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6/12/2025, 11:35:32 AM
>>507081078
https://www.youtube.com/shorts/oKtZq-eH9zQ
The “rule of law” is not a universal principle — it’s a manufactured concept. It exists because armed enforcers (police) are conditioned to uphold a system of rules written by a financial elite. While people are told these laws reflect democratic will, the reality is that democracy itself has become a mechanism for selling government power to the highest bidder.
Those who control the money supply — often creating currency out of nothing (central banks) — also shape the legal system. With that power, they write and enforce laws in ways that benefit themselves, while breaking those same laws without consequence. Meanwhile, the same legal structure is used to control and punish the general population.
Corruption isn’t a flaw in this system — it’s a feature. It enables a network of aligned interests to deceive and extract from the public while shielding themselves through institutional protections. The so-called rule of law becomes a tool of selective enforcement: whistleblowers are silenced under vague notions of national security; constitutional rights are ignored when inconvenient; and yet, the average citizen faces full legal force for something as minor as missing a small fine.
From mass surveillance violating the 4th Amendment in the U.S. to state-sanctioned violence abroad, it’s clear the law is applied differently depending on one’s position in the hierarchy. What’s presented as justice is often just control — a system designed to maintain power, not ensure fairness.
https://www.youtube.com/shorts/oKtZq-eH9zQ
The “rule of law” is not a universal principle — it’s a manufactured concept. It exists because armed enforcers (police) are conditioned to uphold a system of rules written by a financial elite. While people are told these laws reflect democratic will, the reality is that democracy itself has become a mechanism for selling government power to the highest bidder.
Those who control the money supply — often creating currency out of nothing (central banks) — also shape the legal system. With that power, they write and enforce laws in ways that benefit themselves, while breaking those same laws without consequence. Meanwhile, the same legal structure is used to control and punish the general population.
Corruption isn’t a flaw in this system — it’s a feature. It enables a network of aligned interests to deceive and extract from the public while shielding themselves through institutional protections. The so-called rule of law becomes a tool of selective enforcement: whistleblowers are silenced under vague notions of national security; constitutional rights are ignored when inconvenient; and yet, the average citizen faces full legal force for something as minor as missing a small fine.
From mass surveillance violating the 4th Amendment in the U.S. to state-sanctioned violence abroad, it’s clear the law is applied differently depending on one’s position in the hierarchy. What’s presented as justice is often just control — a system designed to maintain power, not ensure fairness.
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