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The International Monetary Fund “walked off with America’s economic sovereignty” with agreements reached at the recent G-20 summit meeting, according to political analyst Dick Morris.

The September meeting in Pittsburgh brought together representatives of 20 of the world’s leading economies, with President Obama representing the U.S. In a video, Morris said that with economic policies adopted at the meeting:

“We literally took a gigantic step toward global governance and control by global economists of our monetary and financial and regulatory system. It was incredibly alarming.

“This was a terrible terrible reversal at the G-20 summit. Literally what’s going to happen now is that professional economists around the world run by the IMF are going to work with the G-20 nations to formulate plans for each of their economies and give them specific mandates and specific requirements, and by consensus the G-20 will adopt it.

Of course the United States will participate as one out of 20 votes, and basically be forced to go along with the global consensus. Then every three months the United States has to come back to G-20 and the IMF and show that we’ve been good boys and girls, that we’ve met our assignments . . .  And who are these people who are going to be running our country, who are going to be running our economic system?”

For those who aren’t very familiar with the G-20 and how it came to be, the G-20 grew out of the original G-7, which included only the U.S., the U.K., Canada, Germany, France, Italy, and Japan. Russia joined in 1997. The intent in the beginning was to allow the prinicipals in the original G-7 to set individual financial policies. According to Morris:

“The U.S. and Japan and Germany and France and Britain needed to get together and coordinate their economic policies . . . but to expand it now to all these other countries is absurd.

“Obviously you needed to include Indian and China, but beyond that? Argentina? Defaulted on its debt to the IMF. Brazil? That’s run by a Marxist. Mexico? That has a huge drug problem infesting the country. South Africa, one of the most corrupt regimes in the world. Saudi Arabia, the single most repressive regime in the world. Indonesia, incredibly unstable. South Korea, a functioning democracy for about 12 years.

“Those are the countries that are going to be sitting in judgment on the United States. And the IMF will orchestrate all of it. Barack Obama gave away the store at that G-20 summit and it’s going to be very hard to get it back.”

Folks, this is yet another step by the IMF and a good number of the nations involved with the G-20 summit to put into motion the steps to get a one-world government going. Of course, leave it to the apologist-in-chief to sign off on any agreements signed at the G-20 meeting in Pittsburgh.

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