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This Week at Solari
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Solari’s weekly Money & Markets reports are hosted by Catherine Austin Fitts and John Titus. Catherine and John discuss the latest financial and geopolitical news—each week summarized by an evocative theme—and monitor significant trends in areas such as “Fed Watch,” “Space, Military, and Global Turf Wars,” “Hey Robot,” and “Pharmageddon.” They also track and celebrate noteworthy pushback around the world. Money & Markets is published on Thursday evenings, with the exception of the last week of the month. Subscribers can access Money & Markets in either audio or video formats (both downloadable).

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https://m.youtube.com/shorts/GnNAtAsueNg
Banking System 2 min.
Ours is, allegedly, a representative government. Elections are assumed to be conducted fairly.
There are only so many cases to examine. Either
In the first case, it means we actually did vote for those who hold office. Therefore, we are either the minority, complaining to the majority of citizens who actually support policies of the people they voted in. Or we are the majority but our will is being thwarted by representatives who have become corrupted via bribes or blackmail.
So in either case we are slaves to a system of government that is too easily corrupted. In other words, ours is a problem that has plagued the West since the days of Pericles. Unless and until elections are shown to be fairly conduct and maintained as such, and office holders are bounded by verifiable constraints that curb bribery – as well as punishments for when bribery is detected – then the problem will not soon be solved.
As it turns out, there are people working on a better method for conducting fair elections. You can look at their patent application here:
https://patentcenter.uspto.gov/applications/16785354
There is another aspect of this that concerns the establishment of candidates for elections. But that is less about vote counting and more about the usurious nature of our financial system, something too long to comment on in this post other than to note that Catherine has some very good ideas on how to address it.