Democracy Is Dead
- rajasalti
- Apr 27
- 3 min read
What’s the point of democracy? Isn’t the whole idea supposed to be that people get a say in choosing who leads their country? The best person to drive the economic engine forward, conduct diplomacy, and create a brighter future?
At this point, in 2025, do you honestly feel like you have any real say in who leads your country?
It's an illusion of choice.
Your prime minister or president doesn’t represent you anymore. They represent themselves and the interests of their donors—their true masters.
Let's be honest, they couldn’t care less about you or your family. Deep down, you already know this, yet you keep believing in the grand illusion of “Democracy.”
Do you really believe the President of the United States holds the power you’re taught he does?
The system isn’t designed that way. It’s structured so that each nation stays obedient to a higher, global organizing power—a hidden hand guiding decisions behind the scenes.
Conspiracy theorists have long warned about the impending "One World Government." But take a closer look around: hasn't it already arrived?
Do you think the architects of such a system would openly admit their intentions and risk mass revolt? Of course not. They quietly built it while we were distracted by meaningless elections, staged debates, and partisan squabbles.
Globalism was never just about connecting economies and blending cultures; it was about creating a global framework of rules where each "sovereign" country ultimately answers to the same centralized entity.
Sovereignty itself is dead. Countries are no longer fully independent—they're merely administrative states under a higher authority, controlled behind closed doors.
Yet, we're encouraged to argue about surface-level politics, pretending our votes can change something significant.
Do you really think America and Israel are separate entities?
When I was growing up in Palestine, the adults around me constantly cursed America, blaming it for enabling all of Israel’s crimes.
Naturally, this shaped my view: I saw America as the world's villain, responsible for immense suffering, just as countless others around the globe do.
But then, as I matured, I began to see things differently. America isn't inherently evil; it’s simply a powerful vehicle.
Historically, empires have always committed grave injustices—not necessarily because their people were bad, but because powerful elites behind the scenes manipulated these empires to fulfill their agendas.
Empires rise and fall, but these elites don't disappear—they move on, settling into the next powerhouse, pulling strings from the shadows.
As I learned more history and developed my own worldview, I realized America itself isn’t the enemy. America, for all its flaws, has also been an incredible experiment, yielding more innovation, prosperity, and individual freedom than perhaps any nation before it.
Directing anger at the nation itself is not just pointless, it’s a distraction from the real fight.
It's not countries we must oppose—it's the people who control them.
Consider the West: America, Israel, Canada, Australia, and Europe consistently agree on major global issues. Why?
Because the real decision-makers aren’t the politicians you see debating on TV. They’re the small circle of powerful elites controlling the flow of global finance, trade, and policy through hidden channels.
Organizations like the International Monetary Fund (IMF), World Bank, World Economic Forum (WEF), and the Bank of International Settlements (BIS)—these institutions hold nations hostage economically, compelling obedience under the guise of international support.
They function as a legal mafia at the global level, quietly steering every country's economic and political directions.
Ever wonder why having a central bank is mandatory for every country seeking legitimacy?
It’s simple: without a central bank, a country can't be integrated into this global power structure. And if a nation resists, history shows us clearly what happens next.
Consider how America has intervened militarily around the world, installing central banks as part of the package to ensure compliance.
We're currently living in the twilight of the Bretton Woods era—the global financial system established after World War II to set up institutions like the IMF and World Bank. But cracks are showing, and a reshuffling of this order is inevitable.
We stand at a crossroads, faced with unprecedented technological advancements. Artificial intelligence and blockchain technology aren't just buzzwords—they're revolutions capable of transforming society.
The question isn't if things will change, but rather how they will.
Will we continue down this road toward tighter centralized control, empowering even fewer elites with even greater power over our lives?
Or will the decentralization promised by cryptocurrency and AI disrupt this old guard, democratizing power back into the hands of the people?
Will humanity finally reclaim control of its future, or will history continue repeating itself, with power simply changing hands among the few?
Only time—and perhaps our collective willingness to open our eyes and act—will tell.

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