Orchestrating Collapse & Profiting from Chaos—The Financialist Kill Chain

Thanks, Elly.

E M Burlingame

Empires rise and fall. Across the past four hundred years, they've not fallen naturally. Their fall not a natural decline but a carefully engineered demolition. The inevitable result of estrogen laden passive-aggressive total war warfare. The Financialist Kill Chain of Dutch and European elites, once Venetian bankers, is that passive-aggressive strategy employed by financialists to systematically exploit and dismantle nations over decades and even centuries, culminating in their total collapse. Step #7, "Collapse and Abandonment," marks the endgame—where a nation, stripped of its wealth, stability, and virility, is pushed into chaos when its citizens can no longer endure the hardship and begin to rise up in capable violence. At this critical juncture, those orchestrating the kill chain ignite the final collapse, profiting from the ensuing war or civil war and later swooping in—sometimes decades later—to buy up the nation’s remaining assets for pennies on the dollar, or even for free. The collapse of Russia, roughly 80 years after the Russian Civil War and Bolshevik takeover, both fostered by the same Dutch elites through the City of London, serves as a stark example of this predatory process.

Step #7: Collapse and Abandonment

The final step of the Financialist Kill Chain is a deliberate and multi-pronged assault designed to push a nation beyond the point of recovery. It unfolds through six interconnected sub-steps, each eroding a different pillar of societal stability:

1. War and Debt Accumulation The nation is entangled in prolonged conflicts—external wars or internal strife—that drain its resources and pile on debt, often owed to foreign creditors. These wars isolate the country diplomatically, fostering global ill-will, while turning its martial population—soldiers and patriots—against the state they once defended.

2. Financialization and Speculation The economy shifts from production to financial markets, where rampant speculation inflates asset prices beyond the reach of ordinary citizens. Homes, land, and businesses become unaffordable for natives but irresistible to foreign investors, who profit as the economic foundation weakens.

3. Charity Overload and Racial Tension A flood of unassimilated low to no skill immigrants overwhelms welfare, charity systems and public services, driving down wages and intensifying competition for jobs, while destroying social unity. This creates economic hardship for natives and fuels social discord, fraying the nation’s cohesion, pitting ethnic groups against one another.

4. Criminal Activity and Corruption The political and justice systems are corrupted, with key institutions—courts, police, and government—compromised by external influence, greed or threats of violence and murder. Crime surges as punishment wanes, undermining public safety and trust, and leaving citizens vulnerable and disillusioned. Further dividing the population.

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