Tuesday, March 31, 2026

Confessions of an Economic Hitman

 

Julie Telgenhoff

In 2013 I stumbled across a video that shook my world. At the time I had already begun questioning the endless cycle of wars that seemed to define modern geopolitics, but I still didn’t have a framework that explained why they kept happening. Governments always offered the familiar explanations—national security, spreading democracy, protecting allies—but something about the constant interventions never fully added up.

Then I watched John Perkins describe what he claimed to have done for a living.

Perkins is the author of Confessions of an Economic Hit Man, a book he says he first attempted to write in the 1980s but repeatedly abandoned after threats or bribes persuaded him to stop. When I first heard that claim, I remember leaning forward in my chair. It immediately suggested that whatever story he was about to tell was not meant to be widely understood.

According to Perkins, his job was not to overthrow governments with weapons.

His job was to trap them with debt.

Perkins explained that Economic Hit Men were highly paid professionals sent into developing nations to convince their leaders to accept enormous development loans from institutions such as the World Bank, USAID, and other international financial organizations. On paper the deals looked generous. The loans promised massive infrastructure projects: dams, power plants, highways, electrical systems.

These projects were marketed as the path to modernization.

But Perkins says the numbers used to justify those loans were intentionally inflated. The economic growth projections used in the financial reports were unrealistic, making the projects appear far more profitable than they would ever be in reality.

Once the loans were accepted, the trap was set.

Many of the countries simply could not repay the debts. And when repayment became impossible, the leverage began.

Perkins argued that those nations were then pressured into political concessions. They might be pushed to support U.S. policy at the United Nations, open their natural resources to foreign corporations, allow military bases, or hand large contracts to multinational companies. In the process, much of the money flowed right back to massive engineering firms and contractors in the industrialized world.

Meanwhile the population of the borrowing nation carried the burden of the debt.

The wealth gap widened.

Local economies weakened.

And entire countries found themselves politically constrained by obligations they could never realistically pay off.

Perkins described the tools of the trade in blunt terms: fraudulent financial projections, bribery, political pressure, rigged elections, and in some cases darker tactics that appeared when leaders refused to cooperate.

Listening to that explanation in 2013 was honestly shocking.

I remember sitting there realizing that if even a portion of what he was saying was true, it changed the way you understood global power. The old image of empire—armies marching across borders—was replaced by something far quieter.

Loan agreements.
Financial forecasts.
Debt contracts.

It suggested that modern control didn’t always require military conquest first. Sometimes all it required was convincing a country to sign the wrong loan.

What hit me hardest watching that video was the simplicity of the mechanism. Debt is not just a financial tool; it can also be a political weapon. When a nation owes more than it can repay, its choices shrink. Policies become negotiations. Sovereignty becomes conditional.

Perkins also argued that when countries eventually asked for debt relief, the conditions attached often required them to privatize essential public services—electricity, water, healthcare, education—and remove subsidies that supported local industries. At the same time, powerful economies often continued protecting their own industries with subsidies and trade barriers.

In other words, the playing field was never level.

Watching that video didn’t just teach me about one man’s story. It forced me to think differently about the architecture of global power—how financial systems can quietly shape political outcomes without most people ever noticing.

And once that idea settles in your mind, it’s hard to look at the world the same way again.


Monday, March 30, 2026

What If Global Collapse Is Real — Just Not for America?

How decadence, technology, and comfort could lead Americans to accept the same AI-driven dystopian system the rest of the world accepts through desperation.

by Julie Telgenhoff

Trending headlines are relentless right now. War warnings. Energy shortages. Fertilizer disruptions. Supply chains breaking. Economies weakening across continents. The dominant narrative repeats the same theme every day: the world is sliding toward crisis. 

But what if that story itself is part of the design?

Imagine, just for the sake of a thought experiment, how someone operating behind the curtain of global power might shape the public narrative. If you wanted to restructure the global system, the easiest approach would be to convince people that everything everywhere is collapsing at the same time.

Yet what if the collapse isn’t meant to happen everywhere equally?

What if the appearance of global instability hides a very different pattern—one where most of the world weakens while one nation quietly moves into an entirely different phase?

For the past century the United States has occupied a unique position in global power. It holds enormous agricultural capacity, massive oil and natural gas reserves, dominance in financial markets, technological leadership, and strategic resources that underpin modern industry. Even materials used in semiconductor production, such as helium, have historically been heavily concentrated within American reserves in Texas.

That combination gives the country something few nations have: the ability to weather global disruption while remaining structurally strong.

Now consider how a strategist thinking long-term might look at that situation.

Destroying the American economy outright would be messy and unpredictable. The population is heavily armed, culturally independent, and historically resistant to overt control. Even during hardship, there has always been a stubborn middle class that values autonomy and personal freedom.

So perhaps direct collapse isn’t the plan.

Perhaps the method is something far subtler.

During the Cold War, a Soviet defector named Yuri Bezmenov described a framework for how societies could be weakened from within. He argued that subversion begins with demoralization. A population slowly loses confidence in its traditions, institutions, and cultural anchors. Over time, the ability to distinguish truth from narrative erodes.

Look around today and many people feel echoes of that stage.

Political polarization is constant. Trust in institutions has collapsed. Universities and schools increasingly shape cultural and ideological identity—often more strongly than families. Young people often absorb worldviews through educational systems, social media ecosystems, and algorithm-driven information streams.

And those younger generations are now becoming the majority.

At the same time, older generations—especially the Baby Boomers—are aging into retirement. The generational center of gravity is shifting rapidly toward populations that grew up immersed in digital technology, algorithmic culture, and online identity.

That shift matters.

A generation raised inside technology adapts easily to technological systems organizing their daily lives. Smartphones already mediate communication, work, entertainment, and social interaction. Virtual spaces increasingly replace physical ones.

Now imagine how that trajectory evolves when economic disruption begins.

Automation and artificial intelligence displace large portions of the workforce. Governments introduce policies like universal basic income to stabilize societies where traditional employment becomes less reliable. For younger populations accustomed to digital life, guaranteed income combined with digital entertainment and virtual experiences may feel less like control and more like convenience.

If your needs are met—housing, food, income, entertainment—the motivation to resist the system providing those comforts fades.

Meanwhile, something very different unfolds across the rest of the world.

Many countries lack the natural resources, financial systems, and technological infrastructure that allow the United States to absorb shocks. Energy crises, fertilizer shortages, debt collapses, and geopolitical conflicts hit them harder and faster.

Entire regions experience economic contraction and political instability. Governments facing desperate populations adopt centralized solutions quickly—digital identification systems, centralized financial controls, tightly managed urban planning, and economic restructuring.

Those societies adapt to a structured governance out of necessity.

But America is different.

The United States still retains a shrinking but stubborn middle class. Even after the economic shock waves of the pandemic—where countless small businesses disappeared while major corporate chains expanded—there remains enough economic independence among the population to resist overt authoritarian restructuring.

That makes direct control harder.

So imagine an alternative path.

Instead of collapsing America through poverty, you elevate it through decadence.

The country becomes richer, more technologically advanced, and more comfortable even as the rest of the world struggles. Artificial intelligence reshapes industries. Universal basic income stabilizes economic disruption. Smart infrastructure promises efficiency and sustainability.

Urban development begins to revolve around highly managed environments—dense housing, automated systems, and services clustered within tightly organized zones. Ideas like the fifteen-minute city emerge, where daily life occurs within a compact radius of housing, work, shopping, and recreation.

For populations accustomed to digital convenience, these systems appear efficient rather than restrictive.

Life becomes easier.

More comfortable.

More technologically integrated.

And that is where the ancient story of Sodom and Gomorrah enters the metaphor.

Those cities were not destroyed because they were poor. They were destroyed because they were wealthy. Their abundance removed restraint. Luxury created moral distance. Comfort dulled empathy and responsibility.

In a modern context the danger is similar.

A society that becomes extraordinarily prosperous while losing its cultural center may drift into decadence and further subversion without realizing it. Entertainment replaces purpose. Digital environments replace physical community. Technology mediates every aspect of life.

Control arrives not through fear—but through convenience.

Across much of the world, populations accepted centralized systems because economic collapse left them little choice.

America arrives at the same destination—but by another road.

While the rest of the world adapts through hardship, Americans adapt through comfort. Gradually Americans become accustomed to the same infrastructure—AI-mediated governance, tightly managed urban environments, and fifteen-minute smart cities—because the systems appear efficient, sustainable, and convenient.

By the time the structure fully surrounds daily life, it no longer feels foreign.

It feels normal.

The global population arrived there through desperation.

America arrived there through decadence and further moral decay.

One path resembles the world of Orwell’s 1984—control through fear and scarcity. 

The other looks more like Huxley’s Brave New World—control through comfort and excess.

Different roads.

Same destination.

The Quiet Saboteur: Why Covert Narcissists are Fatal to Startups

 

by Julie Telgenhoff

In the high-stakes, "all-hands-on-deck" environment of a small startup, a manager’s personality can be the difference between a unicorn and a collapse. While most people look out for the "Overt" narcissist—the loud, bragging egoist—it is the Covert Narcissist who poses the greatest threat. 

In a small company where one person is given full power, a covert narcissist doesn’t just manage; they colonize. 

The Mask: The "Selfless" Professional 

Unlike their overt counterparts, covert narcissists lead with humility and victimhoodThey present themselves as the hardest worker, the most misunderstood, or the “only one who truly cares” about the owner’s vision.They don’t demand the spotlight; they manipulate others into shining it on them. In a startup, they become the owner’s right hand by being hyper-reliable and intensely loyal—at least on the surface. 

The Target: Jealousy as a Weapon 

In a startup, talent is the primary currency. If a manager perceives a subordinate as more innovative, better liked, or more naturally gifted, the covert narcissist doesn’t compete—they sabotage

Because their ego is fragile, they view a high performer’s success as a personal insult. Their sabotage is rarely an explosion; it’s a slow leak: 

  • Gaslighting: They withhold "need-to-know" information, then blame the employee for the resulting mistake. 
  • The "Vague" Critique: They give confusing directions so the employee can never truly succeed, then quietly frame the employee’s struggle as a “lack of ability.” 
  • Isolation: They frame the talented individual as "not a fit" or "difficult to work with," cutting them off from the rest of the team and calling them into HR incessantly. 

The "Fatal Attraction" and the Ignorant Owner 

The most dangerous element is the bond between the manager and the owner. This is often a "fatal attraction" dynamic where the manager acts as a social shield and emotional sycophant for the founder. 

The manager anticipates the owner’s needs and mirrors their values perfectly. They make the owner feel brilliant and protected. When the sabotaged employee eventually complains, the owner turns a blind eye because: 

  • Emotional Dependency: The owner has come to rely on the manager to handle the "messy" human parts of the business. 
  • The "Hero" Narrative: The manager has convinced the owner that everyone else is lazy or disloyal, and only they are keeping the ship afloat. 
  • Sunk Cost: The owner has given this person so much power that admitting they are toxic would mean admitting a catastrophic lapse in judgment. 

Because the owner has no idea he is being lied to and manipulated—he is too focused on maintaining his image to see what is actually happening inside his own company.

The Startup Stink Spiral 

When a covert narcissist is given total control, the startup loses its most valuable asset: its talent. High-performers leave or get taken out, the culture turns toxic, and the owner is left with a "loyal" manager presiding over a graveyard of missed opportunities. The narcissist's only goal is to be the last one standing next to the owner—Second in command, protected by the parasitic ‘yes sir’ culture.

The final result of this dynamic isn't failure, but a profitable, hollowed-out shell. In this "Success at Any Cost" model, the company continues to scale, bringing in massive revenue driven by a workforce of "yes people" the owner desperately relies on to maintain his ego.

Because the numbers are up, the owner remains blissfully unaware that he is being surgically manipulated by the manager he handed over full control. He is too preoccupied with his perfect public standing to notice that his "right hand" is actually a gatekeeper filtering his reality and stunting his growth.

Beneath the financial growth, the culture is a wasteland. Abuse is actively rewarded as "high performance," while genuine concerns are ignored or silenced. The office air is thick with the metaphorical smell of frustration and decay—a stagnant odor of suppressed talent and fear. As the manager systematically eliminates anyone she perceives as a threat, the "fatal attraction" deepens; she gets exactly what she wants—power, luxury, and control—while the owner attributes the high turnover and toxic atmosphere to "the price of greatness." In this environment, the company makes millions, but it breathes through the fragrance of a rancid parasitic stench. 

Sunday, March 29, 2026

FY 2026 National Defense Authorization Act: The Quiet Construction of a Ready-to-Activate National Draft List



For forty years, the U.S. military draft registration system was mostly a ghost.

If you have sons now in their 20s or 30s, you may not remember the Selective Service System because it became a forgotten form. Maybe it was seen at the DMV. Maybe it appeared on a college financial aid application. Or maybe your son never registered at all—and nothing ever happened.

That era of silent, largely ignored registration is now over.

With the passage of the FY 2026 National Defense Authorization Act, the government quietly changed how the draft database is built. The system is shifting from an “opt-in” registration model to an automatic enrollment system.

If you have young boys, nephews, or grandsons today, their generation will not encounter the same system your sons did. Their names will be placed into the Selective Service database automatically using existing federal records.

The list will exist whether they sign anything or not.


The Ghost Era: Why Your Sons Didn’t Feel the Pressure

From 1980 until now, the law technically required young men to register with Selective Service within 30 days of turning eighteen.

But in practice, enforcement was weak.

Most registrations happened through small bureaucratic moments: a checkbox on the FAFSA, a DMV form, or a postcard mailed to the government. If a young man didn’t do it, the consequences were usually indirect—losing eligibility for certain federal programs or jobs.

The key point is that there was still a moment of awareness.

A young man had to physically register. He had to sign something, click something, or mail something.

That moment created friction. It forced people to think about what they were doing.

Because millions simply ignored the requirement, the Selective Service database became incomplete and unreliable.

For decades, it existed mostly as a symbolic system rather than a ready-to-use mobilization roster.


The New System: Automatic and Invisible

The 2026 NDAA changes that structure.

Beginning December 18, 2026, the Selective Service System will automatically identify and register eligible men between 18 and 26 using existing federal databases such as Social Security records and other government data systems.

There is no card to sign.

There is no box to check.

A young man can reach his eighteenth birthday and already be listed in the system.

The administrative argument for the change is efficiency. Lawmakers say the government already possesses the data needed to identify eligible individuals, so the burden of registration should move from the individual to the government.

Critics see something else.

They see the construction of a ready-to-activate national draft list.


Predictive Programming and Quiet Acceptance

Opponents of the change argue that automation does more than streamline paperwork.

It removes visibility.

When systems operate quietly in the background, public awareness fades. There is no moment where a young man consciously decides whether to register. There is no conversation with parents about the meaning of signing that card.

The process becomes passive.

And when something becomes passive long enough, it begins to feel inevitable.

Critics call this a form of normalization—turning something controversial into something routine by embedding it invisibly inside digital infrastructure.

The public debate disappears because the process itself disappears.

By the time people realize the system exists, they are already inside it.


Why Parents Should Pay Attention

For decades, the draft registry resembled a dusty filing cabinet filled with incomplete records.

The new structure is different.

It is a live digital network built from synchronized federal databases.

The United States still operates an all-volunteer military force, and activating a draft would require congressional action. But the infrastructure required to run a national lottery is being modernized and updated.

In other words, the government is making sure the list is ready.

Supporters say this is simply prudent planning.

Critics argue it quietly solves the government’s long-standing non-compliance problem by removing individual choice from the process entirely.

Under the new system, resistance cannot occur at the point of registration.

By the time anyone notices the list exists, the names are already there.


A Generational Divide

For the generation that turned eighteen between 1980 and 2024, the draft registry was something many young men ignored without consequence.

For the generation growing up now, the experience will be different.

They will not be asked to sign the card.

They will simply appear in the database.

And once a name is on the list, the only question left is whether the system ever decides to use it.

By the time anyone notices the list exists, the names are already there.


The Quiet Question No One Is Asking

Most parents today will never remember filling out a draft card themselves. For younger generations, the Vietnam-era images of lottery numbers and envelopes arriving in the mail feel like distant history.

But systems do not disappear just because people stop talking about them.

They get modernized.

They get automated.

They get quietly connected to databases that already hold the personal details of nearly every American citizen.

The new generation of boys growing up right now will never experience the moment their fathers did—the moment of holding a card and deciding whether to sign it.

That decision has already been removed.

By the time they are old enough to understand what Selective Service is, their names will already be sitting inside the system.

And when a system is built so that every name is already collected, organized, and ready to be used, the only remaining question is not how a draft would happen.

It is when someone decides to turn the key.