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[–]TheJamesRocket 7 insightful - 1 fun7 insightful - 0 fun8 insightful - 1 fun -  (0 children)

The elites are aware that America is quickly losing its superpower status. This is a serious concern for them because they still haven't dealt with Iran, Russia, or China. All of these countrys are undermining U.S. hegemony in a variety of indirect ways, most notable of which is 'de-dollarization.' They are all conducting trade with each other in their own currencys, not in U.S. dollars. This accelerates the decline of the dollar as a world reserve currency (which America depends on for her superpower status), and pushs the U.S closer towards a financial crisis and currency collapse. []

The globalists ultimately seek the destruction of all countrys, until they exist only as names on a map. They will have no borders, no laws, and no armys: The people will have no identity and no rights. The entire world will be a ghetto where the globalists can conduct business without any restrictions at all. They have made a giant step forward through the coronavirus and the Plandemic, but they haven't reached their target yet. The world is still divided into countrys who look out for their own interests, and this is a problem for the elites.

For all their love of internationalism and the free flow of money, they still rely on America to maintain the existing world order. If the U.S. were to collapse tomorrow, the globalists would be put in grave danger. The 'rogue states' would enact protectionist policys, nationalize foreign companys, disband the IMF and World Bank, and probably confiscate the wealth of foreign billionares. Meanwhile, the globalists continue to suck America dry and weaken it, so that it becomes less and less able to fulfill its role as the global policeman. They cannot stop themselves from doing this, because their entire business model is based on predatory extraction.

[] The elites are currently promoting the digital dollar as a replacement for the U.S. dollar, but this is based more on their own desperate hopes than on a solid monetary theory.