The Secret Ruling Class — Why the anonymous Blob needs to be invisible

The Secret Ruling Class — Why the anonymous Blob needs to be invisible. By Joanne Nova.

The most powerful class in society has been anonymously invisible, unnamed, and unnoticed, and this is key to its success. If the ruling class is named, the masses would be able to discuss the common motivations and interests of its members. While it has no name, it can disguise itself as separate neutral parties working to help “society”. …

This cloak of invisibility, it turns out, is exactly the way the Soviet bureaucrats worked. We know this, because, as Martin Durkin explains [in the video below], it was described in 1957 by a man called Milovan Djilash in his book called The New Class. His book was smuggled out of Yugoslavia and printed in the US. It earned him 15 years in jail — obviously he was speaking a dangerous truth.

Djilash had become appalled by the socialist system he helped set up. He had come to realize it did not represent a victory of the working class, but of a new oppressive parasitic, bureaucratic class. And for this New Class, he said, it was vital that it must deny its own existence. This, he said, was the biggest deception it must accomplish.

 

 

The New Deal in the 1930s led to an explosion in alphabet agencies and regulators and planners. Understandably, the people inside the class are only human, and they like their jobs and their junkets. Thus they become “a bureaucratic solution in search of a problem to solve”, in order to grow their own power. Verily, the bureaucracy expands to fill as much of the economy as it possibly can (and then some).

The New Class is at war with the free individual:

  • The new class, by definition, is absolutely at war with laissez-faire free market capitalism.
  • For the new class, lower taxes and less regulation are a direct challenge to its livelihood.
  • The new class, though it does not say it outright, is implacably against the notion of private property.
  • It ought to be up to the state, the state run by them, to determine how much of our money, our earnings, and savings we will be allowed to keep.
  • And so for the new class, it’s axiomatic that capitalism is cruel, oppressive, inefficient, corrupt.

Martin Durkin points out that the State calls itself “democratic” to soften up the awful truth of the authoritarian power. “Instead of calling something “state control” it’s called “democratic control”. This mirrors what Mike Benz talks about with the US State Department and its “Whole of society censorship framework”. When we protest and complain about a state institution we are “attacking democracy itself” which justifies calling for censorship. It is as if democracy means the Institutions of an democratic country, rather than the power of the voters. …

Names are important:

I shall continue to call this new class The Blob, for want of any better, more apt sounding name. But we must have a name, for we cannot fight a vaporous foe.

Your mission, should you choose to accept it, is to help tell the world about the new ruling class. Everything they want to hide, we must expose.

That’s why we have The Wentworth Report.

The pushback is coming. Any word that gives power to the individual will be subsumed, relabeled, distorted and misused by The Blob in an attempt to neutralize it.

Like the blob used their media power in 2017  to change the meaning of “alt-right” to fringe racists, once the original alt-right became a grouping that opposed the uniparty and only found a home on the right side of politics.

Here at The Wentworth Report we have often used the term “globalists” for the blob, because a defining feature of the blob is their international orientation — viewing their countrymen with disdain, viewing nationalism as evil. Maybe we should use Mike Benz’s term “blob” instead — at least it’s shorter.