Tuesday, July 15, 2008

John Croino's Prophecies

Civil Unrest in Australia (2005?-2008)

The signs are already there that some kind of violent civilian unrest, almost on the level of an insurrection is very likely to occur. John Croino has foreseen car-bombs and bombings of buildings, fire-bombings, eventually armed conflict with police and security guards, soon increasing to a point where the Australian governments will be calling for the Army to be used.
The first of this civil unrest should start in 2005 with rioting in Sydney involving the Lebanese community, but he placed a question-mark on this year because the government will be trying extremely hard to avoid the conflict’s occurrence through trickery, propaganda, and lots of blatant lies…which are very unlikely to work.

From Christmas time in 2007, the civil unrest will become impossible to hide as it will suddenly grow. Brawls spilling out onto the streets becoming riots that the police will have to deal with in large numbers (20 cars or more). The unrest will continue to increase through 2008 to 2010.
Again, most likely involving the Lebanese community in Sydney as a trigger, though it’s not theirs to be blamed as they are merely expressing the tip if iceberg of the undercurrent of anger among men in the general public in Australia. It will eventually be much greater than rioting and involve almost every ethnic group in the eastern cities of Australia, particularly in Sydney’s poorer suburbs.
Gangs will take the violence to a much greater scale, the police will not be able to cope, and the army will have to be called in. In the long run, the unrest and it’s results will change the Australian national government, but it will be two decades before people see the most truly positive results of this.

Curiously enough, 2005 to 2007 are years of great wealth & power for Australia in all other ways – but the Rich versus Poor gap will be intolerable to far too many people. The Australian government should no longer be considered stable from this point onward for a dozen years.

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