America for Sale : How Nations, Corporations, and Elites are Buying the new World
  America for Sale : How Nations, Corporations, and Elites are Buying the new World
Titolo America for Sale : How Nations, Corporations, and Elites are Buying the new World
AutoreMason Reed
Prezzo€ 15,49
EditorePhilippa
LinguaTesto in Inglese
FormatoDRMFREE

Descrizione
You didn't lose your country in a war. You didn't watch it collapse from the inside overnight. You surrendered it, inch by inch, one quiet transaction at a time. Not because you chose to, but because you were too distracted to notice who was buying what, and why. Every acre of land, every crumbling town, every media network, every vote that no longer matters—has a price tag. And someone already paid for it. America isn't broke. It's bought. While everyday citizens are preoccupied with inflation, culture wars, and the next viral scandal, billionaires, foreign powers, and multinational conglomerates have been consolidating ownership of the very structures that define freedom. "America For Sale" is not a political rant. It's a forensic audit of a country sold off in pieces. You'll see how farmland, real estate, technology infrastructure, even data on your kids, is being bought up—not always by Americans, and rarely in your interest. The book uncovers how foreign governments now own more land in the U.S. than most of its own citizens. How global corporations have more sway over education policy than elected school boards. How wealth is no longer inherited but engineered through backroom deals and legally laundered influence. This is not about left or right. This is about top versus bottom. And if you're not in the top 0.1%, you're on the clearance rack. The media you trust? Owned by less than five entities, each beholden to shareholders, not truth. The politicians you vote for? Funded by donors whose mailing addresses include overseas postcodes and hedge fund suites in Manhattan. The apps you use daily? Tracked, packaged, and sold to data brokers shaping what you believe and buy. Read between the lines of major acquisitions, zoning changes, infrastructure bills, and environmental loopholes. Learn how foreign sovereign wealth funds quietly grab up neighborhoods in Midwestern towns. Why billionaires keep buying land in deserts and abandoned farmlands. How corporate lobbying rewrites entire legislative frameworks while feeding the illusion of democracy. It's not just about land or property. It's about digital sovereignty, energy control, food supply manipulation, and financial dependency. Your paycheck, mortgage rate, grocery bill, and internet freedom are downstream from decisions made in rooms you'll never see by people who'll never step foot in the towns they purchase. "America For Sale" dismantles the myth of national autonomy. It traces the quiet erosion of public ownership—from water rights to emergency services—showing how nations that once feared American dominance now manage it from behind the curtain of capital. It asks the question few dare to entertain: If America is still a superpower, who exactly is steering it? You'll understand how student loan systems, housing markets, and even healthcare laws are written with outside influence, disguised under the banner of reform. You'll learn why ownership of digital infrastructure—cloud storage, satellite systems, telecom networks—matters more than military might. And how the next frontier of power isn't governed by flags or borders but by terms and conditions you blindly scroll through. "America For Sale" doesn't offer hope wrapped in fantasy. It delivers knowledge anchored in evidence, arming readers with tools to question narratives, track capital flows, and understand exactly how and why the American dream has been refinanced by invisible hands. The book is built for readers who feel the tension between what they're told and what they sense. For those who know something is off, but can't yet name it. For professionals who suspect their industries are no longer American in spirit or leadership. For families wondering why their neighborhoods are vanishing and their votes carry less weight.