Words, Power, and Parasites: Rethinking the “Elite”
Beware Your Words, They Have Power! 1 of 4
This is the beginning of a four part series. When most people speak about the “elite,” they unknowingly elevate those who exploit them. Words are not harmless labels — they carry energy.
Calling oppressors elite washes them clean. It bestows honor, stature, and respect they don’t deserve.
The truth? They are parasites.
A parasite is a creature that feeds on a host without giving anything back. A flea on a dog. A leech on a mammal. That’s the more accurate word for those who siphon human energy while giving nothing in return.
And once you stop seeing them as elite, their illusion of power begins to dissolve.
How “Elites” Really Built Their Wealth
Banking & Industrial Families (Rothschilds, Rockefellers, etc.)
They rose to dominance not by “genius,” but by attaching themselves to governments and wars. Rothschild banks financed both sides of European conflicts, profiting off taxpayer debt for generations.
Rockefeller’s Standard Oil empire was broken up for being a monopoly — yet the family restructured and used government-backed corporate law to keep control. Their foundations were given tax-exempt status, meaning they could launder influence under the guise of philanthropy.
Modern Tech Billionaires (Bezos, Musk, etc.)
Amazon built its empire by avoiding taxes, using public infrastructure (roads, postal services, internet) that taxpayers fund, while squeezing small businesses and workers. Amazon has had years where it paid zero federal taxes, despite billions in profits.
Tesla and SpaceX are propped up by billions in government subsidies, grants, and NASA/Department of Defense contracts — direct taxpayer dollars funneled into private hands. Yet the PR machine calls Musk a “self-made genius.”
Bezos’ Amazon Web Services is the backbone of much of the internet — including government servers, yet taxpayers built the original internet infrastructure they profit from. These people are not elite in any sense of the word, so stop the nonsense!
The Hidden Cost of Words
When people use fear or awe while speaking about these parasites, they reinforce the very systems of control they claim to expose. Fear, subservience and the beliefs of the populous nourishes and empowers them. When you name them for what they are, parasites; you strip away the glamour. You see them clearly: beings dependent on your energy, powerless without your belief. They are physical parasites who also serve the spiritual ones.
Next in the Series
In the next blog, we’ll go deeper into a stranger layer of these unseen forces, Egregores: beings created not by ancient gods, but by human thought itself.


