Bitcoin and Benjamin Franklin
The New Nemesis
There is no doubt that the last cycles of elections worldwide, particularly in the U.S., have revealed several “elephants in the room” filled with hypocritic actions, psychological experiments subjecting the proletariat to new forms of manipulation, and through control under the guise of misinformation. The post-Cold War world moved from a good versus evil exposé to a world void of the enemies required to feed the West’s military-industrial-political establishment. In such a void, the illuminati in power sought a new nemesis to ensure the continuance of their power base, a foe that was easier to manipulate. The new opponent became the populus themselves.
What one may overlook is that this passage to dominate the proletariat began long before the Cold War ended. It grew from the seeds of the many self-serving efforts to improve the educational systems of the West, from the guises to protect “non-sophisticated” investors from making their own financial decisions that may tread on Wall-Street, and from the pretext to save democracy, the dollar and the market system.
The False Fiat Victory
Today, the military-industrial-political establishment claims an implicit near total victory over the 99% built on a series of skirmishes that stretch back to the 1980s, where the battles began in earnest. They were the era of deregulation, Wall-Street wolves, and the rise of financial engineering that one might alternatively call the Perestroika of money. I view the 1980s as the turning point for Western civilization. The period looked so good coming off the stagflation, economic and political decline, and war-torn and hostage-filled 1970s. However, the socio-monetary battles that ensued aimed to squash Plebians spanning from dominating their means of education, wealth creation, transport, eating and working habits and thoughts, among other areas.
If you don’t accept that the 1980s imposed such vast societal changes on us, consider that it held the birth of PEOPLExpress, the first low-cost airline where, we, the public was told that this was the future for aviation and travel with no more reserved seats or meals. The decade saw the rise of finance as the number one area of study selected by the college-age generation. Graduates were taught to forget “real” work as the future revolved only around moving money from A to B. Our food chains jumped over the cliff and continue the decline well into the 90s and beyond with innovations such as “Olestra”, the fat substitute that not only claimed to reduce your calorie intake, but offer you a side of abdominal cramping and loose stools as was printed on the warning label of all products containing it. And, for the tree-huggers reading this, the decade saw the disappearance of glass bottles replaced by the Tetra Pak plastic generation.
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