The 1% Will Own Two-Thirds of World Wealth Within the Next
Decade
By Isaac Davis
The media is telling us that the economy is stronger than
ever. That GDP is outstanding, that middle class income is higher than ever,
and that the stock market is smashing all records. Hooray! With all this
so-called good news, it’s easier than ever to forget that we are witnessing the
greatest transfer of wealth scheme in the history of the world.
No, not the transfer of wealth from baby boomers to their
heirs, as the media likes to tout, but an actual gutting of the middle class
and ordinary people by a criminal plutocracy which has created the necessary
regulatory, market, and technical conditions to steal the wealth of whole
civilizations.
You may recall that in the financial crisis of 2008, the
federal government proceeded to solve a problem created by bankers and
fraudulent lending schemes, by giving said bankers tons of taxpayer money. Most
of the media maintains that the government doled out $7-800 billion dollars,
but an audit of the Federal Reserve’s emergency lending programs tells a
different story. Forbes reported on this great lie back in 2001:
“The audit of the
Fed’s emergency lending programs was scarcely reported by mainstream media –
albeit the results are undoubtedly newsworthy.
It is the first audit of the Fed in United Stateshistory since its
beginnings in 1913. The findings verify
that over $16 trillion was allocated to corporations and banks internationally,
purportedly for “financial assistance” during and after the 2008 fiscal
crisis.”
To be clear, the money in question is money that will be
charged to the American people, with interest. It represents our labor. Our
time and energy. Our lives. Stolen and given away to those who need it the
least.
“”[The] billions …
they allegedly earn for their shareholders [are] almost entirely a gift from US
taxpayers.”
Now, a recent projection from the UK House of Commons
Library predicts that the wealth of the 1% will rise to two-thirds of total
world wealth by 2030.
“An alarming
projection produced by the House of Commons library suggests that if trends
seen since the 2008 financial crash were to continue, then the top 1% will hold
64% of the world’s wealth by 2030. Even taking the financial crash into
account, and measuring their assets over a longer period, they would still hold
more than half of all wealth.
Since 2008, the
wealth of the richest 1% has been growing at an average of 6% a year – much
faster than the 3% growth in wealth of the remaining 99% of the world’s
population. Should that continue, the top 1% would hold wealth equating to
$305tn (£216.5tn) – up from $140tn today.
Analysts suggest
wealth has become concentrated at the top because of recent income inequality,
higher rates of saving among the wealthy, and the accumulation of assets. The
wealthy also invested a large amount of equity in businesses, stocks and other
financial assets, which have handed them disproportionate benefits.”
This follows a widely reported on Oxfam International study
from 2017 which highlights the dramatic rise in income equality by noting that
the combined wealth of the world’s top 8 individual billionaires is more than
the lower half of the world’s population, some 3.6 billion people.
“Post-recession
data shows that about $33 trillion went to the richest 10%, who are
overwhelmingly millionaires (13 million millionaires, 12.6 million U.S.
households!) That nearly doubled the wealth of each member of the richest 10%.
Average net worth is now $14 million for each 1% household, and the greater
part of a million for even the ‘poorest’ household in the top 10%.
In comparison,
average net worth for the poorest half of America decreased from $11,000 to
$8,000 since the recession.”
Wealth inequality is a rising tide that will consume us all
within a generation or two. A new, high-tech feudal system is being organized
and constructed right in front of our very eyes. The wealthiest are buying up
assets, productive farmland, remote properties, doomsday bunkers, and a
ridiculous amount of insanely lavish toys like the modern super yacht.
In the stock market crash of 1929, ordinary investors were
wiped out, companies went under, people starved. But those who knew how to play
the game made out like bandits, and in the years during the Great Depression
were able to buy companies for pennies on the dollar, thereby making the
Depression and incredibly lucrative time for them.
Now we see the same widespread speculation and pumping of
the stock market again, and we are poised for another dramatic crash anytime now,
in which the wealthiest will again make out like bandits, while most of the
rest of us lose everything.
It’s important to remember that this would not be possible without
the banking and financial system we have, which uses fractional reserve money
creation, and inflation to give new money to those at the top, who are then
able to use that money first, buying up assets before the inflationary effects
of reserve banking kick in.
“…the U.S. stock
market is currently trading at extremely precarious levels and it won’t take
much to topple the whole house of cards. Once again, the Federal Reserve, which
was responsible for creating the disastrous Dot-com bubble and housing bubble,
has inflated yet another extremely dangerous bubble in its attempt to force the
economy to grow after the Great Recession. History has proven time and time
again that market meddling by central banks leads to massive market distortions
and eventual crises.” ~Jesse Colombo, Forbes
Final Thoughts
If you’re part of the 99% and you believe in hard work and
honest money, then pay attention, because a very small percentage of us have
rigged the game and are feverishly working to steal everything from you.
“We are now two years into the peak of the
second Gilded Age… We’re at an inflection point… Wealth concentration is as
high as in 1905, this is something billionaires are concerned about. The
problem is the power of interest on interest – that makes big money bigger and,
the question is to what extent is that sustainable and at what point will
society intervene and strike back? Will there be similarities in the way
society reacts to this gilded age?
Will the second
age end or will it proceed?” ~Josef Stadler
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