This morning’s key headlines from GenerationalDynamics.com

Wave of terrorist violence in Iraq kills hundreds


Car bombings in Iraq

A dozen car bombings across Iraq on Monday killed at least 95 people,and this followed the killing of 200 people last week from bombings.Terrorist violence has been on the increase in Iraq since December2011, when the last American forces pulled out of Iraq. The violenceappears to be sectarian, with mostly Sunni mosques targeted on Friday,and mostly Shia mosques targeted on Monday. But it’s impossible to becertain that the violence comes from Sunnis and Shias targeting eachother, since Sunni terrorists freely attack both Shia and Sunnimosques — killing anyone who they claim don’t follow the teachings ofradical hardline Islamists. Some pundits are claiming that Iraq isreturning to the civil war that preceded President Bush’s “surge,” butin fact there never was a civil war. (See “Iraqi Sunnis are turning against al-Qaeda in Iraq” from April, 2007)

It’s worth taking a moment and comparing three different countriesin the region, all in a generational Awakening, and being pulled intowhat is essentially a sectarian proxy war:

By contrast, countries and regions that are in generational Crisiseras, such as Pakistan or Israel/Palestine, fight their conflictsinternally, without the need for outside proxies.

We’re increasingly seeing these Awakening era countries being thesites for sectarian Sunni vs Shia proxy wars. These wars have beenworsening throughout the region, and at some point will spiral intofull scale war. AFP and AP

EU steps up investigation of oil price-fixing scandal

I briefly mentioned a couple of days ago that there’s an investigationinto oil price-fixing, similar to the Libor price fixinginvestigation. And why not? There’s apparently a whole generation ofpeople in all industries with no visible ethical or moral boundaries.The European Commission stepped up its investigation on Monday byrequesting information from major oil industry trading houses. Lastweek, the European Commission raided the offices of Shell, BP andNorway’s Statoil. Global Research and Independent (London)

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