Jews are over 100 times more likely to be billionaires than everyone else on earth. 11.6% of the world’s billionaires are Jewish, despite Jews accounting for 0.2% of the world’s population. They are 25% of the world’s 400 most wealthy individuals. 20% of Britain’s “Super Rich” are Jewish—and most of them are immigrants. Five of the top seven wealthiest Australians are Jewish. Jews are 25% of Canada’s billionaires (at roughly 1% of the population), 13% of Brazil’s (at 0.5% of the population), and 30% of the Ukraine’s (at roughly 1-2% of the population). Jews are roughly 17 times more likely per capita to make the Forbes 400 than is the rest of the American population. 46% of Jews earn more than $100,000 a year, compared to 19% among all Americans. In 1987, Nathaniel Weyl found 23% of American billionaires were Jewish, whereas for the last decade, the number has settled in at around 35%. This makes sense, given the increasing financialization of our economy, driven in no small part by the uniquely Jewish “Greed is Good” ethos of the 1980s. Today, six of the twenty leading venture capital funds in the US belong to Jews, according to Forbes.
According to Danny Halperin, described as “Israel’s former economic attaché to Washington,” the Jews are fabulously wealthy because, unlike the Irish, for example, “who studied less and initiated less,” the Jews studied harder and “didn’t integrate into traditional banking, so they established the investment banking.” What that really means of course is that the Jews were able to re-orient the financial sector to their benefit based in no small part on the unscrupulousness of usury and compound interest (imagine Paul Joseph Watson’s shock that Federal Reserve founder Paul Warburg was Jewish). What we are witnessing today is a cascade effect, the consequence of over a century of policies designed specifically to favor a select coterie of power brokers at the expense of all others. The wealth of the 2,200 billionaires in the world jumped 18% from 2017 to 2018, and together their personal wealth reached $9.1 trillion. When we talk about neo-liberalism, we must understand that it is a system predicated on exponential growth, be it population growth, consumer base, GDP, or any number of other tributaries to global capital’s ocean of resources. Further, from NLCPR, while the money supply has increased exponentially:..........https://theanatomicallycorrectbanana.com/home/2019/4/14/homo-globicus
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