Bonds are mostly sought by government organizations – transformed into institutions – that have irresponsibly spent a majority of funds on growing the organization’s bureaucratic structure rather than fulfilling its initial purpose for existing.
Dr. Carroll Quigley (1910–1977) was an American historian and professor at Georgetown University. He is best known for his works on the study of global power structures.
Countless big government politicians like Bill Clinton rushed to sign up to take his courses at Georgetown. Dr. Quigley’s courses taught how growing government organizations through various means – including tax burdens – created control over the people.
In his book, “The Evolution of Civilizations,” Dr. Quigley analyzes how a civilization’s decline occurs when its instrument of expansion (an organization designed to serve a social need) is transformed into an institution.
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According to Dr. Quigley, an institution is created by transforming an organization’s social arrangement to meet a social need into a social institution that focuses on bureaucratic and financial growth rather than meeting the social need it was created to fulfill.
More funding, more buildings, more management, more training, more gear, more horses, more carriages, more vehicles, more creation of departments, and endless spending while failing at its original purpose – all these are explored in Dr. Quigley’s institution transformation analysis.
As a historian, Dr. Quigley knew these types of institutions could not exist without psychologically neutralizing victim societies and civilizations. Thus, these institutions were to achieve acceptance by presenting themselves with an emotional moral appeal to the masses.
“Does thou hate the King? Then thou should be joyful to give.”
“Does thou hate the children? Then thou should be joyful to give.”
“Does thou hate the people? Then thou should be joyful to give.”
Suddenly, those who demanded more control and more of the peasant’s tax money became the ‘moral’ and ‘righteous;’ while those who questioned the institutions and hoped to keep more of their tax money became the ‘greedy.’
Author: Joseph Vargas