...and then everyone who broke the story ended up dead or jailed.
(media.greatawakening.win)
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Was it literally criminal or just immoral? I didn't follow the story closely, but typically the powerful people engineer tax laws to make sure they pay little to no tax.
If you watch the movie The Laundromat, they explain this story. Basically there was a boating accident where a bunch of people died, and the ship captain was on the hook for restitution to the families of the victims. Their insurance stiffed them and long story short, one of the survivors went undercover to expose the insurance fraud and that's where the papers came from. The movie ends with Meryl Streep (who plays the undercover survivor) ranting about how the federal government needs to crack down on the practices of these insurance companies.
Its actually a decent film with some interesting scenes showing how things actually work at a high level - like bearer bonds - even though its a cabal production.
That movie was VERY telling. It was literally based on letting us know how they do it.
Taxation is sinful. Who has the actual right to demand it? When we take fully our power back, and the proper expectations of being free are exercised by each of us, they will have no ability to dictate anything.
.just look at those school boards getting tossed. Zero tolerance for liberalism the ideology is anti American and we need to let them know we believe that about them.
Some form of collective funding is necessary to run public works. When money is taken (without being asked basically) and used to manage roads, hospitals, schools, etc it should be drawn up in a binding contract on a regional level. As it is now your simply born into a debt-taxation slavery without your consent and oops they give themselves trillions while your grandchildren who arn't even born yet are saddled with yet more debt.
Nobody really has the right, it needs to be reworked as a mutually agreed upon contract or something with teeth so the payee gets what he was fucking promised like roads that don't suck, or a not-falling-apart military.
Electronics companies (I think Apple) build planned obsolescence into their products. I think they got sued and actually lost the case, because they put out "updates" to make their older still-used products slower.
NYC is notoriously bad with extremely slow roadwork. I think some small town rented out this giant machine that broke up the asphalt, refined it with new asphalt, then laid it back down. Quick and easy and cheap, none of which NYC does. Look at "track work." 10 people standing around watching 3 people work. Unions are a blight on the country.