Summary
The collusion of political, technological, and pharmaceutical forces has led to a significant loss of global wealth and societal division, prompting a crisis that challenges individuals to choose between resistance and escape.
Property Rights and Taxation
Property taxes function as a form of “rent paid to the government”, undermining true ownership and threatening the American dream of homeownership.
The constitutionality of taxing unrealized capital gains through property taxes is questionable, potentially forcing homeowners to lose their homes due to unpayable tax debt.
A “perfect storm” of housing bubbles, inflation, and inflated property valuations tempts governments to raise property taxes, despite decreased public school usage due to COVID-era scandals.
Economic Manipulation and Wealth Transfer
Between 2020 and 2025, the world (excluding Far East and China) experienced a 25-40% wealth reduction, representing a massive transfer of savings from the middle class to well-connected industries and the rich.
Intentional policy-driven monetary debasement and inflation serve as tools of extortion, devaluing savings and creating artificial wealth effects to justify higher taxation.
Political and Social Control
COVID lockdowns and subsequent censorship of alternative media sources were forms of “gaslighting”, preventing people from accessing truth while isolating them and disrupting communities.
The plot to pillage global wealth relied on three pillars: political consolidation, digital reset, and pharmaceutical dominance, with the latter being the most powerful.
Educational Funding and Reform
School choice and the rise of private schools challenge the traditional link between property taxes and public education funding, especially in states like Florida.
Government Overreach
The Biden administration’s proposed wealth tax on unrealized capital gains aligns with the World Economic Forum’s controversial statement, “you will own nothing and be happy”.
Historical Context
Property taxes represent a “communist experiment” that theoretically leads to the abolition of property rights, echoing Karl Marx’s vision in the Communist Manifesto.