by uncertainty. The same slogans, the same solutions, the same results.

The world isn’t witnessing the rise of a new ideology, it’s watching the end of one.

And when the mask finally slips, when people in all nine countries realize the elites are reading from the same tired script, the real change will begin. Because once the public stops believing the story, the storytellers lose their power.’

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