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Power doesn’t just sit in palaces or on ballots—it moves through inboxes, boardrooms, court rulings, and classrooms. We start with the shockwaves around Prince Andrew and why a single interrogation can rattle a monarchy, then cross the Atlantic to examine how “accountability” becomes a weapon when the narrative machine decides what’s popular and what’s permissible. From Susan Rice’s confident warnings to the “steady state” origin story, we unpack how insiders activate networks without needing badges or briefings—and why that matters for anyone who still believes policy should be right, not merely trending.
The trail then runs through schools and culture: buzzword catechisms, legal pressure to compel accommodation, and a stunning push to keep minors’ access to explicit sites under the banner of “education.” It’s not a side show; it’s the pipeline. If you seed norms early, dissent looks like heresy later. We connect that soft power to hard receipts in the Epstein files: elite lawyers, Swiss-bank fines, and payouts that turn penalties into business expenses. One email thread can tell you more about how the world works than a year of press releases.
When the Supreme Court clips emergency tariffs, the ground shifts again. With Brazil and China finding ways to trade without the dollar, sanctions lose bite—and a neutral rail like Bitcoin starts to look less like speculation and more like plumbing. We explore why Bitcoin can act as market discipline, why transparency on-chain cuts through opacity, and how a shifting settlement layer changes leverage for workers, businesses, and governments alike. Along the way, we touch UAP buzz not as clickbait but as a lesson in how secrecy shapes consent and why selective disclosure fuels distrust.
If you care about sovereignty—over your voice, your kids, or your money—this one ties the threads. From palaces to protocols, from classrooms to courts, we follow the receipts and ask the questions the headlines dodge: Who sets the rules? Who pays the fines? Who writes the email that makes it all go away? Hit play, share it with a friend who still thinks the game is fair, and leave a review so more listeners can find the signal in the noise. Subscribe for our premium deep dive on Bitcoin, trade rails, and the next 24 months of global finance.
Support the show
https://1776live.us
www.PeasantsPerspective.com
www.LeftBehindandWithout.org
www.DollarsVoteLouder.com
buymeacoffee.com/peasant
By Taylor JohnatakisSend a text
Power doesn’t just sit in palaces or on ballots—it moves through inboxes, boardrooms, court rulings, and classrooms. We start with the shockwaves around Prince Andrew and why a single interrogation can rattle a monarchy, then cross the Atlantic to examine how “accountability” becomes a weapon when the narrative machine decides what’s popular and what’s permissible. From Susan Rice’s confident warnings to the “steady state” origin story, we unpack how insiders activate networks without needing badges or briefings—and why that matters for anyone who still believes policy should be right, not merely trending.
The trail then runs through schools and culture: buzzword catechisms, legal pressure to compel accommodation, and a stunning push to keep minors’ access to explicit sites under the banner of “education.” It’s not a side show; it’s the pipeline. If you seed norms early, dissent looks like heresy later. We connect that soft power to hard receipts in the Epstein files: elite lawyers, Swiss-bank fines, and payouts that turn penalties into business expenses. One email thread can tell you more about how the world works than a year of press releases.
When the Supreme Court clips emergency tariffs, the ground shifts again. With Brazil and China finding ways to trade without the dollar, sanctions lose bite—and a neutral rail like Bitcoin starts to look less like speculation and more like plumbing. We explore why Bitcoin can act as market discipline, why transparency on-chain cuts through opacity, and how a shifting settlement layer changes leverage for workers, businesses, and governments alike. Along the way, we touch UAP buzz not as clickbait but as a lesson in how secrecy shapes consent and why selective disclosure fuels distrust.
If you care about sovereignty—over your voice, your kids, or your money—this one ties the threads. From palaces to protocols, from classrooms to courts, we follow the receipts and ask the questions the headlines dodge: Who sets the rules? Who pays the fines? Who writes the email that makes it all go away? Hit play, share it with a friend who still thinks the game is fair, and leave a review so more listeners can find the signal in the noise. Subscribe for our premium deep dive on Bitcoin, trade rails, and the next 24 months of global finance.
Support the show
https://1776live.us
www.PeasantsPerspective.com
www.LeftBehindandWithout.org
www.DollarsVoteLouder.com
buymeacoffee.com/peasant