Experts agree that there is a significant chance that the next week may change little or nothing, and that we soon may be facing a "same shit, different day" scenario.
observable dramatic changes taking place over a short period of time can seldom be anticipated with any great accuracy. they have a capacity to occur, but not a great likelihood of doing so.
In the next few hours I'll be in the path of the latest solar eclipse (98% where I live) which for many people fretells grand things, major changes in reality, and all that tripe. But of course those people forget that there have been thousands of such eclipses while mankind were on the planet, and there'll be thousands more. "Birds stop singing and everything goes dark!" they exclaim, forgetting that the same happens every night for several hours while most people sleep.
its fun to see something that doesn't happen very often. some people can't seem to let themselves enjoy anything without it having to be made into some kind of big deal excitement.
It was a moral imperative to acknowledge this most fucking likely scenario, adding only that something lame or stupid, it's 15 minutes come at last, will get a federal holiday commemoration.
lots of weeks make lots of contributions to lots of things changing that do so so slowly as to be nearly invisible. but you don't see really major changes taking place, from inception to fruition, in that short a period of time. when you see something finally change in a major way, no matter how recently you first heard about it, invariably you're seeing the end point, or not even that, merely a milestone in a process, that will have been going on for a very long time. much longer then a week, often much longer then a year or a decade and sometimes even a century or more. things do change. things are changing all the time. but its only corporate media keeping people ignorant, that makes it seem sometimes, if you hadn't previously been paying attention, like they happen all at once.