All analysis on this blog begins with the most basic question in political economy: "Who owns it?"
The reason for this simple: Whoever owns an organization, whether it be a privately owned corporation or a publicly owned government agency, decides on the objectives and rules for that organization. If one is interested in working for such an organization, then one follows the rules set down by ownership.
Based on a 1976 report commissioned by the United States House of Representatives Committee on Banking, we know that the Federal Reserve System is privately owned by a small group of financiers, and based on a companion study, we know who the owners are and the structure of their ownership.
We also know, based on a 2010 study by three complex system analysts at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology, how control over the Federal Reserve System, which is the printing press for the principal world reserve currency, has been leveraged to purchase a network of global for-profit corporations.
Other recent studies show that this corporate pyramid is controlled by two bank holding companies (Vanguard and BlackRock) owned by the same financiers; for example, Thomas Piketty's New York Times best seller, Capital in the Twenty-First Century and a joint study by Princeton and Northwestern universities.
Despite this centralized control, most folks still believe that the US, UK, and EU are pluralist societies in which decisions are made by various groups influencing and lobbying government officials who are legitimately elected by a democratic process. Yet, the ramifications of ownership are such that both political parties, all three branches of government, the electronic voting and counting machines, the mass and social media, the legal system, the medical cartel, the educational system, etc. are controlled by the same small group of financiers.
Thus, to believe in the mythology of the US, UK, and EU being democratic republics is to place oneself inside the matrix, just like the metaphorical film of the same name.
So, as you read through our commentary on this blog, keep in mind that the basis for the analysis is grounded in publicly available data that has gone unchallenged for years, and serves as a demonstration of how to sort through the barrage of daily articles and actions generated by both corporate and independent media.
Further examples of this approach can be found in the more than 100 articles written prior to the advent of these daily updates, as well as our published book on these subjects, 7 Steps to Global Economic and Spiritual Transformation, Volume I, Access to Tools, and the follow-up 7 Steps to Global Economic and Spiritual Transformation, Volume II, Application of Tools, which was published online in 2019 and is being updated for a print version, including a prologue, which sets the context for the update.

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