Tag: big banks
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The British Royal Family: Hidden wealth and power
They say the monarchy no longer rules. That it is symbolic. Ceremonial. Constitutional. But that is a fairy tale crafted for schoolbooks and television. The real monarchy is not passive. It is not powerless. It is a system of financial privilege, legal immunity, informal control, and quiet influence. The British royal family stands above the…
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Stupid American division: Republicans vs Democracts
Vote for our stupid monkey-like animalistic ideology and the world suddenly has meaning (except for God, of course). You will live in abundance, society makes sense, there is ultimate right or wrong derived from these ideologies. So let’s take a look at how stupid American political division destroys the country and how the super-rich use…
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Trump vs the banks? Or just another power grab?
They say Donald Trump broke from the system. That he disrupted the global financial order, clashed with central banks, and terrified the architects of Western capitalism. But the truth may be far less revolutionary and far more calculated: what if he never opposed the system—only wanted to own it? What appears as rebellion might be…
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Media distractions that work on Brits and what really matters
Britain once ruled seas and minds. Today, it rules distractions. Turn on any screen, and you enter a circus of outrage. Not over stolen wealth. Not over corporate manipulation. But over the same tired decoys. While ordinary citizens argue about junkies and immigrants, the real power brokers—super-rich families, interconnected banks, corporations, and perhaps even secret…
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On American exceptionalism and how people are attracted to it
No country can claim that it is exceptional, as the self-fulfilling prophecy never materializes. American exceptionalism isn’t different at all. This article aims at the evolutionary roots behind the pillars the U.S. builds its reputation on. It also examines the historic desire to immigrate to the US. There may be, of course, rational reasons, why…
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The super-rich’s biggest asset: Confusing us with morality
People love to judge (morality). They follow courtroom drama, they react to shocking headlines. They chase guilt and demand punishment. A drunk driver hits a child — outrage follows. A shoplifter takes groceries — condemnation comes fast. A man stabs his neighbor — the story goes viral. Yet while these incidents flood our emotions, the…
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Journalists: The high priests of pretending
We begin pretending earlier than we realize. At first, the lies feel harmless. Adults tell children stories about Santa Claus. They invent magical worlds where good always wins, and evil is punished. Also, they promise that everything will turn out fine, even when it will not. They do it to protect innocence—or so they say.…
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The impact of colonial history on modern geopolitics
Colonialism has officially ended. Yet its structures remain deeply embedded in the global system. In fact, the modern world order still runs on the mechanisms built by European empires. Colonial history does not sit in museums; instead, it lives in borders, currencies, alliances, and crises. It continues to shape how nations trade, borrow, vote, fight,…
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The fight to possess anything – it’s turned against us
Throughout history, people have struggled to possess something of their own. Not out of greed, but because without ownership, there was no dignity, no safety, no independence. To own even a patch of land, a cow, or a tool was to escape the total control of kings, lords, or masters. However, what began as a…