The Subordination of Nations: Livestream excerpt

The US has contingency plans to destabilize every country, including Muslim countries The US views Muslim countries as a threat to their interests The US seeks to enforce subordination of Muslim countries through force, threat, and coercion The private sector has subordinated national power, and policymakers work for the private sector, not the nation Geopolitical analysts who think in a nation-state mindset are baffled by US policy decisions Key Points: The US has prepared options to destabilize every Muslim country, which can be activated at any time The US has contingency plans for every country that matters to them strategically, economically, and geographically Muslim countries are seen as a threat to US interests because they have a natural inclination towards autonomy and sovereignty The US seeks to enforce subordination of Muslim countries through force, threat, and coercion The private sector has more power than national governments, and policymakers work for the private sector, not the nation Policy decisions are made based on what is good for the private sector, not the nation Geopolitical analysts who think in a nation-state mindset are unable to understand US policy decisions because they do not consider the role of the private sector The predictable outcomes of US policy decisions are conflict, war, poverty, and economic destruction, which are desired by the private sector.
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