Eleven companies control most consumer goods through “brand proliferation” (creating fake competition). The authors argue that weakened antitrust enforcement (via the “consumer welfare standard”) has created a system where platform owners (like Amazon and Uber) extract value from users, turning them into “digital serfs” who pay tribute with data, attention and money.
The health industry profits from chronic illness, not cures, through “disease mongering” (medicalizing normal conditions), “patent cliff” strategies (minor drug changes to extend monopolies) and active suppression of natural, unpatentable remedies (e.g., curcumin, sulforaphane). Drugs like Ozempic are described as a “subscription model for human misery” that creates lifetime dependency.
A small group of billionaire tech elites (Musk, Altman, Bezos) are building a future where humans are obsolete, using AI, surveillance and digital IDs to control populations. The text warns that Central Bank Digital Currencies (CBDCs) are “programmable money” that can expire or be restricted, effectively becoming a “leash” on freedom.
The text advocates for “non-compliance” as a historic tool for freedom, specifically urging followers to stop paying taxes (citing Thoreau and Tolstoy). This is framed as a peaceful revolution that could spark immediate change, with the message that reclaiming liberty requires understanding how slavery (financial, digital, and governmental) is enforced.
The final call to action is not to wait for saviors, but to build self-reliant communities. This includes growing your own food, learning practical skills (first aid, gardening, repairs), using local currencies and forming barter networks. The “mirror test” challenges individuals to live their values and become the hero by taking local, tangible action.
In “The Techno-Feudal Trap,” the authors deliver a gut-punch of reality: eleven companies control nearly everything on those shelves. Not eleven hundred. Eleven. Nestlé, PepsiCo, Coca-Cola and a handful of others have mastered what’s called “brand proliferation.” They create dozens of labels that look like competitors—Froot Loops next to Cheerios—but both are owned by the same corporate monster. You’re not choosing between businesses. You’re choosing between different masks.
Read Full Article: https://www.naturalnews.com/2026-06-21-big-food-big-pharma-engineered-your-captivity.html