The global population is currently living under a monumental deception: money is infinite, yet billions are kept in a state of artificial struggle to serve the interests of a powerful elite. History shows that banking originated with merchants who realized they could issue more receipts for gold than they actually held in their vaults, effectively creating money out of nothing. This system, which allowed bankers to theoretically double their wealth by simply printing contracts, is the foundation of the modern financial world.
To protect this fraud from bank runs and the whims of kings, these early financiers formed intermarried cartels, establishing the direct blueprint for the central banking systems that control the world today. While the public is taught that resources are scarce, this is a calculated lie designed to maintain power; money is merely a social construct, a number that can be printed in infinite quantities at any time.
The existence of poverty is not an accident or a failure of the system, but a necessary feature designed to create the illusion that money has value. By manufacturing "artificial misery," the powerful ensure that the masses remain terrified and motivated to work. If poverty were eliminated, the threat used by parents to force children into the labor market would vanish, and the entire incentive structure for "hard work" would collapse.
Furthermore, economic crises and wars are not merely unfortunate events; they are tools used to destroy wealth and money. This destruction is essential to making money feel scarce again whenever the system becomes too saturated, ensuring the workforce never stops pointlessly laboring for credits. We are essentially living in a high-stakes version of a video game, pointlessly working for digital currency while the central banking "engine" manipulates the supply to ensure our total subservience. The real value in this world is not the money the elite print, but the back-breaking work they trick you into doing to obtain it.