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“Globalism Etiology and Symptomology” argues that democracy and the need for political parties to win elections drives democratic states toward expanding benefits, increasing government power, and ultimately promoting globalist policies. It suggests that the legal system institutionalizes these practices, and that individuals who rely on the state to address perceived societal problems accelerate the move toward a system of global governance. Self-sufficient citizens that work and pay their own costs require little from the state, however, those who want social benefits and who demand for regulations and social justice to fix problems, fuel the growth of state authority and therefore, the trend towards the globalist one world state.
By Robert Burk“Globalism Etiology and Symptomology” argues that democracy and the need for political parties to win elections drives democratic states toward expanding benefits, increasing government power, and ultimately promoting globalist policies. It suggests that the legal system institutionalizes these practices, and that individuals who rely on the state to address perceived societal problems accelerate the move toward a system of global governance. Self-sufficient citizens that work and pay their own costs require little from the state, however, those who want social benefits and who demand for regulations and social justice to fix problems, fuel the growth of state authority and therefore, the trend towards the globalist one world state.