THE GLOBAL BUSINESS MODEL
Every major industry—healthcare, tech, military, finance, media, education, even social platforms—operates on the same fundamental model. The patterns are clear once you step back and observe:
1. Create or Exploit a Problem
2. Offer an Incomplete or Manipulative “Solution”
3. Confuse and Divide the Public
4. Sustain the Cycle for Maximum Profit and Control
This isn’t speculation—it’s the foundation of how these industries remain powerful. Once you recognize the blueprint, you stop reacting emotionally and start strategizing effectively.
Step 1: Manufacturing Problems for Profit
A stable, efficient, well-functioning system does not generate continuous revenue. That’s why these industries do notprioritize real solutions. Instead, they:
• Exaggerate existing problems or keep people locked in cycles (healthcare, debt, military conflicts).
• Create dependency by making their solutions just effective enough to be useful but never enough to be permanent (tech, medicine, software, even some education systems).
Example: The healthcare industry has known for decades that preventative care is the key to reducing disease, but it’s not in their financial interest to emphasize it. Instead, they wait until people are sick, then provide long-term symptom management—not cures. Why? Because a cured patient is no longer a paying customer.
Tech? Same thing. Planned obsolescence means products are intentionally built to last only a few years, forcing unnecessary upgrades. You don’t get durability; you get artificial expiration dates.
Step 2: The Illusion of Solutions
When industries present solutions, they are never designed to fully resolve the issue. They are designed to:
• Keep customers coming back (subscription models, medical treatments, financing plans).
• Appear helpful while strategically withholding essential components.
• Sell secondary products or services to “enhance” the first purchase (think software, hardware, or medicine with required add-ons).
This is why financial systems keep people in debt rather than teaching real financial independence. It’s why tech companies sell you devices with missing essential features, forcing you to buy upgrades. The goal isn’t to solve the problem; it’s to monetize the process indefinitely.
Step 3: Strategic Distraction & Internal Infighting
Here’s where the real game happens. They pretend to be separate entities—insurance vs. healthcare, government vs. corporations, media vs. business—when, in reality, they’re under the same umbrella. The infighting is staged to create confusion.
• Healthcare blames insurance.
• Insurance blames Big Pharma.
• Big Pharma blames wellness influencers.
• Governments blame corporations.
• Corporations blame government policies.
It’s a deliberate cycle meant to keep people distracted. Why? Because if the system were exposed as a unified operation, it would be far easier to dismantle. If people see one clear enemy, they unite against it. But if people believe the industry itself is confused, they stay disoriented, divided, and compliant.
Step 4: Sustaining the Cycle for Continuous Profit
The real art of this system is making the process feel necessary. They know that if people wake up and start thinking independently, their model collapses. So they:
• Frame their tactics as “business strategy” rather than manipulation.
• Create dependency through convenience (subscription models, automatic billing, limited product lifespan).
• Regulate loopholes only when forced to—by then, they’ve already profited and moved to the next strategy.
This is why industries fight regulation while simultaneously influencing it—they need just enough oversight to maintain public trust, but not enough to threaten their bottom line.
So, What’s the Solution?
It’s not about outrage or rebellion. It’s about clarity and precision. If you want to see real change, the key is cutting unnecessary dependence on these systems.
This is not about some collective “we” needing to take action—it’s about individual decisions that create broader impact over time.
Actionable Steps
• Reduce reliance where possible. Health, finance, tech—understand where you can regain control.
• Cut unnecessary upgrades. Don’t buy into planned obsolescence. Keep devices until they’re truly unusable.
• Learn financial independence. Avoid debt cycles and predatory financing.
• Understand the game, don’t get caught in distractions. The more you see the pattern, the less likely you are to be manipulated.
The only way this system changes is when enough individuals stop playing into the cycle. The more people make informed, intentional choices, the more the system is forced to adjust. That’s how you restore balance—not through chaos, but through strategic disengagement from systems that thrive on blind dependence.