Call Me Stormy

Finding righteous currents in turbulent times

Archive for the tag “corporate power”

Blackrock Pushes Woke Baloney

Why are so many corporations fully invested in the woke culture? It has to do with the asset management company Blackrock and its CEO Larry Fink.

Blackrock manages nearly $10 trillion in asset investments on Wall Street. To put that into perspective, the company controls more than the entirety of the British and French governmental budgets.

Fink has made it clear: Corporations that want to tap into Blackrock’s resources must follow rigid social justice guidelines. So even if these woke notions are manufactured and creating a caustic cultural war, the companies are pressing ahead.

They are caught between a rock and a hard place, more precisely, a blazenly hot place. They do not want to find themselves outside Larry Fink’s circle of friends. More from Black Pigeon Speaks.

April Showers To Crack Fraud

Is the tide turning? April Showers bring new life to the investigation into the stolen 2020 election. Texas and Georgia are fighting against corporate titans, and Arizona is probing 2.1 million ballots to seek answers for the strange results reported from Maricopa County. More from Lori Colley.

U.S Stolen A Long Time Ago

Anna von Reitz rejoins Sarah Westall to discuss how we can reclaim our proper sovereign place and start exercising our rights. She explains how the United States has been co-opted and bankrupted by a greedy corporation acting against our interests. This is a two-part interview and we present both videos below. You can learn more about Anna von Reitz on her website at http://annavonreitz.com/ or at https://theamericanstatesassembly.net/

Big Lies From Big Tech

Big Tech leaders failed miserably in their much-anticipated hearing before the House Judiciary Committee earlier this week, basically lying through their teeth. The shameful performance was a display of deception and cowardice for Google’s Sundar Pichai, Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg, Amazon’s Jeff Bezos and Apple’s Tim Cook. Matt Stoller, research director for the American Economic Liberties Project emphasized that this was the most important Congressional hearing on corporate power since the 1930s, where the four CEOs faced questioning for the first time on their shady policies from well-prepared members of the committee. “These guys seem like they’re titans of industry, but all they really pay attention to is making sure that the toll booth that they control is in working order,” Stoller says. “But the rest of it–they don’t care.” Here’s more with Stoller and the “Rising” crew in this edition of The Hill.

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