The Mission of Betrayal: Shepherd Wolves, Red Herrings and Poisoned Meatballs, 7

Some examples of doublethink and doublespeak in economic suppression, maybe in its specialised form of economic and money parasitism?
Some slogans of the "Pensée Unique in Economics":
(I’ll discuss ahead the "single thought" in economics; however, here you catch a glimpse of it, as nailed down by ex−chief World Bank economist Joseph Stiglitz, «excommunicated purely for expressing mild dissent from globalisation World Bank−style», in the interview with reporter Gregory Palast titled “IMF’s four steps to damnation”, where he lists the ingredients of the International Monetary Fund’s «country assistance strategy» implemented through its «restructuring agreements» imposed on the «helped» countries. An "assistance" discussed in more detail by Kevin Danaher in his Fifty Years is Enough: The Case Against the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund, by John Perkins in his Confessions of an Economic Hit−Man, and in its ultimate aims and function by G. Edward Griffin in his The Creature from Jekill Island.)
Step One, "privatisation". Instead of protecting state industries, local politicians betray by selling them off, pocketing handsome "commissions" commensurate with how much they "shave" the sale price, using the World Bank’s demands to silence critics, and drastically mutilating national output, with all the imaginable consequences on the nation’s welfare and creditworthiness.
Step Two, "capital market liberalisation". Pursuant to the "restructuring agreements", local politicians thrust the dykes open to the "investment" capital; first its speculative flood grabs properties out of people’s hands, and then its instanteous flight at the first whiff of trouble leaves an even worse devastation behind: the nation’s value on the market drops, and the purchasing power of its money with it, so the nation is forced to drain its reserves to cope, and moreover to attract the speculators back it skyrockets the yield, in other words the cost, of money, thus starving its people by destroying their purchasing power.