The Enemy Is Not Each Other

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The Epstein network runs through Rothschild banking, sure. But it also involves Peter Thiel’s Palantir. And, DARPA, the same military-corporate apparatus that ran Operation Warp Speed. There are researchers mapping Swiss banking dynasties and Templar financial networks that predate any of this by centuries. The ethnic lens isn’t the simple explanation that explains everything, it’s merely misdirection.

The cabal doesn’t care about Jewish safety any more than they care about Palestinian dignity or American prosperity. They care about maintaining a scapegoat class that can absorb public rage. Henry Kissinger and Dick Cheney didn’t wake up debating Talmudic interpretation versus Christian theology. They woke up calculating which populations could be set against each other for maximum profit with minimum risk to their positions.

What unites the cage-builders isn’t heritage – it’s their shared interest in keeping the rest of us at each other’s throats while they consolidate power across borders, above nations, beyond any tribal loyalty. And they’ve discovered something profound: if they can get us arguing about which ethnic or religious group is overrepresented in power, we’ll never ask the only question that threatens them – why do so few people even ask where the real power sits, regardless of who appears to wield it? 

When violence erupts between groups, we’re trained to ask cage questions. Who started it? Who’s right? Which side are you on?

But the real questions – the ones that would threaten actual power – are different. Who benefits from this conflict continuing? Who profits when these groups remain enemies? What systems depend on this hatred for their survival?

The genius of the division machine is making those questions seem naive and conspiracy-minded, while the ‘sophisticated’ position is debating endlessly which group inside the cage deserves our support. Ring the bell, watch them salivate.

The reality is that all wars are banker wars – and I mean that quite literally. If you haven’t seen the documentary by that title, it’s worth your time. The late Antony Sutton documented this meticulously. The defense contractors, the investment firms, the intelligence agencies don’t live in Gaza or Tel Aviv or Tehran. They count their returns regardless of who wins. Recognizing this doesn’t require picking a side. It’s as simple as identifying who benefits from the conflict continuing.

This isn’t abstract. The infrastructure has a physical address – several, actually. The City of London, Vatican City, Washington DC, Brussels, Geneva – five nodes, each optimized for a specific function: finance, ideology, military force, regulation, diplomacy. There are more too. I’ve written about some of these jurisdictional anomalies before. I’m hardly the first, nor have I gone the deepest. Derrick Broze’s Pyramid of Power series maps the interlocking structures in extraordinary detail. None of them answer to ordinary democratic accountability. Governments shift, leaders come and go. The architecture persists. That’s not a bug, that’s the design. I’m aware that sounds like a grand claim – and maybe it is. But anyone who has pulled on these threads long enough knows they keep leading to the same places.

How do we watch news clips from supposedly ‘competing’ outlets and hear anchors using identical phrases – not just covering the same story, but the exact same words, in the exact same order – and not ask how that happens? It’s the fear machine propagating itself and asking the sides to go to their respective corners.

The Inquisition blamed heretics. Pogroms blamed Jews. Post-9/11 hysteria blamed Muslims. The pandemic response created new categories of “dangerous” people based on medical choices. Anyone who zooms out can see it may have been different pit bulls but it’s the same mechanism at work. And, in fact, the same cage-builders.

The division machine has one weakness: it needs us to play along. Every time we refuse their dialectic – every time we look up instead of sideways – the whole thing gets fragile. They work so hard to keep us looking at each other because they know the moment we look up, the whole game falls apart.