They are, but everything goes back to the black hole of Vanguard, as you can't see who owns them. What one researcher calls Megacorp owns a big piece, perhaps enough to control every single corporation of any type worth noticing.
So we need to find clues about Vanguard's actual ownership. That might be people near the top of the pyramid.
From all the info I could dig up, they are. It's kinda like the lobbyists, the companies they represent and polictians and how they cycle money back and forth. Or the way government funds things like planned parenthood and then PP kicks the money back to Washington in the form of donations. It's the same thing, just a different way of doing it. That's the best way I know to explain.
Let me throw something else into the mix that most people never think of.
It is not necessarily ownership that matters. It is control that matters.
If you form a corporation, and you own 100% of the stock, but you and I form a voting trust where I am the trustee, then guess what? I control that company, not you. It doesn't matter if you are the only shareholder, the only director, CEO, and only employee. I still control it, and if you don't do what I want, I find someone else who will.
Now, extrapolate that to these people. They are not going to make it so obvious as to show how their ownership is the key. During 2008, when Warren Buffet "came to the rescue" of Goldman Sachs, he didn't just loan them money to bail them out. He structured it so that the loan turned into equity, and he could put one of his own people on the Board of Directors (who, of course, would report back to Warren what was REALLY going on and what the upcoming deals REALLY were).
How the hell does anybody think Buffet got rich? Buying "value stock" and holding it for 10 years?
LMAOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO.
He got rich by (a) avoiding taxes (though he wants YOU to pay a bunch), (b) leverage (though he says don't YOU do it!), and (c) inside information that is technically not illegal (after all, what is a casual conversation among friends, when nobody else is around, on a private jet or Caribbean island)?
He controls Coca Cola and other companies, via proxies on the BOD and/or loans where he gets to dictate important policies. The same goes for Wall Street firms and banks who lend Fortune 500 companies money.
How do you think the "woke Ivy League" dipshits all came together on the Covid tyranny at the SAME time and ... with NO DEBATE?
THEY do not control their companies. They are puppets.
Same thing with the Federal Reserve. Nobody "owns" it (at least, not in the traditional sense) and the Board of Governors/FOMC (Janet Yellen, etc.) have NO SAY in how money is printed.
They set policy that is IGNORED whenever and whyever.
It is ONLY the President of the New York Federal Reserve Bank that prints money and does things in secret.
Who controls HIM? I dunno ... but a lot of them became US Treasury secretaries -- for a reason: they are good puppets.
sorry..,it was supposed to be a question, as in do you need help?..my bad..
They are, but everything goes back to the black hole of Vanguard, as you can't see who owns them. What one researcher calls Megacorp owns a big piece, perhaps enough to control every single corporation of any type worth noticing.
So we need to find clues about Vanguard's actual ownership. That might be people near the top of the pyramid.
You can't find out anything about State Street either, js. Wouldn't let me past the home page.
No I watched YouTube video monopoly who owns the world and that is what they said
From all the info I could dig up, they are. It's kinda like the lobbyists, the companies they represent and polictians and how they cycle money back and forth. Or the way government funds things like planned parenthood and then PP kicks the money back to Washington in the form of donations. It's the same thing, just a different way of doing it. That's the best way I know to explain.
Haha, cool
Let me throw something else into the mix that most people never think of.
It is not necessarily ownership that matters. It is control that matters.
If you form a corporation, and you own 100% of the stock, but you and I form a voting trust where I am the trustee, then guess what? I control that company, not you. It doesn't matter if you are the only shareholder, the only director, CEO, and only employee. I still control it, and if you don't do what I want, I find someone else who will.
Now, extrapolate that to these people. They are not going to make it so obvious as to show how their ownership is the key. During 2008, when Warren Buffet "came to the rescue" of Goldman Sachs, he didn't just loan them money to bail them out. He structured it so that the loan turned into equity, and he could put one of his own people on the Board of Directors (who, of course, would report back to Warren what was REALLY going on and what the upcoming deals REALLY were).
How the hell does anybody think Buffet got rich? Buying "value stock" and holding it for 10 years?
LMAOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO.
He got rich by (a) avoiding taxes (though he wants YOU to pay a bunch), (b) leverage (though he says don't YOU do it!), and (c) inside information that is technically not illegal (after all, what is a casual conversation among friends, when nobody else is around, on a private jet or Caribbean island)?
He controls Coca Cola and other companies, via proxies on the BOD and/or loans where he gets to dictate important policies. The same goes for Wall Street firms and banks who lend Fortune 500 companies money.
How do you think the "woke Ivy League" dipshits all came together on the Covid tyranny at the SAME time and ... with NO DEBATE?
THEY do not control their companies. They are puppets.
Same thing with the Federal Reserve. Nobody "owns" it (at least, not in the traditional sense) and the Board of Governors/FOMC (Janet Yellen, etc.) have NO SAY in how money is printed.
They set policy that is IGNORED whenever and whyever.
It is ONLY the President of the New York Federal Reserve Bank that prints money and does things in secret.
Who controls HIM? I dunno ... but a lot of them became US Treasury secretaries -- for a reason: they are good puppets.
Rothschilds and Rockefellers are my guess. Obviously other less well-known elites as well.
Stop thinking..it's dangerous..*sarcasm