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by John & Nisha Whitehead
November 12, 2025
from
TheRutherfordInstitute Website

Photograph by Nathaniel St. Clair
Source
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The
concept of ownership is being redefined as
renting-for-life.
The
World Economic Forum (WEF) let the cat out of the bag
when it proclaimed that "By 2030, you will own nothing."
"You" is a condescending term that refers to everyone
else but "them."
Somebody has to own the stuff we will rent, but it won't
be you.
As
real assets are being hoovered up around the world,
middle-class ownership is being squeezed out like a tube
of toothpaste.
We
are close to the point of inflection to roll over into
an asset-based economy, devoid of debt and private
property.
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"The politicians are put there to give you
the idea that you have freedom of choice.
You don't. You have no
choice. You have owners. They own you. They own everything. They
own all the important land. They own and control the
corporations.
They've long since bought and paid for the Senate,
the Congress, the state houses, the city halls.
They got the
judges in their back pockets and they own all the
big media
companies, so they control just about all of the news and
information you get to hear...
They spend billions of dollars
every year lobbying. Lobbying to get what they want. Well, we
know what they want. They want more for themselves and less for
everybody else... I
It's called the American Dream, 'cause you
have to be asleep to believe it."
George Carlin
As President
Trump floats the idea of 50-year
mortgages, Americans are being sold a new version of the
'American Dream' - one that can never truly be owned, only leased from,
the banks, billionaires, and private equity landlords who profit
from our permanent state of debt...
Which begs the question:
Who owns America?
Is it the government?
The politicians?
The corporations?
The foreign investors?
The American people?
While
the
Deep State keeps the nation divided and
distracted by circus politics - the bread and circuses of empire -
the police state's stranglehold on power ensures the continuation of
endless wars, runaway spending, and disregard for the rule of law.
Meanwhile, America is literally being bought
and sold right out from under us...
Consider the facts.
Homeownership - the cornerstone of
middle-class stability - is being transformed into a lifetime
rental agreement.
Cars, homes, and even college degrees have
become indentured commodities in a debt-driven economy where the
average American family serves as collateral for Wall Street's
profits.
This is not accidental.
It's the natural evolution of an economy built to
enrich the few at the expense of the many.
The American Dream has been repackaged as a
subscription service:
an illusion of ownership propped up by 0%
down payments, predatory interest rates, and fine print that lasts a
lifetime.
What used to be called "buying" is now simply
renting from the future.
We're losing
more and more of our land every year to corporations and foreign
interests.
As individual Americans struggle just to make
rent, corporations and foreign investors are quietly buying the
country piece by piece.
Foreign ownership of U.S. agricultural land
has surged to more than 43
million acres - millions added in just the last few years.
Meanwhile, large institutional landlords and single-family rental
operators have amassed hundreds of thousands of houses across the
country.
Corporations now hold vast portfolios, converting would-be
first-time buyers into permanent tenants. The result is a nation
where more of our soil and shelter are controlled by entities whose
primary allegiance is to shareholders - not communities.
The same dynamic plays out across industries.
We're losing
more and more of our businesses every year to foreign corporations
and interests.
Brands that once defined American enterprise
- U.S. Steel, Budweiser, Jeep and Chrysler, Burger King, 7-Eleven -
now fly international flags.
Chinese companies and investors are also
buying up major food companies,
commercial and residential real
estate, and other businesses.
Global conglomerates have bought
up the names we grew up with:
-
U.S. Steel (now Japanese-owned)
-
General Electric (Chinese-owned)
-
Budweiser (Belgium)
-
Burger King (Canada)
-
7-Eleven (Japan)
-
Jeep, Chrysler, and Dodge
(Netherlands)
-
IBM (China)
The American economy has become a franchise of the world's
oligarchs.
We're digging
ourselves deeper and deeper into debt, both as a nation and as a
populace. Debt has become America's most profitable export.
Washington borrows trillions it cannot repay; Wall Street packages
our futures into products it can sell; and households shoulder
record balances.
The national
debt (the amount the federal government has borrowed over the
years and must pay back) has surged to more than $38
trillion under President Trump,
"the fastest accumulation of a
trillion dollars in debt outside of the COVID-19 pandemic."
In a
nutshell,
the U.S. government is funding its existence with a credit
card, spending money it doesn't have on programs it can't afford.
In
this economy, debt has replaced freedom as our national currency.
The
Fourth Estate
- the supposed watchdog of power - has largely merged with the
corporate state.
Independent news agencies, which were
supposed to act as bulwarks against government propaganda, have been
subsumed by a global corporate takeover of newspapers, television
and radio.
A handful of corporations now control most of the media
industry and, thus, the information dished out to the public.
Likewise, with Facebook and Google having appointed themselves the
arbiters of disinformation, we now find ourselves grappling with new
levels of corporate censorship by entities with a history of
colluding with the government to keep the citizenry mindless,
muzzled and in the dark.
Most critically
of all, however,
the U.S. government, long ago sold to the highest
bidders, now operates as a shell company for corporate interests.
Nowhere
is this state of affairs more evident than in the manufactured
spectacle that is politics.
Elections change the faces, not the
system.
Members of Congress do far more listening to donors than to
citizens, so much so that they spend two-thirds
of their time in office raising money.
As Reuters reports,
"It also means that lawmakers
often spend more time listening to the concerns of the wealthy than
anyone else."
In the oligarchy that is the American police
state, it clearly doesn't matter who wins the White House, if they
all answer to the same corporate shareholders.
So much for living the "American dream"...
"We the people" have become the new,
permanent underclass in America.
We're being forced to shell out,
-
money for endless wars that are
bleeding us dry
-
money for surveillance systems to
track our movements
-
money to further militarize our
already militarized police
-
money to allow the government to raid
our homes and bank accounts
-
money to fund schools where our kids
learn nothing about freedom and everything about how to
comply,
...and on and on.
This is no way of life.
It's tempting to say that there's little we can
do about it, except that's not quite accurate.
There are a few things we can do:
-
demand
transparency
-
reject cronyism and graft
-
insist on fair pricing and
honest accounting methods
-
call a halt to incentive-driven
government programs that prioritize profits over people,
...but it
will require that "we the people" stop playing politics and stand
united against the politicians and corporate interests who have
turned our government and economy into a pay-to-play exercise in
fascism...
Unfortunately, we've become so invested in
identity politics that label us based on our political leanings that
we've lost sight of the one label that unites us:
we're all
Americans...!
The
powers-that-be want us to adopt an "us versus
them" mindset that keeps us powerless and divided.
Yet as I make
clear in my book Battlefield
America - The War on the American People and in its
fictional counterpart The
Erik Blair Diaries, the only "us versus them" that matters
is,
"we the people" against the Deep State...!
The American Dream was meant to promise
opportunity, not indentured servitude.
Yet in the American Police State, freedom itself
is on loan... with interest...
We can keep renting our lives from the powerful
few who profit from our compliance, or we can reclaim true ownership,
of our persons, our labor, our government, and our future.
For as long as we still have one, the choice is
ours.
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