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The Unholy Love Triangle: How Capitalists, Clerics, and Politicians Persecute the Commoner


 

For centuries, three groups have worked together to control society: rich people (capitalists), religious leaders (theologians), and politicians (political elites). They don’t admit it, but they are deeply connected. Together, they create a system that looks good on the surface but keeps ordinary people struggling.


The Rich: Masters of Money

The rich have one goal: to protect and grow their wealth. They use their money to influence politicians, funding their campaigns in exchange for friendly laws—lower taxes, fewer regulations, and policies that favor big business.

At the same time, they fund religious institutions. This isn’t because they are deeply religious but because they know religious leaders can help keep people calm and obedient. When sermons preach that “hard work is a virtue” or “suffering brings spiritual rewards,” people are less likely to protest against unfair systems.


Religious Leaders: Keepers of Morality

Religious leaders have the power to shape how people think. They tell stories about what is right and wrong, often presenting social hierarchies as part of a divine plan. This makes people accept their struggles as something sacred, not something they should fight against.

In return, religious leaders enjoy privileges. The rich donate money to their institutions, and politicians pass laws that protect their influence. They sit in a powerful position, but instead of challenging injustice, they often help maintain it.


Politicians: The Balancers of Power

Politicians act as the bridge between the rich and the religious. They use money from the rich to win elections and use religion to gain trust. They promise fairness and progress but rarely deliver anything meaningful for the common people.

Instead, they protect the interests of the rich and the religious, ensuring their own power remains secure. For the commoner, democracy becomes a show—choices between candidates who all serve the same system.


How the Triangle Hurts Ordinary People

This system fools the common person. The rich tell them to work harder. Religious leaders tell them to have faith. Politicians tell them to trust the system. Meanwhile, wages stay low, opportunities shrink, and inequality grows.

The triangle is designed to keep things as they are. The rich stay rich, the powerful stay powerful, and the ordinary person is kept busy surviving, with no time to question the system.


Breaking Free

The first step to breaking this cycle is to see it clearly. Why do we trust these groups so much? Do their stories actually help us, or do they just keep us quiet?

History shows us that no system lasts forever. Once people see through the illusions, they begin to demand change. The love triangle might seem invincible, but its power depends on one thing: our belief in it. The moment we stop believing, the system starts to crack.

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