Blackrock and Behaviorism

Posted by Dobrien 10 months, 1 week ago to Education
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Behaviorism is the key concept behind Dr. John Money’s theories on creating trangender children. His failed experiment with twin boys led to their eventual suicides. Regardless, one Wall St. luminary not only believes in behaviorism, but is happy to force it upon people: (00:10). https://youtu.be/kIBlha7LF7s
Larry Fink is no slouch. The company he heads up, BlackRock, is one of the largest asset management companies in the world:
With over $8 trillion to invest, every publicly traded corporation wants BlackRock to invest in their company. Generally speaking, if your company ends up in one of the major stock market indices, BlackRock will start adding your company’s shares to their portfolio, making you part of their huge Exchange Traded Fund (ETF) network.

Once you are in, passive investors from around the world pour money into your corporation via the ETF market. You now have the ability to raise capital, and your share price will be buffered by trillions of dollars of pension fund capital.

If you are forced out of the index, BlackRock, and other asset managers like Vanguard, will be forced to sell your shares at whatever price they can get. Your company’s share price will not only collapse, but you will no longer be able to raise capital for expansion. The index is like a big club, and we, most certainly, ain’t in it!

When Larry Fink declared his intention to force behaviors, he was not talking about individuals, but the corporations within the BlackRock portfolio, who employ hundreds of millions of people around the world.
It is important to consider Larry Fink’s declaration in the context of who he is threatening to “force behavior” upon. It is not individuals or families with retirement portfolios, or the over-paid pension fund managers who blindly allocate capital to one of BlackRock’s ETFs. He is talking to corporations who are addicted to the easy-money provided by Wall St.

The recent debacle with Dylan Mulvaney and Anheuser-Busch highlights that corporate executives are clamouring to be a part of the exclusive BlackRock club. Share markets rise and fall, and corporate jobs come and go, but if you are kicked out of the BlackRock club of “forced behavior”, your company and career will be relegated to the dustbin of history.

Out of weakness and fear, corporate executives worldwide are operating in lockstep to promote an ideology that originates from 19th Century Prussia. Corporations are no longer behaving as independent free-market enterprises, but instead openly colluding to provide the same product; LGBT everything.

Hidden in plain sight, are we witness to the biggest monopoly in free-market capitalist history?


All Comments

  • Posted by $ 25n56il4 10 months, 1 week ago
    If Blackrock is so smart and wants representation from every underserved group, how many Seniors serve on their Board? And by Seniors I mean over 80! N
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  • Posted by 10 months, 1 week ago in reply to this comment.
    statistics that show single parent families have exploded since 1970. So has the percentage of families where both parents must work to financially survive. These busy work schedules leave a gap in a parent’s ability to be available for their children. The government is only too happy to fill in these gaps wherever possible, beginning with story time:
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  • Posted by 10 months, 1 week ago in reply to this comment.
    NIFO. When Larry Fink declared his intention to force behaviors, he was not talking about individuals, but the corporations within the BlackRock portfolio, who employ hundreds of millions of people around the world.
    It is important to consider Larry Fink’s declaration in the context of who he is threatening to “force behavior” upon. It is not individuals or families with retirement portfolios, or the over-paid pension fund managers who blindly allocate capital to one of BlackRock’s ETFs. He is talking to corporations who are addicted to the easy-money provided by Wall St.
    Reply | Permalink  
  • Posted by freedomforall 10 months, 1 week ago in reply to this comment.
    A lot of the malls have been failures for years.
    I'm not a shopper and don't frequent malls.
    When I was forced to kill some time waiting for completion of a manufacturing job just
    before Christmas in 2019 I went to a nearby mall that a few years earlier had been the
    biggest in the state. I was flabbergasted at how most of the small stores had closed
    and only one anchor department store remained. The second largest anchor space
    had been taken by an Asian grocery. The parking lot a few days before Christmas
    was nearly empty.

    The collapse of commercial Real Estate has been coming for a long time.
    It has been overpriced for decades, as has the residential housing market.

    I just checked on houses I owned in Phoenix and LA in the past. They were decent
    homes in decent neighborhoods, not mansions or palaces. I could barely make the
    payments when I owned them 20 to 30 years ago.
    In 2022 the LA property sold for 11 times the price I paid and it's not as nice as
    when I lived there.
    The Phoenix house is 4 times the price I paid.
    (They both have increased at about 3 times the government's reported inflation rate.)
    It's not surprising to me that young people can't afford to buy homes.
    The banksters caused this by creating loans out of thin air and inflating the currency
    conspiring with the fedgov.
    They have destroyed the middle class and the American Dream.
    They should all go bankrupt and live in poverty for their acts of theft.
    Those few guilty of murder, genocide and treason should not live at all.
    NIFO.
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  • Posted by $ 25n56il4 10 months, 1 week ago
    It seems to me Blackrock's only goal is to own the U. S. and they are doing a rather good job at it. N
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  • Posted by mhubb 10 months, 1 week ago in reply to this comment.
    nothing it too big to fail
    watch the banks starting in a few weeks, months
    when the commercial real estate loans come due
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  • Posted by $ allosaur 10 months, 1 week ago in reply to this comment.
    Me an old dino recalls that during the early Sixties being called "a dirty rat fink" was an insult.
    Now I'm contemplating a far more contemporary saying~~"To go Woke is to go broke" as it big time proved out for Anheuser-Bush.
    As for BlackRock~~Tick-tock? Or is it too big to fail?
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  • Posted by j_IR1776wg 10 months, 1 week ago
    There are two kinds of Monopoly's:
    1) Merit based i.e. Rearden's metal and
    2) Government enforced
    Only the latter is evil.
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  • Posted by Lucky 10 months, 1 week ago
    One of the unpleasant chores on the Gulch is seeing the names Black Rock and Larry Fink.

    In this case he is right-
    Behavior(s) will have to change.
    with or without Larry Fink.
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