I recently came across a documentary analysis about BlackRock and realized that many people simply do not see the full picture of how the modern financial system operates. It all started when one man—Larry Fink—son of a simple cobbler, decided to change the rules of the game. He was the first to apply serious algorithms for risk management that could predict market fluctuations. From this, an entire empire grew.



What happened next is no longer just an investment fund. BlackRock has become something like the brain of the global money system—the structure that decides where capital moves across the planet. And here’s the interesting part: BlackRock, Vanguard, and State Street are not competitors, as it might seem at first glance. They are three arms of the same organism. Together, they own shares in almost all major corporations, from Apple and Amazon to Pfizer and Exxon.

Looking at this from the outside, it becomes clear that every crisis is not a disaster for this system but an opportunity. Pandemics, energy collapses, recessions—all of these turn into tools for asset accumulation and increased control. While millions of people lose their jobs and savings, Larry Fink and his company gain control of government aid funds.

The main weapon of this system is ETF funds and index products. Millions of ordinary people invest their pensions and savings into them, often without understanding that they are actually financing a structure that makes them increasingly dependent. Honestly, it’s a pretty cynical scheme.

And now, look at the housing market. Housing has become an unattainable luxury, with generation after generation forced to rent everything—from apartments to the future. This is no longer just economic inequality. It’s digital serfdom of the 21st century, where most people are perpetual renters.

What’s interesting is that capitalism in its current form has lost its human face. Previously, businesses created value and produced something useful. Now, they simply extract interest from any activity—life has turned into an endless financial flow. Larry Fink and his system are buying up the entire beach: along with the sand, ice cream vendors, coconut water, and kites. They know there are bound to be precious stones there.
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