The Great Extraction: Why Are We Still Subscribing to This System?
We are born into a “contract” we never signed, handed a bill we never ran up, and told to be grateful for the “order” it provides. But when you look at the math, the logic doesn’t just fail—it insults our intelligence.
The Endless Tax Loop
Modern life is a gauntlet of micro-extractions. You are taxed when you earn money. You are taxed when you spend that same money. Then come the “commissions”—the middleman fees on every transaction, every transfer, every digital breath. We are essentially paying a subscription fee to exist, yet the service we receive is constantly “under maintenance.”
The Monopoly of Profit
While the average citizen is squeezed for every cent, state-owned corporations sit on the most profitable industries. We are told the “market” is free, yet the biggest players are immune to the struggle. They keep the profits; we pay for their mistakes through bailouts and “economic adjustments.”
Human Beings as “Ammunition”
The most chilling part of this system is the lack of consent regarding our own lives. The state views its citizens as “human capital”—a resource to be spent like ammunition in geopolitical games. We are expected to provide our bodies and our labor for conflicts started by people who will never set foot on a battlefield.
The Inflation Theft
If a citizen prints money, it’s a felony. When the state does it, it’s “monetary policy.” By devaluing the currency, the state effectively steals the time you spent earning it. It’s a silent tax on your savings, your future, and your hard work, designed to keep you running on a treadmill that never ends.
The Double Standard of the Elites
There is a glaring disconnect between the “laws” and the “lawmakers.” While the general public is buried under a mountain of prohibitions and regulations, the upper echelons fly in private jets, enjoy immunity, and make decisions that cost thousands of lives without ever facing a courtroom.
The Question: Why does this system exist? Is it truly for our protection, or is it an obsolete operating system designed to keep a small group of “admins” in luxury while the rest of us deal with the bugs?
Everything the state touches feels clunky, inefficient, and fundamentally broken. It’s time we stop asking how to “fix” it and start asking why we need such an invasive, expensive, and violent structure in the first place.
