This paper examines the structural mechanisms of wealth extraction in the United Stateseconomy from 1971 to 2026, challenging the dominant narrative that attributes middle-classeconomic stagnation to foreign competition. Through analysis of wage stagnation patterns, assetconcentration data, interlocking ownership structures, and shadow banking architecture, wedemonstrate that domestic institutional capture—not external economic forces—represents theprimary driver of wealth redistribution from labor to capital. We identify what we term the”Owners of the Global System” (OGS): an emergent power bloc characterized by cross-sectoralmonopolization, financial intermediation dominance, and regulatory capture. The analysis revealsthat trade wars and protectionist policies directed at foreign nations fail to address—andoften exacerbate—the fundamental structural dynamics responsible for American economic distress.We conclude that the enemy of American prosperity has never been foreign, but rathera domestic architecture of extraction that operates through legal, monetary, and institutionalchannels.
Essentia Vera (Fri,) studied this question.