The term "social justice" has been weaponized. It is now a term to lipstick the pig of the deeper systems of control that keep the status quo in place while masquerading as challenging it. Empire Mind Control isn't some abstract or theoretical critique but rather one that, from the halls of Washington D.C., from the boardrooms of the world's largest corporations to the newsroom of Comcast's NBC, Walt Disney's ABC, ViacomCBS, and AT&T's CNN, social justice is used as a prop. It is an illusion contrived to make one believe the forces at the top are engaged in a way to uplift the oppressed when it is very often those forces that profit the most from these selfsame systems of oppression. This story goes behind the scenes of this "progress"-the stories of manipulation, co-optation, and control. Join us, fight the powers-that-be, which are us. Fight our sham battle to overcome our Globalist Empire, truth to power is profitable to us.
1. Political Coverage: The Manufactured Narrative of Democracy
The concept of a 'free press' is a farce. We are led to believe in the existence of a democracy, with the press serving as the people's watchdog, uncovering corruption and informing us about the misdeeds of those in power. However, the reality is quite different. The four media behemoths, NBC Universal, ABC, CBS, and CNN, are entwined with political and corporate interests. For instance, NBCUniversal, a subsidiary of Comcast, is deeply embedded in the political machinery due to its parent company's financial contributions to both parties.This web of influence blurs the line between corporate media and the government, shaping the narrative to suit the powerful rather than the public.
Look at the 2020 US election. When Donald Trump was in office, news outlets like CNN and The New York Times did not spare him from constant negative coverage to define public perception of the man and his policies. With Joe Biden in office, many of those same news outlets dramatically became lenient, though some report his failures, framing him as the savior of democracy. This MSM on Valium wasn't some consequence of changing political dynamics; this was narrative control. The media didn't just report news but created it. The "Trump as a threat to democracy" and "Biden as the protector of democracy" line was sold to the people, even though the money that both politicians take in comes from the same donors to represent the same corporate elites.
Another was the 2020 Hunter Biden laptop scandal. At first, both The Washington Post and The New York Times labeled it "Russian disinformation," then verified the story when it was politically expedient. That is not the work of independent journalists searching for truth in state-controlled narrative-making masquerading as news.
2. Human Rights: The Imperialist Marketing Tool
Human rights advocacy often covers up a branding tool for imperialist agendas. The government of the United States speaks much through Secretary of State Anthony Blinken's voice on human rights abroad when it is pretty selective in concern.For instance, accusations of systematic human rights abuses have faced the Saudi Arabian regime for quite a time, from the brutal killing of Jamal Khashoggi, a journalist critical of the Saudi crown, to its oppressive treatment of women. Meanwhile, the US government under the Trump and Biden administrations has continued to send billions in military aid to Saudi Arabia as it leads the charge in its devastating war on Yemen. Far from any commitment to human rights, this is imperialism in operation: cloaking political and economic motives in humanitarian language.
Similarly, the United States has done so with scores of other countries supporting military coups in Honduras in 2009 to propping up repressive regimes in Egypt under Abdel Fattah el-Sisi, from protecting the Israeli occupation of Palestine because such relationships serve strategic interests of a military, political, and economic nature. "Human rights" is often merely a pretext for the protection of global hegemony, not to protect the oppressed.
3. Health: An Illusion of Care for Profit
The US health system, often hailed as a beacon of care, is in reality a profit-making machine. Pharmaceutical giants like Pfizer, Johnson & Johnson, and Merck have a stranglehold on illness, ensuring a steady stream of customers for life. The Affordable Care Act, touted as a milestone in healthcare reform, only served to enrich private insurance companies like UnitedHealth. The COVID-19 vaccine rollout, funded by billions of government dollars, was a windfall for Pfizer, further exposing the profit-driven nature of the system.
Billions of dollars of government money spent on the COVID-19 vaccine rollout reaped huge profits for Pfizer during the pandemic. Pfizer reaps enormous profits from its price gouging in vaccines hailed as keys to the end of the pandemic. It wasn't just Pfizer: the circle of complicity is complete when insurance companies, pharmaceutical firms, and hospital chains profit from the crisis.
Meanwhile, the poor, the elderly, or otherwise vulnerable went without health care and had to ration life-sustaining treatments. The ACA wasn't about better care but about how to keep UnitedHealth, Cigna, and other insurance behemoths prospering off people's misery. Health "reform" failed in its root causes of corporate greed but further enshrined the profit motive.
4. Environmental Sustainability: Greenwashing for Profit
Giant corporations wrap themselves in "green" PR even while they work to destroy the planet. Take ExxonMobil, an oil giant that spent decades funding denialism on the subject of human-made climate change, all while claiming that it cared about the environment. In 2019, Exxon committed to "net zero emissions" by 2050 yet continued to fund lobbyists pushing for the deregulation of fossil fuel extraction.
Under Jeff Bezos's vision, Amazon rebranded itself as a climate leader. Also, under his helm, Amazon became involved with pledged carbon neutrality while putting out massive emissions from shipping, then in 2021 declared a "climate pledge" fund to overlook its involvement with deforestation in South America due to its huge consumption of packaging material.
Notwithstanding its rhetoric on climate change, even the Biden administration has continued to greenlight oil drilling projects, including those in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge. And the greenwashing continues: corporations such as Exxon and Amazon care infinitely more about their bottom line than the future of the planet, as governments at all levels continue to subsidize such companies through tax breaks and other forms of favorable policy.
5. Social Problems: Activism as Consumerism
What once was a very legitimate struggle for justice has degenerated into no more than a consumerist enterprise. From grassroots against police brutality, Black Lives Matter managed to turn itself into a grassroots sign that corporations hasten to exploit. Corporations such as Nike and Amazon, built upon labor exploitation, have been running advertisements of support for Black Lives Matter while making zero attempts to fight the systemic injustices they further.
Take Nike's racial justice stance: it's extolled as the leader of companies leading today's fight for Black rights, while in reality, the business has long been condemned for its actions against poor workers abroad - mostly of color. It's tagged with the slogan "Just Do It"-that's a campaign of personal empowerment-while Nike's making its money off the backs of oppressed labor, those who have absolutely no choice but to "just do it" by working long hours for minimal wages. Meanwhile, the self-described champion of social justice causes Amazon to continue mistreating its warehouse workers while acting as a champion of progressive values. Social change became a movement co-opted by corporations to make money off inequality and suffering. Activism gets repackaged into consumerism, a product, wearing a T-shirt, and calling it a day. Such corporations do not challenge systemic problems; they exploit them.
6. Technological Advances: Surveillance Disguised as Progress
Instead, this technology and corporations that are considered liberators become part of what firmly consolidates and promotes the regime of control over the masses. Indeed, companies like Meta, Google, and Apple cooperate closely with state power when creating mass observation means. For instance, in 2020, Facebook and the federal government moved to ban pandemic and election-related posts, even though such actions clearly ran against free speech principles. Mark Zuckerberg of Facebook and Sundar Pichai of Google have faced Congressional demands that they explain how their companies collect information on users. Still, these tech moguls continue to profit from spying on us.
Another example is convenience surveillance, such as Amazon Ring doorbell systems. Marked as making neighborhoods safer, Ring has inked partnerships with over 1,800 police departments around the United States that can request footage without needing a warrant. This has nothing to do with freedom and everything to do with monitoring and controlling the populace to use technology to build a Big Brother-like surveillance state to spy on everyone.
7. Global Wars: Profit, Not Peace
War is a very lucrative business, and the US military-industrial complex reaps the most significant benefits from war. Companies like Lockheed Martin, Boeing, and Raytheon make billions of dollars in profit from wars worldwide. For example, the long-term existence of the US military in the Middle East is not to impose democracy but rather to secure oil resources and geopolitics domination. The wars in Iraq and Afghanistan were sold to the American public as a noble effort to bring freedom and democracy to oppressed peoples; in fact, they were created to protect US corporate interests and to line the pockets of defense contractors.
The Iraq War was based on a lie-the presence of WMDs. Dick Cheney, the Vice President under George W. Bush, had close ties with Halliburton, a company that made a killing off the war. This war did not protect democracy; it protected corporate profits.
8. Cultural Narratives: The Manufactured Reality
We are usually deceived by the stories we tell ourselves about the world being made up to keep us docile. Companies like Disney dominate Hollywood and have been a tool for shaping public opinion and rewriting history for decades. An example of this would be the popular image of World War II. Framed primarily as a war between freedom and democracy against totalitarianism, little, if ever, is said within the mainstream media about US support for fascist regimes in Latin America or any of its leading roles within the arms trade around the world.
"American exceptionalism" is the dominant cultural narrative within this virtual reality. National pride for the American nation is brandished, while historical injustices like slavery, genocide against Native Americans, and ongoing racial disparity were downplayed or sanitized. These concocted stories divert the attention of the masses away from the deeply entrenched roots of the current oppression system.
The Illusion of Progress: The Globalist Empire's Grip on Ma, Pa, and Their Kids Behind glittering slogans of "progress," "social justice," and "human rights," the globalist empire has managed to weave an intricate web from what we eat to the very narratives we live by. This is not an empire about politics or military power at the bottom. It's an interlocking complex system through which corporate interests, financial elites, and political puppets ultimately work together to control the vast majority of humanity. Ownership of media majors residing in conglomerates such as Comcast, Disney, ViacomCBS, and AT&T paints a picture of progress thus. The reality, however, stands opposed to that. The consumable good of "social justice" is sold by the very systems that benefit from inequality, control, and exploitation.
Globalism is not an empire that is elsewhere; it's in your home, in the screens your children are watching, the food you put on the table, the clothes you wear, and the beliefs you're induced to hold. It would take an inordinate number of specific examples of how the global corporate and political elite, enabled by the media, have orchestrated world events and even the actual structures of our day-to-day lives.
Illusions of Progress Are Everywhere-Just Designed to Keep You Docile, Compliant, and Spending
1. Big Tech and Surveillance Capitalism: In Your Home, In Your Pocket
However, this oligopoly of Google, Apple, Facebook, and Amazon controls not only which products you buy but also how you think, what you believe, and even what you are allowed to say. Meta, aka Facebook, knows more about you than your closest friends' habits, interests, relationships, and political leanings. It uses that information to sell you things but, in even more insidious ways, controls what information you see and thereby shapes your perception of reality.
Mark Zuckerberg, who started an experiment in his dorm room, now leads a global surveillance empire that has contributed to the decimation of privacy rights worldwide. Facebook is not just a social platform; it's a data-collecting machine designed to manipulate behavior. In 2016, Facebook was caught red-handed influencing elections not just in the US but in countries like India and Brazil, all through targeted political ads and data manipulation. It doesn't drive consumerism alone; it drives political narratives into the data mined from Facebook users. Meanwhile, police nationwide are integrating their system around these via partnerships with the doorbells through Amazon's Ring in building block-by-block panopticons in the United Statesvery much outside of any visibility from general awareness, let alone based on popular consent. But that means that Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos can consolidate unparalleled power by tapping into the most intimate details of our lives to form our shopping habits, political opinions, and even our freedoms.
2. Food Industry: Big Ag and Big Pharma's Symbiotic Control
It is an industry of peers, dominated by big businesses like Cargill, Monsanto-already sold to Bayer-and Nestlé which extract money from consumers for their manufactured food items to keep them addicted.
They do not care about your health; they do care about the bottom line. From the exploitation of California's water to pushing infant formula onto poor countries, full well knowing it would be unsafe or improper for the babies, Nestlé has been embroiled in a string of scandals, including enslaved people making chocolate.Meanwhile, Monsanto's genetically modified desire for mass production and chemical-heavy agriculture not only changed the food that we eat but reshaped whole ecosystems. After buying Monsanto, Bayer continued to peddle pesticides linked to environmental devastation and human disease, including cancer.
These corporate giants promote genetically engineered food not because it's safer but because it gives them a competitive edge in the marketplace and swells their bottom line. They mean that GMOs will "feed the world," not from anything related to science, but rather as the profits for Cargill and other substantial agribusiness behemoths.Meanwhile, pharmaceutical firms Pfizer, Johnson & Johnson, and Merck are reaping profits through general widespread illness for which they create via our foods downstream.
These businesses keep society ill-selling a mirage of health for this purpose-single sales of Pfizer's vaccine against COVID brought in billions in profits. Yet, the company and its subsidiaries remain among Washington's highest spenders in lobbying. This K-Street lobbying-congress-control is not about curing an illness; this is about making sure the disease cycle is perpetual because a sick population is a dependent one.
3. Entertainment and Education: Shaping Minds from Birth
A Discovery that has been turned into a factory of mass ideas and ideologies, dominated by the entertainment world, ViacomCBS, and Warner Bros., is especially insidious: Disney should not have such a stranglehold on family entertainment. That once led the way into imagination and joy in childhood now serves indoctrination purposes. Look at their live-action remakes of classic fairy tales: they are not about either nostalgia or storytelling but molding children's values, most often into politically correct messages that suit the corporate vested interests.
At the same time, Disney launched the Disney+ streaming service, which immediately went global to produce content for children from 2019 onwards. Today, it is not enough to entertain kids; content is built to sell corporate and ideological messages, from environmentalism-as-the-way global corporations can come out even on top to how to consume "sustainable" products that kids don't need.
This is a marketing strategy and one way to instill values, behaviors, and consumption habits among the future generation. Meanwhile, American public education is being corporatized.
Mass-media indoctrination has meant that Pearson Education, McGraw-Hill, and Houghton Mifflin Harcourt are among a few key corporations with a stranglehold on developing educational materials and digital learning platforms. This passivity-valued education leaves us with a system of education that teaches kids not how to think but to spout pre-packaged corporate mythologies.
The curriculum mirrors the views and values of the corporate elites who dominate the media and political landscape, whether through skewed history books or standardized testing systems. The objective function of education in modern times has to be the production of an obedient consumerist culture and not one of question or critique.
4. The Housing Market: Real Estate as Wealth Extraction
The US housing market has become exemplary of the perfect storm, showing how the globalist elite sucks the wealth out of everyday people.
Large corporations like BlackRock, Blackstone, and The Carlyle Group have been surreptitiously buying homes from sea to shining sea, driving property prices up and making homeownership for millions of working-class families an impossible dream. In cities like Phoenix, Atlanta, and Dallas, hedge funds and private equity firms have emerged as the most prominent landlords, converting homes into revenue-generating assets and pushing renters into endless debt.
Using their financial heft to create housing bubbles that force up prices to levels where middle-class families will have no choice but to rent forever, even during the pandemic, BlackRock has been buying up distressed properties on discount to entrench their power in the market further.
This Blackrock vampirism has nothing to do with affordable housing; it's a model wherein the majority will turn into tenants at the mercy of whatever whim some faceless corporation desires.
5. Big Banks and Financialization: The Invisible Hand of Control
Hiding in plain sight, financial institutions work upward in hegemony over the international economy. JPMorgan Chase and Goldman Sachs guys have their hand in every pie: predatory loans putting people deeper in debt, funding war and environmental devastation, or funding surveillance infrastructure. Take JPMorgan Chase alone. While the bank has issued multiple public commitments to sustainable finance over the last few years, it has continuously financed fossil fuels.
Most importantly, BlackRock currently controls the valuation of an enviable record of over US$8 trillion worth of assets under management.
BlackRock calls the shots in many nations' economic decisions- the trendsetters. In 2020, during the COVID-19 Crisis Era, BlackRock won a contract to manage the United States Bond purchase programmed in cooperation with the Fed. These same financial elites bailed out in the 2008 financial crisis maintain their hold on the mechanisms of global wealth while dressing up their true motives in a rhetoric of "philanthropy" and "sustainable finance."
6. Global Wars and Humanitarianism: A Masked Weapon
Empire Wars are not conducted for freedom but for oil, resources, and advantageous geopolitical positioning.
Of course, behind each war, corporations, lobbyists, and military contractors profit by benefitting from chaos. A war industry headed by Lockheed Martin, Raytheon, and Northrop Grumman had underhandedly worked to force America to take on several wars, such as the War in Iraq and the War in Afghanistan. They reap billions in arms and, meanwhile, position themselves with their arms as solutions to crises, which they helped themselves build up into national security crises.
Take Iraq, for instance: it was sold to the American people through a lie - the lie that the reasons behind declaring war were weapons of mass destruction held by Saddam Hussein. However, that was another reason altogether. Major benefactors from that war were firms such as Halliburton, with close connections to Dick Cheney and having made billions from rebuilding contracts and oil concessions in Iraq. That was not democracy.
Securing oil access and enriching the defense sector.
And those same firms, with their media cohorts, used a fabricated humanitarian intervention narrative as camouflage for the true intentions of their actions. The Manufactured Mirage of Progress: this is the game of the globalist empire- to control, exploit, and make profits, not to make life better or society improve. Behind every glitzy ad for "social justice," "sustainability," or "healthcare" lies a multi-trillion-dollar web of manipulation and wealth extraction engineered to keep you in a state of passivity, docility, and compliance.
The revolution you think you are witnessing-whether via the socially active heart-stopping moralities of social media or the diversity campaigns in corporate finance-is nothing but a well-marketed illusion. The more you think you are fighting for justice, the more you are merely consuming the latest version of the status quo. Social justice has become the new opiate of the masses, and globalists are the dealers.