War by Consent: Lies, Manipulation, and the Shadow of World War III

War by Consent: Lies, Manipulation, and the Shadow of World War III

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Spectacle Democracy: How Consent for War is Manufactured

The situation in Iraq, with its familiar sense of “déjà vu,” reveals a fundamental contradiction at the heart of modern democracies: the illusion of popular control. Elections give citizens the feeling that they can steer the direction of their country, yet some structural decisions remain unchanged regardless of the ballot outcome. In this case, a president elected on a clear promise—not to start new wars—ends up leading the country into another major conflict. This reinforces the idea that elections function less as a real lever of power and more as a safety valve, channeling public discontent while leaving the deeper architecture of the system intact.

This democratic illusion is compounded by the construction of the official narrative. Military interventions are often presented as limited, necessary, or temporary: “no ground troops,” “targeted operation,” “just a few weeks.” Yet history shows that these promises frequently turn into long and costly commitments. Mainstream media amplify this framing, echoing the authorities’ language and showcasing spectacular images provided by military institutions, turning war into a series of “technical operations” rather than a consequential political choice. For much of the public, this narrative creates a filtered reality where the root causes, costs, and risks remain largely invisible.

The discerning observer takes a step back and never forgets that the way events are presented to the public is theater: a fabric of lies, deception, and propaganda designed to occupy, distract, and indoctrinate citizens so they accept war without resistance or questioning the system.

The cycle is always the same throughout history. Every major war follows the same mechanism: leaders use fear, official narratives, and information manipulation to maintain control and preserve the existing system.


Debt and Chaos: How War Resets the System

The cycle is simple but relentless. Western hegemonic powers—such as the United States and the European Union—are run by a “deep state”: a minority of unelected, corrupt, and cynical private interests that profit from the fiat system. Controlling money creation, they can generate cash “from nothing” to finance projects and conflicts without ever asking the citizens. States live beyond their means, borrowing massively while siphoning productivity from populations who grow poorer as the elite accumulates more wealth. Rigged economic mechanisms deepen the gap between rich and poor until it reaches a breaking point.

When debt becomes unpayable, as we see across the 21st century, governments do not question central banking systems or reduce public spending—politically unpopular measures—but demand even more money creation. This massive liquidity injection causes inflation: money loses value, citizens’ purchasing power declines, and savings quietly erode. People are taxed both overtly and covertly, while the system continues as if nothing happened. Economic and social instability then becomes fertile ground for manipulation and diversion.

When the situation becomes unbearable, war appears as a reset button. It diverts public attention from financial mismanagement, justifies austerity, and mobilizes the entire economy around the military-industrial complex. War imposes national unity and transforms unpopular sacrifices into accepted obligations: massive taxes, price controls, rationing, surveillance, and coercion become legitimate. Destruction and reconstruction relaunch the economy and “erase” accumulated debts through runaway inflation and the conquest and plunder of enemy resources (oil, etc.). The cycle then repeats until the next rupture.


Separating Money from the State: The Key to a Just and Flourishing Future

“It is no coincidence that the century of total war coincided with the century of central banking.”

Faced with this cyclical and predatory system, there is a way out: separating money from the state.

A decentralized, scarce, and incorruptible currency now gives citizens the ability to regain control over their savings and purchasing power: Bitcoin. In a system where individuals can reclaim total control over their money, governments lose their main lever to finance wars and maintain economic order through monetary manipulation. Monetary decentralization becomes a concrete tool of individual freedom and financial sovereignty. Do not be misled by official narratives or media that downplay its role: Bitcoin’s true function is to give individuals control over their money and freedom in the face of a system that thrives on debt, monetary manipulation, hidden inflation, endless wars funded by citizens, elite privileges, plunder of public resources, exploitation of poverty, and extreme concentration of economic, social, and political power in the hands of an extractive minority.

At the same time, artificial intelligence is opening a new technological era. By automating intellectual work, accelerating research, and drastically reducing production costs, AI creates a natural deflationary dynamic. Goods, services, and knowledge become increasingly accessible, potentially reversing the traditional inflationary cycle. If this technological deflation meets a rare and incorruptible currency, productivity gains directly improve living standards rather than being absorbed by inflation or debt into the pockets of the powerful.

Despite current turbulence, two radically new forces are emerging: a decentralized currency and artificial intelligence. Technological innovation is inherently deflationary: it lowers costs, increases efficiency, and makes goods, services, and knowledge more accessible. A rare and incorruptible currency, meanwhile, protects savings and prevents the state or central banks from manipulating value. Together, they create a new economic order where prosperity no longer depends on coercion or monetary manipulation but on real, shared progress.

This transformation goes beyond economics: it is historical and civilizational. Just as the separation of church and state redefined power and individual freedom centuries ago, the combination of monetary decentralization and technological innovation could break the monopoly that states and financial elites have held for centuries. The endless cycle of debt, inflation, and war becomes obsolete. Production costs decrease, prices naturally fall, and economic and social control returns to the citizens.

This movement could mark the beginning of a new era where prosperity is no longer a privilege for the few but a tangible right for all. In this world, technological innovation and monetary decentralization liberate individuals’ creative energy, reduce economic friction, and make abundance accessible. People can protect their wealth, invest in ideas, and contribute to society without depending on centralized or corrupt institutions. Education, knowledge, services, and goods become more accessible, entrepreneurship flourishes, and creativity drives the economy. Individual freedom returns to the center of the system, allowing each person to live according to their choices and talents while participating in shared progress.


Conclusion

For the first time in centuries, humanity could genuinely combine economic justice, accelerated innovation, and personal autonomy, paving the way for a society where collaboration and collective prosperity replace artificially imposed scarcity and extractive domination.

Do not lose hope: rather than letting your attention be diverted by mainstream media lies, take control of your capital outside the traditional system. It is already possible : Protect yourself financially during this transition, withdrawing your money from the corrupted system.

By doing so, you “vote” far more effectively against war and the economic-technocratic dictatorship imposed by a transhumanist and Malthusian elite that does not seek the good of humanity. image

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