The first thing to understand about the Harvard Cartel, which runs our country, is that the rule of law means nothing to its controlling members.
The rule of law is a veneer of respectability that they use to cover their true criminality.
They will violate the rule of law anytime they feel the need to do so in order to retain their power over society.
Example: Julian Assange.
Power is what they are about.
As George Carlin, the social satirist and comedian, said many times: It’s a big club, and you ain’t in it.
The Harvard graduate, however, is in the club.
Some are more aware of what is going on, and some are not.
But all Harvard graduates benefit from Harvard’s rule whether they know about the inner workings of the club or not.
The unknowing Harvard graduates are useful tools who through their good deeds give respectability to the true bad apples who run the cartel.
So this is why Harvard’s propagandists can point to the good Harvard graduates as an explanation as to why there is no cabal or cartel running the country.
One only need to point to the good and innocent Harvard trained doctor, who surely doesn’t know much, and say things like:
“Well, here is a good man who tirelessly cares for his patients for the good of the community.”
And this is true. One cannot argue with that.
But that in no way suggests that there is not a cartel of evil Harvard graduates and their ilk who do brutalize American society and the people of the world in order to maintain the power of the cartel.
And, indeed, there is a cartel to be seen if one will only open one’s eyes.
Of course, if one chooses not to see, one will not see.
The second thing to remember about the cartel is that any evil deed that they conduct can be spun into a protective cloak of nobility.
“See here now, we are not invading the Middle East in order to balkanize it for the purposes of stealing oil; we are conducting and abetting an Arab Spring.”
“We are not instigating a rebellion in Syria which will kill 500,000 people. We are helping a powerless citizenry overtake a brutal tyrant named Assad who kills his own people at will.”
(Hmm, has Assad killed 500,000 people?)
Arab Spring is noble.
Liberating people from tyranny is beautiful.
The millions of people who die as a result of the cartel’s escapades never need be talked about.
Harvards propagandists will take care of that. And that is because Harvard controls the media.
The third thing to understand about the cartel is that they don’t need to meet in secret to discuss their goals and aspirations.
Why resort to that when the overwhelming majority of people in the USA have been programmed to not believe in conspiracies and evil cabals.
Conspiracies can’t exist, the propagandists shout. Someone would talk. Someone would give a deathbed confession.
(Gee, is it likely people will talk if the cartel vows retribution against family members if anyone should talk? And how many people would they talk to given that the cartel controls the mainstream media? Me? Okay, that’s one; who’s next?)
Forget about the US government filing charges of conspiracy daily against individual Americans for the past two centuries.
Forget about the Army Rangers, Green Beret, Delta Force, Navy SEALS who do believe in planning missions.
Cranks who point out the existence and criminality of the cartel only need to be made fun of whenever they do get an opportunity to appear in public.
And so the goings on of the cartel are openly published in the journals of their various associations and organizations.
There is no secret.
It’s open and right there for everyone to see.
Why should King Louis hide when King Louis controls all the levers to power?
The fourth thing to understand about the cartel is that it’s not solely comprised of five guys sitting in a room making all the decisions.
The cartel is vast and is comprised of hundreds of thousands of people who are invested in the power structure of the cartel.
Just as King Louis had his court of nobles and their henchmen who were totally invested in Louis’s rule because they benefited from his rule, so you have a Harvard Cartel that has hundreds of thousands of members who directly or indirectly benefit from Harvard’s rule.
You don’t need to be a Harvard graduate in order to be a member of the Harvard Cartel.
It’s called the Harvard Cartel, because Harvard is the leader of the cartel. As the oldest school in the nation, the so-called most prestigious (it’s not) school of the nation, the wealthiest school in the nation, the school that has the deepest roots into the power structure of American society, Harvard is undoubtedly the leader of the cartel.
The vast majority of the cartel’s officers come from the Ivy League. That’s why the Ivy League exists. The Ivy League does not exist to train pipefitters and bricklayers.
However, you can come from a regular school and become a member of the Harvard Cartel. They are always looking for a few good men.
And unfortunately, there is no shortage of people who will sell out their fellow human beings for thirty pieces of silver.
The fifth thing to remember about the cartel is that much of its power comes from its ability to project itself over time.
There is a consistent continuity to its power.
In other words, the cartel keeps rolling along through time.
This can best be accomplished through a university.
It’s not possible for a family such as that of King Louis to project this power over more than a few hundred years because a family is limited by genetics and mortality.
Nor is it possible for anyone business corporation to project this power because a business corporation by itself is limited by its scope and ability to make money over time.
A university is different though.
A university as we now know can live for a thousand years and more.
A university is also a source of education for new entrants.
What better way to forge a cartel than through a university that can inculcate shared values in the minds of eager young suckers desiring to become billionaires.
And so it does.
Harvard University is not just a school to teach people history, english, mathematics, chemistry, and physics.
Harvard is a school of indoctrination into power – whether the Harvard attendee understands that or not.
While at Harvard, the student is introduced to the people who rule American society.
Famous actors regularly, come by to give talks at the Hasty Pudding Club.
The goings-on of the Hasty Pudding Club are reported in the national media. There is no logical reason for this other than to program the people: These are important people who you are to obey.
The Sulzbergers will happily report your wedding and baby announcements in the New York Times. Again, there is no logical reason for this except to program the people into believing that the Harvard graduate is a cut above every other person.
Thus we have developed a Kim Jong-un society where infallible demigods from Harvard are created.
This will become useful when the Harvard graduate later decides to run for senator, governor, or president.
Harvard graduates while at Harvard are introduced regularly to senators, governors, presidents, and the so-called people who matter.
It’s a heady experience, and only the guarded can immunize themselves to the indoctrination that is going on.
Why am I being introduced to senators and former presidents? Why am I meeting wealthy nobility from Europe? Why am I sitting here talking to famous Hollywood personalities? Why are not other people meeting these people?
Well, the real reason is because that’s the way the cartel has set things up. They want the Harvard attendee to feel special. They want him or her to get accustomed to power. They want the Harvard graduate to see himself as a special kind of person.
But that’s not what the Harvard graduate exposed to all this power concludes for him or herself.
He or she begins to believe that they are a cut above everyone else. Why, of course they are. They are meeting Tom Hanks, or Brad Pitt or any number of other famous people.
The indoctrination continues even after their attendance at Harvard.
Harvard graduates go to the front of the line
They not only get to work for the presidential campaign of a well-known senator.; they get to meet the senator personally.
And so, the indoctrination continues throughout their whole life until they begin to start thinking about their situation.
Usually, the Harvard graduate never comes to understand his or her position in life. If they do come to understand their position in life, it is usually because they have run afoul of the cartel and committed a faux pas at which point their privileges are suspended or revoked.
The sixth thing you need to remember about the cartel is that its members often don’t know that they are part of a cartel.
They don’t see that they have been unfairly advanced to the top of the line because of their attendance at Harvard or any other Ivy League school.
They might even rebel violently against that notion.
They will insist that they accomplished everything on their own.
They don’t know what you know.
So it’s often a waste of time to discuss that with them.
They can’t seem to understand that they have connections into the power structure, and that is it is these connections, not their native intelligence or ability, that have been responsible for their success.
There was a marvelous movie made in the early 1970s that detailed how the power structure works.
It is a fictional movie, but all fictional movies emanate from the mind of an individual writer who often relies on his personal experiences in life.
The name of the movie was The Brotherhood of the Bell, starring Glenn Ford, Dean Jagger, and William Conrad.
It is perhaps the best television movie ever made.
In the movie, a man named Andy Patterson, played by Glenn Ford, decides to rebel against The Brotherhood. The Brotherhood is asking him to commit an immoral act which he will not do, and so he desires to expose The Brotherhood.
His mentor, played by Dean Jagger, advises him to go along and do what The Brotherhood asks.
When Andy Patterson goes ahead with his plans to expose The Brotherhood, The Brotherhood begins to revoke his privileges.
Andy Patterson becomes upset and complains to his mentor.
His mentor reminds him that The Brotherhood has gotten him to where he is in the world.
Andy Patterson protests and states that he was the one who built his business.
His mentor then reads him the riot act and tells him that The Brotherhood has done everything for him. He tells him that it is safe to say that Andy has never competed for a thing in his life.
And this is true in fiction and in life, but the Harvard graduate will never come to understand this until he runs afoul of the Harvard cartel at which point he or she will most likely submit.
Very few have the courage to give up their first class seat on the jet.
And this is the way of the world.
Sincerely,
Archer Crosley
Copyright 2023 Archer Crosley All Rights Reserved
Leave a comment