Chief Archivist at The Media House. Declassifying the economic and historical realities they forgot to teach you. The 'Official Narrative' ends here
Feb 21 • 10 tweets • 4 min read
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The modern machinery is a centrifuge designed to spin the marrow from your bones and ship it to a ledger in London or Brussels. You were told the world is a global village, but you are living in a global plantation. The quiet hum of the factory has been replaced by the frantic clicking of high-frequency trades that build nothing and feed no one. Fear of liquidation of the American productive spirit by a class of men who view you as an overhead cost is real.
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Alexander Hamilton did not design this nation to be a middleman for foreign empires. His architecture was built on the bedrock of physical reality. He understood that a nation without the means to clothe, arm, and feed itself is not a sovereign state—it is a client state. The system was designed to use the tariff as a shield, creating a protected space where the spark of human reason could transform raw nature into the infrastructure of a civilization.
Feb 16 • 12 tweets • 3 min read
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You believe the history of economics is a debate between Capitalism and Socialism. It is not. The ledgers reveal a war between the American System of production and the British System of speculation. One builds nations; the other loots them. The files on this war have been buried for a century to keep you fighting the wrong enemy.
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1791: The architecture was drafted by Alexander Hamilton in his Report on Manufactures. He rejected Adam Smith’s "Free Trade"—a colonial trap designed to keep America a raw materials farm for London. Hamilton defined wealth not as gold, but as the "productive powers of labor." We were built to make things, not buy them.