I can understand the driving need of the rich and powerful to acquire more (not condoning it, just acknowledging it is a historical truth), but once they bankrupt the world, establish their new digital currency, kill off a large swathe of the public and reduce our sovereign first world statuses (USA and Europe) to third world h___h____s, just how many human servants do they need? I imagine they plan to go to robots and eugenics for replacement people and parts.
What a world it will be. All of the SJWs will be gone (not needed)...They kinda forgot that by encouraging these movements, they are making themselves and the rest of us all obsolete.
This will cause politicians to pass “owner occupied dwelling” laws on the local and state level.
what is behind blackrock??
With all the posting of this stuff about B & V, I am beginning to think these articles are a plant to further attack free enterprise and capitalism. What we have here is faulty logic, or maybe a case of apples and oranges.
From what I understand, Vanguard is a huge mutual fund outfit (like Charles Schwab, or Fidelity or T.Rowe Price or American Century).
Blackrock is more like an umbrella for lots of partnerships (publicly-traded partnerships in may cases) that operate like mutual funds.
Now a lot of the Blackrock investments are owned by the more wealthy types of investors. But there are hundreds of thousands (maybe millions) of owners of the Vanguard funds. And somehow, saying everyone who shops at WalMart is participating in the rape of the DREAM of homeownership is very alarmist. I mean, I have an elderly neighbor who owns shares in several pharma companies.
To say nasty things about Blackrock and Vanguard - well, that is a red herring. And BTW - Vanguard for sure doesn’t OWN the companies in which its funds invests. The various funds are owned by shareholders of the funds.
I think the same is true with much of Blackrock funds/partnerships.
I would think it is time to further investigate who is pushing these stories out because someone is looking to paint Blackrock and Vanguard as the bad guy. Which is a good trick if you are Goldman Sachs (for example), or someone else in the money management business.