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Three major corporations, BlackRock, State Street, and Vanguard, collectively own each other and 89% of the S&P 500. They are now aiming to purchase every family home in America, with a projected ownership of 60% of single-family homes by 2030. Larry Fink, the CEO of BlackRock, is part of the World Economic Forum and supports the idea of a "great reset" where people own nothing and are happy. These corporations often disrupt the housing market by making last-minute cash offers through ambiguous LLCs.

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Speaker 0 and Speaker 1 discuss what they describe as a widening agenda led by the US and UK that would enable corporations like BlackRock to exclude individuals from owning homes, through a system called build to rent (BTR). They state BTR in the US refers to housing developments built primarily for renting rather than ownership, often managed by developers or institutional investors such as BlackRock, and claim this is already happening in the US and accelerating in Australia after a recent election. Speaker 1 emphasizes that in Australia, the government promises to fix the housing crisis by building 1,200,000 new dwellings over five years, but the vast majority are not for ownership. These homes are built by institutional investors, super funds, hedge funds, and overseas syndicates to be part of Australia’s booming BTR sector, which means fewer houses available to buy, more long-term renters, and a system where the landlord is a multibillion-dollar fund based in Singapore or Toronto. They claim this is not addressing housing supply but creating a permanent rent class, with a generation of Australians who will never own, only pay. Speaker 0 adds that while BTR is touted as solving rental shortages, which they claim are created by importing immigrants, the program offers tax breaks, reduced foreign investor surcharges, and faster planning approvals for companies like BlackRock. They argue that highly incentivized corporations can access the market and push out individuals from homeownership. The clip is said to continue. Speaker 1 notes that foreign buyers are being welcomed, with foreign investors paying less tax under new BTR rules and benefiting from faster approvals and access to prime development land. The FIRB restrictions are said to be sidestepped through new development carve-outs, allowing entire towers of apartments to be sold or leased to foreign interests before locals have a look in. Australians are allegedly told to wait their turn and accept that ownership may no longer be achievable, described as a reallocation of land and housing rights away from citizens toward global capital. Speaker 0 mentions Australia’s mandatory retirement funds system (superannuation) and asserts that these funds are investing people’s money into BTRs, funding a booming industry that ensures future generations become a society of renters. They claim this approach does not prioritize affordable renting and instead centers on corporate profit, with mortgages and BTR financing connected through the same investment bankers. The speakers discuss concerns that BTR, while a small current share, is growing and involves major global companies in property and finance, many also involved in smart city development. They argue that these companies’ involvement aligns with a broader vision of controlling housing and movement, including AI-tracked, 15-minute-zone cities and a digitized currency system. They cite the National Association of Realtors’ calculation that the share of built-to-rent among all single-family housing in 2024 was nearly 10%. They warn of potential consequences: people priced out of homeownership, markets flooded with rentals, stricter mortgage criteria from the same financial institutions funding BTR, and a push toward a grid-controlled society. They call for awareness and laws against the trend, naming BlackRock, Vanguard, and State Street, and urging viewers to wake up to what they describe as the Great Reset moving forward. They end with sponsor plugs for Starlink and remind viewers of their program schedule and how to support independent reporting.

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BlackRock, State Street, and Vanguard allegedly own 88% of S&P firms, which the speaker argues negates the idea of a true equity market or land of opportunity. The speaker claims these three are essentially one company. The speaker asserts that investors, including Blackstone, bought up 26% of affordable homes in 2023, according to Redfin. This began with foreclosures after the 2008 subprime mortgage crisis, during which banks received a $29 trillion bailout, according to Bard College's Levy Institute. The speaker suggests banks targeted those in debt with subprime mortgages, leading to foreclosures. The speaker laments the shift from independent stores to chain stores.

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BlackRock has purchased £1,400,000,000 worth of UK homes, and Lloyds Bank aims to own 50,000 homes by 1930. Massive institutions are buying up UK homes, potentially leading to a society where homeownership is unattainable and people are forced to rent. The next fifteen to twenty years may represent the last opportunity to buy a home. Renters will not be able to negotiate with massive US private equity firms, where they are just a line item. Multinationals are buying up all of the homes in the UK.

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The speaker discusses the World Economic Forum's control over global industries and the push for a "Great Reset" to create a new society where individuals own nothing but receive basic needs from the state. This plan involves giving up national sovereignty for a world government. Leaders like Klaus Schwab advocate for this change, stating that the current consumer society is unsustainable. The goal is for people to be happy in a future where they own nothing by 2030.

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Private equity firms like Blackstone, Apollo, and Carlyle Group have been buying up mobile home parks across the country. Mobile homes are often not mobile, and residents typically own the home but not the land. Corporations are buying the land beneath the homes, viewing the parks as "cash machines." Once corporations move in, rent increases, maintenance is neglected, and residents are trapped because moving the home is too expensive. Residents face the choice of paying the increased rent or losing everything. This is presented as the way affordable housing is dying in America.

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Three giant corporations, BlackRock, State Street, and Vanguard, collectively own each other and 89% of the S&P 500. They aim to buy every single family home in America, potentially owning 60% of them by 2030. Larry Fink, the CEO of BlackRock, is on the board of the World Economic Forum. Their goal is for people to own nothing and be happy. Often, when someone is about to buy a home, an LLC with an ambiguous name, which is actually owned by BlackRock, swoops in with a cash offer, pushing the buyer out of the market.

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The speaker claims that corporations are essentially one "mega corporation" due to cross-ownership by a few key institutions: Vanguard, BlackRock, State Street, Fidelity, T. Rowe Price, Geode, JPMorgan, Morgan Stanley, Northern Trust, and Capital World Investors/Capital Research and Management Company. These institutions own each other. Visualizations based on an anonymous Reddit report show that BlackRock's stock, for example, is owned by other institutions like State Street, Capital World Management, and Bank of America. When these institutions are traced to their owners, and so on, it reveals a structure where corporations primarily own each other, with minimal ownership by retail investors. This pattern extends across various sectors, including tech, groceries, and housing. The speaker suggests that GameStop was an exception, but even that may no longer be true. Because these owners own each other, their interests are aligned. The speaker concludes that buying from any of these corporations is essentially buying from the "mega corporation," which siphons money to the top.

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The speaker argues that a fifty year mortgage is a mathematical scam designed to normalize multigenerational debt because the system is broken. They state, “Fifty year mortgage is a mathematical scam. They are trying to normalize multigenerational debt because the system is broken. Do the math.” They illustrate with a standard example: “On a standard $400,000 loan at 7%, a fifty year term means you pay over $1,400,000 total. You pay three times the value of the house.” The speaker exposes what they call “the dirty secret they hide in the amortization schedule.” They claim, “For the first twenty five years, 90% of your monthly payment goes to interest. You build almost zero equity. You are a glorified renter paying the bank while you pay for the repairs.” They question the timing of promoting this scheme: “Why push this now?” The answer, according to the speaker, is that “if they don't, the bubble bursts.” They argue that “Institutional investors hold billions in inflated real estate,” and if prices drop to affordable levels, “the elites lose money.” The speaker contends that a tool was invented to “keep prices artificially high by enslaving you for half a century.” They attribute the push to “the official pushing this is an heir to a real estate dynasty.” The broadcast personifies the motive, stating, “This isn't public service. It is a bailout for his rich friends paid for by your life.”

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The financial system is the "head of the snake" and its purpose is to enslave through debt. A mortgage is a "death grip," as the bank owns the house until the mortgage is paid. Even buying a house outright does not guarantee ownership due to government taxes. The system is based on financial fraud, which takes power and gives it to a small group who control the world through finance. This group has an infinite supply of money and has used it to buy everything and everyone who can be bought.

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Bill Gates and Klaus Schwab predict a future where people own nothing and are happy. They plan to reset all systems, including food and education. Gates is buying up farmland and investing in fake meat while food processing facilities are mysteriously burning down. This raises concerns about the destruction of the food supply. Strange events are unfolding, and they claim responsibility.

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The corporate elites met at the World Economic Forum in Davos to plan the future via a scheme called the great reset, which will drain bank accounts and strip the middle class of its equity. During COVID, the WEF dictated lockdowns that shifted $4 trillion to an oligarchy of corporate billionaires. Bankers and investment houses acquired homes, advertising that you will owe nothing and be happy. The speaker, an attorney who has fought corporate interests, claims familiarity with their impulses to commoditize lands, waters, homes, children, workers, and public health. The speaker says they have proven they can derail these schemes. Despite billions spent on propaganda to make people feel powerless, the speaker believes in the power of the people.

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Blackstone, a private equity firm known for owning single-family homes, is now buying medical equipment companies that supply essential items like defibrillators and syringes. They acquired a company in a $34 billion leveraged buyout, using the company's own money and saddling it with debt. The speaker claims that a few individuals will profit immensely in the next 5-10 years, potentially worsening the healthcare industry. The speaker expresses concern that private equity firms exert control "from cradle to grave" and urges listeners to avoid spending money at businesses owned by private equity, including hospitals and cemeteries.

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Housing prices and interest rates have doubled, making homes unaffordable due to large companies like BlackRock buying up properties. Nearly 30% of new home purchases are by investors, not individuals. This shift from ownership to renting erodes community ties and turns citizens into subjects. Homeownership fosters community involvement and care for neighbors, police, firefighters, and teachers.

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In 2023, private equity firms, specifically BlackRock, accounted for 44% of single-family home purchases. This trend is impacting people's ability to buy homes, as BlackRock aims to create a world where ownership is impossible. They want to control what you can purchase by putting everything on debt. This means you may not own a home, a car, or even the clothes you wear. Their goal is to destroy permanence and the family structure, aiming to atomize and dehumanize individuals for easier control.

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A woman named Tiffany shared a video about private equity firms buying up single family homes. In 2023, these firms purchased 44% of all single family homes in America, potentially leading to them owning 60% by 2030. This trend threatens the middle class's ability to own homes, with future generations likely to rent from a few companies. Without reform, private equity firms could soon own the majority of single family homes in the country, posing a significant problem for all Americans.

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Speaker 0: I had a guy who worked, very, very, very high up at Citibank. And he told me around 2008, he said, Glenn, you know, don't worry about the financial system. And I'm like, uh-huh. And he said, you know, we're never gonna go broke. I mean, do you know how much just the national parks are worth? And I looked at him and said, are you seriously telling me that we should commoditize the national parks? And he said, it's gonna happen. And I wonder now if this is what he was talking about. If it was just a digital not actually selling them, it's just a digital commoditization of our parks. Speaker 1: Yeah. So apply this now to the the phrase that we all heard during the COVID era, you'll own nothing and be happy. Well Yes. There's certain people that want to own everything, and that includes things that have never been able to be owned before that were considered things like the public commons, like rivers, lakes, the ocean itself, natural forests, all sorts of it. These people want to put all of that into the financial system, fractionalize it, tokenize it, and sell pieces of it around, use it to speculate on. Mean, it's It's very insane. Yeah. And so, this is just one aspect of digital currency play. Obviously, there's a lot more than that just going on as well. I would argue that a lot of this push, particularly in The US for dollar stablecoins supposedly being better than a central bank digital currency, also falls into this paradigm we talked about earlier of, you know, moving from the public to the private of the public private partnership because a lot of these stablecoin issuers, you know, if the the big concerns about CBDCs was that they're seasable, they're surveillable and they're programmable, Well, all of those three things also can apply to stablecoins. The only difference is that you would have a private company issue it and control it. But we've seen time and again how a lot of these private entities are willing to do that. When contacted, just look at how Bank of America behaved with January 6, people accused of wrongdoing on that day, for You know, they have no qualms in doing that and engaging in those type of activities. And the biggest dollar stablecoin issuer, Tether, which just hired Bo Hynes from the White House, they have openly said that they are a close partner of the US government for dollar hegemony globally and have uploaded the FBI, the Secret Service and other aspects of the US government onto its platform directly and have seized tethers from people just because government told them to, and this was during the Biden administration. So they obviously are willing to do that under any administration, and it's essentially functioning as a de facto public private partnership, even though we're being told it's a it's much better than a CBDC, but in terms of its impacts on civil liberties, you know, that's not necessarily true. So, again, vigilance is is important here.

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Three major corporations, BlackRock, State Street, and Vanguard, collectively own each other and 89% of the S&P 500. They aim to purchase every family home in America, potentially owning 60% of single-family homes by 2030. Larry Fink, the CEO of BlackRock, is on the board of the World Economic Forum, which promotes the idea of owning nothing and being happy. These corporations often outbid individuals looking to buy homes, using LLCs with vague names that can be traced back to BlackRock.

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Speaker 0 contends that concerns over rising power bills due to AI data centers are about to worsen as BlackRock and Blackstone buy up local power utilities. The piece, attributed to The New American, claims globalist equity firms are acquiring local energy companies nationwide to support AI infrastructure, provoking pushback from ratepayers and regulators. The Associated Press is cited as reporting that private equity giants are purchasing utilities to power AI-driven data centers, raising ratepayer and regulator concerns, with Oregon Citizens Utility Board noting increased public discussion at Public Utility Commissions. Speaker 0 notes a widespread anxiety about electricity costs tied to aging and expanding power infrastructure, including lines, poles, transformers, and generators, as utilities harden for extreme weather. The narrative asserts that apart from general cost increases, the core issue is the AI race, and that large international asset firms are eager to back a technology with potential for surveillance, manipulation, and control, while also seeking strong returns on investment. It claims these firms have historically used monetary power to push corporate support for climate alarmism and transgender activism, and that BlackRock and Blackstone together controlled more than $13 trillion in assets (BlackRock about $12 trillion; Blackstone about $1.2 trillion). It states only the U.S. and China have GDPs larger than $13 trillion. Concrete buyouts and investments are listed: January 2024, Blackstone bought a 20% stake in Northern Indiana Public Service Company for $2.1 billion, with the utility planning to boost green energy production afterward. In January 2025, Blackstone outright bought Potomac Energy Center, a natural gas power plant in Loudoun County, Virginia, for $1 billion, described as Blackstone’s most recent investment in power infrastructure for AI. In March 2025, Wisconsin’s Public Service Commission approved the buyout of Superior Water, Light, and Power by Canada Pension Plan Investment Board and BlackRock subsidiary Global Infrastructure Partners, with BlackRock taking a 60% majority stake. A separate deal: Blackstone bought Hilltop Energy Center, a natural gas power plant in Pennsylvania, for $1 billion, with executives Bilal Khan and Mark Zhu describing the acquisition as AI-focused. Blackstone is also seeking regulatory permission to buy Albuquerque-based Public Service Company of New Mexico and Texas New Mexico PowerCo, while BlackRock and the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board’s attempted purchase of Minnesota Power faces regulatory turbulence; a Minnesota sale could determine how such firms expand in a sector linking households, data centers, and power sources. Speaker 0 adds that the rise of AI is providing these firms with an “excuse” to control infrastructure, and mentions Yuval Noah Harari and the WEF. It cites the WEF’s “you will own nothing” rhetoric and notes Harari’s hypothetical about future irrelevance, Neuralink, and a broader agenda including surveillance, ownership consolidation, and potential reductions in access to private property. It asserts Larry Fink of BlackRock is at the WEF and CFR, and that BlackRock’s broader investments include real estate, farmland, timberland, and single-family rental homes, as part of a “build to rent” scheme. The piece warns that one corporation controlling vast natural resources and power utilities amid rising prices would be disastrous, urging citizens to resist BlackRock’s influence. It contrasts China’s influence with BlackRock’s power, condemning ESG models and the World Economic Forum’s agenda toward a “great reset,” digital currency, digital ID, and reduced access to resources. Speaker 1 interjects with a separate 1999 statement about how genetic engineering will change us and implies a need to start conversations now, arguing that one direction relinquishes power to others while the other empowers individuals to fix themselves. Speaker 0 reiterates that the conversation centers on power, AI, and control, warning against allowing a single corporation to own essential resources. The closing note references the January 1999 statement on genetic engineering, while Speaker 1 emphasizes taking personal power to fix oneself, framing the discussion as a shift in responsibility.

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Three major corporations, BlackRock, State Street, and Vanguard, collectively own each other, essentially forming one giant corporation. They also own 89% of the S&P 500 and have now set their sights on buying every single family home in America. If they continue on this path, they will own 60% of all single-family homes in the country by 2030. The CEO of BlackRock, Larry Fink, is on the board of the World Economic Forum, which promotes the idea of owning nothing and being happy. These corporations often outbid individuals looking to buy homes, using LLCs with ambiguous names that can be traced back to BlackRock.

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The financial system is seen as the main problem, with finance meant to enslave through debt like mortgages. Even if you buy a house, the bank technically owns it. This system benefits a small group controlling everything with money.

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The speaker discusses how housing prices have risen due to excessive spending on wars and COVID, leading to inflation. Three corporations, BlackRock, State Street, and Vanguard, aim to buy every family home in America, hindering young people's ability to own homes. To address this, the speaker plans to change the tax code to discourage corporate buying, offer mortgages at 3% interest, and provide tax-free bonds for first-time homebuyers in the community, prioritizing housing for teachers.

The Rubin Report

Exposing the Reality of the Plan for You to 'Own Nothing' | Carol Roth | POLITICS | Rubin Report
Guests: Carol Roth
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In a discussion between Dave Rubin and Carol Roth, they explore the implications of the World Economic Forum's prediction that "You'll own nothing, you'll be happy" by 2030. Roth emphasizes the dangers of this idea, linking it to the loss of private property and wealth creation, which historically leads to unhappiness and unfreedom. They discuss the rise of ESG (Environmental, Social, and Governance) criteria, which Roth argues manipulates corporations into prioritizing social credit over shareholder value. She highlights the financial implications of this shift, noting how it affects individual wealth and corporate focus. Roth also connects these trends to the potential for centralized digital currencies, warning that such systems could enable government control over personal finances. They conclude by advocating for individual preparedness through ownership of hard assets and estate planning, emphasizing the need for proactive financial strategies in a changing economic landscape. Roth's book, *You Will Own Nothing*, serves as a guide for navigating these challenges.

The Megyn Kelly Show

McConnell's Alarming Freeze, and Elites Saying We'll "Own Nothing," w/ Glenn Greenwald & Carol Roth
Guests: Glenn Greenwald, Carol Roth
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Megyn Kelly discusses several pressing political topics, including President Biden's recent use of the short staircase to Air Force One, Mitch McConnell's concerning public freeze, and the implications of aging politicians in power. Glenn Greenwald joins her to analyze McConnell's health issues, suggesting that the phenomenon of gerontocracy—where older leaders cling to power despite declining capabilities—poses a significant concern for the U.S. political landscape. They emphasize the need for transparency regarding the health of public figures and the responsibility of family members to intervene when necessary. The conversation shifts to Biden's cognitive abilities, with Greenwald noting that visible signs of decline are evident and that the public is not easily fooled by media narratives that downplay these concerns. They discuss the implications of Biden's age on his presidency and how it may affect the upcoming election, particularly as voters express dissatisfaction with his handling of the economy. Kelly and Greenwald also touch on the Democratic primary landscape, highlighting the emergence of candidates like Cornell West, who poses a potential threat to Biden's support among Black voters. They discuss the internal conflicts within the Democratic Party, particularly Bernie Sanders' recent attacks on West, which reflect a lack of tolerance for dissenting voices. The dialogue then moves to the Republican primary, where Nikki Haley and Vivek Ramaswamy are gaining attention. Kelly expresses skepticism about Ramaswamy's candidacy, suggesting he is positioning himself for a potential cabinet role rather than a serious run for the presidency. They analyze the polling dynamics, noting that Trump's dominance in the Republican field may overshadow other candidates. Carol Roth later joins the show to discuss Biden's economic policies, branded as "Bidenomics." She argues that while the administration touts job creation and falling inflation rates, the reality for middle and working-class Americans is one of financial strain and diminished purchasing power. Roth critiques government interventions that she believes hinder economic growth and exacerbate inequality. The discussion concludes with a focus on the BRICS nations and their potential to challenge U.S. economic dominance, as well as the implications of corporate ownership of housing, which threatens individual wealth and homeownership. Roth emphasizes the need for personal financial responsibility and community action to combat these trends, urging listeners to remain informed and proactive in advocating for their economic interests.

Coldfusion

Wall Street Firms Are Now Buying Up Family Homes
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Hedge funds in the U.S. are increasingly buying entire neighborhoods, often outbidding individual buyers by up to 50%. Major firms like JP Morgan and BlackRock are involved, with Wall Street investing around $60 billion in properties. This trend began post-2008 housing crisis to stabilize the market but has led to institutional investors controlling significant rental markets. Concerns arise over tenant treatment and the potential for a permanent class of renters under corporate ownership.
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