O PRESIDENTE DO BANCO DA INGLATERRA CONFESSA QUE O SISTEMA CAPITALISTA É BOM PARA DEITAR NO LIXO. O RENATUS CARTESIUS SÓ PODE CONCORDAR COM MERVYN KING. ESTE SISTEMA SÓ SERVE O GRANDE CAPITAL EM ALTURAS DE CRISE.
NESTES TEMPOS DIFÍCEIS É QUANDO O GRANDE CAPITAL CAÇA AS POUPANÇAS À CLASSE MÉDIA. É O MOMENTO DE ACERTAR CONTAS PARA DEITAR ABAIXO AQUELES QUE SE TOMAVAM POR INTELIGENTES, ATÉ CONFIAVAM NO SISTEMA DO GRANDE CAPITAL. ANDAVAM JÁ A ARRICAR MUITO COM OS DENTES MUITO AFIADOS A PENSAR QUE TAMBÉM JÁ ERAM TUBARÕES.
CAÍU-LHES O ARPÃO NA GUELA E DEPOIS FOI SÓ PUXAR O PEIXE AO BARCO COM PILOTO NO LEME. JÁ ANDAVA POR ALI MUITO MARUJO DO DECK ARMADOS EM CONTRAMESTRES A NAVEGAR EM ALTO MAR, MAS SEM SABEREM TIRAR O AZIMUTE NEM COM UMA BÚSSOLA. QUANTO ÀS MASSAS LUMPENPROLETARIZADAS, ESSAS SÃO APENAS CARNE PARA CANHÃO, NÚMEROS AMORFOS CONTADOS EM PERCENTAGENS. CORTA CABEÇAS: DESEMPREGO PARA OS DESTABILIZAR TAMBÉM.
QUAL É O REMÉDIO PARA ISTO? NÃO HÁ. ESTE SISTEMA TEM RAIZES PROFUNDAS, É COMO AS SILVAS, NÃO SE CONSEGUE ACABAR COM ELAS, REBENTAM SEMPRE. NINGUÉM TEM MÃO NO CAPITALISMO, NEM OS OS PRÓPRIOS CAPITALISTAS! O SISTEMA AGE, MOVIMENTA-SE POR AR, TERRA, MAR, POR FIBRA ÓTICA E POR VIAS QUE NEM DEUS SABE. REGENERA-SE POR SI PRÓPRIO.
EM SUMA: O SISTEMA CAPITALISTA É UM FRANKENSTEIN. CRIARAM-NO E AGORA NÃO O CONSEGUEM DOMAR. É O MONSTRO CRIADO PELO DR. FRANKENSTEIN DA MARIA SHELLEY.
É TÃO SIMPLES COMO ISTO, NADA A FAZER, DEIXEM ANDAR O BARCO COM ALTOS E BAIXOS. QUANDO AFUNDAR, MANDA-SE FAZER OUTRO, IGUAL. E O SISTEMA CONTINUA A SERVIR AS ALTAS CASTAS DA ARISTOCRACIA DA ALTA FINANÇA. ESTAS PARTEM O SISTEMA QUANDO ESTE LHES FOGE UM POUCO AO CONTROL. DEPOIS REATIVAM OS MESMO SISTEMA, PORQUE OS ARRIVISTAS AFUNDARAM-SE.
E CONTINUAM A DELEITAREM-SE NO MESMO SISTEMA ATÉ À ALTURA DE O PARTIREM NOVAMENTE, QUANDO ANDAM ALI POR PERTO NOVOS ASPIRANTES A CAPITAISTAS VINDOS DAS CASTAS INFERIORES. O PADRÃO PERPETUA-SE AD INFINITUM. AMEN!
AFINAL, PARECE QUE HÁ POR AÍ QUEM JÁ APRENDEU A CONTROLAR O FRANKENSTEIN E UTILIZÁ-LO PARA PROVEITO PRÓPRIO!
2 June 2013 Last updated at 01:46
Sir Mervyn King is stepping down at the end of June
Sir Mervyn King: Public are right to be angry at banks

People have "every right to be angry" with banks for the UK's financial crisis, the outgoing Bank of England (BoE) governor Sir Mervyn King says.
In one of his last interviews before stepping down, for BBC Radio 4's Desert Island Discs, he expressed sympathy with public frustration as slow growth takes its toll on living standards.
But the governor also cautioned that blaming individuals was a distraction.
Sir Mervyn said there were signs economic recovery was under way.
Canadian Mark Carney is to become the first foreign BoE governor when he takes over in July.
"In many ways, when the crisis hit in 2007-08 I was surprised that people weren't angry sooner," Sir Mervyn said, speaking to Kirsty Young for the programme.
"You can see it coming through now as the impact on standards of living becomes more obvious and they have every right to be angry.
"But this crisis wasn't caused by a few individuals, it was a crisis of the system of banking we had allowed to grow up.
"It's very important we don't demonise the individuals but we do keep cracking on with changing the system."
The 65-year-old also called on the public and media to give politicians "space" instead of demanding "immediate solutions".
He rejected criticism that BoE failed to anticipate the country's financial woe.
"That's complete nonsense because many things happen in the future that no-one can foresee," he said.
"What you pay the Bank of England for is to understand the nature of the system and to respond in the right way - and we did."
Sir Mervyn, who now intends to take a "gap year", said the economic crisis would have some positive legacies.
They include a reformed, "safer" banking system and a different moral view about making money.
"I go to schools and speak to sixth-formers and others. I found before the crisis that a disturbingly high proportion of them, instead of wanting to become engineers or scientists or musicians, wanted to go and work in the city," he said.
"Why? Because they wanted to make a lot of money. Now I think they don't really want to go and earn money if it is being earned in a way that creates enormous damage to the rest of society. I think that's a very healthy thing."
Sir Mervyn advised his successor Mr Carney simply to "be himself," adding: "He's an outstanding person but the important thing is that he does it in his own way."
Referring to his own time at the BoE, which began with a role as non-executive director in 1990, Sir Mervyn indicated he would allow others to rate his performance.
"I don't want to join the chorus of people who write books with the subtitle: Why I was right and everyone else was wrong," he said.
"The historians will make their judgements in 20 years' time."
Listen to Desert Island Discs on BBC Radio 4 at 11:45 BST on Sunday June 2 and 09:00 BST on Friday June 7, or afterwards on the BBC iPlayer.
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