The Mission of Betrayal: Shepherd Wolves, Red Herrings and Poisoned Meatballs, 9

Our case in point is Keynesianism.
You now know the mechanism of the Trojan horse, hence you are well aware that anything is liable to contain something good which is then leveraged to infiltrate something suppressive, therefore you are well aware that there esists no substitute whatsoever for your own inspection, understanding and judgment, and that Keynesianism here is but an example and not at all hold up as the sole culprit, that is as the scapegoat that pays for all. It has been said that the application of a knowledge is an art, and you are that artist.

Nuri points out how the economist John Maynard Keynes has been hailed by so much of the establishment as the “Einstein of economics” despite “economics as epitomised in Keynesianism appears to fail spectacularly the … criteria of scientific falsifiability” – which is going to resound to us much like a confirmation than as a surprise.
The gist of Keynesianism as waved around by the mainstream, and thus the gist they want us to accept as gospel regardless of its true details, is that: a) economy needs to be stimulated, b) to stimulate it enough it is required that the state itself gets into business, and c) in order to achieve that it is all perfectly well for the state to operate at a loss, and thus it is all perfectly well for the state to go on sinking indefinitely more and more into indebtedness as well.
Let alone that it is basic ethics and common sense that indebtedness must not be permanent but only a momentary eventuality it is used to get back on one’s feet as soon as possible, were we not aware of economic parasitism, we would look at “stimulation” of economy from a naive viewpoint, one from which no harmful side effects of “stimulation” are in sight; but now we know that would just be due to a limited perspective.