Anonymous ID: 360926 Nov. 18, 2024, 8:34 a.m. No.22009933   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>22009889

  • Federal Reserve (1913): The Federal Reserve System was established in 1913, centralizing U.S. banking under a private, independent entity. This was part of broader efforts to control the money supply, stabilize the economy, and influence monetary policy. Critics argue it shifted financial power from Congress to private interests.

  • Income Tax (1913): The 16th Amendment, passed in 1913, legalized federal income taxation. This was a significant shift in U.S. fiscal policy, allowing the federal government to directly tax individual and corporate income, increasing its power and revenue base.

  • Bolsheviks (1917): The Bolshevik Revolution, led by figures like Lenin and Trotsky, overthrew the Russian Provisional Government in 1917. They established a Marxist state, ushering in the USSR, which sought to abolish capitalism and private property in favor of a centrally-planned economy.

  • Collapse of Marxist USSR (1991): The Soviet Union, built on Marxist principles, faced internal economic struggles, inefficiencies, and political repression, leading to its collapse in 1991. The dissolution of the USSR resulted in the emergence of independent states, with Russia being the primary successor.

  • Mass Immigration to the U.S. (Post-WWII, especially 1965 onward): After WWII, U.S. immigration laws were loosened, allowing large-scale immigration from non-European countries. The Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965 ended race-based quotas, leading to increased immigration from Asia, Africa, and Latin America, changing the demographic makeup of the country.

  • Operation Paperclip (Post-WWII): After WWII, the U.S. recruited former Nazi scientists, engineers, and technicians through Operation Paperclip. These individuals played key roles in the U.S. space program, military technology, and intelligence, despite their Nazi affiliations, raising questions about ethics and the long-term impact of such decisions.

  • Nepotism: Nepotism refers to favoritism shown to family members or close associates in professional settings. Throughout history, various dynasties, political families, and corporations have perpetuated power through nepotistic practices, consolidating influence within select groups and creating systems of privilege.

  • Bible Quote – "No man can serve two masters" (Matthew 6:24): This biblical verse is often interpreted to mean that one cannot serve both God and material wealth or conflicting powers. In a political context, some view it as a warning about divided loyalties, such as between the values of Judeo-Christian traditions and ideologies that promote secular or radical goals (e.g., Bolshevik communism, Freemasonry). The idea that a person or nation can be subject to two conflicting systems of control—whether religious or ideological—could lead to a form of spiritual or political enslavement.

  • Judeo-Christianity vs. Bolshevik-Freemasonry: Some critics of globalism, Marxism, or certain secretive societies argue that these movements, especially Freemasonry and Bolshevism, conflict with traditional Judeo-Christian values. They view the former as destructive to moral and societal structures, potentially reducing citizens to subservience under a centralized, authoritarian state, drawing parallels to a "slave colony" mentality. This critique is rooted in the belief that ideologies outside of Judeo-Christian teachings seek to control and manipulate societies for power, often undermining individual freedoms and values.