October 6, 2009 (LPAC)-- Yesterday, when questions were raised on the threat of Tony Blair becoming President of an imperial European Union through the passage of the Lisbon Treaty, just ratified by Ireland, Lyndon LaRouche replied with the following orientation:
"Blair won't be a world dictator, because the whole world will blow up in his face, in the process. And he won't like the debris. The whole thing is going to blow up this month. So we have to think about the wreckage, but not the institution such as Lisbon. The institution is not going to function. But the wreckage is going to be terrible.
"The problem is," LaRouche continued, "people change the subject on themselves, and on others. They want to insistently talk about the horrible thing this will be if it goes through. But what about the horrible things that are going to happen anyway if it does not go through? In other words, what you've done is you've destroyed the institutions which could deal with that area, or deal with it competently, but you still have the authority lodged in an institution which has no capability on delivery.
"In other words, you have a breakdown of the system, you have a breakdown of this aspect of the system. You have a breakdown of any ability to restart the economy. So the idea that you are fighting against these so-called reforms, is not really addressing the problem. But people will say: 'We're fighting against this reform.' This is taking the energy away from the things they should be looking at, to concentrate narrowly on these particular reforms. These reforms are not the problem: they are an expression of the problem, not the problem itself.
"What you are having is a breakdown of government at a time that you need a system of public credit to restart the world economy. What you have is something that prevents the restart of public credit, when the crash is inevitable. So you have a dictatorship of nothing! All they tell you is: 'Sorry buddy, you've got to die. There's nothing we can do for you.' And there is no responsibility of government. That's the problem you've got here, and that's the problem that people don't look at. They are so scandal-minded on the detail, they don't see the overall.
"How do the British run the world? They get other people to go to war against each other. And the British sit back there, and take both sides. And the world destroys itself, out of national pride.
"And this is another one of those cases. That people are so issue oriented, that they don't see what the real issue is. And the appeal to small mindedness: 'Well, look, we're only little people. We can only understand this. We've got to deal with this as it comes up. We can't deal with this big a picture. We're going to deal with these things one at a time.' And that's how they are destroyed: out of their own foolishness.
"Little Me! 'Little Me' is the world's worst dictator, the world's busiest concentration camp administrator."