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The author, Miles Mathis, argues that current political events, including the recent Presidential debate, are part of a long-standing, planned failure orchestrated by the CIA. He claims the CIA seized control of the executive branch after watergate and has been manipulating the political landscape ever since, installing figures like a Hollywood actor in the 1980s. Mathis asserts that the CIA controls media, universities, public schools, the Supreme Court, and Congress, preventing people from seeing the truth and keeping them in a metaphorical Matrix.

He believes the CIA’s plan for decades has been to move the country to the right through “grand fooling,” a strategy initiated by Reagan and continued by subsequent presidents like Clinton and Obama. This involves associating family values with conservatism and giving that script to the Republicans, who Mathis argues have historically disregarded the lower and middle classes. Commentators like Rush Limbaugh and Alex Jones are cited as perpetuating this narrative with manufactured platitudes, as is The Babylon Bee. The author contends that the middle and lower classes have been exploited economically since the 1970s, with wealth concentrating among the rich under administrations including Bush, Obama, Trump, and biden.

Mathis suggests the middle class has been targeted for extinction because of their post-WWII prosperity, with the wealthy aiming to seize all assets. Diversions like fake wars, crises, sports, entertainment, weather events, fabricated murderers, and extensive media content are used to distract the public. He explains that moving the populace to the right benefits the rich, who are inherently conservative in their self-interest of preserving wealth and power, making revolution less likely.

The CIA is credited with intentionally undermining the left to achieve this rightward shift. Even after Obama’s presidency, which Mathis claims was problematic for the CIA despite his perceived “left” stance and broken promises, Trump was brought in to create a sense of a rightward movement. However, Mathis argues that both Trump and biden have failed to benefit the working class, continuing the “rapine by the rich.”

The author states that the CIA and DHS have been losing control due to mounting failures and increasing opposition, exacerbated by the internet. The strategy then shifted to deliberately tanking the Democratic Party by presenting unappealing leaders and appointees, forcing people towards the Republican Party. Specific examples of perceived failures include issues at the border, in Afghanistan, the Fentanyl crisis, rising crime, “race wars,” the decline of cities like San Francisco and Portland, unaffordable housing, and Covid policies.

Mathis criticizes commentators like Bill Maher for downplaying the severity of these issues, suggesting maher might be broadcasting from Jeff Bezos’s private island Lanai in Hawaii to remain unaware of the street-level suffering from Fentanyl, poverty, homelessness, vaccine damage, and mental illness. He also brings up maher’s stance on Israel and Custer at Washita.

Returning to the Presidential debate, Mathis asserts it was intentionally designed to make biden appear disastrous and provoke hatred. He believes biden and his family may have been promised future rehabilitation, comparing the planned loss of debate footage to the lost Moon Landing tapes and Kitty Hawk negatives. Mathis argues that biden’s persistent declines were part of a planned failure, as was the choice of Kamala Harris as VP, intended to generate fear and drive voters towards the Republican Party and its perceived promises of 2025, symbolized by the MAGA hat.

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