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The Iran Deal Just Broke The Global Economy

0h 26m video Transcribed Jun 29, 2026 Watch on YouTube ↗
Intermediate 12 min read For: Viewers interested in geopolitics, economics, and the intersection of war, finance, and technology.
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🔥 High Engagement

AI Summary

The video argues that the 'forever war model'—a system where war generates profit for the military-industrial complex—is ending because the emerging technological-industrial complex (AI, data centers) requires global stability. It explains how the US uses Israel as a proxy to maintain conflict in the Middle East, but now a shift toward infrastructure and AI investment is forcing a transition away from perpetual war.

[0:00]
Forever war model ending

The forever war model, which profits from conflict, is ending because the global economy needs stability for AI and tech infrastructure.

[1:38]
US-Iran deal canceled

A US-Iran deal to end a Middle East war was canceled after Israel continued bombing Lebanon, violating the agreement.

[2:44]
War as a business model

War generates demand for weapons, justifies larger Pentagon budgets, and creates reconstruction contracts—making it the most profitable business model.

[3:56]
US history of war

The US has been at war for 93% of its existence, with only 15–20 years of peace; most wars were not officially declared.

[4:56]
Proxy warfare explained

The US uses proxies like Israel to destabilize regions while maintaining a 'good cop' image, avoiding direct military engagement.

[6:51]
Transition to AI

The forever war model is being replaced by investment in AI, robots, and digital infrastructure, which require stability.

[8:34]
Capital over government

In the US, capital (corporations, banks) sits above government, unlike sovereign nations where government controls capital.

[11:57]
Dollar as weapon

The US uses the dollar's global dominance to sanction, cut off, or collapse economies of countries that resist.

[16:54]
AI vs. war model conflict

The technological-industrial complex needs stability for AI buildout, conflicting with the military-industrial complex's need for chaos.

[19:49]
J.D. Vance as tech face

J.D. Vance, backed by Peter Thiel, represents the technological-industrial complex and is positioned as the face of the new order.

[23:08]
Civil war in profit machine

The conflict is not US vs. Iran but a struggle between two factions of the same system: old war model vs. new tech model.

[25:46]
Rebuilding more profitable

Financing rebuilding, owning ports, and controlling data centers is more profitable than war, driving the transition.

The forever war model is being phased out in favor of a tech-driven infrastructure model, with Israel's role as proxy likely to be absorbed into the new profit machine.

Clickbait Check

70% Legit

"The title is somewhat exaggerated; the video discusses a potential shift in global economic models but does not claim the global economy is 'broken' in a literal sense."

Mentioned in this Video

Study Flashcards (10)

What percentage of its existence has the US been at war?

easy Click to reveal answer

93%

3:35

How many years of peace has the US had in its history?

medium Click to reveal answer

15 to 20 years

3:42

What are the three power structures described by Simon Dixon?

medium Click to reveal answer

Financial Industrial Complex (FIC), Military Industrial Complex (MIC), Technological Industrial Complex (TIC)

9:55

What is the role of Israel in the forever war model?

hard Click to reveal answer

Israel acts as America's proxy to keep the Middle East unstable, ensuring the forever war model has customers.

18:10

Why does the technological industrial complex need stability?

medium Click to reveal answer

Because building a trillion-dollar AI grid requires stable supply chains, energy markets, and shipping lanes.

22:43

Who is the face of the technological industrial complex according to the video?

easy Click to reveal answer

J.D. Vance

19:49

What are the four ways to 'crack a country open'?

hard Click to reveal answer

Sanctions, cutting off dollar access, war, and funding internal opposition/propaganda.

12:18

What event caused the US-Iran deal to be canceled?

medium Click to reveal answer

Israel continued bombing Lebanon, violating the agreement.

1:46

How does the US use the dollar as a weapon?

medium Click to reveal answer

By controlling the global financial system, the US can sanction countries or cut them off from dollar access, collapsing their economies.

11:57

What is the 'forever war model'?

easy Click to reveal answer

A business model where war generates demand for weapons, justifies larger military budgets, and creates reconstruction contracts.

2:44

💡 Key Takeaways

💡

War as the most profitable business model

Explains the core economic incentive behind perpetual conflict.

2:44
📊

US at war 93% of its existence

Provides a stark historical fact that underscores the systemic nature of war.

3:56
⚖️

Capital rules government in the US

Contrasts US power structure with sovereign nations, revealing who truly controls policy.

8:34
💡

AI needs stability, war needs chaos

Identifies the fundamental conflict driving the transition from war to tech.

16:54
💡

Civil war inside the profit machine

Frames geopolitical conflicts as internal struggles between competing business models.

23:08

✂️ Creator Tools: Viral Hooks

AI-generated clip ideas for Shorts based on the transcript

Forever War Model Ending?

45s

Opens with a bold claim about the end of the forever war model, immediately grabbing attention with a controversial geopolitical shift.

▶ Play Clip

US-Iran Deal Collapses

60s

Reveals a dramatic, little-known story of a secret US-Iran deal broken by Israel, creating high engagement through conflict and conspiracy.

▶ Play Clip

War as a Business Model

60s

Explains the shocking concept of war as the most profitable business model, using historical data to provoke thought and debate.

▶ Play Clip

Israel as US Proxy

60s

Breaks down the controversial proxy relationship between the US and Israel, offering a fresh perspective that challenges mainstream narratives.

▶ Play Clip

AI vs. Forever War

60s

Presents a compelling conflict between the old war economy and the new AI-driven economy, framing current events as a battle for the future.

▶ Play Clip

[00:00] So, it looks like the forever war model

[00:02] is coming to an end.

[00:04] >> We initiate, we attack, we surprise, and

[00:08] we attack those enemies that seek our

[00:11] destruction, that seek to kill us, we

[00:13] attack [music] them before they have a

[00:15] chance to do so. If you know Hebrew,

[00:17] akam lo orega ashkel lo orego. Kill them

[00:20] first.

[00:22] >> The next phase of the global economy

[00:24] needs something that the forever war

[00:26] model just can't give us, which is

[00:28] stability.

[00:29] Why we need stability is because

[00:32] you can't build a trillion-dollar AI

[00:34] grid in a world that's always on fire.

[00:38] Now, if this is true, it would explain

[00:40] why we're seeing such a change to the

[00:43] narrative from the media.

[00:44] Because right now,

[00:46] there is real criticism of US's greatest

[00:49] ally Israel.

[00:50] And it's criticism by people no one ever

[00:53] thought would criticize Israel.

[00:56] >> And, you know, you're you're a country

[00:57] of of 9 million people. You can't just

[01:01] kill your way out of solving [music]

[01:03] every single national security problem

[01:05] that you have.

[01:05] >> Why

[01:07] did October 7th happen? What were the

[01:09] signals that were missed? What could

[01:12] have been done differently?

[01:13] >> [music]

[01:13] >> What did Bibi Netanyahu think he was

[01:15] doing having Cutter pay Hamas millions

[01:19] and millions of dollars a month in

[01:22] order, in his thinking, to weaken the

[01:24] Palestinian Authority? What did he think

[01:25] was going to happen?

[01:26] >> Without the United States, there would

[01:28] be no Israel. Israel would have been

[01:29] blown up a long time ago had I not

[01:31] gotten involved. Israel's fighting

[01:33] Hezbollah too long and too many people

[01:35] are being killed.

[01:37] >> Let me explain.

[01:38] A couple of days ago, the United States

[01:40] and Iran signed a historic deal to end

[01:43] one of the most destructive wars in the

[01:44] Middle East.

[01:46] And within days, that deal was canceled.

[01:49] How come?

[01:50] Well, it's because America's closest

[01:51] ally in the region kept on bombing

[01:53] Lebanon, which was in violation of the

[01:56] agreement between Iran and the United

[01:58] States.

[01:59] That agreement, by the way, is called

[02:00] the memorandum of understanding.

[02:03] Now, Israel's basically saying, "This

[02:05] deal does not apply to them."

[02:07] So, Iran was like, "Well, okay. We're

[02:09] now closing the Strait of Hormuz again.

[02:11] So, no more oil for the world. Have fun

[02:14] with the global economy, and let's see

[02:16] how long your markets last."

[02:18] That's where we're at today.

[02:20] Now, the thing that I want to explain is

[02:22] how the world actually works, and what

[02:25] Israel really represents for the United

[02:27] States.

[02:28] This is going to be a pretty ambitious

[02:29] video, but what you have to understand

[02:31] is that

[02:32] for a very small group of powerful

[02:35] people,

[02:36] peace is a very dangerous thing.

[02:39] Because peace threatens the most

[02:40] profitable business model that humanity

[02:43] has ever created. [music]

[02:44] That model, of course, is the forever

[02:46] war model.

[02:47] The product is war, and the way it works

[02:49] is

[02:50] war generates demand for weapons, and

[02:53] every time countries fight, that

[02:55] justifies a bigger Pentagon budget, and

[02:58] every destroyed city becomes an

[03:00] opportunity to make money with

[03:02] reconstruction contracts.

[03:04] That is why we are seeing non-government

[03:07] officials structuring deals on the

[03:09] behalf of the United States.

[03:11] >> So, Jared Kushner actually came up with

[03:13] a with a very interesting solution with

[03:15] the Qataris, where

[03:17] >> instead of actual people that represent

[03:19] the country, we're seeing real estate

[03:22] developers negotiating these deals.

[03:25] Because

[03:26] rebuilding's very good for business. In

[03:28] fact, it is so good for business that if

[03:31] you look at history, you'll find that

[03:33] the United States has been at war for

[03:35] something like 93% of its entire

[03:37] existence.

[03:39] In almost 250 years as a nation,

[03:42] the US has had maybe 15, maybe 20 years

[03:45] of actual peace.

[03:47] And out of all those wars, only five

[03:50] were ever officially declared by

[03:52] Congress the way the Constitution tells

[03:54] us we're supposed to do it.

[03:56] Now, after the Cold War era between the

[03:59] Soviet Union and the United States,

[04:01] things got worse. We went from 46

[04:04] military interventions during the whole

[04:06] Cold War era to 188

[04:09] in the 25 years after it.

[04:11] And just between 1947 and 1989,

[04:15] the US tried to change or overthrow

[04:18] another country's governments

[04:20] 72 different times. Most of them, of

[04:22] course, in secret. The countries like

[04:25] Korea Vietnam Lebanon Grenada

[04:27] Panama Somalia Libya Iraq

[04:30] Afghanistan.

[04:33] America did not invent this model. The

[04:35] US actually inherited it.

[04:37] Because before the US was the world's

[04:40] police force, it was Great Britain. It

[04:42] was the British Empire that was the

[04:44] global cop from 1815 all the way to

[04:47] 1914.

[04:48] And during that whole century, they were

[04:51] at war for all but about 15 years of

[04:54] their history.

[04:56] Britain ran the whole world through what

[04:58] are called proxies.

[05:00] A proxy is basically a substitute for

[05:03] your interests. Because someone else

[05:05] needs to destabilize the world so that

[05:07] while they do, you can act like the good

[05:09] cop that cares for values like freedom

[05:11] and democracy.

[05:12] While the other country gets to be the

[05:13] bad cop who destabilizes the world.

[05:17] Now, why this proxy is so important is

[05:18] because

[05:20] if you're the most powerful country in

[05:21] the world,

[05:22] you don't want to send your own soldiers

[05:23] into every single fight. It's expensive.

[05:26] It's unpopular. Like people start asking

[05:28] really hard questions back at home.

[05:31] So, instead, you find a close ally.

[05:34] Somebody in the region who has their own

[05:36] reasons to fight and you back them up.

[05:39] You give them weapons, you give them

[05:41] capital, and you give them the political

[05:42] cover. And they do the destabilizing

[05:45] while you do the posturing and the

[05:47] rebuilding. That's a proxy.

[05:49] And for decades now, Israel has been

[05:51] America's proxy. We give them billions

[05:54] of dollars in military aid every year.

[05:56] We give them weapons, and we'll veto

[05:58] basically anything that the UN throws

[06:00] against them.

[06:01] And in return, Israel acts as America's

[06:05] proxy of interest in the Middle East.

[06:07] That relationship allows for this

[06:10] forever war model.

[06:12] Because wherever there is war, there's

[06:13] always an opportunity to make some

[06:15] money.

[06:16] And if there is an opportunity to make

[06:17] some money, don't you dare stand in the

[06:19] way of it. That's also why people that

[06:22] have called for peace throughout history

[06:24] have somehow ended up in very bad

[06:26] scenarios.

[06:27] >> I speak of peace because of the new face

[06:30] of war.

[06:32] Total war makes no sense

[06:35] in an age where great powers can

[06:37] maintain large

[06:40] and relatively invulnerable nuclear

[06:42] forces

[06:43] and refuse to surrender

[06:46] without resort to those forces.

[06:48] >> So in this video, I want to explain how

[06:51] much deeper this model actually goes and

[06:54] how it [music] might be coming to an

[06:56] end. So with that said, let's get into

[06:58] it.

[06:59] Hi, my name is Andrei Jikh. Hope you're

[07:00] doing well. Come for the finance and

[07:02] stay for the forever war model. So,

[07:05] Trump signs a deal to end the war with

[07:07] Iran. Israel just kept on bombing

[07:09] anyway.

[07:10] They are now defying the president of

[07:12] the United States.

[07:13] And the easy explanation to that is,

[07:15] Israel controls America. I see that

[07:17] everywhere on social media.

[07:19] But the truth is that Israel and the

[07:21] United States are more or less one in

[07:24] the same. Their interests are a lot of

[07:26] times the same. They are both

[07:28] subservient to the capital machine.

[07:31] Everyone is being used for a greater

[07:34] purpose. And that purpose is to extract

[07:37] resources and centralize power. Now, let

[07:40] me explain.

[07:41] Throughout history, countries have

[07:43] basically organized their power in two

[07:45] different ways.

[07:47] In one type of country, we can call the

[07:49] sovereign,

[07:50] the government sits on top as the ruling

[07:53] class. And it's the people in government

[07:56] that hold the power, right? The capital,

[07:59] or money, answers to them.

[08:02] Right? The state decides what gets

[08:05] built, who gets rich, right? Where the

[08:07] resources go.

[08:09] We usually call these countries

[08:10] nationalistic sovereign, right? China

[08:13] runs this way. And we've seen examples

[08:16] of how China has punished their

[08:18] capitalists.

[08:20] Russia runs this way. They've also

[08:22] punished their capitalists before. Iran

[08:25] runs this way. And love them or hate

[08:27] them, in those countries, their

[08:29] government is the boss, and corporate

[08:32] capital is their employee.

[08:34] Now, here in the United States, it is

[08:36] reversed. It's flipped. Here, capital

[08:40] sits on top, and government answers to

[08:43] it. The corporations, the banks, and the

[08:46] giant asset managers like the

[08:48] BlackRocks, the State Streets, and the

[08:49] Vanguards, they're the boss, and the

[08:52] politicians are basically their

[08:54] employees. They're kind of what I like

[08:56] to call piñatas. They're sort of like

[08:59] these symbols that are meant to

[09:01] represent our interests. But as George

[09:03] Carlin would say, they're symbols for

[09:05] the symbol-minded,

[09:07] right? Because we beat them up expecting

[09:09] some kind of change, but nothing ever

[09:11] changes because they were never in

[09:13] charge in the first place. And I know

[09:15] that sounds cynical, but that is how it

[09:17] works. We know this because politicians

[09:21] need hundreds of millions of dollars to

[09:23] win elections.

[09:24] Well, where does that money come from?

[09:26] From the people who already had it. And

[09:29] once they write their checks, the

[09:31] politician owes them a favor. So, the

[09:34] political class in this country doesn't

[09:36] really rule over capital. It works for

[09:39] it.

[09:40] Now, some people call this power the man

[09:42] or central planners or something else,

[09:44] but the best way to understand the

[09:47] powers that actually run the West

[09:50] was best described by Simon Dixon's

[09:52] model, where power is made up of the big

[09:54] three.

[09:55] The financial industrial complex, aka

[09:58] the FIC, which is Wall Street, the

[10:00] banks, and the crypto lobby.

[10:02] You've got the military industrial

[10:03] complex, aka the MIC, which is the war

[10:06] economy we were just talking about.

[10:09] And then you've got the rising power,

[10:11] which is the technological industrial

[10:13] complex, aka the TIC, right? Which is

[10:16] big tech, AI, data, and surveillance.

[10:20] And then sitting across the room from

[10:22] all of that, on the opposite side of the

[10:24] spectrum, you've got the sovereigns. The

[10:26] nations that refuse to let capital run

[10:30] their interests.

[10:32] Those are the players. What is the game?

[10:35] Now, before I get into it though, this

[10:36] video is sponsored by Gemini. All

[10:37] opinions are my own and were not

[10:39] influenced or endorsed by Gemini. I've

[10:41] used Gemini for years and recently I

[10:43] started using something new from them

[10:44] called Gemini predictions. It fits

[10:46] perfectly with the kind of things we

[10:48] already talk about because every week

[10:50] we're looking at the same questions. How

[10:52] are markets thinking about the next Fed

[10:53] decision? What happens after the next

[10:55] inflation report? What happens to oil or

[10:58] gold or markets when the world is

[10:59] changing this fast? And usually we talk

[11:02] about those things, we analyze them, and

[11:04] then we watch the market react. But

[11:05] Gemini predictions gives you a way to

[11:07] express your view on real world outcomes

[11:10] in real time directly inside Gemini.

[11:12] What I like about it is that it's super

[11:14] easy to navigate. Here inside the app

[11:15] for example, I'm looking at one of the

[11:17] short duration Bitcoin contracts,

[11:20] checking the possible outcomes, the

[11:21] pricing, and the time left before

[11:24] deciding whether this is something I

[11:25] want to participate in. Now, of course,

[11:28] this is not financial advice. Prediction

[11:30] markets involve risk and you should only

[11:32] use money you're comfortable putting at

[11:33] risk. Gemini predictions is also

[11:35] available in all 50 states, so if you

[11:37] want to give it a try, go to

[11:38] gemini.com/andre

[11:39] or click the link in the description

[11:41] down below. Please be careful, do your

[11:42] own research, and make sure you

[11:44] understand the risks. And now, let's get

[11:45] back to it. Okay, so the whole game of

[11:47] this system is to gain control over

[11:50] capital in order to centralize power.

[11:53] Basically, the game is to get rich.

[11:55] And here's how we do that.

[11:57] America holds the most powerful weapon

[11:59] in human history, which is the dollar.

[12:01] Cuz the whole world has to use our

[12:03] dollars to buy their energy and to trade

[12:05] with each other. So, we get to control

[12:07] the plumbing of the entire global

[12:08] economy. That is the fixed superpower.

[12:11] >> [snorts]

[12:11] >> Now, we use this superpower to crack

[12:15] other countries open so we can take

[12:17] their resources.

[12:18] And there's basically four ways to crack

[12:21] a country open, right? Number one, you

[12:23] sanction it. Their economy collapses.

[12:26] In 2018, for example, the US pulled out

[12:29] of the Iran nuclear deal.

[12:30] Now, countries like Germany, France, and

[12:32] Britain, they still wanted to keep

[12:34] trading with Iran. But the US basically

[12:36] said, "Well, that's nice, but if you

[12:38] guys want access to the US financial

[12:40] system, you're going to have to choose

[12:42] who you want to do business with."

[12:44] So, European companies started leaving

[12:45] Iran.

[12:47] Now, the second way to crack a country

[12:48] open is you cut it off from its

[12:51] bloodstream, which is access to the

[12:52] dollar. So, their economy collapses.

[12:55] For example, in 1988, the United States

[12:58] basically told Panama,

[13:00] "Hey, that's a nice country you have

[13:01] there. It'd be a shame if the cash

[13:04] stopped moving here." So, we froze their

[13:07] assets, we blocked payments, and we

[13:08] pushed money that was supposed to go to

[13:09] them into the Federal Reserve escrow

[13:11] accounts, and because Panama's economy

[13:14] relied on the dollar, their banks closed

[13:17] for 9 weeks because there wasn't enough

[13:18] cash,

[13:19] and their economy was massively

[13:21] pressured. Now, the third way to crack a

[13:23] country open is

[13:25] you go to war with it. You pressure it

[13:27] long enough that will cause huge amounts

[13:30] of inflation because war is always

[13:32] inflationary. So, their economy

[13:34] collapses. And the people of that

[13:36] country will hate their leaders so much

[13:40] they'll revolt against them. And when

[13:42] the time is right, we'll remove that guy

[13:44] from power and replace him with one of

[13:46] our own who's cool with us rebuilding

[13:48] there.

[13:49] Okay, the fourth way is the last resort.

[13:52] Takes the longest and that is use the

[13:55] media and the capital to fund the

[13:58] opposition from inside that country to

[14:02] eventually push for a revolution in the

[14:03] name of good. Right, in the name of

[14:05] democracy, in the name of human rights.

[14:08] And if that goes on long enough, you let

[14:10] the country tear itself apart from the

[14:12] inside. People revolt, right? They

[14:14] replace their leader themselves. The

[14:16] economy falls apart.

[14:17] Four different ways of doing the same

[14:19] thing, which is to collapse an economy

[14:23] in order to get their resources

[14:25] privatized, sold off, and get them

[14:27] sucked into the financial industrial

[14:30] complex where more power and capital can

[14:32] centralize.

[14:33] This is why

[14:35] unlike 99% of people in this world,

[14:39] we are able to park our money into the

[14:41] S&P 500 index

[14:43] and assuming that we're sensible, right?

[14:45] We've saved enough and invested

[14:46] diligently throughout our lives, we get

[14:49] to retire fat and happy at the age of 67

[14:53] as millionaires.

[14:54] Hold on though. Where does this system

[14:57] get the money to do this, I wonder?

[15:01] Well, it gets it from you. From all of

[15:02] us.

[15:03] Because we have been conditioned to

[15:05] persistently dollar cost average into

[15:08] the market. Right? That is the heroes we

[15:10] prop up. That's who the media says we

[15:13] should look up to.

[15:14] And it is this very same market that

[15:16] rules over our political class.

[15:19] Cuz the true votes do not come from you

[15:21] voting at the voting booth.

[15:23] It comes from voting with capital.

[15:26] Now, most of us will never get those

[15:28] votes because we dollar cost average

[15:32] into what are called mutual funds, ETFs,

[15:35] target retirement funds, right? Places

[15:38] that forfeit those voting rights to the

[15:42] BlackRocks, the State Streets, and the

[15:44] Vanguards.

[15:46] Those votes get used to support these

[15:48] policies.

[15:50] Now, after those countries get

[15:52] vassalized and absorbed into the thick

[15:55] and we get richer,

[15:56] the machine rolls on to the next country

[15:59] and then the next one and the next one.

[16:01] All right, but the catch though is that

[16:04] not every country can be cracked.

[16:07] Some countries are really hard to take

[16:08] down.

[16:09] Some countries, for example, have very

[16:10] powerful allies who might have their

[16:12] back right?

[16:13] Some countries are just really big and

[16:15] they're self-sufficient and they don't

[16:17] actually need the US.

[16:19] Maybe they don't depend on the dollar or

[16:20] on energy because they have their own.

[16:24] Some countries have nuclear weapons.

[16:27] Now, if the first three strategies don't

[16:29] work,

[16:30] then the fourth strategy of last resort

[16:32] is

[16:33] propaganda. That consists of using the

[16:36] media, the entertainment industry,

[16:39] culture, right? That tries to change the

[16:41] minds from the inside of that country to

[16:43] hopefully spark a revolution.

[16:45] That brings me then to Iran and the

[16:49] conflict that the machine is now in. The

[16:52] conflict of the machine is this.

[16:54] AI needs stability in the region. The

[16:57] forever war model needs war and

[16:59] instability.

[17:01] Iran knows that it has a lot of leverage

[17:03] here because even though they can't win

[17:04] the military war,

[17:06] they can wait it out long enough to

[17:09] collapse the global economy.

[17:11] They know that, which is why in a recent

[17:12] meeting with their leaders,

[17:14] they kind of embarrassed US leadership

[17:15] by just not showing up at all and having

[17:19] US leadership show up first. Which in

[17:21] the game of negotiations is a big no-no.

[17:24] Now also, in this game where

[17:27] capital and centralization of power is

[17:29] the end goal,

[17:30] a collapse of the economy is the worst

[17:33] possible outcome.

[17:34] And it is obvious the Iranian leadership

[17:37] understands this.

[17:38] And that's why they've been putting out

[17:40] messages like this.

[17:41] >> Both the ruling class, the military

[17:43] generals, your own government, the

[17:46] political leadership, and the head of

[17:48] the government, they are all just using

[17:50] you as human shields. The spiral of

[17:53] silence created is the result of a

[17:55] financial oligarchy.

[17:57] >> Iran mentioned the financial oligarchy,

[18:00] which is exactly the system where

[18:03] capital sits above the government.

[18:06] Now, where does Israel play a role in

[18:08] all of this?

[18:10] Israel is the cover story for the US

[18:12] empire.

[18:13] Israel's the piece of the whole machine

[18:15] whose job it is to keep the world in

[18:18] conflict. Remember the MIC, right, the

[18:20] military side of this. They only make

[18:22] money when there's a war, right, weapons

[18:25] to sell and cities to rebuild.

[18:28] And somebody has to fight.

[18:29] And in the most resource-rich, most

[18:32] strategically important region on the

[18:33] planet, that somebody has been Israel.

[18:36] That is their role.

[18:37] Israel keeps the Middle East unstable

[18:39] enough that the forever war model never

[18:42] runs out of customers.

[18:44] But at the end of the day, this can't go

[18:47] on forever. Something has to give.

[18:50] The model of making money from war will

[18:53] inevitably end.

[18:54] One way or another, but that is why

[18:57] we're seeing money move from the war

[18:59] model

[19:01] to the build-out of the last technology

[19:04] humans will ever need to build, which is

[19:06] robots and AI.

[19:08] And in order to transition this money

[19:10] from one place to the other, you need an

[19:13] exit strategy,

[19:15] you need a face to represent the

[19:16] movement, and you need on brand

[19:20] messaging from everyone.

[19:22] That's what we're watching right now. We

[19:24] are watching that exit strategy play

[19:26] out. That is why we're seeing the

[19:28] coordinated public criticism of Israel

[19:31] from people who would have never

[19:33] criticized Israel before. All that

[19:35] criticism gives us the exit narrative.

[19:39] Everyone is now on the same page if you

[19:41] haven't noticed.

[19:42] But we also need a face that will allow

[19:46] us to transition the model to AI.

[19:49] And the candidate that best represents

[19:50] the interest of the technological

[19:53] industrial complex is J.D. Vance.

[19:56] J.D. Vance's entire political career was

[19:58] essentially launched by one man. And

[20:00] that man's name is Peter Thiel.

[20:02] Peter Thiel spent around $15 million for

[20:05] Vance's Senate run, which is one of the

[20:08] biggest bets on a Senate candidate ever

[20:10] made.

[20:11] J.D. Vance worked inside of Peter

[20:14] Thiel's world. Peter Thiel was the guy

[20:16] who helped get him into Trump's orbit in

[20:19] the first place so that he could become

[20:22] VP.

[20:23] That's not a theory. This is all on

[20:24] record.

[20:25] Now, J.D. Vance doesn't have a lot of

[20:27] competition. He is the clearest

[20:29] political embodiment of the tech world

[20:32] that exists in power today.

[20:35] So now we have an exit narrative where

[20:38] everyone's on the same page. We have a

[20:40] face that represents the movement. And

[20:42] he's also on board with criticizing

[20:44] Israel, right? All of it is consistent

[20:47] with this story.

[20:48] If you wanted to transition from wars to

[20:51] AI, you take your guy, you would

[20:53] distance him from this forever war

[20:55] model, you'd let him look strong and

[20:58] independent by standing up to Israel in

[21:00] public, which is exactly what we're

[21:02] watching him do right now.

[21:03] >> If I was in the cabinet of the Israeli

[21:05] government, I might not be attacking the

[21:08] only powerful ally that I have anywhere

[21:11] left in the entire world. And anybody in

[21:14] Israel who thinks their biggest problem

[21:16] is the president of the United States

[21:18] needs to wake up and smell the reality

[21:21] of the situation that country is in.

[21:23] >> That's how you'd set him up to be the

[21:25] face of the new world order heading into

[21:27] 2028. That is how the technological

[21:29] industrial complex becomes the power

[21:32] player. That's how we usher in this

[21:34] digital control grid. So, let me tie all

[21:36] of this together. Remember the three

[21:38] power structures from Simon Dixon, the

[21:40] FIC, the MIC, and the TIC. All right,

[21:42] for the last few decades, the financial

[21:44] industrial complex used the military

[21:47] industrial complex to run this forever

[21:49] war model because war was the most

[21:52] profitable product in the world.

[21:54] War means more weapons contracts,

[21:57] emergency budgets, sanctions, oil

[21:59] shocks, reconstruction deals, and of

[22:01] course, more and more debt.

[22:04] Now, the MIC created the need for war

[22:07] using its proxies. All right, good cop

[22:09] US, bad cop Israel.

[22:11] And the financial industrial complex

[22:13] financed all of it.

[22:15] But now, the product is changing.

[22:18] The new king on the block is going to be

[22:19] the TIC, the technological industrial

[22:21] complex.

[22:23] They want to build out AI, data centers,

[22:25] robots surveillance chips energy

[22:28] digital infrastructure. That is where

[22:30] the money's going right now.

[22:32] But this creates a problem cuz the old

[22:34] model and the new model want opposite

[22:38] things.

[22:39] The MIC needs chaos and forever wars,

[22:42] and the TIC needs stability cuz you

[22:43] can't build a trillion-dollar AI grid in

[22:46] a world that is always on fire.

[22:48] Data centers need power, right? Supply

[22:50] chains that work, energy markets that

[22:52] work, shipping lanes that stay open.

[22:55] So,

[22:56] what we might be watching is not America

[22:59] versus Iran or Israel versus Lebanon.

[23:02] we are watching a civil war inside the

[23:06] profit machine itself.

[23:08] Two factions of the same system fighting

[23:10] over which business model will run the

[23:13] future.

[23:15] This is where Simon Dixon says, "Look at

[23:17] who's funding these operations." Right

[23:19] at the top you have Gulf Capital, which

[23:22] are countries like Saudi Arabia, the

[23:24] UAE, Qatar, Kuwait, countries with giant

[23:27] sovereign wealth funds that need places

[23:30] to invest trillions of dollars.

[23:32] Well, then you have the financial

[23:34] industrial complex, which are the banks,

[23:36] the asset managers, private equity, old

[23:39] banking families, the Western financial

[23:41] system that can turn all of this

[23:43] into investable products like bonds,

[23:46] stocks, loans, insurance contracts,

[23:49] infrastructure funds, yield, right?

[23:52] Well, then you have the technological

[23:53] industrial complex who also funded

[23:55] Trump's election. People like Elon Musk,

[23:59] Peter Thiel, Silicon Valley.

[24:01] And this is all done in order to

[24:03] transition from the old war model to

[24:07] building AI, robots, satellites, data

[24:09] centers, and the surveillance side of

[24:11] the system, the digital control grid.

[24:14] Well, then of course you can't leave out

[24:15] the military industrial complex, which

[24:17] was that old war economy, which are the

[24:19] defense contractors, the weapons lobby,

[24:22] right? And the Israel first donors

[24:24] represented by people like Miriam

[24:26] Adelson.

[24:27] That is the old model in conflict with

[24:29] the new.

[24:31] So, now the question is,

[24:32] well, who's winning?

[24:34] Right now, it looks like the Gulf,

[24:37] the financial industrial complex,

[24:39] and the technological industrial

[24:40] complex.

[24:41] They're trying to move the region toward

[24:43] stability, cuz again, stability lets

[24:45] them build and own the future.

[24:47] Now, while that's happening though,

[24:49] the military industrial complex will

[24:51] still benefit from the chaos,

[24:53] because chaos keeps their model alive.

[24:56] That's what the Iran conflict

[24:58] represents.

[24:59] Now, Iran does not need to win the

[25:01] conventional war.

[25:02] Iran is convincing the world right now

[25:05] that the future is going to be cheaper

[25:07] with them inside the system. And Iran

[25:09] has the geography, they have the energy,

[25:11] and the choke point to leverage

[25:13] themselves into this bigger future to be

[25:17] part of that deal.

[25:18] Now, China's role in this

[25:21] is they're the factory of the world, the

[25:23] manufacturing base, right? The

[25:25] infrastructure, and the alternative

[25:27] payment rails based on gold.

[25:29] Now, the Gulf has the money.

[25:32] The West for now still has the financial

[25:35] wrapper.

[25:37] But ultimately, an agreement will be

[25:39] reached because ownership and rebuilding

[25:43] is a lot more profitable right now than

[25:45] war.

[25:46] You can only bomb somebody once.

[25:48] But if you finance the rebuilding, you

[25:50] own the ports, you insure the ships, you

[25:53] control the payment rails, you run the

[25:55] data centers, you reroute their energy,

[25:58] collect interest rates for the next 30

[25:59] years, and that's a way better business

[26:01] model.

[26:02] That's the transition away from war as a

[26:04] service to infrastructure and AI as a

[26:07] service.

[26:09] And that is why I believe that in the

[26:10] near future

[26:12] Israel's leadership will probably be

[26:14] changed. Its resources will be

[26:17] privatized, and it too will be absorbed

[26:20] into this profit machine.

[26:22] The leaders of the old forever war model

[26:24] will be replaced with new ones.

[26:27] And we will get whatever narrative

[26:28] they'll negotiate. That's where I think

[26:30] this is going. Now, if you're interested

[26:32] in seeing more videos about how I'm

[26:34] investing through these crazy times,

[26:36] those live in the premium member

[26:37] section. You'll also get access to my

[26:38] main videos earlier, and if that's

[26:40] valuable, the link is down below. It

[26:42] allows me to make more videos like this

[26:43] one and take on fewer sponsors.

[26:45] Thank you for watching and being a

[26:46] member. I hope you have a wonderful rest

[26:48] of your day. Smash the like button. I'd

[26:50] love to see you back here next time.

[26:51] Take care. Shh.

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