Above, the logo of Italy's five star movement.
Is this the most important
time in the EU's history?
It is no coincidence that all the European events below are happening and being talked about right around the end of the Jubilee year which is recognized to those paying attention as a time of washing away.

Italy
and Austria take votes at the beginning of December that could destabilize or
even end the euro and the EU itself.
This
is part of a destabilizing trend that I have anticipated, some 16
months ago with the destruction of the EU's Schengen agreement that used to
stand for free-travel throughout Europe.
The
two potential upheavals are the Italian referendum and the Austrian election,
both of which are set to occur on the same day, December 4th.
Not
long ago, we mentioned how a collapse of the troubled Italian banking giant
Banco Monte dei Paschi could prove to be problematic for the Italian economy
and in turn, the entire Eurozone.
There
are also three other mid-sized Italian banks, Popolare di Vicenza, Veneto Banca
and Carige, which are in varying levels of distress, but additionally pose
direct threats to the Italian financial system.
However,
the precursor to bank failures In Italy is this upcoming constitutional
referendum. The basis of this reform would lessen the number of Senate seats
from 321 down to just 100 politicians. (Which, to be truthful, is still exactly
100 too many.)
Another
proposed change has to do with the way Senators are elected. The new
proposition is to have the Senate members be made up of "regional
councillors" who will not be salaried as most of the current Senators are.
One
more stipulation will allow the president to appoint five senators to serve for
seven years each – in hopes of checking the power of the five current lifetime
Senators.
The
outcome of this referendum is particularly significant because it is likely to
be a deciding factor in whether or not the populist Five Star Movement gains
yet more power.
Stronger
support for this party, which has vowed to carry out a new referendum for an
"Italexit", is certain to create a great deal more uncertainty in
markets. International financiers are already sweaty palmed thinking about this
disastrous prospect in light of the current prime minister, Matteo Renzi's
threat to step down should the referendum fail.
Those
behind Renzi are not merely observing passively, however. The political
establishment intends to modify
election laws to make sure the Five Star Movement cannot gain power no matter
the outcome of next Sunday's referendum on constitutional reform.
On the
other hand, the real issue is not a "movement", but the increasing
disaffection of Italian voters. The recently completed trade agreement with
Canada and the not yet accomplished and increasingly unpopular Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP) are yet further examples of
how the EU continues to drive full speed in a direction that Italy (and other
European countries) don't want to go.
Is the situation in Europe similar to pre-Revolutionary France? The gatekeepers of western capitalism, like the Bourbons before them,
have learnt nothing and forgotten nothing … the gatekeepers of the global
liberal order keep on doubling down.
The "doubling
down," is an illustration of ignorance on one level, but is entirely
purposeful on another level. "Europe," having been created, is to be
destroyed and built back up again out of chaotic circumstances.
In this way, control is extended and political integration is deepened.
The
chaos, as we have also seen in Greece, will affect all parts of society. It will
shatter the political, economic and even military order. In Italy, the main
impact right now is financial. Uneasiness is clearly visible in the declining
value of Italian bank shares, which took place on Monday.
AUSTRIA,
TOO
December
4th will be quite a busy day for Austrians as well, who are holding their
election the same Sunday.
This
Austrian election is both historic and popular, perceived to be somewhat of a
"people's win." It is the first time in Austrian political history
that the presidential candidates came from neither the Social Democratic nor
the Austrian People's Party, both of which have dominated the nation's
political landscape since World War II.

Nobert
Hofer of the Freedom Party, (FPO), campaign poster above, who is up against Alexander Van der Bellen of the
Green Party has stated that he would like to put a stop to the influx of
migrants into Austria.
What
is especially noteworthy about the date of Austria's election is its
numerological significance as it pertains to the number 7.
When you
take a closer look at the date 12/4/2016 you can notice that 1+2+4=7 and
2+0+1+6=9 which leaves you with the numbers 7 and 9. So what's the big deal?
Well, when you add the digits 7 and 9 you get 16 and the sum of the digits in
the number 16 (1+6) once again equals 7.
It is
also eerily non-coincidental (probably) that the election is occurring exactly
25 (2+5) days, or 3 weeks and 4 days (3+4) after it was announced that Donald
Trump was victorious on (11/9/2016).
To
take the number 7 another step forward in the context of Brexit, it is exactly
164 days after the Brexit vote or precisely 5 months and 11 days (5+1+1=7).
It is
no surprise that the elites have hidden and interspersed the number 7
throughout these dates, as they love to keep their occult agendas in plain
sight where they know that very few people will notice.
So
leading up to this coming Monday and in the week thereafter, we can anticipate a great deal of volatility in world markets as a consequence of
the uncertainty regarding the outcomes in both of these countries.
In
conjunction with these two European political events, traders and investors are
also holding their breath in anticipation of a US Federal Reserve rate hike the
following week, which also is likely to shake things up.

Not to
mention, in the US, Texas has long been considering seceding from the union
and now you can add California to the list as well. While many say a
"Calexit" is just a stoner's pipe dream, the state does have a larger
economy than that of France and a greater population than Canada, plus, it's an
agricultural powerhouse.
Theoretically,
the state could be self-sustaining and therefore its desire to secede should
not be taken lightly. With the fragility of the world economy as it currently
stands, any of these secession prospects warrant a watchful eye.
