A Pivotal Battle in the Great Class War
Recognizing when we are winning is essential. Elites are on defense.
September 12, 2023
The ongoing American war began long ago and its conclusion is preordained. The Great Class War [GCW] is not so much an event as a process spanning decades. It did not begin on a date certain and will not conclude with an armistice. History is punctuated with such class inversions, when the populace, after decades of subjugation to ever smaller portions of the economic pie, revolts. Wealth is infinite, bounded only by man’s ingenuity and industriousness. We are hardly poor. All enjoy medical, food, transportation and technological bounties inconceivable a century ago. However, the oligarchic class, not content with wealth, covets power equally with money. This is hardly novel, as evidenced by the final commandment:
Thou shalt not covet thy neighbor’s house, thou shalt not covet thy neighbor’s wife, nor his manservant, nor his maidservant, nor his ox, nor his ass, nor any thing that is thy neighbor’s.
The Globalist Class has engineered a realm of perpetually indebted serfs, sentenced to own nothing and be happy, dining on insect burgers. They crave control above all. Narcissism with a side of avarice. This is not class war from below, in the Marxist sense, but class war from above, perpetrated against a populace which has begrudgingly accepted its fate. Now that the serfs are becoming restless, and have identified their leader in the form of their favorite president, the time honored tools of tyrannical repression are beginning to come out.
The GCW has long been percolating. The globalists’ War Lobby resolved their Kennedy problem at Dealey Plaza, coining the term conspiracy theory to counter those questioning their narrative. The Quaker Nixon used the word “peace” 15 times in his first inaugural address. He went too far four years later when repeating the term 19 times for his second inauguration. Nixon was removed in a silent coup, spearheaded by the FBI Deputy Director.
On the economic front, wages continuously lost ground to inflation, manufacturing jobs were exported, immigrants flooded in — undercutting Americans’ wages. Class divisions increasingly widened. Nixon, the peacenik, was tagged a warmonger and despised by the Left — in spite of extricating us from the globalists’ Vietnam fiasco. The Silent Majority reelected him with a 49-state electoral college blowout. That same majority carried Reagan to a 49-state reelection victory 12 years later. Wage erosion continued apace, combined with an explosion in college and medical debt. A generation now after the fall of the Twin Towers, the American middle class has been as effectively destroyed as if a foreign power planned the attack. 61% now live paycheck to paycheck, carrying debt unlikely to be paid off in their lifetimes. Meanwhile, a steady horde of illegal immigrants is granted entry to ensure low-cost wages for the oligarchs.
Matters were running smoothly for the elites: wars for fun and profit bubbled along; the Anointed One introduced color revolutions; Hillary joyously cackled in pathetic imitation of Caesar’s vidi, veni, vici; and Marx’s dictum — history the second time around is mere farce — was again confirmed.
Then Trump ended the party. While the immediate future cannot be predicted with certainty, the GCW’s ultimate conclusion can only resolve in favor of the populist forces. The numbers are overwhelming. Lincoln recognized everyone cannot be perpetually fooled. COVID lockdowns and vaccine tyranny accelerated the public’s awakening. Each week witnesses increasing defections from the globalists.
History has repeatedly witnessed this movie. After the senators knifed Caesar, it was inevitable his populist supporters would prevail to end the senators’ racket of exploiting the masses due to their unsustainable greed. They fled the Senate in fear of their lives. It is essential to grasp the larger context of what we are now witnessing. In the years ahead, widespread bankruptcies are likely to accomplish far more economic leveling than compulsion.

Will Durant, history’s best-selling historian, noted:
The concentration of wealth is natural and inevitable, and is periodically alleviated by violent or peaceable partial redistribution. In this view all economic history is the slow heartbeat of the social organism, a vast systole and diastole of concentrating wealth and compulsive recirculation.