I’ve been noticing article after article hidden in the background every few days about the Olympics and business, and from headlines, it appeared to be not so good, as apparently commercial traffic is WORSE than normal. Further, I’ve also read informally that many venues that were sold out are filled with empty seats despite some events being sold out. Now, “Dr. Doom” (more like Dr. Concerned and Wise) had to tweet about the state of the Olympics, and Mr. Roubini had this to say on the Twitter (thanks to Business Insider for the tip):
- UK policymakers scared so much folks before the Olympic that London is a deserted city: non-olympic tourists are away; londoners are gone!
- The Olympics are an economic failure as London is totally empty:hotels, restaurants, streets. They scared all off with crowd excess warnings
- By scaring every1 to stay out of London with warnings about too many people coming here it turns that London is totally empty, a zombie city
- RT
@Notgiamatti The Yogi Berra effect! Nobody goes there, it’s too crowded.- The West End – usually packed on any Saturday night – was an empty waste land last nite: barely a soul to be found in theaters, bars, etc
- They scared away all non-olympic tourists that pack london all summer;they pushed most londoners to escape;they told 2million to work @ home
- RT
@_garrilla that’s the ‘olympic economy’ – all dispacement & deadweight (oh, and hot air)
Further, congestion is non existent in London’s shopping districts. Are people scared off by false flag cabal attacks? Is it just a bad economy and a desire to avoid the crowds? Is everyone just broke? People losing interest?
Speculations abound, but this Olympics is a bit odd if that’s fair to say. I bet there are people that are scared off by the false flag Olympic attack rumors, as the sold out venues where rows of seats were left empty were corporate seats, and I bet some executives and managers would rather be sitting in loafers in their vacation home than worry about some tinfoil hat incident coming true before their eyes (possibly), but who knows.
Either way, the Olympics is just bizarre regardless of how you look at it – if you look at it in terms of the state of the economy, it could very well indicate that people aren’t spending money anymore. If you look at it in terms of society, it shows that people want to be free and have their own space – look, if I was a Londoner and was expecting millions of new guests, I would want to breathe, so would the visitors, so I guess now more than ever, especially in an age of control and obedience and debt slavery, we want freedom, and we’re showing it in every little way possible.
As for the events and the sports, I wish for the best, of course – the athletes and their families have spent a lot of time and work and have endured much to get to where they are, and it really is a great achievement that I hope they carry with them for a lifetime. Anyway, back on topic – this really is a strange Olympics if you read the news behind the obvious, and perhaps we’ll find out the why eventually.