They manage $10 trillion.
But no one elected them. No one understands them. And no one — certainly not your pension fund — dares disobey them.
In this inaugural transmission, Lord Quantumund von Entaglemeyer charts the silent rise of BlackRock — from bland asset manager to planetary control grid. We trace how one firm became more powerful than most governments, not through coups or armies, but through passive funds, algorithmic sorcery, and the sleepwalking consent of the global middle class.
Along the way, we meet BlackRock’s Aladdin — not a genie, but an AI system managing the fate of markets and countries with the cold indifference of spreadsheet theology.
🎙 Featuring source material from Whitney Webb, the Corbett Report, and a pile of institutional filings that no sane mammal should read voluntarily.
This is not a conspiracy theory. It’s a fiscal reality you were never supposed to map.
BlackRock Timeline
Timeline
Pre-1980s:
Ongoing: The "split circuit monetary system" exists, where the Federal Reserve issues money to commercial banks (public circuit), and commercial banks issue money to individuals and businesses through loans (retail circuit). Commercial banks hold a central, special position in this system as both issuers and users of money.
Historical Context: Every global reserve currency, including the British pound, has historically lost significant value over time due to inflation, driven by the need to print more money to service debt and obligations.
1980s:
Mid-1980s: Larry Fink experiences a significant professional failure, losing $100 million due to miscalculations regarding falling interest rates and mortgage-backed securities. He becomes "persona non grata" at his bank.
1988:
1988: Larry Fink convinces the investment company Blackstone to co-found a new enterprise focused on risk management. Initially named Blackstone Financial Management, Fink soon renames it "BlackRock," a nod to its origins with Blackstone and a name he believed would cause "inevitable confusion and annoyance."
1992:
1992: BlackRock's assets under management reach $20 billion, firmly establishing it as a viable business. Discussions begin about spinning BlackRock off from Blackstone and taking it public.
1999:
1999: BlackRock goes public, with its stock initially trading at $14 per share.
2000s:
Post-9/11 Era: The US government's debt significantly balloons, partly due to foreign wars and efforts to maintain military and dollar hegemony (Petrodollar system).
2008:
September 2008: The US investment bank Lehman Brothers collapses, triggering a global financial crisis.
Late 2008: Amidst the financial crisis, the American financial ministry and the Federal Reserve, in urgent need of expertise to assess "toxic papers" and the financial health of struggling institutions, approach Larry Fink. BlackRock's analytical program, Aladdin, is presented as a solution.
Late 2008 - Early 2009: BlackRock is contracted by the US government to analyze the books of AIG (the world's largest insurance company) and later Citigroup, leading to billions in government bailouts based on Aladdin's assessments. This significantly increases BlackRock's influence and connection to government financial decision-makers.
2008: BlackRock establishes a separate, independent consulting team, physically and operationally distinct from its investment departments, to avoid conflicts of interest, especially when advising government entities.
2009:
2009: Timothy Geithner, formerly head of the Federal Reserve, is appointed American Finance Minister by President Barack Obama, giving Larry Fink a direct line to the White House.
June 2009: BlackRock acquires the "iShares" ETF business from the struggling British bank Barclays for $13.5 billion. This acquisition doubles BlackRock's assets under management overnight and marks its entry into the booming ETF market.
Post-Financial Crisis (starting 2009): ETFs experience explosive growth, thriving in the longest sustained bull market of the decade. BlackRock's assets under management skyrocket, and the firm becomes the world's largest investor within ten years. Hundreds of new ETFs are launched.
2010:
May 6, 2010 (Flash Crash): ETFs are particularly affected by an unexplained market event, raising questions about what would happen if everyone wanted to sell at once and who would rescue the system, as ETFs are largely unregulated like banks.
2013:
2013: BlackRock releases a promotional video openly touting Aladdin as a "quasi-omniscient" tool.
2014:
2014: The European Central Bank (ECB) becomes responsible for regulating and controlling banks in Europe, mandating higher equity reserves for banks. BlackRock, despite managing more money than most banks, operates with less control as it is not classified as a bank and does not issue loans.
2015:
July 2015: BlackRock purchases Greek government bonds at a time when they are highly speculative. This occurs after BlackRock had previously audited Greek bank books at the ECB's request, raising suspicions of insider information. BlackRock defends its actions by citing its regulated status and internal separation of consulting and investment teams.
2016:
Since 2016: Rheinmetall (a European arms manufacturer) stock increases by approximately 70%, benefiting BlackRock as a major shareholder, despite Larry Fink's public statements advocating for corporate social responsibility.
December 2017:
December 2017: French President Emmanuel Macron invites politicians, entrepreneurs, and financial managers to a conference, where a resolution is passed for BlackRock to develop a fund (with French and German state support) to invest in sustainable industries in Africa. This initiative stems from meetings between Fink and Macron, ostensibly to offer "green investment projects" to clients, but also interpreted as BlackRock expanding into new markets with state assistance.
2018:
2018: BlackRock publishes a position paper stating that its decision-making criterion is solely based on whether a company's business policy aligns with the long-term interests of shareholders, not social or political values. They explicitly state that asset managers should not use client assets to promote their own social or political views.
Ongoing: Friedrich Merz becomes Chairman of the Supervisory Board at BlackRock. He advocates for tax incentives for private pension funds, which would benefit BlackRock, without publicly disclosing his employer's interest.
Ongoing: Jean-François Cirelli, head of BlackRock France, also advocates for promoting equity funds for retirement provision, aligning with BlackRock's interests.
Present Day (as of sources' publication, ~2020-2025):
Ongoing: BlackRock manages over $6 trillion globally, making it the world's largest investment firm. Its influence extends to firms, politicians, and entire countries.
Ongoing: BlackRock's headquarters are located on 52nd Street in Midtown Manhattan, not on Wall Street.
Ongoing: BlackRock is a major shareholder in thousands of corporations worldwide, including Apple, Microsoft, Facebook, Shell, and Germany's 30 most important companies.
Ongoing: Aladdin, BlackRock's AI-powered analysis program, performs millions of calculations weekly, provides stock tips, advises on bad securities, and aids in risk management, giving BlackRock a significant information advantage.
Ongoing: BlackRock sells information and risk management services derived from Aladdin to other large companies.
Ongoing: Protests against BlackRock and the financial world are growing, particularly regarding issues like housing costs (e.g., in Berlin with Deutsche Wohnen) and investments in controversial industries (e.g., arms manufacturers like Rheinmetall, fossil fuels).
Ongoing: The concept of "common ownership" (where large financial firms like BlackRock and Vanguard hold shares in competing companies, e.g., Adidas and Puma) is being researched for its potential negative impact on market competition. Studies by Martin Schmalz suggest that common ownership may lead to higher prices and fees for consumers (e.g., in the airline and banking sectors).
Ongoing: BlackRock actively disputes academic research critical of common ownership, commissioning counter-reports and exerting pressure on researchers like Martin Schmalz.
Ongoing: There is a strong push to "financialize and monetize" previously global commons, led by institutions connected to Wall Street and central bankers (e.g., Natural Asset Corporations, global carbon markets). This involves tokenization of natural assets like the Amazon rainforest, potentially leading to surveillance and control of these areas, and new forms of "debt slavery" for Global South economies through "debt-for-nature swaps."
Ongoing: Bitcoin is being increasingly embraced by major financial players (BlackRock, JP Morgan, Jane Street Capital) through ETFs, raising concerns that it might become a tool to perpetuate the "dollar system" as a "demand-inelastic commodity" rather than a decentralized, anti-state currency.
Ongoing: There are concerns about the "tokenization" of physical assets and the natural world, which could lead to increased surveillance (e.g., Internet of Forests, satellite surveillance via companies like Satellogic with ties to US intelligence and former government officials) and a "neo-feudal" system where two divergent classes emerge.
Ongoing: Stablecoin issuers (like Tether) are making controversial choices, investing in brain-machine interfaces, onboarding government agencies (FBI, Secret Service) onto their platforms, and freezing wallets at the behest of authorities, raising questions about their role as "human rights tools."
Ongoing: The potential for an engineered crisis to scare people into accepting programmable, surveillable, and seizable money (CBDCs or stablecoins) as the only alternative to economic collapse is a significant concern.
Ongoing: The ECB aims to reduce its reliance on external consultants like BlackRock for stress tests and regulation by 2020, focusing on internal expertise.
Future Concerns/Predictions:
Potential Duopoly: BlackRock aims to create a duopoly in the ETF market, as it already shares two-thirds of the US market with Vanguard and holds 50% of the German market with its iShares.
Legal Challenges: BlackRock faces potential lawsuits for not fulfilling its fiduciary responsibility, especially concerning the transparency of fee structures.
Economic Collapse: A mathematical inevitability of the current debt system suggests a future economic collapse, which could be exploited by powerful entities for further control.
Programmable Money: The goal is to make people scared enough to acquiesce to programmable, surveillable money, whether CBDCs or stablecoins.
Exploitation of Natural Assets: The "financialization of nature" is seen by some as a new form of exploitation dressed up as sustainability, potentially leading to private entities controlling global commons and extracting profit.
Cast of Characters
Larry Fink:Bio: Co-founder, Chairman, and CEO of BlackRock. A key figure in the financial world, known for his obsessive focus on risk management. He experienced a major career setback in the mid-1980s, losing $100 million due to a misjudgment in mortgage-backed securities, but subsequently founded BlackRock. He is depicted as one of the most influential men in finance, with direct access to political leaders and central bankers. Publicly advocates for corporate social responsibility and sustainability, but BlackRock's investments often contradict these statements (e.g., in arms and fossil fuel companies).
Heike Buchter:Bio: A stock market correspondent who has witnessed BlackRock's rise from the beginning and authored the only book to date focusing on the company's financial dealings. She provides expert commentary on BlackRock's growth and strategies.
Carl Icahn:Bio: A prominent stock market legend. He publicly accused Larry Fink and Janet Yellen (former Fed President) of recklessly pursuing policies that could lead to the next financial crisis, metaphorically describing them as driving a "party bus" towards a "cliff."
Janet Yellen:Bio: Former President of the American central bank (Federal Reserve) at the time of Carl Icahn's accusation. Implied to be aware of potential risks but unable to curb the celebratory mood (and associated financial policies) driven by figures like Fink.
Timothy Geithner:Bio: Head of the Federal Reserve in 2008 and later appointed American Finance Minister by President Barack Obama in 2009. He sought BlackRock's assistance during the financial crisis, relying on Larry Fink and Aladdin to analyze distressed assets of major financial institutions like AIG and Citigroup, thereby significantly boosting BlackRock's influence and connections within the US government.
Barack Obama:Bio: US President during the 2008 financial crisis. His administration appointed Timothy Geithner as Finance Minister, further solidifying BlackRock's ties to the White House.
Friedrich Merz:Bio: Former CDU parliamentary group leader in Germany. He became Chairman of the Supervisory Board at BlackRock, raising concerns about the revolving door between finance and politics. He advocated for policies that would benefit private pension funds (and thus BlackRock) without explicitly stating his conflict of interest.
Emmanuel Macron:Bio: President of France. He actively sought investments from BlackRock, inviting Larry Fink to private meetings and establishing a commission (which included BlackRock France's head) to promote privatization and encourage foreign investment in France. He partnered with BlackRock on a fund for sustainable industries in Africa.
Jean-François Cirelli:Bio: Head of BlackRock France. Previously worked for President Chirac and transformed Gaz de France into a major energy company. Like Friedrich Merz, he advocates for promoting equity funds in retirement provision.
Pascalis Boris:Bio: A former banker who organized the privatization of state buildings in Greece. Shortly after, he was appointed to a senior position at BlackRock's Greek subsidiary, raising questions about potential conflicts of interest related to BlackRock's early entry into the Greek real estate market.
Martin Schmalz:Bio: A scientist and professor at Oxford University who conducted research into "common ownership," specifically how BlackRock and other large financial funds holding shares in competing companies (e.g., Adidas and Puma, airlines, banks) might negatively impact market competition, leading to higher prices and fees. His research has generated significant attention and pushback from BlackRock.
Whitney Webb:Bio: An investigative journalist and author (e.g., "One Nation Under Blackmail"). She is a vocal critic of BlackRock and the broader financial system, viewing them as predatory institutions that exploit natural assets and push for a new financial system that perpetuates "debt slavery" and forms of "neo-feudalism." She also critically analyzes the embrace of Bitcoin by large financial players and the push for programmable, surveillable money.
Mark Goodwin:Bio: A colleague of Whitney Webb and author of "The Bitcoin Dollar" book. He contributes to the critical perspective on Bitcoin's role, suggesting it might be used to prop up the existing dollar system as a "demand-inelastic commodity" rather than serving as a true alternative. He also collaborates on reporting regarding carbon markets and the financialization of nature.
John Titus:Bio: A commentator and creator of indispensable videos ("Mommy, Where Does Money Come From?", "Wherefore Art Thou Reserves?", "Larry and Carstens’ Excellent Pandemic") that explain the "split circuit monetary system" involving the Federal Reserve and commercial banks.
Lynn Forester de Rothschild:Bio: Representative of the Rothschild banking dynasty and CEO of E.L. Rothschild, a financial holding company. She is credited with founding the "little-known investment monster," implying a connection to the establishment of powerful financial entities like BlackRock. Her company is involved with The Economist Group, which uses its intelligence unit for geopolitical reporting and risk analysis.
Mark Carney:Bio: Former head of the Bank of England and Bank of Canada. He is mentioned as a prominent figure in designing "sustainable development systems" and global carbon markets, despite a controversial past (e.g., covering up the HSBC drug cartel money laundering scandal). He is seen as part of the group pushing for the financialization of nature.
Henry Paulson:Bio: Former Goldman Sachs executive and head of the Treasury Department during the 2008 financial crash. He was chairman of The Nature Conservancy for a long time, highlighting the intimate connections between Wall Street and organizations pioneering the "financialization of nature" through concepts like "debt-for-nature swaps."
Stephen Mnuchin (Steve Mnuchin):Bio: Former US Treasury Secretary. He is the chair of the board of Satellogic, a satellite company involved in efforts to tokenize the Amazon and create carbon markets, raising concerns about surveillance and the influence of former government officials in these initiatives.
Howard Lutnick:Bio: Longtime head of Cantor Fitzgerald (a major dealer of US treasuries) and recently named co-chair of Trump's transition team. He is also on the board of Satellogic and connected to the stablecoin Tether, indicating significant financial and political influence in the emerging "tokenization" landscape.
Peter Thiel:Bio: A prominent financier who funds companies building technologies like virtual border walls and facial recognition systems used by law enforcement. He is intimately connected to JD Vance, a vice-presidential candidate, suggesting a link between powerful tech funders and political agendas related to surveillance and control.
Reed Hoffman:Bio: A backer of Kamala Harris, envisioning similar policy outcomes (e.g., biometric systems) as those associated with the political right, despite different stated motivations. This suggests a bipartisan push for increased surveillance and control.
Johannes Teyssen:Bio: CEO of E.ON (a German energy company). He acknowledged BlackRock's significant influence over companies, stating that BlackRock officials meet with firms, and companies seek these meetings because BlackRock's support (as a large shareholder) provides stability.
Peter Harry:Bio: A resident of Berlin, angry about rising rents and the influence of financial investors like BlackRock on housing corporations like Deutsche Wohnen, whose rent increases are significantly higher than municipal landlords. He represents the growing public dissatisfaction with financial speculation affecting everyday life.
Lord Quantum Fluff’s Facts & Sources
"Blackrock | The Company That Owns The World (And Its Getting Worse)" uploaded by Stoic Finance.
Summary: This video examines BlackRock's significant global influence, tracing its rise from the 2008 financial crisis bailouts through its ongoing involvement in the COVID-19 pandemic fiscal response. It highlights BlackRock's immense assets under management (exceeding $9 trillion), its intentionally low public profile, and its widespread "universal ownership" across major corporations in various sectors, including finance, pharmaceuticals, and media. The source also discusses Larry Fink's public image and BlackRock's strategic adoption of ESG (Environmental, Social, and Governance) investing as a method to both address criticisms and subtly steer corporate behavior.
"BlackRock - Die unheimliche Macht eines Finanzkonzerns - Doku" uploaded by Doku24 HD.
Summary: This German documentary details BlackRock's emergence as the world's largest investment firm, managing over $6 trillion globally from a diverse client base of large institutions and small savers. It explains the critical roles played by Exchange Traded Funds (ETFs), particularly its iShares brand, and its advanced analytical system, Aladdin, in achieving this dominance. The source discusses BlackRock's pervasive influence over companies, politicians, and countries, as well as controversies related to its ethical investment practices (e.g., in the arms industry) and the potential systemic risks posed by its market power and "common ownership" of competing firms.
"BlackRock's Aladdin: AI-Powered Financial Dominance" (Source without explicit author/uploader).
Summary: This source provides an in-depth look at Aladdin, BlackRock's proprietary AI-powered analytical program, which is described as the "operating system for BlackRock". It outlines Aladdin's core functions, including sophisticated risk management and investment analysis, processing vast amounts of digital data, and its ability to automate investment decisions, even replacing human stock pickers through projects like "Monarch". The source also highlights Aladdin's broad licensing to over 200 external institutions and its instrumental role in BlackRock's advisory work during financial crises and in shaping government financial policy.
"BlackRock's Ascendancy: Strategy, Crisis, and Global Dominance" (Source without explicit author/uploader).
Summary: This source offers a comprehensive overview of the factors contributing to BlackRock's massive global dominance. It details the firm's origins, influenced by Larry Fink's personal financial setback and his subsequent "obsessive" focus on risk management. The source emphasizes BlackRock's strategic leveraging of the 2008 financial crisis, including securing no-bid contracts from the U.S. government to analyze distressed assets, and its pivotal acquisition of Barclays' iShares ETF business, which fueled its growth. It also covers the technological sophistication of Aladdin, BlackRock's deep political entanglements via a "revolving door" phenomenon, and its market control through "universal ownership".
"BlackRock's Ascent: Power, Influence, and the New Financial Order" (Source without explicit author/uploader).
Summary: This source provides a detailed timeline of BlackRock's evolution and introduces key figures involved in its trajectory. It explores broader themes of financial control, including the "split circuit monetary system," the emerging trend of "financializing nature" through concepts like Natural Asset Corporations and global carbon markets, and the potential implications of programmable money (Central Bank Digital Currencies and stablecoins). The source also discusses the co-option of Bitcoin by major financial players and its potential role in a new, controlled financial order.
"BlackRock's Global Financial Power and Influence" (Source without explicit author/uploader).
Summary: This source comprehensively describes BlackRock's immense global power, highlighting its vast managed assets (over $6 trillion) that surpass the GDP of most countries. It explains how BlackRock achieves market dominance through its strategic use of ETFs and the Aladdin system, and its significant stakes in thousands of global corporations (referred to as "common ownership"). The source also details BlackRock's deep political and governmental connections (the "revolving door") and its controversial involvement in crisis responses. Key criticisms addressed include systemic risk, reduced market competition due to common ownership, and alleged ethical hypocrisy in its ESG investments.
"Elites Will Create A New Class Of Slaves" - BlackRock's Next Plans Will Shock You | Whitney Webb" uploaded by Tom Bilyeu.
Summary: This video discusses how financial crises exploit emotional responses, allowing BlackRock to influence and design government fiscal policies, which disproportionately benefit elites through "massive wealth transfers" rather than "Main Street". It critiques the "revolving door" between Wall Street and government, the misuse of taxpayer money, and presents a concern about a coming "neo-feudal" two-tier society where a technocratic elite manages a large underclass. The source suggests that this societal restructuring is facilitated by the manipulation of public perception through social media and AI technologies.
"Episode 449 – How BlackRock Conquered the World" uploaded by James Corbett.
Summary: This documentary-style podcast provides a comprehensive account of BlackRock's history, starting from its founding by Larry Fink with an emphasis on risk management after a personal financial loss. It details how BlackRock achieved dominance post-2008 financial crisis by advising the U.S. government on bailouts and leveraging its Aladdin system. The source critically analyzes BlackRock's growing political influence, its "revolving door" with government officials, and its pivotal role in proposing and implementing the "Going Direct" policy, which channeled money directly into the private sector during the COVID-19 pandemic. It also highlights BlackRock's efforts to shape corporate behavior through the ESG agenda.
"Global Influencers: Power Categories and Institutions" (Source without explicit author/uploader).
Summary: This source provides a framework for understanding global influence by categorizing key individuals and institutions. It identifies major power players as leaders of: large financial institutions (e.g., BlackRock, Vanguard, State Street), corporate executives with "interlocking directorates," heads of state and central bank governors, leaders of international organizations (UN, IMF, World Bank), influential NGOs and foundations (WEF, Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation), and historical dynastic families (e.g., Rothschilds, Slim family). It emphasizes the interconnectedness and concentration of power among these groups.
"How BlackRock Conquered the World" uploaded by Corbett Piratestreams (Unofficial).
Summary: This video, presented as an unofficial stream of The Corbett Report's documentary, narrates BlackRock's journey from its inception in 1988 with Larry Fink's vision for risk management to its current status as a financial colossus. It describes how the 2008 financial crisis "catapulted" BlackRock to prominence through its advisory role in government bailouts and the successful acquisition of iShares. The source emphasizes the transformative power of its Aladdin system and BlackRock's deliberate cultivation of political influence, which has allowed it to shape economic policies, including the controversial "Going Direct" reset during the COVID-19 pandemic.
"How Elites Will Collapse America Like Rome: BlackRock, Trump vs Kamala & Market Crash | Whitney Webb" uploaded by Tom Bilyeu.
Summary: This video expresses concern over BlackRock's pervasive influence on U.S. economic policy, regardless of the political party in power, especially concerning an anticipated government debt crisis. It details the "Going Direct Reset" during the COVID-19 response as an example of a "massive wealth transfer" to Wall Street, managed by BlackRock. The source warns about the push for "programmable, surveillable, and seizable money" (CBDCs and stablecoins) and discusses Larry Fink's alleged preference for totalitarian governments due to their predictability in risk management. It also touches on the "financialization of nature" and the co-option of Bitcoin by financial elites.
"Laurence Fink Talks investing and Blackrock Culture 2020" uploaded by Financial Freedom.
Summary: This interview features Larry Fink, BlackRock's CEO, discussing the company's founding principles, his personal career setback that led to an intense focus on risk management, and the early use of technology to create financial instruments like the Collateralized Mortgage Obligation (CMO). Fink highlights BlackRock's commitment to a "one platform" internal culture for consistent risk management and explains the shift towards a fiduciary standard in wealth management. He also reflects on BlackRock's growing public role and its involvement with governments worldwide, emphasizing the need for long-term solutions amidst global economic challenges like stagnant wages and low interest rates.
"Mapping Global Corporate Influence and Interconnections" (Source without explicit author/uploader).
Summary: This source describes a graphic that serves as a network map illustrating the concentrated power within the global economy wielded by a small, interconnected group of megacorporations, financial institutions (like BlackRock, JPMorgan Chase, Procter & Gamble), and individuals. It explains how this "web of influence" is formed through interlocking directorates (where individuals hold board seats in multiple companies), executive leadership, and massive institutional ownership. The map connects central hubs (e.g., Pfizer, BlackRock) to peripheral nodes including other companies, NGOs (World Economic Forum, Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation), and influential figures, suggesting that power extends across various sectors including media and academia.
"Rekurs & Rochaden" by Tom-Oliver Regenauer.
Summary: This blog post argues that influential figures, including BlackRock CEO Larry Fink and WEF founder Klaus Schwab, adjust their public rhetoric (e.g., shifting away from explicit "ESG" terminology) in response to growing public resistance. However, it asserts that their underlying "Green Economy" and "Inclusive Capitalism" agendas, often tied to the UN's Agenda 2030, remain unchanged. The source highlights the "increasing fragmentation" observed by the WEF among elites and public discontent, while also noting BlackRock's immense financial power (managing 9.4 trillion USD and influencing 21.6 trillion USD via Aladdin) and its role in "common ownership".
"THE REAL BLACKROCK CONSPIRACY: The Mega Corp That Controls Capitalism - CIC Ep2" uploaded by Ian Carroll.
Summary: This video asserts that BlackRock, along with Vanguard and State Street ("The Big Three"), effectively controls major sectors of the Western economy through its "universal ownership" of shares in nearly every significant corporation. It explains that while BlackRock manages "other people's money" (primarily retirement accounts), it consolidates the voting rights associated with those shares, granting it immense influence over corporate decisions, including policies like ESG and DEI. The source details the pivotal role of Aladdin, BlackRock's AI-powered system, in managing trillions of dollars and its historical involvement in government bailouts, raising concerns about conflicts of interest and the concentration of power.
"Why We Shouldn’t Trust BlackRock with Whitney Webb & Mark Goodwin" uploaded by Peter McCormack.
Summary: This discussion features Whitney Webb and Mark Goodwin explaining their reasons for skepticism about BlackRock. They argue that BlackRock and similar financial giants are co-opting Bitcoin through ETFs to maintain existing power structures, rather than promoting true decentralization. The source discusses Larry Fink's shift in rhetoric from ESG to emphasizing profit, linking it to a broader strategy by elites to adapt their "sales pitch" for a new global financial governance system. It also delves into the concept of "financialization of nature" and the push for "programmable, surveillable, seizable money" as key elements of this evolving system.
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