TheTurkTime

Who pays for Israel's wars?

2026-03-08 - 14:02

Israel has been raining tons of bombs on our region for years. America has been raining tons of bombs on our region for years. Yet their economies are in better shape than all the other economies affected by the chaos they create. First of all, this points to who owns the global financial system. There's no denying it. Israel, bombed daily and walking toward its end in its promised graveyard, hasn't seen its currency lose value, its index crash, or its companies collapse. How does that happen? Who's supporting it? Then there's the U.S., piling new debt every day on top of its $35 trillion debt from these wars. Besides using its own resources, it won't even let Israel reach into its own pocket—it gives troops, gives ammunition, gives weapons, and still, it doesn't bat an eye. Meanwhile, the American public comes out saying, "You can't finance Israel's war with our taxes." Yeah, right. Yes, unfortunately, we are paying for the destruction in our region. Other countries are paying. We are even paying the taxes of Americans. The U.S. prints money, takes on debt, and creates inflation. Then it manipulates prices and exports that inflation to the entire world. In this way, it gains global seigniorage and makes us pay for the cost of striking us. As long as this monetary system exists, humanity will continue to have bombs it pays for itself dropped on its head. How long will we remain this helpless? We pay the salaries of American soldiers, we cover the CIA's expenses, we work with our flesh and bone for the prosperity of every American, and on top of that, we are humiliated and dragged through the mud. Oh, and oil prices are going up in America? We're filling their gas tanks too. Wait a second. When it comes to a war with Iran, they say, "the daily cost of this war is 1 billion dollars." Let no one think from what I'm saying that we are collecting 1 billion dollars among ourselves and paying it. If only it were that simple. With long-tail inflation, God knows whether we pay that one billion as five billion or ten billion—it can't be calculated mathematically with our current capabilities. Of course, that amount—whether five or ten—we don't pay it in cash. We borrow it. And we borrow it from the global financial architecture that supports Israel. Then we pay interest on that money. So much so that for this war's 1 billion dollar daily bill, we pay 1 billion dollars in interest alone through the system we're caught up in. I mean, if we just directly handed over the money and said, "here, go hit Iran," paying the upfront cost, we'd be much better off. But we—I don't know what kind of people we are—they make money from us because they strike us. We feed our own executioner. In such an equation, it would only be fitting for them to strike us daily and add to their profits. But surely, one day, the promised ones will come, and a people better than us will arrive. They will be better than us by doing just one thing: saying, "this monetary system cannot go on." When they say that, the monetary system will collapse. When they dismantle and change the monetary system, they will also destroy the interest system and pour kerosene on the roots of the rentier class. They will spread charity. And starting from these lands, they will envision a just world. We, on the other hand, will hang on the stage of history as pitiable, pathetic people lacking foresight—a lesson for them to look back at whenever they feel the need to reform themselves.

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