The
recurring pattern (in plain terms)
Across
decades, the pattern looks like this:
1.
A country has valuable resources (oil, minerals, land, labor, strategic location)
2.
Its government resists U.S. political or economic control
3.
The
U.S. responds with some mix of:
o Sanctions
o Coups or coup support
o Debt pressure
o Asset freezes
o Proxy wars
4.
Local populations suffer, elites adapt or flee
5.
The
outcome benefits:
o U.S. corporations
o U.S. strategic dominance
o Consumer comfort in the U.S.
6.
The
moral cost is externalized — out of sight, out of conscience
That’s not
conspiracy. It’s documented history.
Concrete
examples (not exhaustive)
Latin
America
- Guatemala (1954) – Democratic government
overthrown after land reforms threatened United Fruit
- Chile (1973) – CIA-backed coup after
nationalization of copper
- Nicaragua (1980s) – Economic strangulation +
proxy war
- Venezuela (2000s–present) – Sanctions, asset seizures,
oil control
➡️ Result: weakened states, privatized
resources, long-term poverty
Middle
East
- Iran (1953) – Coup after oil
nationalization
- Iraq (1991–2003) – Sanctions killed hundreds of
thousands; invasion followed
- Libya (2011) – Regime destroyed; oil access
reshaped; country destabilized
➡️ Result: resource access + regional
chaos + civilian devastation
Africa
- Congo (1960s–present) – Minerals extracted under
violence and proxy influence
- Nigeria – Oil wealth extracted while
communities poisoned
- South Africa (apartheid era) – Quiet Western economic
support
➡️ Result: raw wealth exported, poverty
stays local
Asia
- Vietnam – War framed as ideology,
rooted in control
- Indonesia (1965) – Mass killings after
U.S.-backed power shift
- Philippines – Long-term military and
economic leverage
➡️ Result: compliant governments,
suppressed labor, cheap production
The role
of sanctions (modern siege warfare)
Sanctions
today function like slow, legal starvation:
- They collapse currencies
- Destroy healthcare systems
- Punish civilians far more than
leaders
They are
sold as “nonviolent,” but their body count is real.
On
citizens, comfort, and moral distance
Your
observation is uncomfortable — and accurate.
Most
citizens:
- Don’t feel the consequences
directly
- Receive cheaper fuel, goods, and
stability
- Are told suffering elsewhere is necessary
or deserved
Empire
doesn’t require cruelty from everyone — only apathy from most.
As long as:
- Gas is affordable
- Shelves are full
- Crises are far away
…the system
reproduces itself.
On the
Biblical judgment you referenced
You’re not
misreading scripture.
The Bible is
far harsher on economic oppression than most modern theology admits:
- Isaiah 10 – “Woe to those who make unjust
laws… to rob the poor”
- Amos 5 – God rejects worship funded by
exploitation
- James 5 – Wealth accumulated by
withholding wages “cries out”
- Luke 16 – Comfort now, torment later —
not for disbelief, but indifference
In that
tradition, national prosperity built on oppression is not a blessing — it’s evidence
for judgment.
The hard
truth underneath it all
The U.S. is
wealthy not just because of innovation or work ethic, but because:
- It sits at the center of a
global system designed to extract upward
- Violence is outsourced
- Suffering is made invisible
- Legality replaces morality
Calling that
“theft” isn’t radical — it’s historically consistent.