The Great deception, part 3.
Part 3 : What is the Military Industrial Complex?
Welcome to part three of my series, The greatest con trick ever, in which I look at the notion that the recent UK and US elections were anything other than a sham!
In part One I exposed the myth that Keir Starmer's Red Tory (labour) government and Donald Trump offered the respective electorates of the UK and US an alternative to the mainstream.
In part two I identified the 1% as a global cabal controlling 70% of everything on Earth and asked the question; ‘how did they become so powerful’? Did they achieve their position because they acted in a manner beneficial to the rest of humanity? Or is there a darker, dystopian explanation behind the success of the 1%?
In Part three, what is the Militarised Industrial Complex I look back at how major corporations went from being an integral part of a State’s defence industry to turning the tables 360 degrees and arriving at the position we are in today, where the State is part of the MICs entertainment division.
In part four, Electoral fraud and fraudulent elections I will expose the tactics employed by the 1% to achieve and maintain their position of dominance and show how they have installed regimes in both the UK and US that are nothing more than puppets. Stooges of the global elite. Employees of the Militarised Industrial Complex
In Part five of the series I will look at their end goal as I analyse the actions and words of key players in the 1% including The Bilderberg group, Washington based ‘religious’ organisation The Fellowship, also known as The Family and various heads of states and monarchies including the UKs own Prince Phillip who, before he died, when speaking at a dinner hosted by the Bilderberg group stated openly that he ‘wanted to be reincarnated as a virus so that he could help deal with the problem of overpopulation’ !
Let's start our examination of the tricks and tactics, or more accurately, the smoke and mirrors, employed by the 1% over the decades to establish themselves as World rulers and then to maintain their vice-like grasp on everything there is by deploying the MIlitarised Industrial Complex.
To do that we need to pinpoint certain key events of the past few decades that altered the balance of power across the planet and crucially, that lessened the agency of governments, elected or otherwise, to decide and implement both foreign and domestic policies.
World War 1 was significant in the development of the MIC for three key reasons;
Technological innovation: World War I was the first modern mechanised industrial war, with a scale of technological innovation that was unprecedented. Innovations included advancements in weaponry, manufacturing, chemistry, and communications.
Industrial mobilisation: The industrial mobilisation of World War I created opportunities for profit and showed what could be done in arms production.
Government-sponsored research: The government sponsored large-scale research and development.
Indeed attempts were made to conceptualise the MIC from as early as 1940, due to the even greater reliance of nation states upon major industrial companies to drive their war efforts during WW2
It was during the Second World War that the MIC made significant breakthroughs into embedding themselves within the US Government. Significantly World War II contributed to the growth of the military-industrial complex (MIC) in the United States by:
Shifting production
The government established the War Production Board to coordinate civilian industries to produce war supplies. This led to a massive increase in arms production, from around 1% of the annual GDP to 40%.
Expanding defence divisions
Companies like Boeing and General Motors expanded their defence divisions.
Benefiting American industry
The war provided many opportunities for American industry, including contracts for ambulances and Liberty Engines.
Dismantling regulations
The government dismantled many regulations, including antitrust laws and increased union rights, to secure war production.
This deregulation had a huge impact on the banking and financial systems in the US, allowing Chase Bank and JP MOrgan &Co to establish a virtual monopoly on the banking sector. Interestingly, the same two banks funded the Nazi war machine by allowing Nazi sympathisers to purchase Marks (known as Rückwanderer) with dollars to fund the war effort. The banks also turned over their client lists to the Nazis who in turn used it to recruit spies in the US.
No better way to get rich than by guaranteeing a long, drawn out global conflict!
Although the US did not officially join the war as a combateur until 1941, their emergence from the ashes of the great depression as an industrialised giant was based almost entirely on their involvement in the production of arms and heavy industries.
Indeed World War II had many positive economic effects on the United States, including:
Employment
The war created millions of new jobs, and the unemployment rate dropped from around 25% to around 10%. Women were hired to take over jobs that had previously been considered men's work.
Wages
Wages increased, and the average earnings of the bottom 20% of workers grew by around 68%.
Industrial output
The Gross National Product (GNP) more than doubled, rising from $99.7 billion in 1940 to nearly $212 billion in 1945. Industrial productivity increased by 96%.
Corporate profits
Corporate profits after taxes doubled.
Government spending
The American government spent around $250 million per day, which helped bring about a business recovery.
Economic power
By the end of the war, the US had one of the most powerful economies in the world.
What was that? Corporate taxes after profits doubled! That didn't go unnoticed, war means profits.
World War II also led to scientific and technological advances, including the creation of new commercial products and advances in medicine.
In other words, big pharma joined the MIC and we learnt how to kill each other with greater, more ruthless efficiency than ever before.
The companies that benefited most from WW2?
General Motors: The leading contractor, receiving nearly 8% of awards by value. GM and Ford converted their German plants to military production.
Boeing: Made $31.8 billion in arms sales and $68.7 billion in total sales.
Lockheed Martin: Made $36.3 billion in arms sales and $46.5 billion in total sales.
BAE Systems: Made $29.2 billion in arms sales and $30.7 billion in total sales.
General Dynamics: Made $23.8 billion in arms sales and $32.7 billion in total sales.
Raytheon: Made $22.5 billion in arms sales and $24.9 billion in total sales.
Northrop Grumman: Made $21.4 billion in arms sales and $26.4 billion in total sales.
EADS: Made $16.4 billion in arms sales and $68.3 billion in total sales.
Finmeccanica: Made $14.6 billion in arms sales and $24.1 billion in total sales.
L-3 Communications: Made $12.5 billion in arms sales and $15.2 billion in total sales.
United Technologies: Made $11.6 billion in arms sales and $58.2 billion in total sales.
As has been shown Chase Bank and JP Morgan & Co.
Not all of these companies exist in the same format but I have been able to trace the money and guess which companies are the major, institutional shareholders in 90% of these companies.
You guessed it;
Vanguard Group Inc
BlackRock, Inc.
Newport Trust Co
State Street Corp
Capital Research Global Investors
WW2 was the mechanism used by the wealthiest men in the word to establish the Military Industrial Complex. Was WW2 inevitable?
I say yes, because of greed.
We now know what the Military Industrial Complex (MIC) is and crucially, who owns it.
We now know who runs the world.
The same men who orchestrated, funded and prolonged WW2. No wonder President Eisenhower warned us about them.
In part 4 of this series, I will show how the recent elections in the UK and USA were subject to electoral fraud and were, in fact, fraudulent elections.