There are a lot of bad people out there doing a lot of nasty stuff, and often it’s not over the pursuit of ideological differences. One of the greatest perpetrators of evil in the world is the pursuit of easy money because people are too lazy to make it for themselves. And that is certainly the case with a conflict I’m involved in with Wells Fargo, where I have witnessed many layers of evil driven by those types of sentiments that really put a challenge to all the assumptions people have of freedom. It’s one thing to work toward MAGA goals of self-government and personal fulfillment. It’s quite another to see how a mobster-type of network running behind the legal profession thinks of itself as a government behind a government, and that when they want to steal something from you, they believe they can do it without recourse, because their efforts are so predictably parasitic that a whole new layer of concern unfolds before you. When I warn people about the problems with modern banking, it comes from direct experience. And when you have something really valuable, there will always be entities out there who will want to steal it, perhaps for purely ideological reasons. But mostly, because they can and they lack that value themselves. So if you leave your doors unlocked in a crowded area, you can almost guarantee that someone will try to open your door and steal the contents of your car. Especially if it looks like something valuable might be in it. You cannot trust that good deeds will always maintain civility. More often than not, you will see the worst of the human race if you allow them to show it to you, and that is the case with a conflict I’m involved in with a team of others that finds itself in a dispute with a vast bank that thinks it has more power than the United States government, and that they have complete control over the legal profession, and can essentially make anything happen that they want to see happen.

Not to get into the specifics of the case I’m involved in, which is a very public case. Nothing much shocks me; I’ve pretty much been there and done everything. But in the Wells Fargo case, which most people dealing with them outside the coloring lines of normal loans and transactions report, the level of evil they utilize these days is long over the rainbow. But to see their behavior and arrogance displayed before the courts is essentially a lesson on why the creation of the Fed at Jekyll Island was such a bad idea in 1913. It’s one thing to vote for the right to vote. To pass a school levy. Or even to go to war with another country. But this idea that we’d let some global terrorists run our monetary policy and be able to control financial interests in the defense of our country, essentially, is reprehensibly wrong, which is the issue at the center of the case I’m involved in. How would a bank like Wells Fargo get so much power to begin with, or BlackRock, which owns so many companies with a controlling financial interest in them, as BlackRock does with Wells Fargo? The answer starts with the Fed printing trillions of dollars and issuing the phony money into Wall Street over a long period of time to wash it. And essentially give the handlers of that money control over all the means of production in the world through finance. When we study how communism has spread beyond the borders of politics, look at the finance industry, and you’ll see what a menace all this is.
But for the depth of it, I had a front row seat as we were securing counsel for a vigorous defense of essentially a hostile takeover. And while looking for that level of counsel, we found that most of the top talent across the country had to recuse themselves because they had some financial tie to Wells Fargo, in some way. And the obvious answer that comes to mind is how could any one bank acquire that much power? To influence to such an extent the entire legal industry. And they had no fear of law enforcement or political reform of their holdings. They acquired that power from the Lords of Easy Money, who print money at the Fed to saturate the market with a flood of cash, no matter what its real value to gold is. It’s the perception of value that they control because there are no auditors on the face of the planet who could come in and scrutinize them for their deeds. And when we did, it was hard to find a lawyer anywhere who was not on the take somehow by just that one bank. Then apply that same standard to the many banks that control our lives, and you start to see a real problem. They think they are well beyond political controls to be regulated by the people of a nation through an election process. We’ve learned a lot over these last few years about how these sinister characters operate behind the curtain. And we were all too polite to even ask the question, until this latest Trump term where we have seen a lot of evil behavior that assumed it had control of the political process including the FBI, CIA, and of course, the banking industry, hiding behind a Federal Reserve that never should have been created in the first place, for these very reasons.
There is a legal standard in cases like this where “goodwill” is the real commodity. It’s not the dollars and sense that buy material or pay payroll, it’s the intangibles of what a company or entity means to society in general. And that looks to be the case here, where money doesn’t mean anything to the attackers, because they work in an industry where they can print all they want to flush it through the system through hedge fund investors like a personal assassination squad. The attack is on the value of something to society, not in the hardware it uses to produce the product. In this case, a company openly supportive of the Trump administration and a very woke bank that wanted to attack the “goodwill” of that brand to take that chess piece off the map, essentially. And it’s not so much the politics of it as it comes down to a case of private ownership, on the premise of privately held companies versus publicly traded ones, where the means of production are out of the hands of private people, but collectively owned. The amount of money that it takes to keep the entire legal profession on a retainer is essentially enormous. Yet that is the case as I see it; it is an astonishing level of power that no bank, no single entity, should ever have for themselves. And a lot has been revealed in their arrogance, which is worth fighting. And that will undoubtedly be the case here. But to see just how bad it is up close and personal has been alarming. It’s one thing to talk about these things as they happen and are observed. It’s another to be personally involved. And to see the rot up close and to meet the characters. If we thought the situation was bad before, now we know it. And we can’t unsee what we have seen. Nor can we put that genie back in the bottle. The wrath of justice has to take place because we can’t let it endure untethered. Knowing what I do about cases like this, it is astonishing to consider how much “goodwill” has been attacked by phony money to destroy businesses from the inside out. And to determine, based on that assessment, what the real threat to American infrastructure truly is.
Rich Hoffman

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