Understanding how a system works matters more than knowing who runs it.
Names change. People get replaced. The person at the top hires someone, uses them, and moves on — the system stays the same.
Who sits in the middle, who sets the rules, what moral cause justifies the rules, and what conditions are attached?
The criteria don’t need to be controversial.
They just need to be impossible to argue against:
public health, sustainable development, clean energy, financial inclusion.
A moral cause that no reasonable person can oppose is the most important part.
The system wants you angry, because then you don’t think rationally.
The system wants you presented with scapegoats.
Because then you erroneously believe the issue is fixed when politicians and billionaires collapse in the media spotlight.
The only thing the system does not want from you is comprehension.
The Epstein archive contains extensive correspondence about the development of digital currencies.
Between October 2011 and September 2012, the documents show Epstein systematically evaluating the World Economic Forum’s working group on alternative currencies, poaching its best people, and setting up a parallel project under his control — outside the WEF, under rules guaranteeing that no participant would be named.
The paper that came out of it — referred to in the emails as the ‘Thoughts on Bitcoin’ document — laid out a blueprint for a government-backed digital currency: negative interest rates, full surveillance of every transaction, the removal of banks as middlemen, and the absorption of weaker countries’ currencies by stronger ones.
Larry Summers wrote a formal version in 2016.
Connect the dots:
Epstein emails connect directly to the central bank digital currency programs now being built or tested in over a hundred countries — and through the Bank for International Settlements, to the infrastructure that would make programmable conditions on your money operational at the level of every individual transaction.