We speak of the “world crisis,” but isn’t the world always in “crisis”? During the period of the 20th-21stcentury alone we have seen two world wars and appear to be on the cusp of a third. In fact, American commentator Brian Berletic, reporting from Thailand, says it has already begun. (US Using Israel to Distract Away from World War 3: Blockade on Iran is an Act of War on China.)

There have always been “wars and rumors of wars” (Matthew 24:6). There have always been nations and empires trying to conquer each other. There have always been greedy and violent people trying to enslave those weaker or less fortunate. There have always been classes of intellectuals or other apologists skilled at justifying actions that lack rational justification, including the priests of religions favored by the ruling elites.

The histories, analyses, studies, theses, commentaries, and explanations of these events are endless. Yet none of them mean anything except insofar as they contain lessons on how humanity can grow out of the propensity to abuse, rob, and kill each other seeminglyad infinitum.

The United States Has Become the Chief Aggressor

Although I have written regularly about what I have called the Anglo-American-Zionist Empire, it’s the United States that has been leading the charge for world conquest and control since the start of World War II. This is one of the central themes of the book on U.S. history I published in October 2023 entitledOur Country, Then and Now.

There has been a long series of events which has contributed to where we find ourselves today, with the U.S., under the Trump administration, increasingly removing the mask by which this country has tried to hide its ambitions for world conquest for a very long time.

I shall attempt to summarize these events in the following narrative.

Through competition with France and Spain, Great Britain became the dominant European power in settling and controlling the Western Hemisphere during the “Age of Discovery.” This required the near-extermination of the Native Americans, particularly in the territory that became the United States.

Economic development of North America directed by British capitalists required the labor of impoverished settlers, including white indentured servants and enslaved Africans. The British colonies created their own robust cultural zones, with marked differences depending on the religious background of the controlling elites and their degree of dependence on black slaves.

When the colonies gained independence following the Revolutionary War, it was understood by the leaders of the newly-formed nation and their supporters in the Mother Country that the U.S. would eventually become an imperial power to partner with or rival the British Empire itself. This linkage was expressed by the fact that the First and Second Banks of the United States were modeled directly on the Bank of England for the same purpose: i.e., printing of money through the fractional reserve method (i.e., lending against a gold reserve base) in order to prosecute imperialistic warfare. Conquest of the North American continent proceeded under the doctrine of Manifest Destiny which included the purchase of Alaska from Russia in 1867. By the end of the 19thcentury the U.S. had begun to create its emerging empire by the seizure of Hawaii and prosecution of the Spanish-American war, resulting in acquisition of the Philippines, Guam, and Puerto Rico and military control of Cuba.

Source: Global Research