The business of war that has been operating on this planet needs to come to an end. With the help of the media, The People have been kept in the dark. Stories on the surface are just there to keep The People’s attention on the drama, while backroom arms deals to both sides of wars are made. The U.S. is a warmongering empire that needs to be fed a constant flow of taxpayer money 24/7, and politicians are incentivized and rewarded for passing omnibus bills that send USAID into the laundering machine of corruption and greed. What is the answer?
- Knowledge: To empower ourselves with the knowing of what they are doing and calling them out on it and pushing back.
- Defund Warmongering Corporations: by moving investments and banking to non-BlackRock and Vanguard companies.
- Peace: Peace puts them out of business. Make Peace the Goal and everything else falls in line.
Two important documentaries that I’m going to put right up front. All Wars are Bankers Wars and Everything is a Rich Man’s Trick.
The bottom line. From the documentary:

The Rothschilds and their banking cartel have funded both sides of virtually every war since 1815.
Why do globalists want so much war? What do they get out of it? Global banking corporations such as BlackRock, State Street, Vanguard, are invested in all stages of war, including the banking making the loans for weapons, and then they win the rebuilding contracts afterwards.

NATO helps the US War Empire stay in business. The CIA covertly helps flan the flames of discord between opposing entities so that they can justify calling on more and more resources for war, which ends up being laundered every which way possible.
Julian Assange explains why endless wars have become the new normal.
What has really been going on behind the scenes? What kinds of deals have been made behind our backs?
We certainly need transparency, and truth and disclosure. War is indeed a business for the U.S. which is in the business of making weapons cheaply on the backs of prison slave labor to do backroom deals with countries and terrorist groups on both sides of wars, in order to keep wars going endlessly. The goal is perpetual war because then the U.S. government can justify washing tax money out of the hands of taxpayers and into the hands of politicians, warmongering mega-corporations and globalist bankers.

This description from a friEnd: “The U.S. has 4.33% of the world’s population. Under 5%. But it houses over 20% of the global prison population. Why? Because government owned federal prison contractors like UNICOR are used by the defense industry to manufacture the weapons of war. You are locked up with huge disparity to build Kevlar vests and patriot missile systems at 8 cents an hour. Weapons manufacturers like Raytheon and Halliburton are awarded lucrative billion dollar contracts through the U.S government which is then hired by those same weapons manufacturers to use its prison force to build them at nearly no cost. This ensures a steady supply of cheap weapons and also lines the pockets of your heavily invested political bodies with your tax dollars. Why do you think the U.S. media depicts all prisoners as violent, stupid, and dangerous? Welcome to reality.”
“Why are so many Americans are locked up in prison on minor offenses compared to other countries? This is what Grok AI answered:
- To Keep the Slave Labor Workforce Replenished: The U.S. prison system essentially allows for ‘legalized’ slave labor. The 13th Amendment, which abolished slavery, has a loophole permitting slavery as a punishment for crime. This results in prisoners working for wages as low as 14 cents an hour, providing corporations with cheap labor. This practice not only benefits the prison system itself but also large companies that contract prison labor, reducing the incentive to reduce incarceration rates since it’s economically beneficial to keep prisons full.
- Incentives for Judges, DAs, and Lawyers: There are claims that some judicial officials are incentivized to increase incarceration rates. While direct financial incentives aren’t openly admitted, the system benefits from high incarceration through job security for those in the criminal justice system, including judges, prosecutors, and public defenders. The more cases processed, the more justification there is for their positions and funding. Moreover, the ‘tough on crime’ stance can be politically advantageous, leading to policies that favor incarceration over rehabilitation or alternative sentencing.
- Corporate Influence on Incarceration: Major investment companies like BlackRock and Vanguard indeed have significant stakes in private prison companies. For instance, BlackRock and Vanguard are among the largest shareholders in CoreCivic and GEO Group, the two largest private prison companies in the U.S. This financial interest can influence policy to favor incarceration over alternatives. Beyond prisons, these firms have extensive investments across various sectors, potentially affecting legislative outcomes to favor an incarceration-heavy approach, which in turn secures their investments.
- Additional Data: Racial Disparities: Black Americans are incarcerated at nearly 5 times the rate of white Americans, and in some states, this disparity is even greater. This isn’t just about crime rates but systemic issues within the justice system, including racial profiling, harsher sentencing for minorities, and socio-economic factors leading to higher criminalization.
- Mass Incarceration: The U.S. has the highest incarceration rate in the world, with more than 2 million people behind bars at any given time, representing about 25% of the global prison population despite having only 5% of the world’s population.
- Economic Factors: The private prison industry has lobbied for policies that increase incarceration rates, like mandatory minimum sentences and three-strikes laws, which directly increase the number of inmates and thus, profit for these companies.
- Policy Impact: Policies like the ‘War on Drugs’ have disproportionately affected minority communities, contributing to high incarceration rates for drug offenses, which often carry severe sentences despite being non-violent crimes. The systemic issues driving high incarceration rates in the U.S. are complex, involving economic benefits for some, political incentives, and a legacy of racial and economic inequality. Understanding these factors is crucial to addressing the disproportionate incarceration phenomenon.”

Alabama’s prison labor program amounts to “modern day slavery,” lawsuit claims – CBS News The suit says those jobs include unpaid prison jobs in which inmates perform tasks that help keep the facilities running. https://www.cbsnews.com/news/alabama-prison-labor-program-modern-day-slavery-lawsuit






















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