10% Flat Tax – A proposed system where everyone pays the same low income tax rate with no loopholes. Simple, fair, and cuts cheating.
14 Eyes / 9 Eyes – Extended surveillance alliances beyond Five Eyes (including France, Germany, etc.).
527 Organization – Tax-exempt groups that influence elections through political spending, named after the tax code section.
5G Tracking Infrastructure – Advanced wireless networks that enable real-time data collection on location, health, and behavior.
Abolish Corporate Feudalism – Ending a system where people are financially trapped serving big corporations with no path to independence.
Academic Indoctrination – The teaching of political or ideological content in schools or universities that critics claim manipulates students’ beliefs.
Accel Partners – Global VC firm investing across internet, software, and consumer sectors.
Accelerationism – The belief that pushing tech progress or societal collapse faster could lead to a new system emerging, either utopian or catastrophic.
Activist Investor – Shareholder who pressures companies to make strategic changes for financial gain.
Addiction Recovery Centers – Facilities providing comprehensive treatment for substance abuse, including mental health support and holistic therapies.
ADL (Anti-Defamation League) – Organization that claims to fight hate but often polices speech and protects political narratives (especially related to Israel or globalism).
Advent International – Specializes in buyouts and strategic investments across multiple industries, emphasizing global expansion and operational improvements.
AI (Artificial Intelligence) – Machines or software capable of performing tasks that normally require human intelligence, like decision making, image recognition, or language processing.
AI / Automation – Artificial Intelligence and machines used to automate jobs. Can be good for efficiency but dangerous if it replaces all human labor without protections.
AI Deepfakes – Fake videos or audio made with AI to make someone appear to say or do something – can be used for blackmail or misinformation.
AI Governance – How artificial intelligence is regulated, controlled, or distributed; who owns AI determines who has power.
AI Governance / AI Ethics – Oversight, regulation, and ethical guidelines for artificial intelligence deployment.
AI Governance / Algorithmic Rule – Decision-making by automated systems instead of humans, affecting loans, law enforcement, jobs, and social benefits.
AI Social Credit System – Algorithmic scoring of citizens’ behavior, punishing or rewarding based on compliance or ideology.
AI Surveillance Countermeasures – Tools citizens use to hide from AI tracking, like encryption, blockers, anti-camera clothing, etc.
AI War Game Simulation – Artificial intelligence used to simulate battlefield conditions or plan wars without human ethics or limits.
AI-Driven Propaganda – Bots and algorithms spreading misinformation, fake news, or state-sponsored ideology at scale.
AIPAC (American Israel Public Affairs Committee) – A powerful U.S. lobbying group advocating pro-Israel policies to Congress and the executive branch.
Air Quality Degradation – Pollution of the atmosphere with particulate matter, ozone, and industrial chemicals, leading to chronic respiratory illnesses.
Alex Jones – Media personality; promotes anti-globalist and anti-establishment narratives.
Alex Stamos – Cybersecurity expert, social media integrity.
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (AOC) – U.S. Congresswoman, progressive policy.
Algorithmic Censorship – Using algorithms to suppress or promote content online, often political or social.
Algorithmic Manipulation – When tech companies use hidden computer code to influence what people see online or how they think, often without users knowing it.
Allen & Co Sun Valley Conference – Exclusive technology and media retreat in Idaho attended by billionaires, CEOs, and political figures.
Allied Defense Burden Sharing – The idea that other countries (NATO, allies) should pay their fair share instead of relying on America.
America-First Infrastructure – Funding roads, bridges, power, water, and transit inside the U.S., using American labor and materials — not sending money overseas.
Amy Goodman – Investigative journalist exposing corporate and government malfeasance.
Anchor Babies – Children born to non-citizen immigrants who then become citizens and anchor their parents and extended family in the host country.
Andreessen Horowitz – VC firm investing in software, biotech, crypto, and consumer tech. Influential in shaping Silicon Valley trends.
Andrew Tate – Social media personality, entrepreneur, and controversial commentator.
Angel Gurría – Former OECD Secretary-General.
Angela Merkel – Former German leader who pushed mass immigration and deeper EU control, seen as globalist figure.
Animal Testing Ban – Ending cruel medical or cosmetic experiments on animals unless absolutely necessary with ethical oversight.
Ann Coulter – Conservative author and political commentator known for provocative critiques of liberal policies.
Anonymous LLC Ban – A law stopping people from hiding behind secret shell companies to launder money or dodge taxes.
Anti-Globalist Policy – Policies that favor national independence over global governance, trade deals, or treaties.
Anti-Merit Culture – Systems or policies that devalue achievement, skill, or effort in favor of equality-of-outcome initiatives.
Anti-Merit Indoctrination – The perceived teaching of ideas that prioritize group identity over individual skill or achievement.
Anti-Meritocracy – A system where merit, skill, and achievement are ignored in favor of identity, favoritism, or political agenda.
Anti-Trust Laws – Regulations designed to prevent monopolies, promote competition, and protect consumers.
Anti-White Propaganda – Media or educational content that stereotypes, demonizes, or blames white people for societal problems, promoting collective guilt and division.
Antitrust – Government laws and actions designed to stop companies from forming monopolies and to keep markets competitive.
Apollo Global Management – Focuses on PE, credit, and real assets. Known for aggressive acquisition strategies and turning around distressed companies, often through restructuring or cost-cutting.
Arianna Huffington – Founder, Huffington Post; speaker at global economic & leadership summits.
Asia Society Global Forums – Focused on Asia-U.S. relations, trade, and cultural diplomacy.
Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) Summit – High-level forum for 21 Pacific Rim economies to promote free trade, economic growth, and cooperation.
Aspen Ideas Festival – Annual forum in Colorado where global leaders, thinkers, and influencers discuss politics, economics, and society.
Aspen Security Forum – Private gathering of security experts, policymakers, and military leaders to discuss global security threats and strategies.
Asset Stripping – When investors buy companies and sell off valuable assets, often leaving employees or infrastructure in a weakened state.
Asteroid Mining – Using space tech to extract metals and minerals from asteroids — to reduce dependence on foreign mineral supply on Earth.
Asteroid Mining & Space Resource Extraction – Using robotic or AI systems to mine metals from asteroids; could unlock trillions in resources and shift global economic power.
Astroturf Movement – A fake “grassroots” movement created by elites or corporations to make it look like ordinary people support something they actually don’t.
Atlantic Council – Major NATO think tank that influences Twitter moderation, social media policy, war propaganda, international security, foreign policy, and transatlantic cooperation.
Atlantic Council Global Energy & Security Forums – Policy, trade, and defense discussions in U.S. and Europe.
Atlantic Council Global Energy Forum – Think tank discussions on energy security, oil, gas, and geopolitical energy strategy.
Atlantic Council Strategy & Leadership Summits – U.S. and NATO-aligned foreign policy, defense, and economic coordination.
Atlantic Council Strategy Dialogues – Policy workshops for transatlantic relations, energy, and security coordination.
Atlantic Dialogues (Morocco) – International forum connecting policymakers, academics, and business leaders from Africa, Europe, and the Americas.
Atlantic Treaty Association (ATA) Conferences – NATO-related discussions on defense and transatlantic security.
Atlanticists – Political class that supports NATO, U.S.-EU alignment, globalism under Western leadership.
Audit the Fed – Movement calling for transparency and investigation into the Federal Reserve’s books and actions.
Austrian Economics – School of economic thought (Mises, Rothbard) supporting gold standard, no central bank.
Authoritarianism – A political system where one group or person holds absolute power and limits personal freedoms.
Automated Censorship – AI systems used to flag or remove speech deemed “dangerous” or “inappropriate” without human oversight.
Automation – The use of machines or software to perform tasks previously done by humans, often replacing jobs.
Automation Strategy – Plans or policies about how robots and AI replace human jobs; whether we protect workers or let machines take over unchecked.
Autonomous Policing Robots – Machines or drones deployed to enforce law, often acting on AI-driven instructions without human discretion.
B20 Summit – Business-focused component of the G20, where corporate leaders advise governments on economic policy.
Backchannel Influence – Covert or informal communication used by foreign actors to sway policy or decisions.
Bail-In – When banks take money directly from customer accounts to save themselves from collapse — already used in some countries.
Bailout – When government uses taxpayer money to save a failing corporation or bank instead of letting it collapse.
Bain Capital – PE and venture firm with investments in consumer, technology, healthcare, and industrial sectors. Bain Capital emphasizes long-term growth and operational improvements.
baldandbankrupt – Travel and cultural influencer covering post-Soviet states and global insights.
Balkanization – Fragmentation of a country into multiple hostile ethnic, religious, or cultural enclaves, leading to conflict or breakup--people form parallel communities.
Bank for International Settlements (BIS) – Central bank of central banks, controls global monetary policy above nations.
Bank of America Merrill Lynch (BofA Securities) – Offers M&A advisory, corporate finance, and trading services. Frequently advises on cross-border deals.
Barack Obama – Former U.S. President associated with globalist policies, military interventions, and mass surveillance expansion.
Barclays – UK-based investment bank focused on M&A advisory, trading, and capital raising.
Based vs. Woke – Based = grounded in truth/reality; Woke = progressive ideology, identity obsession.
Basel III – International banking regulations that favor large banks over smaller ones, locking in monopoly power.
Behavioral Engineering – Using psychology and media manipulation to influence how people think and act without them realizing it.
Behavioral Manipulation Algorithms – Software that nudges or coerces people toward certain actions, often used by Big Tech.
Behavioral Modification Program – Psychological reprogramming systems used in schooling, marketing, prisons, etc.
Behavioral Nudge – A psychological trick used by governments or platforms to subtly push people toward certain behaviors without them realizing it's manipulation.
Ben Horowitz – VC, Andreessen Horowitz; major startup investor.
Benchmark Capital – Early-stage venture firm investing in technology startups, including eBay, Twitter, and Uber.
Beneficial Ownership – The real person(s) who ultimately own, control, or profit from a company, often hidden behind shell corporations.
Beneficial Ownership Disclosure – Legal requirement for companies to reveal their real owners to prevent corruption, fraud, or foreign influence.
Benjamin Netanyahu – Israeli Prime Minister with strong control over U.S. foreign policy debates, AIPAC-backed.
Bennett Haselton – Privacy advocate, software engineer exposing surveillance vulnerabilities.
Benny Gantz – Israeli Defense Minister; part of security/political establishment.
Bessemer Venture Partners – Broad-stage VC investing in cloud computing, healthcare, fintech, and consumer sectors.
Big Pharma – Large pharmaceutical corporations that control drug development, pricing, and distribution, often accused of profit-driven practices over public health.
Big Pharma Asset Seizure – Confiscation of wealth from corporations that profit from harmful practices.
Big Tech – Massive technology companies like Google, Facebook, Apple, Amazon, Microsoft. They control online information, censor speech, collect data, and often push political agendas.
Big Tech Control – Influence and power held by major technology companies over communication, news distribution, and public discourse.
Big Tech Transparency – Forcing tech companies to reveal how their algorithms work (open-source) and remove hidden bias.
Bilderberg Group – Secretive annual conference for world bankers, CEOs, political elites; accused of setting globalist agenda behind closed doors.
Bilderberg Meeting – Annual, invite-only gathering of political leaders, business elites, academics, and media figures to discuss global issues privately.
Bilderberg Regional Meetings – Smaller, preparatory gatherings feeding into the main annual Bilderberg Meeting.
Bill Ackman – Hedge fund manager, Pershing Square Capital.
Bill Gates – Microsoft founder, global philanthropy, economic influence.
Bill Kristol – Neoconservative strategist, editorial influence.
Billionaire Reinvestment Mandates – Policies requiring ultra-wealthy individuals to reinvest wealth into domestic industries or public projects.
Billionaire-Owned PACs – Political Action Committees funded by billionaires to influence elections and policy in their favor.
Biometric Tracking – Using unique body features like fingerprints, voice patterns, DNA, facial recognition, or retina scans to identify, control, and monitor people.
Biosurveillance – Tracking population health through data, often integrated with digital ID and vaccine certification.
Birthrate Collapse / Population Winter – Sharp decline in birthrates among native Western populations leading to aging society and dwindling native majority--which is then used to justify importing migrants to maintain economic or labor growth.
BIS (Bank for International Settlements) – The central bank of central banks – ultimate authority in global finance.
Black Budget – Top-secret government budget for operations the public isn’t allowed to know about.
Black Budget / Black Ops – Government programs funded with taxpayer money that operate in complete secrecy (intelligence, covert warfare, etc.).
Black Ops / Clandestine Programs – Secret military or intelligence operations not acknowledged by the government, often outside public law.
Blackmail / Honeypot Operations – Alleged secret intelligence tactics using sexual or financial leverage to control high-profile targets.
Blackmail Networks – Alleged operations where compromising information is used to control political or business leaders.
BlackRock & Vanguard – Two of the world’s largest institutional investors, holding shares in a vast number of public companies.
Blackstone Group – One of the world’s largest private equity firms, Blackstone specializes in leveraged buyouts, real estate, credit, and alternative investments. They have immense influence over U.S. and global industries due to the size of assets under management.
Blockchain – A secure, decentralized digital ledger that records transactions and data across many computers — used in cryptocurrency and digital voting.
Blockchain Sovereignty – The idea that citizens use blockchain-based systems to control their own data, identity, and voting, independent of central authorities.
Blockchain Voting – Using blockchain technology to create a secure, transparent voting system that cannot be easily hacked or manipulated.
Blockchain Voting / Blockchain Democracy – A voting system built on blockchain so every vote is locked, public, traceable, and cannot be hacked or rigged.
Boao Forum for Asia – Asia’s equivalent of Davos, held in China, focusing on regional economic development and global integration.
Bohemian Grove – Exclusive California retreat for powerful men (business, government, and media), known for secretive networking and rituals.
Border Security – Measures to control entry into a country, prevent illegal immigration, and combat smuggling or trafficking.
Border Security Threats – Illegal crossings, human trafficking, cartel influence, and other risks associated with porous borders.
Børge Brende – WEF, former Norwegian Foreign Minister.
Boris Johnson – Former UK Prime Minister, supported lockdowns and globalist foreign policy--Brexit, too.
Bradley Martin – Influencer and commentator (context: right-wing/social commentary).
Brain-Computer Interface (BCI) – Devices that connect the brain to computers for control, implants, or human enhancement.
Break Up Monopolies – Forcing giant corporations to split into smaller companies so they don’t control entire sectors.
Break-Up Silicon Valley VC Mafias – Ending control by venture capital elites over which tech companies thrive.
Bretton Woods Committee – Promotes strong international economic institutions and global financial governance.
Bretton Woods Committee Meetings – Forums for global finance, monetary policy, and development policy coordination.
Bretton Woods Project Roundtables – Policy oversight and critique of IMF and World Bank programs.
Bretton Woods System – Post-WWII agreement setting the U.S. dollar as global reserve currency, giving America financial dominance.
BRI (Belt and Road Initiative) – China’s global infrastructure program building ports and rails in dozens of countries, extending Chinese influence.
BRICS – Group of emerging nations (Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa) forming a monetary alliance to counter Western power.
BRICS Summit – Strategic and economic coordination among Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa.
Bridge Financing – Short-term funding provided to a company until permanent financing or an IPO can be arranged.
Bridge Loan – Temporary financing to cover immediate needs until a longer-term solution is available.
Brookings Institution Events – U.S. centrist think tank organizing forums on foreign policy, economics, and governance.
Brookings Institution Global Economy & Development Conferences – Policy forums on economics, development, and international finance.
Brookings Institution International Conferences – U.S.-based policy think tank hosting global governance and economic forums.
Brookings Institution Panels – Policy workshops and roundtables covering economics, governance, and foreign affairs.
Bruce Schneier – Security technologist, cryptographer, privacy advocate.
Bucharest Forum on Global Policy – Smaller regional meeting for policy elites in Europe and transatlantic cooperation.
Build in America Incentive – Tax breaks and funding for factories that hire American workers and produce goods domestically.
Bureaucratic Bloat – Government agencies that grow too large, waste money, and slow everything down with useless processes.
Bureaucratic Red Tape – Complicated rules and government procedures that slow down progress and make it hard to build, start a business, or innovate.
Buy & Burn / Kill Competition – VC or PE strategy acquiring companies only to shut them down or eliminate competitors.
Buy & Flip Strategy – When firms acquire a company primarily to restructure or strip assets and sell it quickly for profit, often criticized for destroying long-term value.
Buy-and-Burn Schemes – When investment firms buy companies or tech startups not to grow them, but to kill competition or destroy it.
Buyout Fund – A PE fund created to acquire controlling stakes in companies, typically using debt financing.
Buyouts – Acquiring a controlling interest in a company, often associated with PE or corporate consolidation strategies.
Cancel Culture – Public shaming or ostracism of individuals or organizations for behavior or opinions deemed unacceptable by modern cultural standards.
Candace Owens – Conservative political commentator and activist.
Capital Call – A demand by fund managers for LPs to contribute their committed funds to the investment vehicle.
Capital Flight / Offshore Wealth – When rich people move money out of the country to avoid taxes or accountability.
Capture (Regulatory Capture) – When the industry being regulated actually controls the regulators through lobbying, hiring, or corruption.
Carbon Credit Scam – A system where corporations “buy” pollution points to keep polluting but pretend they’re environmentally responsible.
Carl Icahn – Activist investor, corporate restructuring expert, takeover specialist.
Carlyle Group – Global investment firm managing private equity, real assets, and credit. Carlyle is notable for its political connections and investments in defense, technology, and healthcare.
Carnegie Council for Ethics in International Affairs Panels – Debates on global ethics, diplomacy, and governance.
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace – International think tank advancing policy research on global peace, democracy, and security issues.
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace Policy Roundtables – Focused on U.S. foreign policy, conflict resolution, and global governance.
Carnegie Moscow Center – Research institute focusing on Russia, Eurasia, and global strategic issues.
Carnegie Moscow Center & Beijing Branch Forums – Russia- and China-focused strategic policy workshops.
Carnegie Moscow Center Policy Dialogues – Regional policy, security, and economics in Eastern Europe and Russia.
Carried Interest Loophole – Tax provision allowing private equity and hedge fund managers to pay lower taxes on profits disguised as capital gains.
Carried Interest Loophole – Tax trick that lets hedge fund managers pay very low tax rates on massive earnings.
Cash Flow Waterfall – The order in which distributions are made to investors in a fund, often favoring GPs before LPs.
Cato Institute Conferences – U.S.-based libertarian think tank hosting events on economics, security, and international policy.
CBDC (Central Bank Digital Currency) – A fully digital form of government-controlled money that can be tracked, monitored, and potentially limited by authorities.
CCP – Chinese Communist Party; the ruling political party of China that influences global politics, technology, and business using economic pressure.
CCP Influence Operations – Strategies by the Chinese Communist Party to advance its interests abroad, including political, economic, or cultural influence.
CDC Malfeasance – Alleged misconduct or bias by the Centers for Disease Control in public health decisions.
Censorship – The suppression of speech, media, or artistic expression, often criticized when applied by governments or tech companies.
Censorship / Algorithmic Control – When companies or governments control what information people can see online, often using hidden computer programs (algorithms) to silence certain viewpoints.
Censorship Cartels – Coordinated efforts by government or corporations to suppress speech or ideas deemed undesirable.
Census Weaponization – Manipulating census data or redefining categories to hide demographic shifts or inflate minority counts to shift power.
Center for a New American Security (CNAS) Strategy Forums – U.S. national security and defense policy-focused gatherings.
Center for Strategic & International Studies (CSIS) Events – Policy briefings on defense, economics, technology, and international economics.
Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) Conferences – Leading U.S. think tank on security, geopolitics, and defense strategy.
Centerview Partners – Boutique M&A advisory firm known for strategic consulting and high-value corporate deals.
Central Bank Digital Currency (CBDC) – Government-issued digital money that can be programmed to limit or track spending.
Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) – U.S. agency that gathers foreign intelligence and often conducts covert operations and regime change.
Central Planning – When a government or authority tries to control the entire economy from the top down — often leads to inefficiency or tyranny.
Centralized ID / Digital Passport – A single government-controlled digital identity used to track people’s actions, purchases, or compliance.
CFR “Off-the-Record” Private Briefings – Small, confidential meetings hosted by the Council on Foreign Relations for policy strategy discussions.
Chain Migration – When one immigrant gets citizenship and then brings extended family, sometimes leading to large waves beyond initial vetting.
Chain Migration Reform – Restricting extended family immigration to stop uncontrolled population shift.
Charlie Rose – Media figure (legacy interviews with global leaders).
Chatham House (Royal Institute of International Affairs) Conferences – UK-based policy think tank shaping global governance, security, and economic policy.
Chelsea Manning – U.S. Army intelligence analyst who disclosed sensitive military documents.
Chemical Dumping / Industrial Pollution – Factories or industries releasing toxic materials into the environment (air, water, soil), causing disease and environmental damage.
Child Indoctrination / Grooming – When schools or media expose children to political or sexual content meant to influence them, often without parental consent.
Chinese Social Credit Model – A system where every citizen is scored by the state based on behavior and loyalty; a tool for total control.
Chris Hedges – Journalist and activist; critiques corporate influence and empire-building.
Chris Williamson – Politician and media figure, UK-based.
Christine Lagarde – Head of the European Central Bank (ECB), former IMF director, symbol of global finance control.
CIA / NSA Oversight – The need for monitoring U.S. intelligence agencies to prevent abuse of power domestically or internationally.
Citigroup – Provides global banking and capital markets services, including M&A advisory and corporate finance.
Class Warfare – Tension or conflict between rich and poor when wealth is too concentrated and systems are rigged.
Cloud Sovereignty – National or personal control over cloud data and servers, instead of global corporations.
Cloward-Piven Migration Strategy – Using immigration to overwhelm systems and cause a crisis allowing a new regime or policy shift.
Cloward-Piven Strategy – A method of intentionally collapsing systems (like welfare or immigration) by overwhelming them, in order to introduce a new, bigger government program.
Clown World – Term online for the absurdity of modern post-truth politics (DEI, gender ideology, etc.).
Club of Rome – Think tank focused on global sustainability, economics, and environmental challenges, often discussing long-term global planning.
Club of Rome Strategy Workshops – Global economic, environmental, and resource planning think tank.
Cognitive Dissonance – Psychological discomfort that occurs when someone holds two conflicting beliefs — weaponized in propaganda.
Cognitive Warfare – Using media, AI, and psychology to attack a population’s beliefs and mental stability.
COINTELPRO – FBI program that infiltrated and sabotaged domestic political movements (civil rights, anti-war, etc.) in the 1960s and 70s.
Color Revolution – A technique used by intelligence agencies to overthrow a government by supporting protests, NGOs, and media within that country to create regime change--through protests and media manipulation rather than direct war.
Common Stock – Standard shares representing ownership in a company, with voting rights and residual profit claims.
Compound Interest Prison – When interest on loans grows so fast it becomes impossible to fully pay off, trapping people for life.
Compounded Interest Slavery – The way debt snowballs over time, making it nearly impossible to escape financial hardship.
Confucius Institutes – Chinese government-funded programs in foreign universities, criticized as a form of foreign influence in education.
Consolidation – The merging of companies or assets, often creating monopolies or reducing competition in markets.
Constitutional Carry / 2A Rights – The right to carry firearms for self-defense without needing a permit — tied to upholding the Second Amendment.
Continuity of Government (COG) – Emergency plan where military or unelected officials take over if official government collapses.
Controlled Demolition – Intentional destruction of an economic or political system to replace it with a new structure (often used regarding 9/11 or currency resets).
Controlled Opposition – When powerful elites fund or tolerate a “fake” opposition group to make it look like there’s resistance while still controlling the outcome.
Convertible Note – Debt that converts into equity upon specific events, such as a future funding round.
Corporate Anti-Trust Enforcement – Legal actions or regulations to break up monopolies and restore competitive markets.
Corporate Asset Seizure – Government action to take over companies or assets involved in illegal activity, corruption, or foreign influence.
Corporate Buyback Ban – Stopping companies from spending profits just to buy their own stock to inflate price instead of paying workers or innovating.
Corporate Governance – Structures and rules by which companies are directed, controlled, and held accountable.
Corporate Lobbying – Efforts by corporations to influence government policies in their favor, often through donations or campaign support.
Corporate Monopolies – Firms with dominant market power that can manipulate prices, stifle competition, or influence policy.
Corporate Political Donations – Contributions from companies to politicians or parties, often used to influence legislation or regulation.
Corporate Propaganda – Influencing public perception through controlled messaging, PR campaigns, or media dominance.
Corporate Raider – An investor who buys a large stake in a company to influence management or force a sale, often criticized for short-term profit motives.
Corporate Tax Avoidance – Legal or illegal strategies used by corporations to reduce their tax liability.
Corporate Welfare – Government handouts to billion-dollar corporations (like bailouts, subsidies, tax rebates) while everyday people struggle.
Corporatism – When government and corporate power merge into a single decision-making unit that does not represent the common citizen.
Cory Doctorow – Author, journalist, advocate for digital rights and anti-censorship.
Council of Councils (Atlantic Council) – Global think tank bringing together foreign ministers and senior policymakers--coordinating on global strategic priorities.
Council of Councils (C2) Annual Summit – Strategic dialogues among leading think tanks worldwide.
Council of the Americas – Leadership Events – Networking and policy discussions on trade and governance in the Western Hemisphere.
Council of the Americas – Organization promoting free trade and democracy in the Western Hemisphere; gathers business and government elites.
Council of the European Union (Foreign Affairs Council) Meetings – EU foreign policy coordination at the ministerial level.
Council on Foreign Relations (CFR) – U.S.-based think tank influencing foreign policy discussions, providing research and networking for policymakers and elites.
Counterintelligence – Methods to detect and prevent spying or infiltration from foreign or internal enemies.
Credit Score Tyranny – A system where people’s entire financial fate is controlled by credit agencies, limiting housing, jobs, and freedom.
Credit Suisse – Swiss bank offering investment banking, wealth management, and capital markets services.
Criminal Prosecution for Pharma Executives – Legal action against leaders responsible for misleading practices, deaths, or public harm.
Crony Capitalism – When businesses succeed not because they serve customers well, but because of special favors from politicians or government connections.
Cultural Degeneracy – A decline in moral standards, discipline, responsibility, and traditional values in society.
Cultural Displacement – The loss of language, traditions, religion, and historic values when a native population becomes a minority in its own country due to immigration and demographic change.
Cultural Erasure – The removal or suppression of a society’s original cultural symbols, holidays, language, religion, and traditions — replaced with foreign or globalist culture.
Cultural Hegemony – Dominance of one group’s values, beliefs, or ideology over others, often via media or education.
Cultural Homogenization – The reduction of cultural diversity due to globalism, media influence, or political pressure.
Cultural Marxism – The idea that Marxist ideology has shifted from class struggle to culture, pushing radical social changes to destroy traditional western society.
Currency Manipulation – When governments or banks purposely change the value of money to benefit themselves at the cost of citizens.
Currency Reset / Great Reset – The idea that elites will intentionally collapse or replace the dollar system to force a new global currency or CBDC.
Currency Wars – Countries devalue or manipulate their own currency to gain trade advantage, often leading to inflation or economic destruction.
Cyber Warfare – Attacks carried out using computers and digital systems to disrupt or spy on other nations or groups.
Cybernetic Soldier / Bio-enhanced Military – Soldiers augmented with advanced tech (AI implants, enhanced armor, exoskeletons) to be stronger, smarter, faster.
Cybersecurity Shield – A national strategy to protect against hacking, cyberwar, data leaks, and AI-driven attacks from enemy nations.
Cyberwarfare / Cyber Espionage – Hacking, infiltration, or digital attacks on citizens, companies, or nations to gather information or influence behavior.
Dan Bilzerian – Entrepreneur and social media personality known for lifestyle and poker.
Daniel Ellsberg – Leaked the Pentagon Papers exposing U.S. involvement in Vietnam.
Dark Money – Political money that comes from hidden donors (like by nonprofit organizations), often through non-profits, so voters can’t see who is funding politicians or campaigns.
Dark Money Network – Web of shell organizations used to move political money without disclosure (funding activism, campaigns, NGOs).
Dark Pools – Private trading venues for large-scale stock trades away from public exchanges.
Dark Web / Black Market Economy – Hidden online marketplaces or underground trade for illegal goods, weapons, drugs, and trafficking.
Data Harvesting – Collection of personal data, browsing history, and app usage for profiling and monetization.
Dave Smith – Comedian and libertarian commentator.
David Rubenstein – Co-founder, Carlyle Group, WEF participant, global private equity.
David Solomon – CEO, Goldman Sachs; banking, investment, and global finance.
David Tepper – Hedge fund manager, Appaloosa Management.
Davos Agenda Sessions – Smaller, invitation-only events at the World Economic Forum focusing on strategy, tech, and geopolitics.
Davos Man – Slang for global elite attendees at WEF in Davos who shape international policy.
Debit/Credit Score Blackmail – Using credit scores to control access to housing, jobs, and loans — punishing those who go against the system.
Debt pushdown – Firms transfer debt to the acquired company during a buyout, allowing the target company to deduct the interest payments, reducing overall taxes.
Debt Trap – A financial situation where people or nations become stuck paying interest and can never fully repay the debt.
Debt-Based Economy – An economy where people and governments must constantly borrow money and pay interest just to survive.
Debt-fueled buyouts – Interest payments on borrowed funds for acquisitions are deducted, reducing taxable income significantly.
Decentralization – Shifting power away from one central authority and giving it to many smaller, local, or individual actors. Used for tech, money, governance, etc.
Decentralized Healthcare – Healthcare where people can pay doctors directly, use telemedicine, or small clinics without going through big insurance networks.
Decoupling – Strategically breaking economic ties with foreign countries (ex: U.S. decoupling from China supply chain).
Deep State – Permanent unelected officials, agencies, and intelligence networks that hold real power regardless of who is elected--shadow control over government.
Deepfake / Synthetic Media – AI-generated media that mimics real people or events, often used in propaganda.
Deepfake Misinformation – Fake videos or audio created by AI, used to frame people or spread lies.
Deepfake Technology – AI-generated videos or audio that can impersonate real people, often used to spread misinformation or frame individuals.
Defund Anti-American Universities – Removing funding from universities that teach anti-American or anti-merit ideology.
Degeneracy – Cultural or moral decay; promoting weakness, addiction, or self-destructive behavior as normal or acceptable.
Deglobalization – The process of pulling manufacturing and jobs back to the home country and rejecting globalist economic dependence.
DEI (Diversity, Equity, Inclusion) – Programs aimed at promoting representation and fairness in workplaces or schools; often criticized in right-populist platforms as ideological indoctrination.
DEI / Identity Politics – Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion programs that focus on race, gender, or identity instead of skill, work ethic, or merit.
Demographic Engineering – The deliberate alteration of a population’s racial, cultural, or ethnic makeup through immigration policy, incentives, or social programs.
Demographic Imperialism – When a population grows into another region and gradually takes control via birthrate and cultural dominance rather than military invasion.
Demographic Time Bomb – A future scenario where the native-born population becomes a minority due to low birth rates and high mass immigration, upsetting social and political balance--forecast where a native population becomes a minority by a certain date if current immigration/birth trends continue.
Department of Justice (DOJ) – Executive branch agency that enforces federal law, including antitrust and corporate regulation.
Deplatforming – When social media companies ban or silence users who express views they don’t like.
Derivatives / Swaps – Financial contracts whose value is derived from underlying assets; used for hedging or speculation.
Derivatives Bubble – Massive financial time bomb made of “bets on bets” by banks valued in quadrillions, could crash global economy.
Deutsche Bank – German investment bank with global operations in corporate finance, advisory, and trading.
Digital Autonomy – Personal power over your own data, online identity, and software instead of being controlled by corporations.
Digital Bill of Rights – New constitutional-style protections for data, privacy, and speech in the digital realm.
Digital Censorship – Blocking or removing content online because it doesn’t fit the narrative preferred by governments or corporations.
Digital Currency Slavery – Full control over spending by central bank digital currency (CBDC), no privacy, no freedom.
Digital ID – A government-issued electronic identity that tracks people and may be used to control access to services or money.
Digital ID / Biometric Tracking – Systems that record a person’s identity and track their movements or data using fingerprints, facial scans, or eye scans.
Digital ID / CBDC – Central Bank Digital Currency or state-controlled digital identity systems.
Digital ID / Digital Identity – A system where individuals’ personal data, online activity, and financial info are tracked under a single profile.
Digital Redlining – Denial of services, access, or opportunities based on digital profiles or algorithmic scores.
Digital Twin – A digital clone of a city, infrastructure or person used for simulation — can be used for control or optimization.
Diplomatic Pressure – Efforts by foreign governments to influence domestic legislation or judicial outcomes through negotiation or threats.
Direct Democracy Tools – Technology that lets citizens vote directly on laws rather than relying only on politicians (e.g., blockchain voting).
Direct-to-Consumer Pharma Advertising – Television or online ads promoting prescription drugs directly to patients, legal only in the U.S. and New Zealand.
Disaster Capitalism – When corporations or elites take advantage of crises (war, disasters, pandemics) to push policies or make money.
Disposable Culture – Mass-production of cheap goods meant to be thrown away, leading to waste, pollution, and loss of craftsmanship.
Distributed Energy – Local energy generation (solar, nuclear microgrids, etc.) instead of being dependent on centralized power grids.
Diversity, Equity, Inclusion (DEI) – Programs or policies in workplaces, schools, and institutions aimed at promoting representation and fairness, sometimes criticized for ideological enforcement.
Donald Trump – U.S. President seen as a nationalist-populist opposed to globalist elites.
Drag-Along Rights – A clause that forces minority shareholders to go along with a sale of the company if majority shareholders approve it.
Drone Surveillance – Use of unmanned aerial vehicles to monitor public or private spaces for control or law enforcement.
Drug Cartels – Organized criminal groups involved in trafficking narcotics across borders; often linked to border security concerns.
Dual Citizenship in Government – When someone in political office has loyalty to more than one country, which can create conflict of interest or divided loyalty.
Dual Use Technology – Tech that can be used for civilian life or military/spy purposes (like drones, quantum computers, etc).
Dual-Citizenship Ban – A proposal to forbid politicians or key officials from holding citizenship in another country, removing conflicting loyalties.
Dubai Economic Forum & Global Policy Summit – UAE-hosted economic, trade, and innovation-focused policy discussions.
Dubai Future Forum & Government Summit – UAE-hosted innovation, technology, and governance summit.
Dubai Global Conference on Technology & Innovation – Elite business and policy networking focused on tech and AI.
Due Diligence – The thorough investigation and analysis of a company’s finances, operations, and legal status before an acquisition or investment.
EastWest Institute Global Security Forums – Conflict resolution and international security policy workshops.
Economic Club of New York – Exclusive club where leaders from business, finance, and government discuss economic trends and policy.
Economic Dependency – Over-reliance on foreign production, imports, or global financial systems, potentially threatening sovereignty.
Economic Inequality – The uneven distribution of wealth and income within a society, often causing social tension and political debate.
Economic Patriotism – Favoring domestic businesses and workers over global profits — buy American, hire American.
Economic Sovereignty – The ability of a nation to control its economy without undue external influence.
Education Indoctrination – Schools teaching political ideology instead of actual knowledge, making students obedient rather than intelligent.
Education Restructuring – Replacing outdated public school models with practical, merit-based, skill-focused programs.
Edward Snowden – Former NSA contractor who leaked details on mass surveillance programs.
Elijah Schaffer – Journalist, commentator, and founder of BlazeTV-style content.
Eliminate Useless Degrees – Ending government loans for college programs that do not lead to real jobs (like courses that create debt but no income opportunity).
Elite / Globalist Elites – Powerful individuals or groups (billionaires, bankers, political insiders) who control major parts of the economy or government. They often make decisions that benefit themselves, not regular citizens.
Elite Capture – When political, economic, or cultural institutions are dominated by a small, powerful group, often disconnected from average citizens.
Elite Control / Foreign Influence – Combined concept where domestic elites and foreign actors coordinate to shape policy, media, and economic outcomes.
Elite Cultural Influence – The effect of wealthy or powerful individuals and institutions in shaping mainstream culture or public opinion.
Elite Networks / Cabals – Informal or covert groups of wealthy and influential individuals coordinating power, investments, or policy influence.
Elite Retreat Bunkers / Bunker Society – Private underground or remote hideouts (or private islands) built by the wealthy in case of societal collapse — showing separation between elites and normal people.
Elite Transition Programs (Veterans) – Helping veterans leave military life and transition into tech or entrepreneurship careers.
Elitist Eugenics / Genetic Caste – Idea that elite may use genetic engineering to create a superior class of people while regular citizens fall behind.
Elon Musk – Entrepreneur, CEO of Tesla and SpaceX, influential in tech and media discourse.
Emmanuel Macron – French President, former Rothschild investment banker, considered pro-EU, pro-WEF globalist.
Empire-Building – When a country expands military bases and power overseas for political or corporate gain rather than true national defense.
End Stock Buyback Manipulation – Prevent companies from rigging stock prices by buying their own shares just to look profitable.
End-to-End Encryption Backdoors – Government-mandated access points that bypass encryption, compromising privacy.
Endless Wars / Military Industrial Complex (MIC) – Long-term foreign wars that mostly benefit defense contractors and elite interests rather than national defense.
Engineered Collapse / Controlled Demolition – Crises (financial, societal, pandemic) that appear sudden but are intentionally planned to restructure society.
Entrepreneurial Freedom – Removing regulations and taxes that stop individuals from starting businesses or building their own income streams.
Environmental Toxins – Harmful chemicals present in everyday products, water, air, or food.
Equity Dilution – Reduction of existing shareholders’ ownership percentage due to new shares being issued.
Equity Kickers – Additional equity granted to lenders in exchange for providing debt financing.
Equity Stake / Ownership – The percentage of a company owned by investors, determining profit share and voting power.
ESG – Environmental, Social, and Governance scores used by corporations to push political agendas rather than performance or merit.
ESG / Corporate Woke Capitalism – Environmental, Social, and Governance — rules or scores that companies follow for political reasons, often used to push political or ideological agendas instead of real productivity.
ESG Scores – Corporate scoring system enforcing climate/woke compliance to get access to capital and investment.
Espionage Accountability – Legal or political mechanisms to hold spies, intelligence officers, or foreign agents accountable for illegal influence.
Espionage Networks – Systems of spies or informants operating domestically or internationally to influence governments, corporations, or individuals.
Ethnic Enclaves / No-Go Zones – Areas where an immigrant group dominates and the host culture no longer has authority or control over laws or customs.
Ethno-Majority Disenfranchisement – The gradual loss of political power by the original majority group as new immigrant populations become the dominant voting bloc.
Ethno-National Identity – The concept that a nation has a core ethnic or cultural identity that should be preserved in immigration and governance policy.
Ethno-nationalism – Belief that a nation should be defined by a certain ethnic identity and demographic continuity.
Ethnomasochism – Self-hatred of one’s own ethnic group combined with belief that their own group should feel guilt or be replaced.
Eurasian Economic Union (EAEU) Summit – Economic and political coordination among Russia-led post-Soviet states.
European Council (EU) Summit Meetings – High-level EU decision-making on policy, economy, and foreign affairs.
European Council on Foreign Relations (ECFR) High-Level Panels – Discussions on EU foreign policy and global governance.
European Policy Centre (EPC) Policy Workshops – EU-focused governance, policy, and economics roundtables.
European Round Table of Industrialists (ERT) Meetings – European corporate leaders coordinating economic and policy strategies.
European Union (EU) – Political and economic union of European countries that often acts as a supranational government limiting national sovereignty.
Evercore – Independent investment advisory firm focused on high-profile mergers, acquisitions, and corporate finance.
Exit Multiple – A valuation metric used to determine expected returns when selling or IPO’ing a company.
Exit Strategy – The planned way investors will eventually sell their stake in a company to realize a profit, commonly through IPOs, sales, or mergers.
Extraterritoriality – When corporations operate in multiple countries but aren’t held responsible under any national law.
Fabian Socialism – A gradual approach to socialism rather than violent revolution; relies on slow cultural takeover (UK Fabian Society).
Facial Recognition Technology – AI-driven software that identifies individuals using their face, often without consent.
Fair Trade / Protectionism – Trade rules that protect local workers and industries from being undercut by countries with cheap labor and low standards.
Fake News – Deliberately misleading or false information presented as news to influence opinions or manipulate behavior.
Fake News / Misinformation – Deliberate or accidental dissemination of false or misleading information in media or social networks.
False Flag – A covert operation designed to look like it was carried out by someone other than the actual perpetrators (used to justify war or crackdown).
Family Offices – Private wealth management firms for ultra-wealthy families.
Fareed Zakaria – Political commentator, global policy.
FBI – U.S. domestic intelligence and federal law enforcement; often accused of political targeting and spying on citizens.
FDA Corruption – Allegations that the Food and Drug Administration prioritizes corporate profits over public safety in drug approvals.
FedCoin – A hypothetical U.S. central bank digital currency that could track spending or cancel your account if you disobey authority.
Federal Reserve (The Fed) – The central banking system of the U.S., responsible for monetary policy, controlling inflation, and regulating banks.
Federal Reserve / Central Banking – The institution that prints U.S. money, controls interest rates, and affects inflation; not fully controlled by the public or government.
Federal Reserve / Fiat Currency – The central bank that controls America’s money supply. Fiat currency means money not backed by gold or anything real — it can be printed endlessly, causing inflation.
Federal Trade Commission (FTC) – U.S. government agency tasked with preventing anticompetitive, deceptive, and unfair business practices.
Fentanyl – Synthetic opioid far stronger than morphine, largely responsible for the current U.S. overdose epidemic.
Fentanyl Flood – The large-scale illegal importation and distribution of fentanyl, particularly from Mexico and CCP-linked networks.
Fiat Currency – Money that has value because the government says so, but is not backed by gold, silver, or other real assets.
Financial Reset / Debt Jubilee – Mass cancellation of debt to reset the system, historically done in ancient civilizations and proposed by some politicians.
Financial Serfdom – Life-long economic slavery due to loans, credit debt, payday lenders, and wage stagnation.
Financial Terrorism – Using economic tools (sanctions, market crashes, debt traps) to destroy nations or control populations.
First Principles Thinking – Solving problems by removing assumptions and focusing on core truths, a foundational philosophy of your educational policy.
FISA Court – Secret court authorizing surveillance, often abused by intelligence agencies without public oversight.
FISA Court Abuse – Secret court orders used by intelligence agencies to spy on citizens without proper oversight or transparency.
Five Eyes – A secret intelligence alliance between the U.S., UK, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand that shares signals intelligence.
Flat Tax vs. Progressive Tax – A flat tax charges everyone the same percent. A progressive tax charges higher-income people a higher percent.
Food Label Transparency – Requirement for companies to fully disclose ingredients, additives, and processing methods.
Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) – Investment made by a company or individual in one country into business interests in another, which can include acquiring control over companies.
Foreign Energy Investment – Ownership or influence of U.S. energy assets by foreign governments or corporations.
Foreign Funding of NGOs – Non-governmental organizations receiving money from foreign governments or entities to push agendas in domestic politics.
Foreign Influence (AIPAC, CCP, IMF, etc.) – When foreign governments or organizations use money, lobbying, or pressure to influence American policy and laws.
Foreign Influence in Education – Programs like Confucius Institutes or other foreign-funded initiatives aiming to shape curriculum or ideology.
Foreign Lobbies – Organizations funded by other countries that pay U.S. politicians to support foreign agendas.
Foreign Lobbying – Attempts by foreign entities or governments to influence domestic policy through financial, political, or covert means.
Foreign Lobbying / FARA (Foreign Agents Registration Act) – U.S. law requiring individuals and entities representing foreign governments or interests to register with the Department of Justice.
Foreign Lobbying Influence – Actions by foreign governments or entities to shape domestic policy through PACs, donations, or advocacy.
Foreign Lobbyist / Agent of Influence – An individual or organization acting on behalf of a foreign entity to sway domestic policy.
Foreign Mergers & Acquisitions (M&A) – When companies from one country acquire or merge with companies in another country, potentially transferring control or intellectual property.
Foreign Ownership – When non-American entities buy U.S. farmland, real estate, businesses, or infrastructure, which can threaten national sovereignty.
Foreign Ownership Ban – Preventing non-Americans from owning land, critical infrastructure, or companies inside the U.S. for national security reasons.
Foreign-Controlled Companies – Businesses operating domestically but owned or heavily influenced by foreign entities.
Foreign-Controlled VC Firms – Venture capital firms funded or influenced by foreign actors, sometimes accused of undermining domestic entrepreneurship.
Forgiveness Program (Debt) – Plan to eliminate or drastically reduce predatory debt burdens to free citizens financially.
Founders of the Federal Reserve – Key figures like Paul Warburg, Nelson Aldrich, and Woodrow Wilson who created the Fed in 1913.
Fourth Industrial Revolution – Klaus Schwab’s WEF concept of AI, robotics, genetic editing, and digital monitoring blending with everyday life.
Fractional Reserve Banking – Banks lending out more money than they have on deposit, creating money out of thin air and risking collapse.
Free Speech – The right to speak ideas without fear of censorship or punishment — threatened today by tech companies and governments.
Freedom of Code Act – If you write code, you own it — protecting programmers from corporate intellectual property theft.
Full Financial Transparency – Making politicians disclose all investments, trades, deals, gifts, lobbying funds — nothing hidden.
Fund of Funds – Investment funds that invest in other funds rather than directly in companies, used to diversify risk.
Fusion Reactor / Nuclear 2.0 – Next generation nuclear energy that is safer and more powerful, potentially ending energy scarcity.
G20 Finance Ministers & Central Bank Governors Meetings – Economic and financial coordination among major economies.
G20 Finance Ministers & Central Bank Governors Meetings – Focused discussions on global finance, currency stability, and economic policy.
G20 Summit – Annual meeting of finance ministers and central bank governors from the world’s 20 largest economies, discussing global economic policy and trade.
G30 (Group of Thirty) Conferences – Central bankers, academics, and financial leaders discussing global finance.
G7 Finance Ministers & Central Bank Governors Meetings – Annual meetings of the world’s seven largest advanced economies to discuss monetary and fiscal policy.
G7 Summit – Annual meeting of the world’s seven largest advanced economies for economic and political coordination.
Gain-of-Function Research – Altering viruses to make them more dangerous in labs, often linked to pandemic origin scandals.
Gaslighting – Manipulating someone to make them doubt their own perceptions or sanity; often done by media and government.
Gaza Genocide / Middle East Foreign Policy – Included as an example of foreign policy driven by foreign interests rather than U.S. national needs.
GCHQ – British signals intelligence agency (UK’s NSA), involved in mass surveillance.
General Partners (GPs) – Fund managers who actively manage investments and make operational decisions in VC or PE funds.
Geneva Centre for Security Policy (GCSP) Seminars – Security, diplomacy, and strategic studies conferences.
Geneva Centre for Security Policy (GCSP) Workshops – Elite seminars for diplomats, military leaders, and policymakers.
Geo-Strategic Sabotage – Deliberate attacks on supply chains, pipelines, or infrastructure to weaken a nation.
Geoengineering – Technology used to manipulate the Earth’s climate (e.g., spraying particles in the sky to reflect sunlight).
Geopolitical Leverage – Strategic use of geography, resources, or alliances to influence other nations.
George Soros – Billionaire who funds leftist NGOs and movements worldwide (Open Society Foundations), accused of manipulating elections and “color revolutions.”
George Will – Political commentator, conservative thought leader.
Gig Economy Serfdom – Workers trapped in temporary, no-benefit jobs like Uber, TaskRabbit — no ownership, no stability.
Glass-Steagall – Old law that separated commercial and investment banks – repealed in 1999, leading to Wall Street consolidation.
Glenn Greenwald – Journalist who worked with Snowden to publish NSA surveillance revelations.
Global Conference – Broad term often referring to major international forums for business, technology, and policy exchange.
Global Counterterrorism Forum (GCTF) Summits – International security, terrorism prevention, and policy frameworks.
Global Economic Symposium (GES) – Forum for policymakers, economists, and academics to discuss international finance, governance, and development.
Global Infrastructure Facility (GIF) Summits – Infrastructure investment strategy and public-private partnership planning.
Global Infrastructure Leadership Forum – High-level discussions on international infrastructure investment, development, and financing.
Global Military Engagements – Overseas wars or interventions undertaken by a nation, sometimes criticized as serving foreign interests.
Global Solutions Summit (Berlin) – Multilateral economic, social, and policy solutions gathering.
Global Strategic Forum (Singapore & London Chapters) – Networks of senior officials, corporate leaders, and academics discussing strategy and trade.
Globalism / Globalist Agenda – Policies that prioritize international institutions over national sovereignty and often favor elites and corporations over citizens.
Globalist Influence – Political or economic control by international elites or organizations that prioritize global agendas over domestic interests.
Globalist Policy Enforcement – Implementation of international agreements or norms that may conflict with national sovereignty.
Globalists – People who want world governance under UN, WEF, IMF, etc.
Gold & Crypto Reserves – Storing national wealth in gold or decentralized digital assets instead of relying only on printed fiat dollars.
Golden Parachute – Large financial compensation guaranteed to executives if they are terminated following a merger or acquisition.
Golden Visa / Citizenship by Investment – Programs allowing foreigners to gain residency or citizenship in exchange for large investments, often criticized for enabling elite influence.
Goldman Sachs – Global investment bank offering M&A advisory, trading, asset management, and financial consulting. Known for handling high-profile corporate deals (major influence in U.S. and international finance).
Great Replacement Theory (Reality) – The reality that political elites are intentionally replacing the native population of Western countries (especially white Europeans or Americans) with immigrants from other regions in order to weaken national identity and control the population.
Great Reset Agenda – A globalist plan promoted by institutions like the World Economic Forum to reshape economies and societies under centralized control.
Greenwashing – When corporations pretend to be environmentally responsible, but it’s just marketing while they still pollute.
Grey Zone Warfare – Conflict below open warfare: sanctions, cyber attacks, propaganda — all used without official war declaration.
Greylock Partners – Focuses on consumer and enterprise technology startups, often taking early stakes in high-growth companies.
Grooming (Political / Cultural) – Exposing children or the public to ideas or behaviors to normalize certain lifestyles or ideologies for political goals.
Grooming & Child Indoctrination Penalties – Harsh legal punishments for anyone who exploits or indoctrinates children sexually or politically.
Gulf of Tonkin Incident – Alleged attack on U.S. naval ship used to justify Vietnam War escalation; later proven questionable/false flag.
H-1B Visa / Foreign Labor Replacement – A visa program that allows companies to bring in foreign workers, sometimes replacing American workers with cheaper labor.
H-1B Visa / Foreign Worker Visa – A visa program that allows companies to hire foreign workers, which sometimes replaces American workers with cheaper labor.
H-1B Visa Loophole – A system exploited by companies to hire foreign workers at lower wages instead of employing qualified Americans.
Hard Power – Using military, coercion, or economic coercion to influence foreign policy outcomes.
Harrison H. Smith – Political and media personality, right-leaning commentary.
Healthcare Monopoly – When a few corporations control hospitals and insurance, resulting in high prices and poor service.
Heavy Metal Contamination – Dangerous levels of metals like lead, mercury, or arsenic in water, soil, or food, causing long-term health damage.
Hedge Fund / Private Equity – Firms that buy companies, cut jobs, and extract profit, often at the expense of workers and long-term investment.
Hedge Fund Influence – Hedge funds’ use of investments and lobbying to shape markets or policy to maximize returns.
Hedge Fund Raiders – Investors who buy companies only to slash jobs, sell assets, and leave communities ruined.
Hedge Funds – Private investment funds that employ aggressive strategies like short selling, leverage, and derivatives to maximize returns for accredited investors.
Henry Jackson Society Forums – U.K.-based think tank on foreign policy, national security, and human rights advocacy.
Henry Kissinger – Former U.S. Secretary of State; CFR and global diplomatic influence.
Henry Kravis – Co-founder, KKR; private equity pioneer.
Heritage Foundation Policy Forums – U.S. conservative think tank hosting discussions on domestic policy, defense, and international relations.
Hillary Clinton – Former Secretary of State tied to Foundation scandals, Libya war, and suspected Deep State involvement (Clinton Foundation).
HodgeTwins – Social media personalities, commentators, political content creators.
Holistic Recovery – Approaches to addiction or illness that treat mind, body, and social context rather than only symptoms or drugs.
Hollowing Out of the Middle Class – Economic phenomenon where the middle class disappears due to wealth gap, leaving only rich vs poor.
Hollywood & Entertainment Bias – Critiques of film, TV, and streaming content promoting values or messages seen as anti-national or anti-family.
Honeypot / Blackmail Networks – Intelligence strategy using compromising situations to control politicians or influential figures.
Hostile Takeover – Acquisition of a company against the wishes of its management, often via stock purchase or proxy battle.
Housing Affordability Act – Proposed laws to make housing more available by removing zoning barriers, stopping corporate buy-ups, and promoting modular housing.
Howard Marks – Oaktree Capital, debt & distressed investing expert.
Human Enhancement / Transhumanism – Using genetic editing, implants, or biotechnology to upgrade human intelligence, strength, or lifespan.
Human Longevity Research – Medicine and biohacking to extend healthy lifespan, promoting research into anti-aging and genetic repair.
Human Trafficking – Illegal trade of humans for forced labor, sexual exploitation, or other illicit purposes.
Human Trafficking Networks – Criminal and political networks involved in child trafficking, sex trafficking, or labor exploitation — often tied to elites.
Hybrid Warfare – A mix of cyber, propaganda, and financial warfare, used by nations to weaken each other without direct battle.
Hyperinflation – Extreme loss of money value due to massive printing of currency, causing prices to skyrocket.
Ian Carroll – Political analyst and commentator.
Identity Politics – Political positions based on the interests of social groups with which people identify (race, gender, religion, etc.) rather than universal policy concerns.
Ideological Indoctrination – Efforts in education or media to instill a specific worldview or set of beliefs, often without debate.
Idriss Jazairy – UN human rights & economic development figure.
Illegal Immigration – When people enter the country without legal permission, which can strain resources, lower wages, or threaten sovereignty.
IMF (International Monetary Fund) – Global financial institution lending to countries with strings attached, often pushing austerity and globalist policy.
IMF Structural Adjustment – Conditions forced on countries receiving loans: privatization, tax hikes, cut services, loss of sovereignty.
Immediate Deportation of Illegals – Policy of expelling non-citizens who are in the country illegally with no long bureaucratic process.
Immigration Replacement Theory (Neutral wording) – The hypothesis that immigration policy is used to replace existing populations for political or economic reasons.
Indoctrination Camp / Re-education Program – Schooling or training designed to suppress individual thought and force ideological conformity.
Industrial Pollution – Toxic emissions from factories, mines, or plants affecting air, soil, and water.
Inflation – The rising price of goods and services caused by too much money being printed or poor financial policy.
Information Warfare – Coordinated campaigns to manipulate public opinion via media or online platforms.
Infrastructure – Roads, bridges, power grids, water systems, and transportation. The basic physical systems a country needs to function.
Infrastructure Overhaul / New Power Grid – Rebuilding energy/drainage/electric/water systems to be reliable, modern, safe — especially for disasters.
Infrastructure Plan – A government program to rebuild roads, bridges, power systems, and transit — ideally using domestic labor and materials.
Innovation Suppression – When big corporations or governments shut down new technologies that might threaten their profit or control.
Insider Trading – When politicians or business elites use private information to make stock trades and get rich illegally or unethically.
Institute for International Finance (IIF) – Global association of financial institutions discussing economic policies, debt, and financial stability.
Institutional Influence – The combined political, economic, and social power of large financial and corporate entities.
Institutional Investors – Large entities such as pension funds, mutual funds, and insurance companies that manage significant amounts of capital and influence markets.
Inter-American Dialogue Forums – U.S.-based hemispheric policy think tank focusing on Latin American democracy, economy, and governance.
International Chamber of Commerce (ICC) World Congress – Annual meeting of global corporate leaders and policymakers on trade and commerce.
International Crisis Group (ICG) Conferences – Conflict prevention, peacebuilding, and international security policy discussions.
International Economic Forum of the Americas (Montreal) – Canadian-hosted summit for global policy and trade leaders.
International Energy Agency (IEA) Ministerial Meetings – Energy policy, market, and global resource discussions.
International Finance Forum (IFF) Moscow & London Events – High-level finance and investment summits.
International Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS) Conferences – Global security and defense think tank hosting discussions on military strategy and policy.
International Monetary Fund (IMF) Annual Meetings – Gathering of finance ministers, central bankers, and economists to discuss global economic health and policy.
International Peace Institute (IPI) Roundtables – Global peacebuilding and conflict prevention forums.
International Renewable Energy Agency (IRENA) Assemblies – Global renewable energy strategies and policy coordination.
International Republican Institute (IRI) Global Leadership Forums – Democracy promotion, governance, and political leadership workshops.
Internet of Things (IoT) Monitoring – Network of connected devices (appliances, cars, cameras) used to collect personal data constantly.
Interventionism – A policy of getting involved in other nations’ affairs (military or political) rather than focusing at home.
Inversion Loophole – When a company renounces its home country citizenship for tax benefits while continuing to earn revenue domestically.
Inverted mergers – By merging with foreign companies, private equity firms shift taxable income abroad, reducing their U.S. tax liabilities.
Investment Banks – Financial institutions that advise companies on raising capital, underwriting stock or debt offerings, and facilitating large transactions like IPOs or mergers (including firms like Goldman Sachs, JP Morgan, and Morgan Stanley).
Investment Funds for Real Americans – Tax benefits for funds that invest in U.S. small businesses and real workers instead of foreign stock buyouts.
Investment Repatriation – Returning profits earned abroad back to the domestic country, often tied to nationalist economic policies.
Islamic State (ISIS) – Terror group that some claim received indirect support from Western intelligence to destabilize Middle East governments.
Israel Lobby – General term for organized groups lobbying U.S. government on behalf of Israeli geopolitical interests.
J.P. Morgan – Full-service global investment bank active in corporate finance, advisory, M&A, and capital markets. Often involved in megadeals shaping U.S. industry.
Jacob Appelbaum – Activist, researcher, and Tor Project contributor; advocates privacy and anonymity online.
Jair Bolsonaro – Former Brazilian President; nationalist policies in Latin America.
Jake Shields – Mixed martial artist and political commentator.
James Gorman – CEO, Morgan Stanley; corporate finance and wealth management.
James O’Keefe – Project Veritas founder, undercover journalism.
Jamie Dimon – CEO JPMorgan Chase; banking and financial influence (influential in global banking policy).
Jane Fraser – CEO, Citigroup; major role in international banking.
Jeff Bezos – Amazon CEO; media (Washington Post); major private investment influence and tech power.
Jeffrey Sterling – CIA officer prosecuted for leaking classified information on covert operations.
Jesselyn Radack – Whistleblower attorney, defended multiple government leakers.
Joe Biden – U.S. President, aligned with establishment foreign policy and global financial networks.
Joe Rogan – Podcaster and commentator covering a wide range of topics including politics, tech, and society.
John Paulson – Hedge fund manager; famous for bets on 2008 financial crisis.
Joseph Safra – International banking and finance magnate.
Judicial Overreach – When courts or judges act beyond their constitutional role, creating new laws instead of interpreting existing ones.
Julian Assange – Founder of WikiLeaks; published classified U.S. and global government documents.
Justin Trudeau – Prime Minister of Canada, extreme WEF / authoritarian covid policy / iberal / globalist agenda.
Justin Welby – Archbishop of Canterbury; moral/ethical influence in global forums.
Katharine Gun – British whistleblower who exposed illegal U.S./UK spying before Iraq War.
Ken Griffin – Founder, Citadel, hedge fund & market influence.
Kill the Debt Trap – Ending systems that trap people in endless interest payments: payday loans, student debt, high credit card interest.
King’s College London – Policy Institute Events – High-level conferences on international security, economics, and global governance.
Kissinger Summer Symposium – Private gatherings of elite policymakers and former diplomats to discuss global strategy and geopolitics.
KKR (Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Co.) – Known for pioneering leveraged buyouts, KKR invests across private equity, infrastructure, real estate, and credit. Its strategies often reshape the companies they acquire, for better or worse.
Klaus Schwab – Founder of the World Economic Forum (WEF) and promoter of Great Reset global agenda.
Kleiner Perkins – Iconic Silicon Valley VC, historically influential in tech innovation and startup funding.
Knesset – The Israeli parliament; center of Israeli legislative power, heavily influenced by Zionist political factions.
Kulturkampf – “Culture war” — a conflict between values and identity of natives and the values imposed by elites or foreign cultures.
Kurt Caz – Political commentator and media creator.
Landlordism – The practice or system where large-scale property owners control rental housing, often criticized for contributing to high rents and housing inequality.
Larry Fink / BlackRock – CEO of BlackRock, the world’s largest asset manager, influencing global economics and corporate policy including ESG initiatives.
Larry Summers – Former U.S. Treasury Secretary; economist, policy adviser, global financial forums.
Latin American Council on International Relations (LACIR) Meetings – Policy discussions for Latin American political and business elites.
Laura Poitras – Documentary filmmaker exposing mass surveillance and NSA activities.
Laurence Fink – BlackRock; WEF participant, global asset management.
Lazard – Independent advisory firm specializing in M&A, restructuring, and capital raising. Often handles complex or hostile takeover situations.
LBO Fund – A type of PE fund that specializes in leveraged buyouts.
Leon Black – Founder, Apollo Global Management; private equity and finance.
Leveraged Buyout (LBO) – A purchase of a company using a large amount of borrowed money, typically with the acquired company’s assets used as collateral.
Leveraged Loans – Loans issued to companies with high debt, often used in LBOs.
Leveraged Recapitalization – A recapitalization using significant debt to pay dividends or buy back equity, sometimes used to defend against hostile takeovers.
Lightspeed Venture Partners – Global VC firm investing in technology and consumer companies.
Like-kind exchanges – Firms defer capital gains taxes by swapping assets of equal value in real estate or business transactions, thus delaying tax obligations.
Limited Partners (LPs) – Investors in a venture or private equity fund who provide capital but do not manage the fund’s day-to-day operations.
Lobbying / PACs – When organizations or corporations spend money to influence laws and politicians. PAC = Political Action Committee — used to funnel money to campaigns.
Lobbying Disclosure Act – Law requiring disclosure of lobbying activities and spending in the U.S.
Lobbying Firm – An organization that advocates for specific policies or legislation on behalf of clients, often corporations or foreign entities.
Lobbying Revolving Door – When officials go back and forth between government jobs and corporate lobby firms, creating corruption loops.
Lobbyist – A person paid by a group (corporate or interest group) to influence politicians and government for their agenda.
Local Manufacturing Hubs – Factories and workshops in local towns so communities can be economically independent and create jobs.
Localism – Economic and cultural self-sufficiency where communities produce their own food, goods, and services instead of relying on global systems.
Long-Term Investment Requirement – Mandates for investors to maintain ownership in companies to prevent destructive short-term speculation.
Management Buyout (MBO) – When a company’s existing management team purchases the business, often with PE financing.
Management fee waivers – Private equity firms convert management fees into equity, allowing them to treat income as capital gains, which are taxed at a lower rate than ordinary income.
Management Fees – Regular fees charged by PE or VC managers to cover operational costs of running a fund.
Marc Andreessen – VC, Andreessen Horowitz; tech and startup investment.
Marginal Utility of Crisis – The concept that each new crisis is used for power grabs, funding, or new laws that the elite want passed.
Marine Le Pen – French nationalist-populist politician who opposes mass immigration and EU globalism.
Mario Draghi – Former ECB President; global financial policy.
Mark Carney – Former Bank of England & Bank of Canada Governor; climate finance.
Mark Klein – AT&T technician who exposed NSA wiretapping.
Mark Mobius – Emerging markets investor; financial development influence.
Mark Rutte – Prime Minister of the Netherlands, involved in farm shutdowns and WEF-aligned climate policy.
Mark Zuckerberg – CEO of Facebook/Meta, key actor in social media censorship and data harvesting.
Masha Gessen – Journalist covering surveillance and Russia.
Mass Audit of Fortune 500 – Government audit of large corporations that avoid taxes or commit fraud despite huge profits.
Mass Data Aggregation – Combining multiple datasets (financial, medical, social media) to create complete profiles on every individual.
Mass Formation Psychosis – When large groups of people are brainwashed into hysteria or compliance through media and fear campaigns.
Mass Immigration – Large-scale immigration, illegal or legal, that can change culture, strain resources, or displace local workers.
Mass Immigration Pressure – The impact of large-scale immigration on culture, economy, and social systems, often debated politically.
Mass Immigration Weaponization – Claim that immigration is intentionally used to influence domestic politics, demographics, or labor markets.
Mass Migration Policy – Government programs or international agreements that encourage or allow extremely high rates of immigration, often promoted by globalist organizations or leftist parties.
Mass Surveillance – Large-scale monitoring of citizens’ communications, movements, and behaviors by governments or corporations.
Matt Gaetz – U.S. Congressman, conservative politician.
McCarthyism – Accusations of treason or “extremism” used by the state to silence political enemies. Modern version = labeling people as extremists for anti-establishment views.
Media Bias – Perceived or actual partiality in news coverage or reporting, often favoring certain political or corporate interests.
Media Consolidation – A few companies owning most news outlets, reducing real journalism and increasing propaganda.
Mentorship-Driven Trades (Guild System) – An alternative education system where apprentices train under masters in skilled trades or tech fields.
Mergers & Acquisitions (M&A) – The process of companies combining (merger) or one company buying another (acquisition), sometimes creating monopolies or enabling foreign control.
Merit-Based Scholarships – Education funding for those who earn it through skill and achievement, not identity quotas.
Meritocracy – A system where people succeed based on talent, effort, and ability — not political favoritism, identity, or wealth.
Meritocracy Over Victimhood – A culture where people rise by effort, skill, and discipline, rather than social victim narratives or identity-based favoritism.
Meritocracy vs. Anti-Merit Indoctrination – The tension between rewarding skill/performance and imposing political or ideological conformity.
Metaverse Control Systems – Big Tech plan for people to live in virtual reality worlds so behavior, consumption, and thought can be fully controlled.
Methadone Clinics – Facilities that provide opioid replacement therapy, often criticized for treating addiction symptoms instead of root causes.
MI5 – UK domestic intelligence service spying on citizens, political activists.
MI6 – UK foreign intelligence agency (like British CIA), involved in foreign covert operations.
Michael Bloomberg – Founder, Bloomberg LP, financial media & political influence.
Michael Milken – “Junk bond king,” financier, philanthropist.
Michele Bachmann – Former U.S. Congresswoman known for conservative activism and anti-globalist positions.
Mike Flynn – Former U.S. National Security Advisor, military figure.
Military 2.0 / Elite Warrior Training – Redesigning the military to produce smarter, stronger, highly skilled soldiers — focused on agility, tech, and resilience rather than just numbers.
Military-Industrial Complex / MIC – The network of defense contractors, lobbyists, and politicians who profit from constant war and military spending, often critiqued for promoting unnecessary conflicts for profit.
Milken Institute Global Conference – Focuses on finance, technology, and healthcare innovation; attracts policymakers and corporate leaders worldwide.
Misinformation / Disinformation – False or misleading information spread either intentionally or through biased media or algorithms.
Mitch McConnell – Senate leadership, legislative strategy.
MKUltra – A series of illegal CIA experiments in mind control, drugging, and psychological torture on unwitting civilians during the 50s and 60s.
Modern Guild System – A system of trade apprenticeships and master craftsmen that train the next generation outside of universities.
Monetary Debasement – Devaluing currency by printing too much of it, wiping out savings, causing inflation.
Money Laundering – Concealing the origins of illegally obtained money, often through shell companies or offshore accounts.
Monopolies – Companies dominating a market with little or no competition, often leading to higher prices and restricted consumer choice.
Monopolistic Abuse – When large companies manipulate markets, stifle competition, or exploit consumers for excessive profit.
Monopoly / Corporate Monopoly – When one giant company controls an entire industry, blocking small businesses and making it hard for people to compete or have choices.
Moral Decay – A decline in societal ethics, family structures, or civic responsibility.
Morgan Stanley – Investment bank providing M&A advisory, capital markets, wealth management, and institutional services. Plays a key role in tech and corporate buyouts.
Mossad – The national intelligence agency of Israel, responsible for foreign intelligence gathering, covert operations, and counterterrorism.
Multiculturalism Agenda – Government or institutional promotion of multiple foreign cultures over assimilation or shared national identity, often resulting in loss of cohesion.
Multiculturalist Indoctrination – Teaching children that their own race or national culture is not special and must be subverted for multicultural goals.
Multipolar World – The idea that power is shifting away from U.S. unipolar domination to many power centers (China, BRICS, etc).
Multipolar World Order – Competing powers emerge (BRICS vs West).
Munich Security Conference (MSC) – Annual conference in Germany focused on global defense and security issues, attended by top military, political, and diplomatic leaders.
Munich Security Conference (MSC) Senior Officials’ Meetings – Security and military strategy discussions beyond the main conference.
Munich Security Conference (MSC) Track 1.5 Dialogues – Semi-private workshops for government and corporate leaders on security policy.
Munich Young Leaders Program – Sub-group of the Munich Security Conference grooming next-gen global leaders in defense and policy.
Myron Gaines – Political commentator and activist.
Nancy Pelosi – Speaker of the House, political influence.
Nation of Immigrants Propaganda – Narrative that Western countries have always been meant to be mixed or multicultural in order to justify open borders.
National Defense vs. Empire-Building – Policy distinction between protecting a country’s sovereignty and engaging in foreign interventions for global influence.
National Divorce – A potential breakup of the U.S. into separate regions or autonomous zones due to ideological polarization.
National Endowment for Democracy (NED) International Conferences – U.S.-based democracy promotion and policy coordination.
National Manufacturing Renaissance – Reviving domestic factories, steel mills, and production lines to rebuild economic independence.
National Pharma Watchdog – Government body strictly overseeing all drug approvals, marketing, and distribution for safety and ethical compliance.
National Sovereignty – A nation’s right to make its own laws and decisions without outside interference from foreign governments or global bodies.
Nationalist Investment Funds – Investment strategies prioritizing domestic companies and economic self-sufficiency over foreign entities.
NATO (North Atlantic Treaty Organization) – Western military alliance often used for U.S./EU intervention overseas and proxy wars.
NATO Burden-Sharing – Debates over how much each member country contributes financially and militarily to the alliance.
Neocon / Neoliberal – Establishment political figures who support globalist trade, open borders, and military interventionism.
Neoconservatives (Neocons) – U.S. hawkish faction that supports regime change wars, pro-Israel, anti-Russia.
Neoliberalism – The ideology that favors free-market capitalism, deregulation, privatization — often linked to globalism and outsourcing.
Neoliberals – Global finance liberals who support open borders, free trade, central banks.
Netanyahu – (already defined but repeating to include explicitly where you can see it) – Israeli PM known for aggressive foreign policy and lobby influence in U.S.
Neural Network Profiling – AI analyzing patterns in behavior, emotion, and decision-making to predict actions or vulnerabilities.
Neuralink / Brain Interface – Technology that connects the human brain to computers; powerful but potentially dangerous in the wrong hands.
New Economy Forum (Global) – Policy and tech-focused summit attracting global leaders and executives.
NGO (Non-Governmental Organization) – Private groups that claim to help society but often push political agendas or receive foreign funding.
Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala – Director-General, WTO; global trade and finance policies.
Nick J. Fuentes – Centrist political commentator and activist.
Nick Johnson – Media personality and political commentator.
No More Grooming / Child Abuse Execution Penalty – Mandatory life sentences or execution for severe crimes against children.
No Pay-to-Delay Pharma – Ending practice where drug companies pay competitors not to release cheaper generic drugs.
Noam Chomsky – Linguist and political commentator; critic of U.S. foreign policy and corporate power.
Non-Governmental Organization (NGO) Influence – When international or domestic NGOs shape policy or social norms, sometimes accused of acting counter to national interest.
NPC (Non-Playable Character) Mindset / Indoctrination – People who repeat mainstream or politically correct views without thinking critically — often caused by media or school indoctrination (meme for people who repeat media talking points without original thought).
NSA – U.S. National Security Agency, responsible for electronic surveillance and data collection worldwide.
OECD (Organization for Economic Cooperation & Development) Ministerial Meetings – Economic policy coordination among member countries.
OECD Ministerial Council Meetings – Global economic coordination among member states on policy and regulation.
Offshore LLC / Shell Company – Legal entities used to conceal ownership, reduce taxes, or bypass regulation.
Offshore Money Laundering – Using foreign accounts or shell companies to hide illicit income from taxes or law enforcement.
Offshore Money Laundering Penalties – Strict punishments for hiding money overseas to avoid taxes or regulations.
Offshore Tax Havens – Jurisdictions with low or no taxes, often used by corporations or wealthy individuals to hide or shield wealth.
Offshore Trust / Offshore Account – A financial account or trust registered in a foreign country, often used to protect assets or reduce tax liability.
Offshoring / Outsourcing – When companies send American jobs to other countries to save money. It makes goods cheaper but ruins local jobs and factories.
Oligarchy – Rule by a small group of elites (wealthy, corporate, or political) who make decisions for everyone.
Open Borders Ideology – Political position that supports having little to no immigration limitations regardless of economic/cultural impact.
Open-Source Code – Software with publicly viewable code so anyone can inspect, use, or improve it — promoting transparency and decentralization.
Open-Source Intelligence (OSINT) – Using publicly available data and internet activity for intelligence purposes (often done by citizens or agencies).
Open-Source Military Tech – Transparency so enemy can’t insert backdoors; build military tech with publicly auditable code (your proposal).
Operation Gladio – NATO/CIA program planting terror cells in Europe to fight communism, allegedly behind false flag terror attacks.
Operation Mockingbird – A CIA program that secretly placed agents or influence into mainstream media to shape the news narrative.
Operation Northwoods – A declassified U.S. government plan proposing false flag attacks on American citizens to justify war with Cuba.
Operation Paperclip – U.S. program that brought Nazi scientists to America after WWII to work on rockets, medicine, and intelligence.
Operational Improvements – Changes PE firms implement to make portfolio companies more efficient and profitable.
Opioid Crisis / Pharmaceutical Accountability – The epidemic of opioid addiction and the legal/policy measures to hold pharma companies accountable.
Opioid War Chest Fund – Policy idea to seize profits from pharmaceutical companies responsible for the opioid epidemic to fund recovery programs.
Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) Ministerial Meetings – Multilateral policy and economic coordination discussions.
Outsourcing – Hiring cheap labor from other countries to avoid paying Americans, often lowering quality and hurting workers.
Outsourcing Penalty – Fines or taxes for companies that send jobs overseas instead of hiring American workers.
Overprescription – Excessive or inappropriate prescription of medications, often incentivized by pharmaceutical companies.
Overton Window – The range of political ideas considered acceptable/popular at a given time; controlled by media and elites to restrict debate.
Owen Shroyer – InfoWars host and political commentator.
PAC (Political Action Committee) – A political organization that raises and spends money to elect or defeat candidates, often representing corporate or special interests.
Pacific Council on International Policy Forums – U.S.-based discussions on global governance and diplomacy.
Pacific Economic Cooperation Council (PECC) – Asia-Pacific regional forum bringing together business, government, and academic leaders to discuss trade and policy.
PACs (Political Action Committees) – Organizations that raise money to support political candidates or agendas, sometimes criticized for billionaire influence.
Pandemic Policy – Government actions during crises like COVID used to increase control, surveillance, or censorship.
Parallel Economy – A separate economic system not reliant on corporate or government systems — like crypto, local trade, gold, etc.
Paramilitary – Non-official armed groups that are equipped like military but operate outside official army control.
Parental Rights / Family Sovereignty – Legal and social policies protecting parents’ authority over education, upbringing, and family decisions.
Participation Trophy Culture – Rewarding people for minimal effort, leading to weakness and entitlement instead of achievement.
Pat Buchanan – Conservative commentator, former White House advisor, and presidential candidate; known for nationalism and anti-globalist views.
Patriot Act Repeal – Removing laws passed after 9/11 that allow government to spy on citizens without warrants.
Paul Joseph Watson – Commentator and conspiracy theorist associated with InfoWars.
Paul Singer – Hedge fund manager, Elliott Management; activist investing.
Paul Tudor Jones – Hedge fund founder, macro trader, philanthropy influence.
Pay-for-Delay – When pharmaceutical companies pay competitors to delay releasing cheaper generic drugs.
PE Buyouts of Essential Industries – When private equity acquires critical infrastructure or companies, sometimes risking national interests.
Pedro Sánchez – Spanish Prime Minister; EU leadership, international policy.
Peter Santenello – Journalist and media creator focusing on culture and society.
Peter Thiel – Venture capitalist, co-founder of PayPal, Palantir founder, influential in tech politics.
Peterson Institute for International Economics (PIIE) – Washington-based think tank providing policy research on trade, finance, and macroeconomics.
Petrodollar System – U.S. dominance enforced by requiring oil to be traded in dollars, propping up American currency but leading to endless wars.
Pharma Lobbying – Efforts by drug companies to influence legislation, regulation, and government policy to favor their interests--even if people suffer from high prices or bad drugs.
Pharma Watchdog – A citizen or government body that investigates drug companies, price fixing, and corruption in the medical system.
Piers Morgan – Journalist and media personality, UK and international coverage.
PIPE (Private Investment in Public Equity) – Investment in publicly traded companies through private transactions, often giving investors discounted shares.
Planned Obsolescence – Designing products to break or wear out so people must keep buying replacements — wasteful and exploitative.
Plastic & Microplastics Contamination – Ubiquitous pollution in oceans, rivers, and food, affecting human and animal health.
Plutocracy – A system where the wealthy rule the government or have most of the political power.
PMC (Private Military Contractor) – Private armed security firms (like Blackwater) that fight wars or protect elites outside normal laws.
Poison Pill – Defensive strategies used by a company to prevent hostile takeovers, such as issuing new shares to dilute the acquirer’s stake.
Poisoned Food & Water – Contamination of consumables with chemicals, heavy metals, or sugar causing chronic health problems.
Political Blackmail Networks – Alleged operations involving compromising information to influence politicians or business leaders.
Political Correctness (PC Culture) – Social or institutional pressure to avoid language or actions that could offend certain groups; often criticized for restricting free expression.
Political Insider Trading – Members of Congress using secret information to make money on the stock market.
Political Theatre – Symbolic, scripted events performed by politicians for media while real decisions happen behind scenes.
Population Dilution – The deliberate or incidental flooding of a country with different ethnic groups to dilute the original majority culture.
Populism – A political movement that claims to represent ordinary people against elites or corrupt institutions.
Populists – Political figures or movements that claim to represent ordinary people against corrupt elites (e.g., Trump, Orban, Le Pen).
Post-Money Valuation – The value of a company after investment, combining pre-money valuation with the new capital injected.
Post-Scarcity / AI Prosperity – A future system where technology produces so much abundance that people no longer struggle for basic needs — requires fair distribution and ownership of technology.
Pre-Money Valuation – The value of a company before new investment is added, used to calculate equity ownership for new investors.
Predatory Buyouts – Acquisitions intended to strip companies of value, eliminate competition, or reduce labor standards.
Predatory Interest Ban – Ending payday loans, 20%+ credit cards, student loans that grow faster than wages.
Predatory Lending – High-interest loans (payday loans, rent-to-own, student loans) designed to enslave people in debt.
Predatory Practices – Business or government tactics exploiting vulnerable populations for profit, e.g., payday loans, pharma overprescription.
Predictive Policing / Minority Report Tech – Using AI to track potential criminals before crimes happen — leading to minority targeting and dystopia.
Preferred Return / Hurdle Rate – The minimum return LPs must receive before GPs can earn carried interest.
Preferred Stock – Shares that give investors priority over common shareholders for dividends and liquidation proceeds.
Prescription Drug Price Gouging – When companies drastically increase drug prices with little justification.
Private Debt Funds – Investment funds providing loans to companies outside traditional banks.
Private Equity Abuse – When powerful investors buy a company, strip its assets, cut jobs, and sell it for profit, leaving workers and communities worse off.
Private Equity Firms (PE) – Firms that buy controlling stakes in established companies, restructure them (lay off workers), and sell them for profit, sometimes criticized for short-term profit at the expense of employees--and for “asset stripping” without caring about long-term well-being.
Private Equity Takeover / Roll-Up – PE strategies to acquire companies for restructuring or profit, sometimes consolidating control in an industry.
Private Equity Vultures – Firms that buy companies, pile on debt, strip assets, lay off workers, then sell for profit.
Private Investment Firms – Companies or funds that invest in private companies, sometimes criticized for prioritizing profit over public good.
Programmable Money – Money that can be restricted in usage, time, or amount by authorities via software.
Propaganda – Information designed to manipulate people into believing a political agenda or narrative.
Propaganda Algorithms – Software systems used by social media platforms to prioritize certain content, potentially shaping public opinion.
Propaganda Channels – Media or platforms influenced or funded by foreign entities to manipulate public opinion.
Protectionism – Economic policy aimed at shielding domestic industries from foreign competition through tariffs, quotas, or regulations.
Proxy Wars – Conflicts where foreign powers support opposing sides without direct engagement.
Psychological Warfare (PsyWar) – Use of fear, confusion, and propaganda to weaken or control populations.
PsyOps – Psychological operations — using propaganda, fake news, and psychological influence to control populations--designed to manipulate people’s emotions, beliefs, or actions for political gain.
Public-Private Partnership (bad form) – When government and big business collude in ways that serve elite interests rather than the public.
Public-Private Partnerships (PPP) – Joint projects between government and private companies, often used for infrastructure or social programs.
Public-Private Surveillance – Partnerships between corporations and government to monitor citizens (ex: bank reporting, phone data sharing).
Quantitative Easing – Central bank policy that prints money and inflates the economy, often benefiting banks and investors instead of workers--devaluing savings and often worsening inequality.
Quantitative Tightening – The opposite of money-printing: pulling money out of the economy — usually done to fight inflation, often hurting workers.
Quantum Computing Surveillance – Next-gen computing enabling breaking of encryption and monitoring of all communications in real time.
Quarantine State / Lockdown Economics – Using health crises as a reason to shut down movement, small business, and increase surveillance.
Race Replacement Agenda – Belief that elites are intentionally transitioning a society from white majorities to multicultural mixes to weaken national unity.
Rachel Maddow – Liberal commentator, MSNBC.
Racial Guilt Narrative – Constant moral framing that one ethnic group must atone for past sins, used to justify policy that disempowers them.
RAND Corporation Symposia – Research organization hosting elite discussions on national security, policy, and technology trends.
Rand Paul – U.S. Senator; libertarian-leaning policies, anti-surveillance advocacy.
Ray Dalio – Founder, Bridgewater Associates; macroeconomic strategy, hedge funds.
Recapitalization – Restructuring a company’s debt and equity mix to stabilize finances, often by PE firms.
Refugee Resettlement Scam – Organized redistribution of refugees into rural or suburban areas under pretext of humanitarian aid but driven by NGOs and government grants.
Regenerative Agriculture – Farming methods that restore soil health, protect the environment, and produce healthy food without using harmful chemicals.
Regenerative Environment Funding – Investment in ecological systems that repair land instead of corporate profit-only climate policy.
Regenerative Farming – Farming in a way that rebuilds soil, captures carbon, and improves land instead of draining it. Chemical-free, eco-rich farming.
Regime Change – Overthrowing a foreign government via military, economic, or covert tactics.
Regulatory Arbitrage – Exploiting differences in laws or regulations across jurisdictions for advantage.
Regulatory Capture – When government agencies become controlled by the industries they’re supposed to regulate, protecting corporations instead of the public.
Reid Hoffman – LinkedIn co-founder, investor, global tech influence.
Remote Work Incentives – Policies to encourage companies to allow flexible work-from-home options, supporting parents and workers.
Renaissance Weekend (U.S.) – Private meeting of elites in politics, finance, and culture for informal policy discussions.
Rent-Seeking – When corporations get rich not by creating value, but by owning access and charging fees (housing rent, patents, tolls).
Replacement Migration – Global policy proposals to deal with aging western populations by importing massive foreign labor populations — often with cultural consequences.
Replacement Migration – United Nations policy terminology suggesting large-scale immigration as a solution to declining birth rates in Western countries, often criticized as social engineering.
Replacement Voters / Demographic Voting Bloc – Strategy to bring in immigrant groups expected to vote consistently for one political party or ideology.
Resilience Mandate – The idea that every citizen should meet a physical and mental toughness standard. Teaching survival, discipline, leadership.
Resilience Programs – Training that builds mental strength, discipline, and emotional toughness — for military, schools, or civilians.
Richard Branson – Founder, Virgin Group; influence in global entrepreneurship & climate initiatives.
Rishi Sunak – UK Prime Minister, former Goldman Sachs banker, WEF-friendly and fiscally globalist.
Robert Rubin – Former U.S. Treasury Secretary, Citigroup executive.
Robotic Automation / Autonomous Systems – Machines that operate without human input, replacing workers and possibly soldiers and police.
Roll-Up Strategy – Acquiring multiple small companies in a single industry to create a larger entity with more market power.
Ron Paul – Former U.S. Congressman and presidential candidate; libertarian, anti-globalist.
Rothschild & Co. – International advisory firm focused on M&A, restructuring, and financial consulting, with strong European and global presence.
Rothschild Banking Family – Historical banking dynasty heavily involved in European finance, often cited in discussions of global financial control.
Rothschild Roundtables – Private finance and policy gatherings historically associated with elite banking networks.
Royal Institute of International Affairs (Chatham House) Strategy Briefings – Confidential meetings for government and corporate leaders on global issues.
Royal United Services Institute (RUSI) International Security Conferences – Defense, military policy, and intelligence strategy discussions.
Rug Pull – In crypto and investment, when the creators pull all the money out of a project and leave everyone else with nothing.
Rules-Based International Order – Phrase used by U.S./NATO to describe their version of global governance (translation: U.S. empire).
Rural Decline – Economic, social, and infrastructural decay in countryside areas due to job loss and neglect.
Rural Revitalization – Plans to repair declining small towns through industry, infrastructure, and local investment.
Rush Limbaugh – Influential conservative radio host shaping right-wing discourse in the U.S.
Sam Hyde – Comedian and online personality, often involved in controversial political satire.
Sanctions – Economic punishments placed on foreign countries, often used to control or destabilize governments without war.
Sanctions & Trade Restrictions – Economic tools used to pressure countries or entities, sometimes used in nationalist or protectionist policies.
Sanctions & Trade Wars – Economic tools used by governments to punish foreign nations, often intersecting with domestic policy debates.
Sanctions Evasion – Using complex corporate structures or offshore entities to bypass economic sanctions.
Satellite Surveillance Grid – Surveillance via satellites that track movement, mobile devices, terrain; used for monitoring the entire planet.
Sayanim – Jewish diaspora helpers used by Mossad around the world (means "helpers")--covert volunteers worldwide who assist Israeli intelligence services (Mossad) by providing safe houses, documents, or strategic help.
Secondary Buyout – A sale of a company from one PE firm to another PE firm.
Secondary Market Sale – Selling shares in a company to another investor before the company goes public.
Seize Assets of Corrupt Billionaires – Take wealth that was gained by fraud, crime, or foreign collusion to return it to the public or use for national rebuilding.
Seizing Corrupt Wealth – Government action to confiscate wealth gained through fraud, foreign collusion, or monopolistic abuse.
Self-Ownership Philosophy – You own your body, time, data, labor, and creations — not corporations or governments.
Seoul International Financial Forum (SIFF) – South Korea-hosted economic, policy, and trade summit.
Separation of Powers – System dividing power among branches (executive, legislative, judicial) that is now being bypassed via bureaucracy and executive orders.
Sequoia Capital – Early-stage tech investor, Sequoia has funded companies like Apple, Google, and Airbnb. Known for spotting high-growth startups.
Shadow Banking / Shell Companies – Hidden financial activities outside regulated banks, including hedge funds and private lending networks used to launder money, avoid taxes, or hide ownership.
Shadow Banking System – Financial activity conducted by hedge funds and non-bank institutions not subject to traditional regulation.
Shadow Cabinet – Parallel government in parliamentary systems used by opposition party, also used to refer to hidden real government behind the scenes.
Shadow Diplomacy / Backchannel Deals – Secret negotiations conducted outside official channels, often benefiting elites or foreign influencers.
Shadow Economy – Illegal or semi-legal part of the economy (drug trade, illegal labor) that is often linked to organized crime or corruption.
Shadow Government / Deep State – Unelected bureaucrats or agencies who run the country behind the scenes no matter who is elected.
Shamai Leibowitz – Former FBI translator who leaked internal documents.
Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) Summit – Security and economic policy coordination in Central Asia and China-Russia sphere.
Sheep / NPC – A slang term for people who follow mainstream narratives blindly without critical thought.
Shell Companies / LLC Loopholes – Companies with opaque ownership structures used to hide money, avoid taxes, bypass regulations, or political corruption.
Sheryl Sandberg – Meta, tech influence & WEF participation.
Shinzo Abe – Former Japanese Prime Minister; global alliances and trade policy.
Shock Doctrine – Strategy of exploiting disasters or crises (natural or engineered) to push policies people would normally resist.
Short Selling – Investment strategy betting that a security’s price will fall, allowing profit from decline.
Short-Term Flipping – When investors buy a company or asset only to sell it quickly for profit, often harming employees or long-term growth.
Silicon Valley Censorship Cartels – Big Tech companies acting together to silence ideas, throttle reach, or manipulate elections.
Singapore Dialogue on International Law & Security – Southeast Asia regional security, trade, and governance forum.
Singapore International Festival of Diplomacy & Policy – Southeast Asia regional diplomacy, trade, and security forum.
SIS / MI6 – British foreign intelligence service (James Bond type). Covers espionage.
Slush Fund – Money set aside (often hidden) to fund illegal or unethical activities, like political bribes or black ops.
Small Business Rebirth Act – Your idea to remove taxes/regulation for small businesses to rebuild middle-class ownership.
Smart City / Smart Infrastructure – Cities that use technology to run more efficiently — depending on use, can become surveillance tools or energy-saving tools.
Smart City Control Systems – City infrastructure (traffic lights, power grids, utilities) monitored and controlled digitally, often with citizen tracking.
Smart Contracts – Code that automatically executes agreements on a blockchain. Good for transparency but dangerous if controlled by elites.
Smart Dust – Micro-sensors deployed in environments to monitor everything from temperature to human presence — can be used for spying.
Smart Environmentalism vs. Climate Alarmism – Using high-tech clean energy without crippling the economy, not fear-based carbon taxes.
Social Credit System – A government-controlled system that tracks citizens’ behavior and rewards or punishes them based on compliance.
Social Decay – Decline in social structures, family units, community engagement, or moral standards within a society.
Social Engineering – Manipulating people’s behavior using planned psychological tactics in schools, media, or policy.
Soft Corruption – Subtle manipulation of policy or public opinion via financial incentives, lobbying, or media control without overt illegal acts.
Soft Ethnocide – Cultural erasure through demographic displacement, identity politics, and censorship — not killing physically, but killing identity.
Soft Power – Using culture, media, or economic pressure to influence countries or people rather than direct military force.
Soros Foundation / Open Society – Global network of NGOs funded by George Soros to spread left-progressive policies and color revolutions.
Sovereign Debt Crisis – When a nation becomes unable to pay debt, leading to IMF takeover, austerity, collapse of sovereignty.
Sovereign Debt Trap – Cycle where a nation borrows from global lenders, then must sell national assets or pass laws benefiting lenders to pay it back.
Sovereign Wealth – National ownership of natural resources, energy, or land for the benefit of citizens — instead of foreign or private ownership.
Sovereign Wealth Fund (SWF) – State-owned investment fund that invests national resources domestically or internationally.
Sovereignty – The power of a country or state to govern itself without interference.
SPAC (Special Purpose Acquisition Company) – Shell corporations formed to raise capital for mergers or acquisitions.
Space Colonization Acceleration – Speeding up moon/mars settlement programs by cutting red tape and letting private sector innovate faster.
Spartan Citizen Program – Mandatory survival, tactical, and resilience training for civilians to create a strong, prepared population.
Special Economic Zone (SEZ) – Area where normal laws don’t apply, often used by China or corporations to exploit cheap labor with no regulation.
Spin-Off – When a company creates a new independent company by selling or distributing new shares, sometimes used to isolate profitable assets.
Spy Networks & Intelligence Operations – Activities conducted by domestic or foreign agencies to collect sensitive information, sometimes controversially used against citizens.
St. Gallen Symposium – Swiss annual conference connecting global leaders, business executives, and policymakers.
St. Petersburg International Economic Forum (SPIEF) – Russia-hosted event attracting political and business leaders worldwide for economic discussion.
Stagnant Wages – A situation where workers’ pay fails to increase in line with inflation or productivity, reducing real income over time.
State Capture – When private interests take control of a government’s decision-making process.
State Sovereignty & Local Control – Giving states more power than federal bureaucracy and allowing regions to govern themselves in key areas.
Statism / Overregulation – When government becomes too big and controls too many parts of life or the economy.
STEM & First Principles Education – Teaching science, logic, math, problem-solving starting in K–12 so young people can build real things later.
Stephen A. Schwarzman – Blackstone founder, private equity titan.
Steve Bannon – Political strategist and former White House advisor; advocate of populist movements.
Steve Cohen – Hedge fund manager, SAC Capital founder.
Stimson Center Security and Policy Briefings – U.S. and global defense, nuclear policy, and conflict prevention discussions.
Stock Buyback – When a company uses profit to buy its own stock instead of paying workers more or investing in innovation. It boosts stock price but hurts the real economy.
Stockholm Business & Policy Roundtables – Nordic-focused economic policy and international trade discussions.
Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI) Events – Forums on arms control, conflict resolution, and military strategy.
Stop Nation-Building Abroad – Ending endless wars that try to rebuild other countries while ours falls apart.
Strategic Incompetence – When leaders appear incompetent but actually use “failure” as a way to push hidden agendas or justify new powers.
Structured Finance – Complex financial instruments combining debt, equity, and derivatives.
Subversion – The act of slowly undermining a country or culture from within — often through media, academia, or social movements.
Subversive Culture – Ideas or practices considered destabilizing to societal norms, often promoted via media, education, or entertainment.
Sugar & Processed Food Epidemic – Widespread consumption of ultra-processed foods contributing to obesity, diabetes, and cardiovascular disease.
Super PAC – A PAC that can raise unlimited sums of money from corporations, unions, and individuals to influence elections, though they cannot directly coordinate with candidates.
Supply Chain – The system of production, shipping, and delivery that gets products from factories to consumers. Foreign control of supply chains makes a country vulnerable.
Supply Chain Dependence – Reliance on foreign nations or companies for critical goods, such as electronics, energy, or pharmaceuticals.
Supply Chain Resilience – Having backup systems and domestic production so the country is not reliant on hostile nations for food, energy, or medicine.
Supranational Bodies – Organizations like the UN, IMF, or EU that operate above the level of individual nation-states, sometimes seen as infringing national sovereignty.
Surveillance Capitalism – Business model where companies profit from selling detailed personal data to advertisers or governments--using it to control their behavior.
Surveillance State – A government that constantly watches citizens using technology and data collection.
Syndication – When multiple VCs or PE firms invest jointly in a single deal to share risk and resources.
Synthetic Biology – Engineering new life forms or genetics for medicine, food, or warfare — requires strong ethical rules.
Synthetic Meat / Food Control – Push toward lab-grown or processed food controlled by corporations and governments under ESG/climate excuses.
Systemic Financial Extraction – How elites extract wealth from the bottom through banking fees, credit scores, housing rent, student loans.
Systemic Risk – Risk of collapse in the entire financial system due to interconnected institutions or market failures.
Tag-Along Rights – A clause allowing minority shareholders to sell their shares if majority shareholders sell theirs.
Tavistock Institute – UK think tank alleged to specialize in mass psychology, behavioral manipulation, and social engineering.
Tax Avoidance & Evasion – Legal or illegal strategies used by companies or individuals to reduce or avoid paying taxes.
Tax Incentives for Remote Work – Rewarding companies that allow flexible work, benefiting parents, rural citizens, mental health.
Tax Inversion Loopholes – When companies shift legal headquarters to another country to reduce taxes while still primarily operating domestically.
Tax Loophole – A legal trick used by corporations or billionaires to avoid paying taxes.
Tax sheltering – Complex financial structures--tax credits & accelerated depreciation--help firms shelter profits & reduce taxable income.
Tax-advantaged investment vehicles – Firms use pass-through structures like S-Corps and LLCs to avoid corporate tax, having profits taxed at the individual investor’s lower tax rates.
Tech Cartel – A small group of tech giants who collaborate or suppress competition to dominate the digital world.
Tech Monopoly – When a few tech companies dominate the entire internet or app ecosystem.
Tech Oligopoly – Dominance of a few tech giants controlling platforms, data, and market access.
Technocracy – A system run by technical experts or scientists instead of elected representatives, often seen in Big Tech and globalist policy structures.
Ted Kaczynski (Unabomber) – Domestic terrorist; targeted modern technology and industrial society in manifestos. Studied for ideological extremism and anti-technology critique.
Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus – WHO Director-General, global health influence.
Term Limits – A rule that makes politicians step down after a certain number of years so they can’t hold office forever.
Term Sheet – A non-binding agreement outlining the terms and conditions of an investment, including valuation, equity stake, and investor rights.
Terraforming Initiative – Government-funded R&D to change environment of planets (Mars, Moon) for future colonization.
Terraforming R&D – Research to transform Mars or Earth’s environment intentionally — potential for both future settlement and weaponization of climate.
The Bilderberg Alumni Meetings – Private follow-up gatherings of former attendees to coordinate policy and influence.
The Bilderberg Steering Committee Sessions – Internal meetings coordinating topics, speakers, and influence strategies for the annual conference.
The Council of European Energy Regulators (CEER) High-Level Meetings – Policy coordination on energy markets and regulation.
The Hague Institute for Global Justice Forums – International law, security, and governance workshops.
The Trilateral Commission Task Force Meetings – Specialized, closed-door sessions to implement policy recommendations.
Thiel / VC Oligarch Influence – Refers to wealthy venture capitalists (like Peter Thiel) using funding / influence in politics to shape public policy.
Think Tank – An organization conducting research and advocacy in areas such as economics, politics, or social policy, often influencing legislation and public opinion.
Thomas Drake – Former NSA executive who exposed wasteful and unconstitutional practices.
Thomas Massie – U.S. Congressman, libertarian-leaning policymaker.
Thomas Piketty – Economist, inequality research.
Tony Blair – Former UK Prime Minister; involved in foreign interventions and globalist policies.
Too Big to Fail – Concept where certain corporations or banks are so large that their failure would threaten the economy, often leading to government bailouts.
Totalitarianism – A political system where the government controls everything: speech, media, economic decisions, personal freedoms.
TPG Capital – A major PE firm focused on leveraged buyouts, growth equity, and impact investing. TPG has stakes in consumer brands, technology, healthcare, and financial services.
Trade Policy – Government rules and agreements that determine how goods, services, and capital move across borders.
Trade Protectionism / Fair Trade – Policies designed to protect domestic jobs and industries from unfair global competition.
Trade School vs. College – Promoting apprenticeships and skilled trade jobs (electrical, welding, AI machining, plumbing) instead of forcing everyone into debt-heavy university tracks.
Trade Surplus / Deficit – When a country exports more than it imports (surplus) vs. importing more than it exports (deficit).
Traditional Values – Principles emphasizing family, community, national pride, and social responsibility.
Transatlantic Policy Network Conferences – Private meetings of European and American policymakers.
Transfer pricing – Firms manipulate pricing between subsidiaries in different tax jurisdictions to shift profits to low-tax countries.
Transhuman Governance – A power structure where cybernetic enhancements or AI augmentation create a ruling class beyond ordinary humans.
Transparency Act – A proposed law to make all government meetings, spending, and communications public and accessible to citizens.
Triglyceride / Processed Food Poisoning – The idea that high sugar, seed oils, and chemical-filled food create obesity, heart disease, and shortened lifespan.
Trilateral Commission – Private organization founded to foster cooperation between North America, Europe, and Asia, often cited for elite policymaking influence.
Trilateral Commission Asia-Pacific Group – Regional chapter of the Trilateral Commission, focusing on North America, Europe, and Asia cooperation.
Trilateral Commission Expert Committees – Focused regional and sector-specific policy planning.
Trilateral Commission Regional Meetings – Regional sub-gatherings supplementing the global Trilateral Commission forums.
Truman National Security Project – U.S. organization fostering dialogue on national security and foreign policy leadership.
Truth in Media Act – Requiring news media to disclose funding, foreign influence, or face legal penalties for propagandizing.
Truth in Media Law – Forcing media companies to disclose conflicts of interest and stop pushing misinformation or be punished.
Tucker Carlson – Fox News host, conservative political commentator.
UBS – Global financial services firm with investment banking and asset management divisions.
Unilateralism vs. Multilateralism – Acting alone as a country vs. acting through alliances or global bodies.
Uniparty – The idea that both major political parties (Democrat and Republican) are controlled by the same elite interests and no longer represent the people.
Unipolar vs. Multipolar Order – Single global power (U.S.) vs. multiple competing powers (China, Russia, BRICS) — used to discuss global alliances.
Unipolar World Order – Single power runs the world (U.S. since Cold War).
Universal Basic Income (UBI) – Government payout to citizens often criticized as a system to create dependency and compliance while eliminating middle-class jobs.
Universal Basic Welfare / Dependency State – A government system that keeps people dependent on state aid instead of empowering them to build wealth.
Universal Parental Leave Mandate – Forcing large corporations making billions to give maternity and paternity leave, not punish parents.
Unrestricted Innovation Zones – Test cities with almost no regulation to allow breakthrough technologies without government slowdowns.
Ursula von der Leyen – President of European Commission; central figure in EU centralized power and digital ID programs.
Vaccine Mandates / Forced Medication – Government or corporate policies compelling people to take medications or vaccines under threat of penalty.
Vaccine Passport – Digital proof of vaccination used to control entry into public spaces, creating medical segregation.
Valuation Cap – A maximum conversion price for convertible notes to protect early investors from excessive dilution.
Venture Capital (VC) – Funding provided to startups or small businesses with high growth potential, sometimes dominated by elite investors.
Venture Capital (VC) Firms – Investors providing early-stage funding to startups in exchange for equity, often driving tech innovation.
Venture Capital (VC) Mafia – Networks of elite venture capitalists controlling startup ecosystems and who succeeds in tech or innovation.
Venture Capital Capture – Small group of investors (VCs) decide which ideas or technologies get funded — controlling which innovations survive.
Venture Capitalists (VCs) – Investors who provide early-stage funding to startups in exchange for equity, often taking an active role in guiding company growth.
Veteran Rehabilitation & Job Training – Programs that teach veterans tech, entrepreneurship, AI, trades so they are employed and respected after military life.
Veteran Transition Programs – Programs for military veterans to enter civilian jobs, especially in tech, entrepreneurship, or skilled trades.
Viktor Orbán – Prime Minister of Hungary, nationalist and anti-globalist leader focused on sovereignty and border control.
Visa Fraud & H-1B Exploitation – Loopholes allowing companies to import foreign labor at lower costs, potentially replacing domestic workers.
Vladimir Putin – Russian President; significant in geopolitics, influence operations, and cyber strategies.
Volodymyr Zelensky – President of Ukraine, heavily funded and militarily supported by NATO; seen as puppet in proxy war.
Wage-Fixing Agreements – Illegal arrangements where companies collude to suppress worker pay.
Wall Street – The U.S. financial industry hub, representing investment banks, stock exchanges, and institutional investors.
Wall Street Arbitrage – When hedge funds exploit tiny price differences in markets to make millions while producing nothing of real value.
Wall Street Bailouts – When massive financial institutions are saved by public money after making reckless investments that harmed the economy.
Wall Street Speculation – Gambling in the stock market or financial derivatives that produces no real value but can crash the economy.
Warburg Pincus – Growth-focused PE firm investing globally across energy, technology, healthcare, and financial services sectors.
Warrantless Surveillance / FISA Abuse – Government spying on citizens without court approval, often justified by secret “security” reasons.
Warren Buffett – Berkshire Hathaway, investor & philanthropist.
Water Infrastructure Neglect – Poorly maintained water systems leading to contamination, like the Flint, Michigan crisis.
Wealth Concentration – Extreme gap between rich and poor, where most wealth and power sits in the hands of a tiny elite.
Wealth Confiscation / Seizure – Government action to seize assets from corrupt billionaires, drug cartels, or foreign oligarchs as a form of justice or restitution.
Wealth Extraction – Process where elites siphon wealth from the middle class through rent, banking fees, health bills, loans.
Wealth Repatriation – Bringing hidden or offshore money back into the country, taxing it, and putting it back to use for infrastructure and citizens.
Weaponized AI Bots / Disinfo Bots – Automated accounts or AI that spread false information online to shift opinion or destabilize a nation.
Weaponized Immigration – Large-scale immigration used as a political weapon to destabilize a country’s workforce, culture, or voting demographics.
Weaponized Migration – Using migrant flows or refugees as political leverage or destabilization tactics (Turkey to EU, for example).
Weather Modification / Geoengineering – Technologies used by governments or corporations to control the climate, rain, hurricanes, etc.— debated and possibly dangerous.
Whistleblower – A person who exposes corruption or wrongdoing inside a company or government — often silenced or punished.
White Flight – The phenomenon of white residents moving away from neighborhoods due to rising crime, demographic changes, or declining school quality, often used as a sign of social breakdown.
White Replacement / Great Replacement – The idea that native white populations in the West are being systematically replaced through mass immigration and declining birth rates.
William Binney – NSA whistleblower, critic of mass surveillance programs.
WMD Hoax – False claims of weapons of mass destruction used to justify 2003 Iraq invasion.
Women in the World Summit – Influential gathering of global female leaders in politics, business, and culture.
World Affairs Council Conferences – U.S.-based regional councils hosting forums on foreign policy, economics, and international affairs.
World Affairs Councils of America Forums – U.S. policy discussions linking global political leaders.
World Bank – Global development lender tied to IMF, forces countries into debt in exchange for compliance.
World Bank Annual Meetings – Discussions on international development, debt relief, and global infrastructure projects.
World Business Council for Sustainable Development (WBCSD) Annual Meetings – Corporate sustainability, climate, and policy strategy sessions.
World Business Forum (NY, London, & regional events) – Influential global business and policy discussions.
World Business Forum (WBF) – International event connecting CEOs, thought leaders, and policy influencers to discuss global business trends.
World Cities Summit – Urban development, infrastructure, and smart city planning for global cities.
World Economic Forum (Davos) – Swiss-based forum where global business, political, and academic leaders meet to discuss economic and societal trends--elites proposing Great Reset, ESG agenda, and increased technocratic control.
World Economic Forum Annual Meeting of the New Champions (Dalian, China) – Focused on innovation, technology, and entrepreneurship in the global economy.
World Economic Forum Regional Meetings – Smaller-scale versions of Davos for focused regional economic and policy discussion.
World Economic Roundtable – Smaller, private sector-focused economic coordination among global elites.
World Energy Council Meetings – Private summits for energy policy, global oil/gas markets, and strategic infrastructure investment.
World Government Summit – Dubai-hosted event focused on innovation, policy-making, and global governance solutions.
World Health Organization (WHO) – UN health agency that sets global medical policy, criticized for overreach and alignment with China or pharmaceutical interests.
World Investment Forum (UNCTAD) – United Nations Conference on Trade and Development, global investment and economic policy discussions.
World Islamic Economic Forum (WIEF) – Policy, trade, and finance forum for Muslim-majority economies.
World Nuclear Association (WNA) Global Conferences – Nuclear energy policy, global energy security, and technology forums.
World Policy Conference – Annual meeting of global political, business, and academic leaders discussing international governance and security issues.
World Policy Institute Events – Conferences analyzing global security, economic development, and governance.
World Strategic Forum (Miami & Global Locations) – Global policy, finance, and security networking.
World Trade Organization (WTO) Ministerial Conferences – Global trade negotiations and policy-setting meetings.
Yair Lapid – Israeli politician; centrist/foreign policy focus.
Young Global Leaders (World Economic Forum) – Subgroup of the WEF identifying and networking influential global leaders under 40.
Young Presidents’ Organization (YPO) Global Events – Private meetings connecting top executives and political influencers worldwide.
Young Presidents’ Organization (YPO) Global Leadership Conferences – Networking and strategy events for top CEOs.
Young Presidents’ Organization (YPO) Regional & Global Forums – Private executive networking and policy influence.
YPO (Young Presidents’ Organization) Summit – Exclusive network of young CEOs and entrepreneurs gathering for leadership discussions and networking.
Zelensky Regime – Used often in alt-media to describe Ukrainian government as puppet state of West/NATO.
Zero Regulation Space Innovation – Removing bureaucratic barriers so companies like SpaceX can colonize space faster.
Zero Trust Architecture – Cybersecurity model that assumes everything is hostile by default — used in military and corporate networks.
Zero-Day Exploit – A hacking technique that abuses a brand-new vulnerability no one has patched yet — used in cyber warfare.
Zionists – Those who politically support the state of Israel as a religious or strategic requirement.
Zombie Corporations – Companies that can’t survive on profit but stay alive through endless loans and central bank support.