We see the power of our enemy to maintain his sway over the whole world being broken by God..He(Allah) brings to a naught their trade between each other..

Greetings,

   Can you see allah breaking the power of America and the rest of the anglo world? It is becoming quite obvious that the old world order under anglo governance and dictated under white supremacy is now dying a natural death. The system is collapse and their is nothing that they can do to offset the looming fallout.

     Elijah Muhammad, The Last & Greatest Messenger of God, said this concerning this time and what is now taking place with the so-called world powers and world economy…”He(Allah) breaks their power to rule…” We ask how? He then tells us that…”He(Allah) brings to a naught their trade between each other. That’s going on now.”–pg.17(ttot)

   Aren’t we living in that time? Aren’t we witnesses to this very thing? Allah is removing their power and their rule,especially America ..as it was said that…”Now the time of God has arrived – the time that Allah (God) must separate the Black slave and his white master, and bring freedom to the Black slave.

   So we see the power of our enemy being broken by God in destroying the power of the white man: power to maintain his sway over the whole world.

   Independence is fine, if we keep and maintain independence! But there is a dark cloud of trouble now swinging over the country of America. The dark cloud makes her once freedom of thought and action become instead, a freedom of death, hell and destruction!

   It is awful to think over the things of evil and of trouble that are coming upon the glorified North America.”–pg.75(tfoa)

Trade Deficit Widens as Exports to Europe Fall

Source: http://online.wsj.com

By JOSH MITCHELL

U.S. exports fell in July after rising earlier in the summer, adding to concerns that troubles in Europe and elsewhere are slowing the U.S. economy.

The value of American goods and services sold overseas dropped by $1.9 billion from June to a seasonally adjusted $183.3 billion, the Commerce Department said Tuesday. Exports to the European Union, where recession has spread amid the continent’s sovereign-debt crisis, fell significantly.

The drop in exports caused the U.S. trade deficit to expand for the first time since March, to $42 billion from $41.9 billion in June. The gap would have been wider had it not been for a similar fall in imports due largely to lower oil prices in July.

The report added to worries that U.S. factories could be in for more pain as economies around the world weaken. The manufacturing sector, a pillar for much of the U.S. recovery, contracted for the third consecutive month in August, according to a key purchasing managers’ index last week.

Some economists downgraded their expectations for economic growth after Tuesday’s report, which indicated weak demand both in the U.S. and abroad. The forecasting firm Macroeconomic Advisers said it expected the U.S. economy to grow at an annualized pace of 1.4% in the July to September period, down a tenth of a percentage point from an earlier estimate. That would be slower than the 1.7% growth rate in the second quarter.

“I find it quite concerning,” Paul Dales, senior U.S. economist at Capital Economics, said of the drop in exports to Europe. “We know that activity in the euro zone has been slowing for some time now, but so far there hasn’t been a very big hit. But it seems to me that this could be sort of the tip of an iceberg.”

He said his analysis of the data showed that, when seasonally adjusted, exports to the euro zone fell 6.6% in July from the prior month. He said the situation in Europe likely will get worse, hurting exports in two ways: Europeans will cut spending across the board, and American goods could be priced less competitively as the euro weakens against the dollar. Still, many economists expect the blow to the U.S. from further troubles in Europe to be limited, barring a broader financial crisis. That is because the continent represents only a slice of the market for U.S. exporters.

But Europe isn’t the only concern. A slowdown in Asia is also hurting demand for American-made goods. Meantime, imports from China into the U.S. grew last month. That caused the U.S. trade gap with China to expand 7.2% to a record $29.4 billion, though those figures aren’t adjusted for seasonal factors.

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