Who is "MegaCorp"?
(cdn.videy.co)
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He shouldn't go too many layers. If 2 companies own each other stock that means the CEOs are accountable to each other... It doesn't pass through to the minority shareholders, authority doesn't go down two layers. Like where I work, my CEO is on the board of directors of a food company... And that food company's CEO is on the directors for my insurance company...
The CEOs get paid ridiculous amounts by being on each other's board of directors. So they can pass whatever agenda they want as long as both agree. If they're both part of the same club or church they almost always agree....
You two are over the target. Check this out.
Let's say you control the Fed. Covid planning clearly happened before Covid (there is plenty of public info about the plandemic), the debt rate accelerates wildly out of control due to Covid, the UNI party refuses to cooperate with each other passing a budget, so that leaves the spending unchecked and the "compromise" only very slightly slows the pandemic-level spending, continuing to rack up debt at historic levels.
Now at some point the debt grows so large it destabilizes the U.S. dollar, kicking off a recession where literally every major company except Game Stop fails because they all own each other. When each individual companies bottom line goes to shit, they can't fall back on their "diversified" investments in other companies, because they all own each other so all the ships are going down together.
Everything goes to shit simultaneously. The recession turns into a depression. If you wanted to topple the U.S. as a world power, you have this scenario which is very similar to what happened to the USSR.
The problem with chasing the dragon is that one day you just might catch it.
Ok, so who owns the MegaCorp?
The 13 fams. Corsini (Rothschild) Medici, Breakspear....
It was mostly right....but it's about the boards on the top 20 institutions that are within the arms reach of the elite controllers.
Ultimately, it's the central bankers who established the fed and who setup the underlying economy and from all of this are certificates for shares offered at a specified 'value'. That value is backed by notes of 'fair market value' which are in turn backed by the fed...
Usually, things are legally broken back down into dollars which allows for the fed to own everything
Yeah the GME statement helped me look at my brain for a moment.
That's a good term I should use more. Debt holders. Everyone talks shareholders, but when the company dissolves....back to liquidation and hard assets and paper debt are all that remains.
Yeah, black is just money reinvested into growth of the Conglomerate. Black behaves like a cancer, but interestingly the side-effect is a one-way shift of the white money becoming gray money.