The Mission of Betrayal: Shepherd Wolves, Red Herrings and Poisoned Meatballs, 13

The inoculation point of Keynesianism was the Bretton Woods conference, straight after the Second World War. It could be argued that the product of a World War was an extraordinary and widespread economic upheaval, and that therefore equally extraordinary measures were then justified to provide the “needed” extraordinary stimulation. But the Bretton Woods conference is where such things as the International Monetary Fund, the World Bank and a Dollar−centric system of fixed exchange rates were put through, and once one knows what these things are actually for, one may well argue as well that the Second World War itself was but a Trojan horse to emplace these, casting a heavy shadow over the “problem”, and on its blatant human cost, as the possible pretext for the “solution”, with its hidden but just as deadly human cost.
You may have noticed above that I put the terms “real” and “natural” in quotes. The definition of “in quotes” that applies here is, “quite to the contrary”. If the authenticity of the “real” gross domestic product is somewhat questionable, with its presumption that any ethical production is expressible in money and that all that is expressed in money is ethical production, the genuineness of the “natural” gross domestic product is considerably more so, with its presumption that we must speed all this up ad infinitum, running faster and faster just to stay in the same place much like the Red Queen in Alice in Wonderland or rather much more like hamsters in the wheel, with its presumption that “it will be all right” if our reserves melt away like snow in the sun and we sink into indebtedness like into quicksand.

Yep, because we do know a parasite feeds on the metabolic flows of its victim, that it can take control of it, and that it can artificially increase its metabolism. And we do know a significant amount of reserves is a vital factor for the well−being and the survival of an organism, that those reserves are a major target for the parasite, and that the parasite aims at “mobilising” them into its victim’s metabolic flows in order to seize them.
And that is exactly what we see when we look at consumerism and at any push for increased amount and speed of use of a money under the control of moneypulators; the target? People’s and states’ savings first and then indebtedness. That is, the victim’s energy reserves.