Bren Kelly
2 min readJan 11, 2022

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Warren Buffet’s strategy is to appear wise. He makes a quote that we shouldn’t trust the rich, while his company is worth $710 Billion, ranked 8th largest in the world. He made billions and billions investing in the fracking boom: he bought the railroad in the central US that all oil cars have to travel on from North Dakota and Canada, Colorado, and Wyoming, to the refineries. He increased oil raise shipments from 8,000 cars to 100,000 cars and then took the liberal side to support protests again his main competitor, the Keystone pipeline. Diesel exhaust by railroad cars pulling the oil shipments is way dirtier then pipe line shipment for sure. Yet to voice that opinion makes me look like a radical republican instead of just a liberal telling the truth. As long as we are brainwashed into thinking super billionaires like Buffet are wise “oracles” because say quotes that are quite obvious while destroying the environment, the poor lose. The politicians on “both sides” love these wise men, treating them like rock stars as they destroy the environment, pollution regulations, and repress wages. Even today the wealthiest private universities were caught again price fixing tuition in the “538 cartel”. The lawsuit abuses federal law at the expense of poor and middle class students in a way few understand. The fix is against the poor. There are few interested champions left. Even the few who make remarks like AOC are shot down right away for attempting to speak up. No more quotes from the super rich. Malcom X and Orwell who you quote were far smarter and saw through those charlatans. All we the people seem to have left to govern are the Roman rules to control: bread and circuses. Thanks for sharing.

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Bren Kelly
Bren Kelly

Written by Bren Kelly

Engaged in Inequalities, dismantling Western Consciousness, confronting American narratives, seeking inherent injustices to address.

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