Confessions of an Economic Hit Man (2004)
By John Perkins - 30 Q&As - Unbekoming Book Summary
John Perkins spent a decade as what he calls an “Economic Hit Man” - a highly paid professional who cheated countries around the globe out of trillions of dollars. Working for an international consulting firm called MAIN from 1971 to 1981, his job was to convince developing nations to accept enormous loans for infrastructure projects that would never benefit their people. The money would flow directly from U.S. banks to American corporations like Bechtel and Halliburton, while countries were left with crushing debts they could never repay. When they defaulted - which was always the plan - these nations would be forced to surrender their resources, their UN votes, and their sovereignty to U.S. interests. It was, as Perkins describes it, the most sophisticated form of empire-building in history: colonization disguised as development aid.
The system Perkins reveals operates through three escalating levels of intervention. First come the Economic Hit Men, working through private companies to maintain plausible deniability, producing fraudulent economic forecasts that justify massive loans. If leaders resist this economic manipulation - as Omar Torrijos of Panama and Jaime Roldós of Ecuador did - then the “jackals” arrive, CIA-sanctioned operatives who orchestrate coups or assassinations disguised as accidents. Both Torrijos and Roldós died in mysterious plane crashes in 1981, shortly after implementing policies that threatened U.S. corporate interests. And if the jackals fail, as they did with Saddam Hussein, then comes the final solution: military invasion. This isn’t conspiracy theory but documented history, from the CIA’s overthrow of Iran’s Mosaddegh in 1953 to Guatemala’s Arbenz in 1954 to the invasion of Iraq in 2003. What makes Perkins’s account so disturbing is his insider’s revelation that this system has become normalized, institutionalized across corporations, banks, and government agencies that shuttle executives between them - what he calls the “corporatocracy.”
For twenty years after leaving MAIN, Perkins tried to write this book, starting and stopping four times as bribes and threats kept him silent. He’d founded a successful alternative energy company with help from his old contacts, received lucrative consulting contracts that required almost no work - payments for his continued silence. But September 11, 2001, shattered his rationalizations. Standing at Ground Zero, encountering an Afghan man who’d lost his legs to a U.S. missile, Perkins finally understood that the system he’d helped build had created the conditions for such hatred and violence. The twenty-four thousand people who die daily from hunger, the indigenous communities destroyed for oil extraction, the democracies overthrown for corporate profits - he realized his silence made him complicit in ongoing atrocities. His resulting confession reads like a man desperate for redemption, each page an attempt to warn us about a system that has only grown more sophisticated since his time.
The terrifying truth Perkins reveals is that Economic Hit Men are more ubiquitous today than ever before, no longer needing government coordination because every major corporation has internalized these practices. Modern executives convince countries to accept trade deals that destroy local industries, pressure governments to privatize public services, create races to the bottom for wages and environmental standards - all while believing they’re spreading development and democracy. The income gap between the world’s richest and poorest nations more than doubled during the supposed “development decades,” growing from 30:1 in 1960 to 74:1 by 1995, proving that the system creates poverty rather than alleviating it. Yet this book isn’t ultimately about despair but transformation. Perkins argues that the same institutions and networks that enforce exploitation could be redirected toward genuine development if enough people understand what’s happening and demand change. His confession becomes a call to action: we must recognize our own participation in this system through our consumption patterns, our silence, our willingness to believe comfortable lies about American foreign policy. Only by facing the truth about empire can we begin to dismantle it and build an economy that serves life rather than destroying it for profit.
With thanks to John Perkins.
Confessions of an Economic Hit Man, 3rd Edition: Perkins, John
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Discussion No.150:
Insights and reflections from “Confessions of an Economic Hitman”
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Analogy
Imagine a skilled con artist who poses as a financial advisor to elderly homeowners. He arrives in an expensive suit, carrying impressive charts and projections, speaking the language of prosperity and security. He convinces them to take out massive loans against their homes for “improvements” that will “increase value” and “enhance their quality of life.” The loan documents are complex, the terms obscured, but his projections show how the improvements will pay for themselves. The construction work begins, but the contractors he insists they use are his associates who overcharge for shoddy work. The improvements benefit not the elderly homeowners but the con artist’s partners who install expensive systems the owners don’t need and can’t maintain. When the victims can’t make the loan payments - which was always inevitable given their fixed incomes - the con artist returns with “solutions”: sell the mineral rights under your property, let us install a cell tower in your backyard, vote the way we tell you in the homeowners association, and we might restructure your debt. Those who refuse find themselves foreclosed upon, their homes seized. But the brilliance of this con is that it’s all legal - the contracts were signed, the loans legitimate, the foreclosure proceedings proper. The con artist even convinces the victims’ children that their parents were helped, that the debt was their own failure, and that the con artist was actually trying to develop and modernize their neighborhood. This is exactly how Economic Hit Men operate, just substitute nations for homeowners, natural resources for property, and sovereignty for ownership.
The One-Minute Elevator Explanation
Modern empire isn’t built with armies - it’s built with debt. We send in economic consultants who convince developing countries to accept massive loans for infrastructure projects they don’t need. The money goes straight to American corporations while the country gets stuck with the bill. When they can’t pay - which is the plan - we demand control over their resources, their votes at the UN, military bases on their soil. If leaders resist this economic colonization, we send in the CIA to orchestrate coups or accidents. If that fails, then we invade. It’s the mafia model scaled up to global level, where a handful of corporations, banks, and government agencies work together to control the world’s resources while maintaining the fiction that we’re helping these countries develop. Since World War Two, we’ve perfected this system to the point where a few thousand people in boardrooms and government offices effectively rule billions, extracting their wealth while keeping them in poverty. The genius is that it all appears legitimate - development assistance, free trade, democratic capitalism - when it’s actually the most sophisticated empire in history, more effective than Rome because the conquered don’t even realize they’re slaves. Want to go deeper? Look into the history of the World Bank and IMF, research what happened to leaders like Mosaddegh in Iran and Arbenz in Guatemala, or examine why we really invaded Iraq. [Elevator dings]
12-Point Summary
1. The Architecture of Economic Imperialism Economic Hit Men operate as the first line of attack in a three-tiered system of global control. They work for private consulting firms but serve the interests of what Perkins calls the “corporatocracy” - an interlocking network of corporations, banks, and government agencies. Their job is to convince developing countries to accept enormous development loans that fund infrastructure projects built by U.S. companies. When economic manipulation fails, CIA-sanctioned “jackals” arrange accidents or coups. If both fail, the military invades. This system evolved after World War II when nuclear weapons made traditional empire-building too dangerous, proving that financial warfare could be more effective than military conquest in controlling nations and resources.
2. The Debt Trap Mechanism The entire foreign aid system is designed to create unpayable debt. EHMs deliberately produce inflated economic growth projections using sophisticated econometric models that can be manipulated to show whatever results are desired. These fraudulent forecasts justify loans far larger than countries can repay. The money never actually helps the recipient country - it flows from U.S. banks to U.S. corporations while the country receives infrastructure that primarily benefits foreign companies extracting their resources. When default inevitably occurs, creditors demand structural adjustment programs that slash social services, privatize public assets, and orient the entire economy toward serving foreign corporate interests. This transforms sovereign nations into effective colonies without firing a shot.
3. The Saudi Arabian Model The 1970s Saudi Arabian Money-laundering Affair created a revolutionary template for controlling oil-rich nations. Rather than using debt, the U.S. convinced Saudi Arabia to invest its petrodollars in U.S. Treasury securities, with the interest used to hire American companies to modernize the kingdom. In exchange, America guaranteed military protection for the Saudi royal family. This created a circular system where oil money funded American companies and weapons purchases while establishing the petrodollar as the mandatory currency for global oil trades. This arrangement forces every country needing oil to accumulate dollars, supporting American currency dominance and allowing the U.S. to print money without triggering hyperinflation.
4. The Assassination of Hope When leaders resist economic colonization, they face literal elimination. Jaime Roldós of Ecuador and Omar Torrijos of Panama both died in mysterious plane crashes in 1981, shortly after implementing policies that threatened oil company profits and U.S. strategic interests. These weren’t isolated incidents - the pattern extends from Mosaddegh in Iran to Allende in Chile to Arbenz in Guatemala. The jackals who arrange these “accidents” send a clear message to other leaders: cooperate with economic exploitation or die. The Reagan era marked a return to these violent tactics after Carter’s brief attempt at more ethical foreign policy, demonstrating that the empire will not tolerate even moderate nationalism that threatens corporate profits.
5. The Corporatocracy’s Ideology The system perpetuates itself through a false ideology that equates all economic growth with human progress, regardless of who benefits or what is destroyed. This belief system, promoted through universities, media, and international institutions, teaches that those who excel at generating GDP growth deserve rewards while those who fail deserve exploitation. The corporatocracy isn’t a conspiracy but a culture where members genuinely believe they’re helping the world by promoting capitalism, viewing themselves like pre-Civil War plantation owners who thought they were civilizing slaves. This self-justifying worldview allows executives and government officials to commit atrocities while sleeping soundly, convinced they’re spreading democracy and development.
6. Corporate Evolution of Empire Modern corporations have internalized EHM practices to the point where they no longer need government coordination to exploit developing nations. Every major multinational corporation now employs people who perform EHM functions - convincing countries to accept unfair trade deals, privatize public services, and compete in races to the bottom for wages and environmental standards. Business schools train executives in the same fraudulent forecasting techniques Perkins used, while international agreements like NAFTA codify exploitation into law. The empire has become self-perpetuating, with each MBA graduate potentially serving as an economic hit man without ever knowing the term or recognizing their role in the system.
7. Environmental and Cultural Genocide Resource extraction requires not just environmental destruction but the systematic elimination of indigenous cultures that view land as sacred rather than commercial. In Ecuador’s Amazon, oil companies don’t just drill wells - they build roads that open regions to colonization, introduce diseases that decimate tribes, and poison rivers that sustained communities for millennia. Companies work with missionary groups to pacify resistance through religious conversion, while governments trained by the School of the Americas massacre those who fight back. This slow-motion genocide is hidden behind the language of development and progress, but indigenous peoples understand it for what it is: a war for survival where their very existence threatens the ideological foundations of corporate exploitation.
8. The Inequality Engine Between 1960 and 1995, the income ratio between the world’s richest and poorest fifths grew from 30:1 to 74:1, proving that the development model actually increases poverty while claiming to reduce it. This isn’t an unfortunate side effect but the intended outcome - the system requires desperate populations willing to work for starvation wages and governments desperate enough to sell resources cheaply. Twenty-four thousand people die daily from hunger and preventable diseases while the World Bank and IMF claim to be reducing poverty. The statistics reveal that trillions in “aid” have created a massive transfer of wealth from poor to rich nations, hidden behind the fiction of development assistance.
9. Media Manipulation and Consent Manufacturing Corporate ownership of media ensures that news coverage supports the corporatocracy’s agenda, with major networks owned by companies directly profiting from military contracts and international development projects. These outlets frame military invasions as humanitarian interventions, corporate exploitation as bringing opportunity, and resistance movements as terrorism. Beyond simple censorship, corporate media trains audiences to internalize consumerist values and equate corporate success with national interest. Journalists who attempt real investigation face pressure from advertisers and editors, knowing that challenging the system means career suicide. This information control explains how policies that harm the majority maintain public support - alternative narratives never reach mass audiences.
10. Personal Transformation and Collective Awakening Perkins’s journey from EHM to whistleblower illustrates both the personal cost of participation in the system and the possibility of redemption through truth-telling. His twenty-year struggle to write his confession, despite bribes and threats, reflects the powerful forces keeping participants silent. September 11 finally broke through his rationalizations, forcing him to recognize his role in creating conditions that generate terrorism and violence. His confession serves as both personal catharsis and a call to action, demonstrating that the system’s participants can choose to expose rather than perpetuate exploitation once they achieve moral clarity about their actions.
11. The Permanent War Economy The progression from economic manipulation to military intervention has created a perpetual cycle where violence generates profits for the same corporations that benefit from exploitation. When economic hit men and jackals fail, military invasion becomes justified through manufactured threats, as happened with Iraq. Companies like Halliburton and Bechtel then receive billions in no-bid contracts to rebuild what American bombs destroyed, profiting from both destruction and reconstruction. This permanent war economy makes conflict profitable, ensuring that peace becomes economically threatening to powerful interests. The system creates its own enemies through exploitation, then uses their resistance to justify further violence and exploitation.
12. Pathways to Transformation The current system isn’t inevitable - it was created by human choices and can be changed through human action. Perkins calls for both individual and collective resistance: reducing consumption, especially oil; supporting fair trade and sustainable businesses; spreading awareness about the true nature of the corporatocracy; and building alternative economic structures. The transformation requires Americans to confront their own participation in and benefit from exploitation, moving from unconscious complicity to conscious resistance. The fundamental choice facing humanity is between continuing the current path toward ecological and social collapse or creating an economy that serves life rather than destroying it for profit. The hour is late but not too late - the same institutions that enforce exploitation could be redirected toward genuine development if enough people demand transformation.
The Golden Nugget
The most profound revelation that fewest people would understand is that the entire system of international development and foreign aid was deliberately designed as a money laundering operation that never actually leaves the United States while creating the illusion of assistance. When the World Bank approves a billion-dollar loan to Indonesia for a power plant, the money transfers from a bank in Washington to an engineering firm in San Francisco - it never touches Indonesian hands. The recipient country receives a power plant it doesn’t need, can’t maintain, and which primarily serves foreign corporations extracting Indonesian resources, but Indonesia must repay the entire billion dollars plus interest with real resources and labor. This elegant circularity means American taxpayers fund foreign aid that enriches American corporations while impoverishing foreign nations who then owe America money for their own exploitation. The genius lies in making colonization appear as charity, conquest as assistance, and economic warfare as development aid - a form of imperialism so sophisticated that even its victims often fail to recognize what’s happening, believing they’re simply bad at development rather than understanding they’re succeeding perfectly at being exploited.
30 Questions and Answers
1. What exactly is an Economic Hit Man (EHM) and how does this role differ from traditional intelligence operatives?
Economic Hit Men are highly paid professionals who cheat countries around the globe out of trillions of dollars using fraudulent financial reports, rigged elections, payoffs, extortion, sex, and murder. They funnel money from international “aid” organizations like the World Bank and USAID into the coffers of huge corporations and the pockets of wealthy families who control the planet’s natural resources. Unlike traditional intelligence operatives who work directly for government agencies, EHMs are employed by private consulting firms, giving the government plausible deniability. Their tools include inflated economic projections, conditional loans that can never be repaid, and development projects that benefit the wealthy while enslaving the poor.
The critical distinction from traditional spies lies in their corporate cover and economic focus. If an EHM is caught or exposed, the consequences are far less severe than if a CIA agent were discovered orchestrating economic manipulation, making this approach both safer and more effective for building empire. While intelligence operatives might use military or political pressure, EHMs create economic dependencies that last generations. They represent a evolution in empire-building, moving from the crude military conquests of earlier centuries to sophisticated financial manipulation that leaves countries nominally independent but economically enslaved. This system proved so effective that today EHMs are more ubiquitous than ever, walking the corridors of major corporations worldwide.
2. How did the 1953 coup in Iran against Mohammad Mossadegh establish the template for modern economic imperialism?
When Iran’s democratically elected Prime Minister Mohammad Mossadegh nationalized Iranian oil assets in 1951, threatening British Petroleum’s interests, both Britain and the U.S. feared military retaliation would provoke Soviet intervention during the Cold War. Instead, the CIA dispatched Kermit Roosevelt, Theodore’s grandson, who brilliantly orchestrated Mossadegh’s overthrow through payoffs, threats, and organized street demonstrations that created the impression Mossadegh was both unpopular and inept. Roosevelt won people over through bribes and intimidation, then enlisted them to organize riots and violent demonstrations, ultimately bringing down a democratic government and installing the pro-American Shah as unchallenged dictator.
This operation revolutionized empire building by proving that countries could be controlled without military force, using economic manipulation and covert operations instead. The success in Iran demonstrated that developing nations could be subjugated through economic means rather than costly military interventions, establishing the blueprint for future operations. However, the Iranian model had one flaw: Roosevelt was a CIA employee, and if caught, the consequences would have been dire. This realization led to the development of the EHM system, where private consultants working for engineering firms and banks would replace CIA operatives, providing the government with plausible deniability while achieving the same imperial objectives through economic rather than military conquest.
3. What is the “corporatocracy” and how does it function as a system of control?
The corporatocracy is a close-knit fraternity of corporations, banks, and governments whose members share common goals and move easily between corporate boards and government positions. Men like Robert McNamara exemplify this system, transitioning from Ford Motor Company president to Secretary of Defense to World Bank president, while others like George Shultz and Dick Cheney shuttled between corporations like Bechtel and Halliburton and the highest levels of government. This isn’t a conspiracy in the traditional sense but rather a system of shared values and mutual benefit, where members endorse common goals of expanding markets, exploiting resources, and perpetuating their own power.
The system functions through the perpetuation and expansion of a fundamental lie: that all economic growth benefits humanity and that those who excel at stoking the fires of growth should be exalted and rewarded. The corporatocracy ensures that schools, businesses, and media support this fallacious concept, creating a monstrous machine requiring exponentially increasing amounts of fuel and maintenance. Members convince themselves they’re doing the right thing, viewing themselves like pre-Civil War plantation owners who believed they had a duty to “civilize” and care for the “heathens.” Through this self-justifying ideology, the corporatocracy creates conditions where purchasing things becomes a civic duty and pillaging the earth is considered good for the economy, all while those at the top of the pyramid appear to benefit materially in the short term.
4. How do EHMs use inflated economic growth projections and development loans to trap countries in debt?
EHMs produce studies with highly optimistic economic forecasts that justify huge international loans for developing countries, far larger than actually needed. These projections intentionally overestimate economic growth, future revenues from projects, and the country’s ability to repay, using sophisticated econometric models that can be manipulated to show whatever results are desired. The loans are conditional on hiring U.S. engineering and construction companies like Bechtel and Halliburton, ensuring most of the money never actually leaves the United States but simply transfers from banking offices in Washington to engineering offices in New York, Houston, or San Francisco. Countries are left with massive infrastructure projects they cannot afford to maintain and debts they cannot possibly repay.
When the inevitable default occurs, the creditors demand their “pound of flesh” - control over United Nations votes, military bases, access to precious resources like oil, or structural adjustment policies that benefit foreign corporations. The country essentially becomes a servant to its creditors, forced to slash social services, privatize public utilities, and orient its economy toward serving international corporate interests rather than its own people. This creates a form of economic slavery more effective than traditional colonialism because the country maintains the illusion of independence while being completely controlled through debt. The pattern has been repeated in countries across Asia, Africa, and Latin America, adding nation after nation to what has become a global empire built on financial manipulation rather than military conquest.
5. What was Claudine Martin’s role in training Perkins, and what methods did she use?
Claudine Martin was a special consultant who trained Perkins in the art of being an Economic Hit Man during his first weeks at MAIN. She used a combination of seduction, psychological manipulation, and explicit instruction about his future role, though she never used the term “Economic Hit Man” directly. Her approach alternated between acting as a teacher, confessor, and seductress, using personal intimacy to create psychological dependence while instructing him in economic manipulation. She taught him that his job would be to encourage world leaders to become part of a vast network promoting U.S. commercial interests, and that he must justify huge loans that would funnel money back to MAIN and other U.S. companies through massive engineering and construction projects.
Claudine made it crystal clear that once Perkins accepted this role, he would be in for life - there was no quitting the EHM network. She explained that his forecasts and economic projections must always err on the side of optimism, inflating predicted economic growth to justify larger loans that countries could never repay. Through a carefully orchestrated training program that mixed professional instruction with personal manipulation, she prepared him psychologically for a career built on deception. Her methods were so effective that even years later, Perkins reflected on how she had essentially created him as an EHM, just as he would later create others, establishing a self-perpetuating system where each generation of economic hit men trains the next without fully explaining the moral implications of their work.
6. How does the Saudi Arabian Money-laundering Affair represent a new model of economic control?
The Saudi Arabian deal negotiated in the 1970s created a revolutionary model for economic imperialism that went beyond simple debt entrapment. Following the 1973 oil embargo, Washington offered the House of Saud a striking arrangement: Saudi Arabia would guarantee to supply the United States with oil and use its influence to maintain acceptable prices, while investing billions of petrodollars in U.S. government securities. The interest from these investments would be used by the U.S. Department of the Treasury to hire American firms to westernize and industrialize Saudi Arabia, creating an unprecedented money-laundering system that cemented Saudi dependence on the United States while enriching American corporations.
In exchange for this arrangement, the United States guaranteed military protection for the Saudi royal family, ensuring they would continue to rule despite growing opposition from their own people. This deal differed fundamentally from other EHM operations because Saudi Arabia’s vast oil wealth meant they could actually pay for their development projects rather than going into debt. The brilliance of the system lay in creating dependence through modernization itself - the Saudis became addicted to Western technology, military equipment, and construction expertise, while their investment in U.S. securities gave America tremendous leverage. This model would later be attempted in Iraq, but when Saddam Hussein refused to participate, it ultimately led to military invasion, demonstrating that the Saudi arrangement had become the new standard for controlling oil-rich nations.
7. What is the relationship between EHMs and “jackals,” and when do jackals become involved?
Jackals are the CIA-sanctioned assassins who step in when Economic Hit Men fail to bring a country’s leaders into line with U.S. economic and political interests. While EHMs use economic manipulation, fraudulent reports, bribes, and extortion to convince leaders to accept devastating loans and policies, jackals employ violence, orchestrating plane crashes, violent revolutions, or assassinations that appear accidental. The system is designed hierarchically: first, EHMs attempt to seduce, bribe, or economically entrap leaders; if these efforts fail and a leader refuses to play ball, the jackals are unleashed to remove the obstacle through physical elimination or overthrow.
The progression from EHM to jackal represents an escalation from economic to physical warfare, though both serve the same master - the corporatocracy. When leaders like Torrijos and Roldós refused to be corrupted by EHMs and stood firm against policies that would harm their people, they died in mysterious plane crashes that bore all the hallmarks of CIA-orchestrated assassinations. If both EHMs and jackals fail, as eventually happened with Saddam Hussein in Iraq, then the military becomes the last resort, leading to full-scale invasion and occupation. This three-tiered system ensures that one way or another, countries will be brought into the global empire, whether through debt, death, or destruction.
8. How did Omar Torrijos of Panama resist the corporatocracy, and what made him different from other leaders?
Omar Torrijos stood out among world leaders because he genuinely understood the EHM game but refused to play it for personal enrichment, instead using his position to benefit Panama’s poor and defend Latin American sovereignty. Unlike many leaders who succumbed to bribes or intimidation, Torrijos openly acknowledged the attempts to corrupt him, even joking with Perkins about the EHM role while making it clear he would not sacrifice his people’s interests for personal gain. He successfully negotiated the return of the Panama Canal from U.S. control, championed the rights of the poor and oppressed throughout Latin America, opened Panama to refugees across the political spectrum, and actively explored building a new sea-level canal with Japanese financing that would cut out Bechtel and other U.S. corporations.
Torrijos possessed a rare combination of charisma, integrity, and strategic intelligence that allowed him to navigate between superpowers while maintaining his independence. He understood that his stance made him a target, openly predicting that the CIA would have to kill him since political assassination wouldn’t work with Panama’s military loyal to him. His approach was not ideologically rigid - he sought practical solutions that would benefit his people while maintaining relationships with both capitalist and socialist nations. This pragmatic nationalism, combined with his personal incorruptibility and genuine care for the poor, made him incredibly dangerous to the corporatocracy because he offered a viable alternative model for developing nations that prioritized domestic welfare over foreign corporate profits.
9. What were the circumstances surrounding the deaths of Jaime Roldós and Omar Torrijos in 1981?
Jaime Roldós, Ecuador’s first democratically elected president in modern times, died in a mysterious plane crash on May 24, 1981, just weeks after presenting revolutionary legislation that would reform Ecuador’s relationship with oil companies. Eyewitnesses claimed Roldós had been forewarned about an assassination attempt and had taken precautions including traveling in two airplanes, but at the last moment was convinced by a security officer to board what turned out to be the doomed aircraft. His death came shortly after he had expelled the Summer Institute of Linguistics (accused of colluding with oil companies), denounced the conspiracy between politics and oil, and warned all foreign interests that they would be forced to leave Ecuador unless they implemented plans to help the people. The crash occurred at a critical moment when his new hydrocarbons law threatened to reshape how developing nations dealt with international oil companies.
Two months later, on July 31, 1981, Omar Torrijos died in another plane crash in Panama, fulfilling his own prophetic nightmare about dropping from the sky in a gigantic fireball. Torrijos had been a thorn in Reagan’s side, refusing to renegotiate the Canal Treaty, expelling the Summer Institute of Linguistics, and exploring a Japanese-financed alternative canal that would exclude U.S. corporations. Both deaths bore the hallmarks of CIA-orchestrated assassinations, occurring within months of Reagan taking office and sending a clear message that the jackals were back in operation. Graham Greene’s bodyguard in Panama, Sergeant Chuchu, stated unequivocally that there was a bomb in Torrijos’s plane, while newspapers throughout Latin America blazed with headlines of “CIA Assassination!” These deaths marked the violent end of two leaders who had dared to stand against the corporatocracy and represented hope for a different development model in Latin America.
10. How does the system ensure that U.S. corporations benefit from foreign aid and development loans?
The foreign aid system is designed with an elegant circularity that ensures money never truly leaves the United States while creating the illusion of assistance to developing nations. When the World Bank, USAID, or other “aid” organizations approve loans for a country, the funds come with strict conditions requiring that U.S. engineering and construction companies like Bechtel, Halliburton, Stone & Webster, and Brown & Root receive the contracts for infrastructure projects. The money simply transfers from banking offices in Washington to corporate offices in New York, Houston, or San Francisco, while the recipient country receives airports, power plants, and industrial parks it often doesn’t need and cannot maintain. These projects are specifically designed to benefit the wealthy elite and foreign corporations operating in the country rather than the poor majority who are supposedly being helped.
The recipient country, however, must repay the entire loan with interest, even though the money primarily enriched U.S. corporations and only a small fraction benefited local elites who facilitated the deals. When countries cannot repay these loans - which is the intended outcome - they become subject to structural adjustment programs that force them to slash social services, sell national resources to foreign corporations at bargain prices, and support U.S. positions in international forums. This creates a self-reinforcing cycle where each new loan to “help” pay off previous debts only deepens the country’s servitude while generating more profits for U.S. corporations. The genius of this system lies in its ability to masquerade exploitation as assistance, making corporate enrichment appear philanthropic while systematically transferring wealth from the world’s poorest to the richest.
11. What role did Robert McNamara play in transforming the World Bank into an instrument of empire?
Robert McNamara’s career trajectory from Ford Motor Company president to Secretary of Defense to World Bank president epitomized the corporatocracy and fundamentally transformed the World Bank’s role in global affairs. His background in using mathematical models and statistical approaches to justify decisions in Vietnam translated directly to his approach at the World Bank, where he pioneered the use of econometric models to justify massive loans that would entrap developing nations. McNamara’s greatest and most sinister contribution was jockeying the World Bank into becoming an agent of global empire on a scale never before witnessed, turning what had been created to reconstruct war-torn Europe into a tool for economic colonization of the developing world.
Under McNamara’s leadership, the World Bank became the primary vehicle for implementing the EHM strategy on a global scale, funding projects that appeared to promote development but actually created dependency and debt. His advocacy of “aggressive leadership” in both government and corporate sectors helped create a new breed of managers who saw their role as expanding American economic influence worldwide. McNamara set the precedent for the fluid movement between corporations, government, and international financial institutions that defines the corporatocracy, demonstrating that the same individual could serve military-industrial interests, corporate profits, and seemingly humanitarian development goals without acknowledging any contradiction. His legacy was a World Bank that, despite its stated mission of alleviating poverty, became instrumental in creating the conditions where the income ratio between the world’s richest and poorest countries widened from 30 to 1 to 74 to 1.
12. How did the United Fruit Company’s actions in Guatemala exemplify corporate imperialism?
United Fruit Company’s manipulation of Guatemala in the 1950s provided the template for corporate control of entire nations that EHMs would later refine. When democratically elected President Jacobo Arbenz implemented land reforms in a country where less than 3 percent of the population owned 70 percent of the land, United Fruit launched a massive public relations campaign in the United States to paint Arbenz as a Communist threat. The company leveraged its connections in Washington to convince the American public and Congress that Guatemala had become a Soviet satellite, even though Arbenz was simply trying to help his people escape starvation through modest reforms. This propaganda campaign succeeded so thoroughly that the CIA orchestrated a coup in 1954, with American pilots bombing Guatemala City to install Colonel Carlos Castillo Armas as a ruthless dictator.
The new government immediately reversed all land reforms, eliminated taxes on foreign investors’ profits, abolished the secret ballot, and jailed thousands of critics, creating a reign of terror that would plague Guatemala for decades. United Fruit’s “gratitude” for this service was ensured through a government that existed solely to protect corporate interests, demonstrating how a single company could effectively own a country. This model proved that corporations could use the U.S. government as an enforcement mechanism for their interests, setting a precedent where legitimate democratic governments could be overthrown simply for threatening corporate profits. The Guatemala operation showed future EHMs that the combination of economic pressure, propaganda, and when necessary, military force could transform sovereign nations into corporate fiefdoms while maintaining the fiction of independence.
13. What is petrodollar recycling and how does it maintain U.S. economic hegemony?
Petrodollar recycling emerged from the Saudi Arabian money-laundering arrangement as a mechanism that forces oil-importing nations to maintain large reserves of U.S. dollars, thereby supporting American currency and economic dominance. When OPEC nations, led by Saudi Arabia, agreed to price oil exclusively in dollars and invest their surplus revenues in U.S. Treasury securities and banks, they created a system where every country needing oil must first acquire dollars. This arrangement transformed the dollar from merely a national currency into the mandatory medium for the world’s most critical commodity, giving the United States unprecedented power to print money without triggering hyperinflation because global demand for dollars remains artificially high.
The recycling occurs when petrodollars return to the U.S. through weapons purchases, construction contracts, and investments in Treasury bonds, which are then used to finance American deficit spending and military adventures. This creates a circular flow where oil profits fund the very military apparatus that ensures continued access to oil, while developing nations must export real goods and services to acquire the dollars needed to buy petroleum. The system effectively taxes the entire world to support American consumption and militarism, as countries must hold vast dollar reserves that the U.S. can devalue at will through monetary policy. Any threat to this system, such as Saddam Hussein’s attempt to sell Iraqi oil for euros, is met with extreme force, demonstrating that petrodollar recycling has become so fundamental to American power that challenges to it trigger military intervention.
14. How do infrastructure projects serve as mechanisms for economic and political control?
Infrastructure projects designed by EHMs serve multiple control functions beyond their stated purpose of promoting development and modernization. These projects - power plants, highways, ports, telecommunications networks, and industrial parks - are intentionally designed to facilitate foreign corporate exploitation of natural resources rather than serve local populations. A highway built with development loans might connect a mine or oil field to a port for export rather than linking rural communities to schools and hospitals, while power plants provide electricity primarily to industrial zones housing foreign factories rather than rural villages. The infrastructure becomes a physical manifestation of economic colonization, literally paving the way for resource extraction while leaving the host country with maintenance costs it cannot afford.
Beyond enabling exploitation, these projects create technological dependency that ensures continued control long after construction ends. Countries must rely on foreign expertise, spare parts, and technology to maintain and operate sophisticated infrastructure, creating permanent relationships with corporations from creditor nations. When electrical grids, water systems, or telecommunications networks are built to U.S. specifications using proprietary technology, the country becomes locked into purchasing services and equipment from American companies indefinitely. The debt incurred for these projects provides political leverage, as creditors can threaten to cut off parts, expertise, or refinancing unless the government complies with political demands. This transforms infrastructure from a tool of development into chains of dependency, where each new project deepens servitude rather than promoting genuine independence.
15. What was the Flowering Desert project in Iran and what did it reveal about development schemes?
The Flowering Desert project represented a massive agricultural development scheme in Iran’s desert regions, ostensibly designed to transform barren land into productive farmland but actually serving to enrich engineering companies and strengthen the Shah’s control. The project involved elaborate irrigation systems, modern agricultural technology, and the creation of entire new communities in previously uninhabitable areas, requiring billions in contracts for foreign firms like MAIN. While presented as a visionary transformation that would make Iran food self-sufficient and provide land for its growing population, the project was economically unfeasible from the start, designed more to generate contracts and create the appearance of modernization than to actually benefit Iranians. The scale and complexity ensured that only foreign companies could implement it, while the locations chosen were often politically motivated to relocate potentially troublesome populations.
What the Flowering Desert revealed was how development projects could be weaponized for social control while enriching foreign contractors. By relocating traditional communities to new desert settlements dependent on complex irrigation systems, the Shah could break up tribal loyalties and create populations entirely dependent on the government for survival. The project’s failure was predictable and perhaps intentional - it justified continued foreign involvement, created permanent dependency on imported technology and expertise, and left Iran with massive debts for infrastructure that never delivered promised benefits. The Flowering Desert exemplified how grandiose development schemes serve multiple purposes for the corporatocracy: they generate profits for engineering firms, create technological dependency, enable social engineering, and burden countries with debt, all while maintaining the fiction of benevolent assistance for developing nations.
16. How did Manuel Noriega’s relationship with the CIA differ from Torrijos’s stance?
Manuel Noriega began as a CIA asset, heading Panama’s G-2 military intelligence unit that served as the national liaison with U.S. intelligence, developing such a close relationship with CIA Director William Casey that he believed himself untouchable. Unlike Torrijos, who maintained independence while navigating between superpowers, Noriega actively collaborated with the CIA in operations throughout Latin America, helping infiltrate drug cartels and serving as a messenger between Washington and various regional actors. His relationship with Casey was so intimate that when Casey arrived in Panama City, he would ask “Where’s my boy? Where’s Noriega?” and they would meet privately at Casey’s house when Noriega visited Washington. This insider status convinced Noriega that the CIA would protect him regardless of his actions, leading him to engage in drug trafficking and corruption while believing his usefulness to U.S. intelligence made him immune to consequences.
However, Noriega critically misunderstood that his value to the CIA did not extend to protecting Panama’s sovereignty or continuing Torrijos’s nationalist policies. When he refused to renegotiate the Canal Treaty and rejected extending the School of the Americas lease, maintaining Torrijos’s position on these fundamental issues, he crossed lines that his CIA connections couldn’t protect him from crossing. Unlike Torrijos’s principled nationalism that came from genuine conviction, Noriega’s resistance seemed more about preserving his own power and profit streams from controlling the canal. His corruption and drug dealing, which the U.S. had previously overlooked, suddenly became justifications for invasion once he opposed American strategic interests. The difference revealed a crucial truth: the corporatocracy would tolerate massive corruption as long as leaders served its interests, but would destroy even its own assets when they threatened core imperial objectives.
17. Why did the U.S. invade Panama in 1989 rather than use covert methods?
The invasion of Panama represented a deliberate return to overt military force as a demonstration of American power under George H.W. Bush, who needed to overcome his “wimp factor” image and establish a new post-Cold War doctrine of unrestrained intervention. Despite Noriega being surrounded by U.S.-trained bodyguards who could have been bribed or turned, and despite the CIA’s previous success in eliminating leaders through “accidental” plane crashes, the administration chose massive military action involving 27,000 troops and the bombing of Panama City. This overwhelming force against a country of only two million people sent a clear message to other nations, particularly Iraq, that the United States would not hesitate to use its military might to achieve its objectives, regardless of international law or sovereignty. The invasion marked a policy shift from the subtle economic imperialism of the EHM era back toward the explicit military imperialism of earlier periods.
The operation also served to eliminate the Torrijos legacy completely and install a puppet government that would be favorable to U.S. interests, particularly regarding the canal and military bases. By making Noriega the sole justification for invasion - portraying him as a drug-dealing monster despite his long CIA collaboration - the administration could destroy Panama’s independence movement while appearing to liberate its people. The invasion demonstrated that when economic hitmen and jackals could not achieve complete capitulation, the military would finish the job, setting a precedent for future interventions in Iraq and elsewhere. Most disturbingly, Noriega became the only foreign leader in 225 years of American history to be captured, brought to the United States, and tried for violations of U.S. law committed on his own sovereign territory, establishing a new level of imperial prerogative that claimed jurisdiction over any leader anywhere who opposed American interests.
18. How does the corporatocracy use the concept of “economic growth” to justify exploitation?
The corporatocracy perpetuates a fundamental deception that all economic growth benefits humanity and that greater growth automatically means more widespread benefits, when in reality growth often enriches only the elite while impoverishing the majority. This gospel of growth measures success through GDP increases that count every monetary transaction as positive, whether it’s building hospitals or bombs, cleaning up pollution or creating it. When a country’s GDP rises because foreign corporations extract its resources, this registers as growth even though the profits flow overseas and local environments are destroyed. The system celebrates a nation’s rising economic indicators even when wealth concentrates in fewer hands, unemployment increases, and the majority slides deeper into poverty, because aggregate numbers mask the distribution of benefits and costs.
Through this ideological framework, devastating exploitation becomes reframed as development assistance and economic progress. When subsistence farmers are driven from their land to work in sweatshops producing goods for export, this transformation from self-sufficiency to wage slavery registers as economic growth. When public utilities are privatized and prices increase beyond what the poor can afford, the higher revenues count as economic expansion even as people lose access to water and electricity. The corporatocracy ensures that universities, media, and international organizations promote this fallacious concept, training economists and policy makers to genuinely believe that pursuing higher GDP justifies any social or environmental cost. This creates a self-reinforcing system where those who excel at stoking the fires of economic growth are rewarded with wealth and power, while those who question whether growth actually improves human welfare are marginalized as naive or anti-development.
19. What role does the School of the Americas play in maintaining imperial control?
The School of the Americas served as a critical institution for training Latin American military officers in techniques of repression, torture, and counterinsurgency that would be used to suppress popular movements and maintain governments friendly to U.S. corporate interests. Located in Panama until required to close under the Torrijos-Carter treaty, the school trained generations of military leaders in methods that went far beyond conventional warfare to include interrogation techniques, psychological operations, and strategies for controlling civilian populations. Its graduates became notorious throughout Latin America for human rights violations, with alumni including many of the region’s most brutal dictators and death squad leaders who systematically murdered union organizers, indigenous leaders, priests, and anyone else who challenged the economic order. The school essentially mass-produced the enforcement arm of economic imperialism, creating military forces that would protect foreign corporate investments and eliminate local resistance.
The institution’s importance to maintaining imperial control became clear when its closure was one of the provisions in the Panama Canal Treaty that most enraged U.S. military chiefs and contributed to the targeting of Torrijos. Rather than truly close, the school simply relocated to Fort Benning, Georgia, and rebranded itself as the Western Hemisphere Institute for Security Cooperation, continuing its mission under a less inflammatory name. The persistence of this institution despite widespread documentation of its graduates’ atrocities demonstrates its essential function in the imperial system: creating military forces that will suppress their own populations to maintain conditions favorable to foreign exploitation. By training officers in a controlled environment where they develop relationships with U.S. military and intelligence personnel, the school creates networks of influence that ensure Latin American militaries serve as extensions of U.S. power, ready to overthrow democratic governments or massacre civilians when economic interests are threatened.
20. How did Venezuela under Hugo Chávez represent a new challenge to the EHM system?
Hugo Chávez emerged as a leader who not only understood and openly exposed the EHM system but also possessed the oil resources and popular support to effectively resist it, making him uniquely dangerous to the corporatocracy. Unlike leaders who quietly opposed the system or tried to work around it, Chávez publicly denounced economic imperialism, literacy used oil revenues to fund social programs for the poor instead of enriching foreign corporations, and actively encouraged other Latin American nations to resist Washington’s economic dominance. His Bolivarian Revolution explicitly aimed to create an alternative model where natural resources would benefit the population rather than foreign shareholders, and he used Venezuela’s position as the world’s fifth-largest oil producer to challenge petrodollar hegemony by proposing oil sales in currencies other than dollars. His success in improving literacy, healthcare, and poverty rates through oil-funded missions demonstrated that resource wealth could serve domestic development rather than foreign exploitation.
The response to Chávez followed the classic pattern but with mixed results that revealed both the strengths and limitations of modern imperial methods. When economic hit men failed to co-opt him and he survived a 2002 coup attempt that bore CIA fingerprints - with the U.S. immediately recognizing the coup government before it collapsed - the jackals seemed unable to eliminate him as they had Torrijos and Roldós. The administration then attempted the Kermit Roosevelt model, supporting strikes at the state oil company designed to create economic chaos and popular uprising, but Chávez’s support among the poor majority proved too strong. His survival demonstrated that the EHM system could be successfully resisted by leaders who combined resource wealth, popular support, and the willingness to openly challenge the corporatocracy, though the constant pressure and attempted destabilization showed that such resistance required extraordinary vigilance and came at enormous cost to the nation’s economy and stability.
21. What is the connection between September 11, 2001 and the activities of EHMs?
The September 11 attacks emerged from a world shaped by decades of EHM activities that created massive inequality, destroyed traditional cultures, and fostered deep resentment against American imperialism throughout the developing world. Osama bin Laden himself had been empowered by the same system, receiving CIA training and weapons to fight the Soviets in Afghanistan, demonstrating how the tools of empire could turn against their creators. The attacks represented what Perkins calls “blowback” from policies that had impoverished nations, propped up brutal dictators, and subordinated entire populations to serve American corporate interests. The twenty-four thousand people who die daily from hunger and poverty created by the economic system EHMs enforce provided a breeding ground for extremism, as desperate people saw violence as the only way to strike back at an empire that seemed invulnerable to conventional resistance.
Rather than prompting reflection on the policies that created such hatred, September 11 became a justification for accelerating imperial expansion through military means. The attacks provided cover for invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq that had more to do with controlling resources and demonstrating American power than fighting terrorism. The tragedy convinced Perkins to finally write his confession, realizing that the EHM system had created conditions where such attacks were inevitable, and that without fundamental change, the cycle of exploitation and retaliation would continue escalating. He understood that the same corporate interests that profited from economic imperialism would now profit from the “war on terror,” with companies like Halliburton and Bechtel receiving billions in no-bid contracts to rebuild what American bombs destroyed, creating a perpetual war economy that enriched the corporatocracy while multiplying the enemies it claimed to fight.
22. How do modern corporations continue the EHM practices without official government designation?
Today’s corporate executives function as economic hit men without needing the formal structure or government connections that defined the original EHM system, having internalized and institutionalized the practices of economic exploitation. Modern EHMs walk the corridors of Monsanto, General Electric, Nike, Wal-Mart, and nearly every major corporation, pursuing strategies of market domination, resource extraction, and labor exploitation without requiring CIA briefings or NSA profiles. These corporate officers convince developing nations to accept trade agreements that destroy local industries, pressure governments to privatize public services, and create conditions where countries compete to offer the lowest wages and weakest environmental protections. They no longer need consulting firms as cover because the entire system has been normalized - exploitation disguised as free trade, conquest presented as development, and corporate colonization celebrated as globalization.
The evolution from government-directed EHMs to corporate-initiated economic imperialism represents the full maturation of the corporatocracy, where the system has become self-perpetuating and self-expanding. Business schools train future executives in the same mathematical models and economic theories that Perkins used to justify fraudulent projections, teaching them to genuinely believe that maximizing shareholder value justifies any social or environmental destruction. International institutions like the WTO and trade agreements like NAFTA have codified EHM practices into law, making it illegal for countries to protect themselves from corporate predation. The modern system is more insidious because it operates openly under the guise of legitimate business, with corporate executives convincing themselves they’re bringing progress and opportunity even as they create sweatshops and environmental disasters. This diffusion of EHM practices throughout the corporate world means the empire no longer needs designated hit men - every MBA graduate potentially serves the same function.
23. What is the relationship between resource extraction and indigenous displacement in Ecuador?
The oil extraction in Ecuador’s Amazon region exemplifies how resource exploitation systematically destroys indigenous cultures, with companies like Texaco leaving behind a legacy of environmental devastation and cultural genocide. When oil operations move into rainforest areas, they don’t just extract petroleum - they build roads that open previously inaccessible regions to colonization, introduce diseases that indigenous peoples have no immunity against, and contaminate the rivers and lands that tribes have depended on for millennia. The Huaorani, Shuar, Achuar, and other tribes face not just the loss of their territories but the complete destruction of their way of life, as oil pollution makes traditional hunting and fishing impossible while the cash economy destroys traditional social structures. Companies often work with missionary groups like the Summer Institute of Linguistics, which pacifies indigenous resistance by converting tribes to Christianity and convincing them to accept “development” that ultimately serves corporate interests.
The indigenous peoples of Ecuador understand what most of the world refuses to acknowledge: this is a war for survival where oil companies commit slow-motion genocide while maintaining plausible deniability about their intentions. Tribes that have lived sustainably in the rainforest for thousands of years are portrayed as obstacles to progress, their sophisticated knowledge of forest ecosystems dismissed as primitive, and their resistance to oil extraction labeled as terrorism. When indigenous peoples fight back, defending their lands from invasion, they face military and paramilitary forces often trained by the same U.S. institutions that protect corporate interests throughout Latin America. The pattern reveals how resource extraction requires not just environmental destruction but cultural extermination, as indigenous peoples who view land as sacred rather than commercial pose an ideological threat to the entire system of corporate exploitation that cannot be tolerated.
24. How does the system create what Perkins calls “modern day slavery” or “economic feudalism”?
The global economic system has created a form of servitude more extensive and in some ways more insidious than historical slavery because it maintains the pretense of freedom while ensuring perpetual bondage through debt and economic manipulation. Unlike traditional slavery’s explicit ownership, modern economic slavery operates through wage labor that pays just enough for survival but never enough for genuine independence, trapping workers in cycles where they must constantly work just to maintain subsistence. Entire nations function as slave states, their populations laboring in sweatshops and plantations to produce goods for wealthy countries, while their own governments, captured through debt and corruption, enforce conditions that benefit foreign corporations rather than their own citizens. The system socializes people to believe they’re better off than those even more impoverished, creating hierarchies of exploitation where each level oppresses those below while serving those above.
This economic feudalism extends beyond developing nations to create debt slavery in wealthy countries as well, where citizens become trapped in mortgages, student loans, and consumer credit that require perpetual labor to service. The brilliance of this system lies in its ability to make slaves police themselves, as people internalize values that equate consumption with success and view their exploitation as personal failure rather than systemic oppression. Just as medieval serfs were tied to land they couldn’t own, modern workers are tied to jobs they cannot leave because they need health insurance, to homes they spend decades paying for, and to an economic system where survival depends on continuous participation in their own exploitation. The corporatocracy has discovered that debt is more effective than chains, that economic coercion generates more stable control than physical force, and that slaves who believe themselves free will work harder and resist less than those who recognize their bondage.
25. What role does debt play in controlling both nations and individuals within the global empire?
Debt functions as the primary weapon of control in the modern global empire, more powerful than armies because it appears voluntary and legitimate while creating inescapable servitude. For nations, debt transforms sovereignty into fiction, as countries must orient their entire economies toward generating foreign currency to service loans, forcing them to export raw materials rather than develop domestic industries, slash social spending to make payments, and accept structural adjustments that benefit foreign corporations. The beauty of debt as a control mechanism is that it compounds itself - each loan taken to pay previous debts deepens dependence, while the conditions attached to refinancing progressively strip away economic independence until countries exist solely to service foreign creditors. Default is not an option, as international financial institutions can freeze countries out of global trade, seize assets, and create economic chaos that brings down governments.
At the individual level, debt has become so normalized that most people in developed countries spend their entire lives servicing various forms of indebtedness, from student loans that determine career choices to mortgages that chain workers to specific locations and jobs. The system deliberately encourages debt accumulation through easy credit and consumerist culture, creating populations who must continue working regardless of conditions because missing payments means losing everything. This personal debt makes workers compliant, as they cannot risk unemployment by organizing for better conditions or challenging corporate power. The genius of debt-based control is that it makes rebellion almost impossible - nations cannot simply declare independence from the global financial system without facing economic collapse, and individuals cannot escape the debt cycle without accepting marginalization from society. By making debt seem like opportunity and credit appear as wealth, the corporatocracy has created a prison where the inmates hand themselves the keys to their own cells.
26. How did Perkins’s alternative energy company (IPS) benefit from his EHM connections?
Independent Power Systems (IPS), the alternative energy company Perkins founded in 1980, succeeded largely through the insider knowledge, connections, and subtle threats that came from his EHM background. While ostensibly committed to environmental sustainability and alternative energy, IPS benefited from Perkins’s understanding of how to navigate the corridors of power, his relationships with decision-makers in multiple countries, and most importantly, the system’s interest in keeping him quiet about his EHM activities. His success came not purely from business acumen but from “coincidences” and favors from people in powerful positions who had a vested interest in his prosperity and silence. The company thrived in an industry where most competitors failed, suggesting that invisible hands were guiding its success as a form of ongoing payment for Perkins’s discretion.
The ultimate proof of this corrupt relationship came when Perkins sold IPS in 1990 under pressure from Ashland Oil Company, which acquired the alternative energy company in what seemed like a contradictory purchase unless viewed as a buyout to maintain control. After the sale, Perkins received consulting payments from Stone & Webster Engineering Corporation (SWEC) that required little actual work - essentially bribes for continued silence about the EHM system. SWEC paid him an executive-level salary just to remain on call, flying him occasionally to Boston or Rio for meetings that seemed more about reminding him of his obligations than utilizing his expertise. This pattern revealed how the corporatocracy maintains control over former EHMs through a combination of rewards for compliance and implicit threats for disclosure, ensuring that even those who leave the system formally remain bound to it through financial dependencies and the knowledge that their prosperity depends on their silence.
27. What is the significance of the income inequality ratio changing from 30:1 to 74:1 between 1960 and 1995?
The dramatic widening of global income inequality from a 30:1 ratio between the world’s richest and poorest fifths in 1960 to 74:1 by 1995 provides empirical proof that the development model promoted by EHMs actually increases rather than reduces poverty. This statistical reality demolishes the fundamental justification for the entire system of international aid, structural adjustment, and development loans that supposedly exist to help poor nations develop. During the exact period when the World Bank, IMF, and development agencies claimed to be reducing poverty through economic growth, the gap between rich and poor nations more than doubled, demonstrating that the system functions to extract wealth rather than create it. The numbers reveal that despite trillions in “aid” and development projects, the poorest countries have become relatively poorer while resources and wealth flow increasingly to already wealthy nations.
This staggering increase in inequality represents millions of real human tragedies - communities destroyed for resource extraction, families torn apart by economic migration, children dying from preventable diseases while pharmaceutical companies protect patents. The ratio demonstrates that the entire development paradigm is not merely ineffective but actively harmful, creating conditions where the poor subsidize the wealthy through resource extraction, debt payments, and unfair trade relationships. Yet international institutions continue to promote the same policies that created this inequality, proving that widening the gap is not an unfortunate side effect but the actual goal of the system. The corporatocracy needs desperate populations willing to work for starvation wages and governments desperate enough to sell resources cheaply, making inequality not a problem to be solved but a condition to be maintained and deepened.
28. How does media ownership by corporations help perpetuate the corporatocracy’s agenda?
Corporate control of media ensures that the version of reality presented to the public supports the corporatocracy’s interests, with NBC owned by General Electric, ABC by Disney, CBS by Viacom, and CNN part of the AOL Time Warner conglomerate. These corporations have direct financial interests in military contracts, international development projects, and the global economic system that EHMs help maintain, creating massive conflicts of interest in their news coverage. The officers and directors controlling these communications outlets understand their role in perpetuating and strengthening the system they’ve inherited, carefully managing what information reaches the public and how it’s framed. Stories about successful resistance to corporate power rarely receive coverage, while military interventions are presented as humanitarian missions and corporate exploitation gets reframed as bringing opportunity to developing nations.
Beyond simple censorship, corporate media manufactures consent by training audiences to internalize corporatocracy values through endless promotion of consumerism, individualism over collective action, and the equation of corporate success with national interest. The constant message that purchasing things is patriotic duty, that economic growth equals progress regardless of distribution, and that American military interventions bring democracy rather than corporate control shapes public consciousness more effectively than any propaganda ministry. When journalists do attempt real investigation, they face pressure from advertisers, editors with corporate loyalties, and the knowledge that challenging the system means career suicide. This media control explains how the corporatocracy maintains public support for policies that harm the majority - by ensuring that alternative narratives never reach mass audiences and that those who question the system appear as extremists rather than truth-tellers.
29. What personal crisis of conscience led Perkins to finally write his confession?
September 11, 2001 shattered Perkins’s ability to continue rationalizing his role in creating the conditions that led to such devastating violence, forcing him to confront how the EHM system had generated the hatred that motivated the attacks. Standing at Ground Zero and encountering an old Afghan man who had lost his legs to a U.S. missile while tending his sheep, Perkins experienced a profound moment of recognition that he had been a soldier in an economic war that created millions of casualties. The coincidence of ending up at the site of the attacks while confronting a victim of American imperialism felt like a message he could no longer ignore. The twenty-four thousand people dying daily from hunger and poverty caused by the system he had helped create weighed on him, making his comfortable retirement feel like blood money for mass murder.
The combination of his daughter Jessica growing up in the world he had helped create, the recurring attempts to write his story over twenty years, and the realization that the post-9/11 world would see an acceleration rather than a reconsideration of imperial policies finally broke through his fear. Despite multiple bribes and threats that had previously silenced him, including lucrative consulting contracts that required no real work, he decided that confession was the only path to redemption. The book became not just a personal unburdening but an urgent warning, as he recognized that the American empire had reached a critical juncture where it would either transform or collapse catastrophically. His decision reflected a understanding that remaining silent made him complicit in every future death, every destroyed culture, and every environmental catastrophe that the EHM system would produce.
30. What specific actions does Perkins suggest readers take to resist and transform the current system?
Perkins emphasizes that awareness must lead to action, urging readers to cut back on oil consumption and resist consumerist culture by reading, exercising, or meditating instead of shopping whenever they feel the urge to purchase unnecessary items. He advocates for supporting organizations that promote sustainability, fair trade, and corporate responsibility while divesting from companies that exploit workers and destroy environments. Most importantly, he insists that readers must spread awareness about the true nature of the corporatocracy, speaking truth to family and friends, questioning media narratives, and teaching others to see through the veneer of corporate propaganda. He encourages people to commit absolutely to shaking themselves and everyone around them awake to the reality of the global empire and its consequences.
The transformation Perkins envisions requires both individual and collective action, starting with personal confession about one’s own participation in and benefit from the exploitative system. He challenges readers to examine how they’ve been socialized into accepting inequality, how their consumption patterns support exploitation, and where they’ve deferred to power rather than standing for justice. Beyond personal change, he calls for supporting political movements that challenge corporate power, creating alternative economic structures based on sustainability rather than growth, and building communities that resist corporatocracy values. The essential message is that the current system is not inevitable - it was created by human choices and can be changed by human actions, but only if enough people stop accepting exploitation as normal and commit themselves to creating an economy that serves life rather than destroying it for profit.
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“build an economy that serves life rather than destroying it for profit.” I’m all for it. I read this book in 2015 and it was the beginning of the realization that everything I thought I knew was a lie. I’m truly grateful to Mr. Perkins for putting this out in the world despite the risk to himself.
Surprise? Hardly. Thieves run the world because we let mind-parasites write the rules and call it “development.” Name the con, cut the leash (debt, oil, consent), and the castle collapses. Wolves don’t beg robbers for mercy—they stop feeding them. —RIB 🐺