100 Days of Middle Nation: Their OCGFC and Ours
Okay, I
hope I'm audible. I'm just trying to get myself set up here. So while waiting for the people to come in, I just wanna comment that, you know, while while you put out your content, you talk about geopolitics, you you your terminologies and and references. I think it's really interesting to see how the participants are also getting involved in the conversation.
You know,
and that they are using the tools and the vocabulary that you've provided in the conversation that's taking place while while we are perusing your old videos and in discussing geopolitics.
Alhamdulillah.
Yeah. It's not just a passive one way traffic, you know.
This is incredibly important, you know, because well, for obvious reasons. Because I'm not I'm not actually just doing this for content. I'm not putting this out here just for content purposes. The point is actually exactly what Middle is the the objectives of Middle Nation are outlined to be to try to advance the political independence, economic sovereignty, and psychological decolonization of the Muslim world and of the global South more generally. Mhmm.
So that only happens when other people start applying these ideas and and applying this understanding and understanding the these ideas Yes. And incorporating this understanding into their own, you know, view of the world and how they process information and how they process, events and so forth. And as you know, so that so that we can collectively achieve something something like well, first, the psychological decolonization, and then also to so that we can actually work together in the world in a certain kind of way that isn't that isn't that isn't passive. Mhmm. That that we're not just we're not just passive consumers of narrative.
This again is even in and of itself as part of psychological decolonization to break that pattern, that habit that the West has imposed upon its people to just be passive consumers Mhmm. Of of information, passive consumers of content, and then to just regurgitate it, which isn't what's happening. Mhmm. Alhamdulillah. That's this is what I really like to see, is that when I see people who are participating in the hundred day challenge, taking the ideas and really writing their own content Mhmm.
Writing their own explanations because they have understood it. They're not just regurgitating points. They're not just regurgitating talking points. Mhmm. It's they they really have have comprehended and grasped, the frameworks
Yeah.
Like the frameworks of of the OCGFC Mhmm. Private sector power and so forth, and and the the reality of the the transition to the global South and so on, that they're they're really understanding this. And then also even even understanding the the the factions within the OCGFC, like, well, we're talking about it today, I
guess. Yeah.
But, like, even the factions within their OCGFC, the West Western oriented OCGFC that you have the a national and the nationalistic. Mhmm. And then you have ours Mhmm. Our OCGFC. So it's it's it's very encouraging to see.
Yeah. And for those who are just joining in the in the chat or who are just Welcome, everyone, first of all. Yeah. Welcome.
Thank you for joining.
For all
the On a Friday for us, it's Friday night. For you, I guess it's probably for most people, probably Friday afternoon or mid morning.
Probably. Yeah. If you're in the West.
Late morning.
Yeah. Welcome, and we are
Juhmah Mubarak.
We we we have launched this hundred days of new nation challenge over the past week. We are into the second week, we've gone into the second week now, and it will take place over the course of about fourteen weeks, which will which will amount to about a hundred days. And we are going but we're not going over every a video a day. We're going over a video over the course of a couple of days. And every time we consume a video or two, we will meet for a live to talk about the content that was produced and also the interactions that were achieved from the various content creators who have tried to participate in the challenge.
So if you're new here, we are inviting you to participate in the challenge. Please join the main discussion, middle nation discussion group, and then we will be guided thereafter in joining the various subgroups Mhmm. That would, you know, provide you with guidance, provide you with tips. Your we we have a section where you can actually put out your ideas, and we would review them Mhmm. And we would provide advice Mhmm.
And make clarifications. And the lives are also for those that purpose. So if you have anything related to the videos, please
I mean, I think personally, I think that that well, and I've gotten this feedback also from people that the discussion group, the Telegram discussion group has been as important, if not more important to to many people as the the content that we put out, the the the videos that we put out. Mhmm. Because you actually get to hash it out, you know, you actually get to talk it out. Mhmm. And not not only with me because I'm I'm usually there almost daily or pretty much I am there daily.
But there's many people, There's many really great minds who are participating especially among the admins and then there's long time members who who fully understand the the the thinking and the the frameworks. And so you can you can discuss there, and, you know, as things come up on a daily basis or what have you, you can you can find people that you can discuss it with and talk to about it that will help you to give maybe get get some clarity about what's what's going on in the world
Mhmm.
Rather than the, you know, avalanche of narrative that you get from the West.
Yes. Feel free to also type in your questions in the chat, on the live chat, and we'll be happy to address those questions. We had one questioner ask about where you should I think it's it's not the triple a that we know. Mhmm. Not not triple a.
It's just triple a. If people want to migrate out from the West, what are the best countries to consider?
Okay. This I I I completely understand the question and the the the reason for the question and why you would ask us here. And we get this question a lot, you can imagine. But it's not a question that has a generalized answer. It's this is this is a very personal individualized assessment that each individual person has to make about what their their needs are.
First of all, let me just clarify. I don't wanna go completely too much off the topic that we're trying to talk about today, but first of all, don't think if you're living in the West, if you're Muslim and you're living in the West and you wanna move to a Muslim country, please don't call that Hijra. This is not Hijra. You can practice Islam where you are. You can practice Islam.
You can pray. You can go to Salat Al Jamar. You can, you know, go to Darid prayers, you can fast Almaden, you can do everything that you are required to Yeah. Do in You're not like the Muslims in Makkah under the Quraysh, where you couldn't practice. You can practice Islam there.
So it's not Hijra. You are moving because for your well-being. You're moving just like anyone who moves from one location to another, seeking a better life, that's what you would be doing. So I would I would advise you not to use the term hijra because that has a a definition, Yani. And also, for the for the Muslim country that you're moving to, if you refer to your moving from the West to their country as hijra, that will they will identify you as a as a kind of a radical, as someone who's been extreme in the religion because they don't see it that way at all.
If you are moving from from the West into a into a Muslim country, you have to understand what that will entail. You have to get visas like any other country. You're not gonna be welcomed into open welcomed welcomed by open arms with a a host of who will help you. You're gonna be on your own. You have to make your own way just like moving into any other country.
So you have to look at that, and then you have to think about what are the reasons why you wanna move, and what is it that you're looking for, and what do you bring to the country that you wanna go to. Because like I say, no one is gonna host you like we're gonna now take you in and and take care of you. You have to provide for yourself and you have to hope hopefully bring something to the country that you're moving to, something positive to the country that you're moving to. If you're looking for, you know, outward appearances of Islam, outward manifestations of Islam, that's one thing. If you wanna move to a country where people have a very internalized, you know, but maybe not obvious over manifestations of Islam, this then you'll have to make your your distinctions, Yani.
But each individual person has to do their own research and understand their own situation because in my opinion, the the worst thing that could happen is for you to move, and then it you find your experience is either unsuccessful there or unpleasant there or uncomfortable, it doesn't work out, and then you end up having to move back. That would be a disaster in my opinion. If you move, it should be halaseni. Make sure that it's a solid very solid decision. And I can't advise you.
Make a general advice about which Muslim countries you should go to. There are many Muslim countries that are you know, I think Turkey is great, I think Malaysia is great, I think Indonesia is great, I think depending on what you're looking for, The Emirates can be good for you, Saudi Arabia can
be good for you, Qatar can be good for you, depending on what you're looking for. And then you can also look at the the countries in Africa. You you you could look at Egypt. You could look at Morocco. You can look even if
you if you can move to the Sahid, but you have to know what you're getting yourself into materially. Materially, the situation is gonna be very different. The the day to day life is is not gonna be what you're used to maybe in the West necessarily.
I I would have you know, I would suggest you visit. I mean
Yeah. You
know, but it's not it's not a luxury. It's a luxury to be able to travel.
It is. Absolutely.
You know?
Especially for especially for Americans, it's incredibly expensive to to to travel internationally when you're when you're living in The States. A lot of Americans don't even have passports.
Okay. We have a we have a question, besides, that's quite related to the content.
Alright.
What are the factions? We've we've already gone through this, but Fortress Fighter is asking, what are the factions of the OCDFC competing against each other at the moment?
Well, the main factions, I think, as you know, probably, given the question, the main factions you have are the are the, what are they sort of the original, OCDFC that came up as a as a result of the military industrial complex in America. And then you have the a that's the nationalistic OCGFC, and then you have the a national OCGFC who have now surpassed this, and they've really transcended borders. And this has been this has evolved over the course of decades. The the creation of this of this faction is over the course of decades. But you still have the ones that are aligned with the military industrial complex and who are aligned with nationalistic interests like the weapons sector Uh-huh.
Like, to a certain extent, oil and gas to a certain extent. And the the there's a fight between or there's a there's a tension and a competition between any both of those factions, the the nationalistic and the anationalistic. There's a tension and there's a there's a competition between those and our OCGFC because the the the the Western oriented or the Western originated OCGFC, as I've talked about many many times, are predatory by nature. They are vampiric by nature, parasitic by nature, and and they reflect in their approach to business, in their approach to investing, in their approach to the world, a colonizer mentality. They have the same they they were formed by any Western European and American Kufar, and so they reflect that same character, that same cultural background, that same worldview and paradigm that those people operate in in the world.
So when they come into the into the Muslim world and to the global South, they come with that same mentality. And so they're coming in into a clash to one extent or another with our local domestic OCGFC. Our domestic players, our domestic powers, our domestic rich and powerful, who are who who are more who are themselves more nationalistic. Like we only have nationalistic OCGFC in our parts of the world. In the global South, our OCGFC are nationalistic exclusively, especially in the countries where the the richest like like, to put it very easily, in The Gulf.
Mhmm. In The Gulf, the the the the most of the wealth, like the sovereign wealth funds or what have you, this is in the hands of the government. Yes. Exclusively. This is in the hands of government.
This the all of the capital that they have to play with
Mhmm.
To invest with, this is in the hands of the government. It's not in the private sector. So in in in most of the Muslim countries, the private sector is beneath state power. In the West, obviously, the private sector is above state power. So there's a clash in that they want they don't want us to have sovereignty when they come into into the global South.
They they still have a colonizer mentality. They don't want us to have sovereignty. So there's going to be a conflict, and there's gonna be tension, and there's gonna be competition and rivalry in every sector of the economy with regards to them coming into our part of the world. There's always going to be competition. And right now, the fact of the matter is that like, okay.
Even with the the sovereign wealth funds of The Gulf, like PIF in Saudi Arabia, the what is it called? ADIA ADIA
in Abu Dhabi.
Then they have a a sort of a domestic sovereign wealth fund that's really just for local investment, which is ADQ, I think. And then Kazana in Malaysia. Mhmm. What's it called in Domestic. Domestic in Singapore.
Yeah. Where where I lost my train of thought, subhanAllah. What was that?
Southern wealth funds and domestic wealth concentration of domestic wealth.
Yeah. This is all this is all in the hands of the government. This is all in the hands of of of the rulers.
Mhmm.
And they they they are oh, yeah. This is what I was gonna say. Unfortunately, right now, at this stage, they don't outweigh the power of the a nationalist GTOC in in in, like, middle nation RPI, relative power index. The the combined power of of our sovereign wealth funds still does not quite
Match.
Match them or over or or surpass them. So we still can't really just be completely confrontational with them. So this is why I think Saudi Arabia, for example, and The Gulf The Gulf generally, has has very carefully navigated their relationship with like a BlackRock. They very carefully navigated their relationship with AE National OCGFC to give them an interest, within certain restrictions so that they they can leverage the the the partnership, to where they won't be dealt with in a hostile manner. Because we don't quite have the power yet.
I would say that within the next, I don't know, fifteen years ten to fifteen years, depending on how things go, obviously Mhmm. Then then our power will surpass them.
Okay.
But the but the fact that they have very cleverly and cunningly and carefully made partnerships with the A National ACGFC that has multiplied their own power.
Mhmm. Leveraged.
They've they've leveraged the power of the A National ACGFC Yeah. By selling them on a on a new approach to because like I said before, the transition is gonna happen one way or the other. Mhmm. The for for the for the Westerners, they would love it if they could just do the transition in a way that was just straight up colonialism, just straight up colonization all over again, just complete takeover. They would love it if they could do it that way.
The way things have gone, they're not really in a position to do that, and now they've they've been struggling with trying to figure out how we're gonna manage this transition. But but never think that they are actually your friends at all. They are very dangerous players, and and they're they're gonna have to be dealt with and a very cautious and and a very cautious and a very careful and a very calculated, very long sighted vision.
Yeah. In the next few days, in the next few series in this OCGFC segment of the challenge, we will be demonstrating how actions taken by, you know, other powers within the OCGFC have tried to attain sovereignty of some kind, assert their positions, and formation of the bricks as an outcome and then The US isolation that resulted from that and so on. So just stay tuned and look out for the next challenge and next videos to peruse and we will have more clarity on the subject. Now let's I have another question from Ali Raui. Mhmm.
You had mentioned in a previous episode that Muslims in the West should be doing business with Muslims in the East so that we can bridge our divide and strengthen our Muslim community so that we can gain power and influence. How do we really do that as it seems that Arabs especially only really like working with white American passport holders, and it also really depends on a lot of established relationship?
You're you're you're clearly speaking as someone who hasn't tried.
Yeah.
And you're and you're and you're you're putting a bar on your even trying by by basing it on your assumptions Mhmm. And your assumption of biases on their part. This is not the case. Factually, it's not the case.
Yeah. We have we have in the discussion group, people who are I mean, members who are who work, you know, who have businesses in the in
in the
Gulf countries and and
Business people wanna make money. Yeah. They don't care. They don't care. The the the your your your assumption is incorrect.
Yes. Very much so. Okay. So that's that. Let's see what other questions.
Think let's see. Fortress fighter. Yeah. Okay. You this is a follow-up from the earlier question.
When consolidating community sovereignty, issuing basket backed tokens by means of production, etcetera, how would you approach a bribe from OCDFC when they already made plans to neutralize you?
I'm I'm afraid I don't quite understand the question. I'm afraid I I I don't I I I'm sorry. I'm not quite understanding the question.
Yeah. I do you mean bribe as a form of resistance or call it, you know, or or as a attempt to take over? Mhmm. You know? So basically, I you I I'm gathering from the question that it's a it's an attempt to undermine a a a a country or another setting of the OCDFC by
I mean, I mean, there's a few parts to the question. First, that that that confused me. One, you you referred to community sovereignty, which indicates that we're not talking about country level sovereignty. Yes. It indicates that you're talking about what I've talked about before, is like neighborhood sovereignty Mhmm.
Which is something that you should try to work on in the West because you're you're gonna be facing societal economic collapse in the West, so you need to try to fortify your community on the community level, achieve some kind of sovereignty and autonomy economic sovereignty, I mean. So that that terminology confuses me Okay. Because then you're talking about the the currency that you're using and saying and and he's talking about tokens, like, for example, so that so that on a community okay. So wait a minute. Now I'm trying to work out what you're what you're asking, brother.
On the community level, say you you create a kind of a a an an ecosystem whereby you can conduct exchanges using currency that you have created just for your community that is like a a say a work based, an hours based, labor based, like you say token that then you can use within your community level ecosystem to buy and sell. Mhmm. So what what's the bribe? I don't understand what the bribe is. To to to try to destroy the project by means of what now?
Yeah. So we we would like some clarification.
Yeah. I'm not I'm not sure.
If you're still here, please clarify the question for us. Let's see. This is Karim. Karim says, I do believe China state companies and affiliated private companies are massive. They are even in the top numbers on the Forbes list of highest manufacturing capacity entities.
Right.
It's only China.
Right.
You know?
Yeah. And China's and China also has what you can I don't know if they call it a sovereign wealth fund, but they have that Mhmm? Which is also massive.
Okay. We need to show us, we need to show support to our local, giant companies and firms that support the efforts of the government in achieving national sovereignty. That's absolutely essential that we go it's about local.
Absolutely. I mean I mean, there are some there are some sort of you can say, I don't know, ground rules or or fundamental things that any country should be working towards if they can't do it immediately. One is the is the complete control of your of your raw materials, of your natural resources, complete control over that. Nationalization or whatever can come close to nationalization of your industries that are based on your raw materials, your raw minerals, and so forth. Complete control over that.
Like like, for example, nickel in Indonesia. Mhmm. Okay. You're not nationalizing it. Mhmm.
And the same thing they were doing in where was it? Argentina, I believe. They didn't nationalize it, but they said we're not we're not exporting the raw materials anymore.
Right.
We're not exporting raw raw nickel anymore. Refining and processing must be done in Indonesia.
Yeah. Demand industrialization Right. And skills uplift, you know.
Right. Yeah. This is this is this is like a basic thing that every country needs to be doing. Mhmm. If you because this is really where your your power is economically.
Your power is in the fact that you have all the stuff. This is why they've been coming to you for all these centuries. This is why they the the West has been coming to the global South for all these centuries because you have all the resources, in fact. So you have to have control of your resources from start to finish. Mhmm.
And, you know, that doesn't mean that you just, you know, overnight, we're gonna nationalize this or that industry or this or that sector or these or those companies. Mhmm. But that's the goal. Yeah. The the the goal is like, what what what's the goal of nationalization?
It's the control of your minerals. It's the control of your resources in service to the to to your own people and to your own economy. So that's the goal. Now work towards that by whatever steps are available to you at this time. Like for example, we're not going to we're gonna we'll target one particular resource, one particular natural resource, one particular mineral Yeah.
And say this one, we're not exporting the raw version anymore. We're it has to be refined here.
Yeah.
Now you've got other ones, maybe you'll you'll let those go for a while until you can build up, You know, it's a this gradual process of building. Or you can at least say, okay. Say, we're not going to completely ban the export of this or that raw mineral that this or that raw material, this or that natural resource. But there must be set a cap of how much value added must be done within the country.
Okay.
For example, work, you know Mhmm.
You don't have to
do something radical. But just know that this is our goal. Our goal is a 100% control of our resources and and a 100% of the profits for those resources, and every product that comes from those resources needs to be coming to us.
This is not some
Work towards that.
Yeah. This is not a new idea. I mean it's been
Not at all?
Yeah. So you can study the different countries, you know, countries like China, countries like, okay, like Indonesia now, Ghana Mhmm. And and Burkina Faso right now Mhmm. You know. We have someone who is who's got a question, but I'm waiting for the second question.
You go by the name r I, the big question mark on in in in the red color. So I'll just read your first question while you're sending your second Alright. Question. What exactly are the roles of the world think tanks that may or may not have any ties with the key players affiliated with OCPFC, especially in the environment sector? Okay.
So They don't there there isn't there aren't any that aren't tied to the OCGSE. Okay. I mean, not not any think tanks of note, and and and including in in in the environmental sector. Think tanks are crafters of narrative. They are interpreters of what power wants into policy recommendations.
Okay. That's their job. That's you know, I mean, I'm not talking about, like, if you have some, you know, a few communists or Marxists or something who get together and they form a think tank Uh-huh. And they just have a PO box or what have you, that's different. Yeah.
But any think tank that has a name on it Yeah. And has funding, where their funding is coming from foundations that are associated with the OCC.
Yeah. Think we need to take you know, remove the veil on this one. Yeah. This is very essential that that, you know
And and think tanks, by the way, like I've I've said before, think tanks are not the drivers of policy. Yeah. They are the interpreters of what power wants.
Mhmm. Propaganda.
What power already wants, and they put it into a language that makes it acceptable. Mhmm. Because when you're talking about the West, like I've talked about like I just talked about in the last one, the last livestream, What the West believes in and what their priorities are are very, very simple and very, very primitive. Mhmm. Profit maximization, resource acquisition
Yeah.
And power. Power. Yeah. This is this is the only thing that they care about ever. And so you can't just boldly say that.
You can't just flat out say that that's what we believe in. Okay. We're just, you know, savage psychopathic colonizers. You can't say that. So you have to think tanks help them craft it into a politically correct, politically, socially acceptable language Okay.
And then form and then put it into the language of policy.
I hope that answers your question, RI. Now there's another questioner, Tiptronic SS. Mister Shai talked about what's to come what's to come about the transition of power and how countries and people should prepare for it. Could you tell us about that a little bit more, please? Now, again, I would like to before before you answer the question, I would like to interject and say that in the next three videos that's lined up Mhmm.
After today's live, we will be covering particularly this specific
Like what's coming? Yeah. Okay.
Like what's been what what the opposing OCGFC's interests have brought about, you know, in the trajectories that geopolitics has taken over the past decade, over the past two or three years, you know, since October 7, you know, and so on. So we will be covering And
since Ukraine?
Yeah. Since Ukraine. Exactly. So there's there's there's all of these sections that we'll be covering in order for you to provide in order to provide for you a helicopter view of how we analyze geopolitics through the lens of just objective reality.
I mean, you know, inshallah, we we will talk about this according to the the the next few days or or or a few prompts in the challenge. Mhmm. But if you wanna know what the West is going to look yeah. Like, first of all, I'm not sure what the question is. What region you're talking about?
What in terms of the transition and what's gonna come and Mhmm. How to prepare for it depends on where you are. Mhmm. If you're in the West, if you're in America, if you're in The UK or or what have you, you can kind of understand how it's gonna look like by looking at what colonized countries have looked like in the past. Because like I've said many times, the colonized colonization is coming home to America and to the West.
The colonizers are colonizing themselves by the OCGFC. The the corporate power has colonized The United States. Corporate power is colonizing Europe. Colonization has played out in different ways in different parts of the world. Some of it was not horrifically violent.
Mhmm. In Malaysia, for example, I think the the British colonization wasn't horrifically violent. Mhmm. In other places, it was horrifically violent. Mhmm.
So for example, in Europe, it will play out one way. In parts of Europe, it will play out one way. In The UK it will play out one way, in America it will play out another way. So and and even within America it will play out in different ways across, you know, different time zones of the country. But it's this is what is happening.
Your your country, America, is colonized by corporate power. They are dismantling the federal government Mhmm. In terms of the federal government's authority. Authority will recede to the state level. Mhmm.
And even that is obviously subordinated to corporate power, to private sector power. You are going to have, as I've talked about many times, more militarized policing Mhmm. More arrests, more incarceration, more police violence Mhmm. Deportations, obviously.
Yeah. As is evidenced over the past Yeah. Twelve months or so.
Your your rights, you know, the the the rights that you are supposedly guaranteed will will be eroded. Mhmm. Okay.
We've already passed thirty minutes of live. Welcome to the 300 people who are watching. Let's see.
And you know there's another thing also. The this is this is why sometimes it's it's it's very helpful to to really have some some, like, truism rules of engagement with the Kufar, especially with the Western Kufar. One of which is that that basically you you everything they say, you just read it backwards, and then you can understand what they're really saying. And the other is, you know, every every accusation is confession. Mhmm.
Everything that they say that other people are doing is either what they are currently doing or what they're planning to do. So for example, when you when you they talk endlessly about China and the control and the surveillance and the restrictions and the social credit score system and so forth. That's what's coming to you. That's that's what they're planning to do to you because people in China don't even know what you're talking about. People in China have no idea what you're talking about when you talk about these things with the social credit system and all of this stuff.
Mhmm. People in China don't have any idea what you mean when Westerners talk about this. This is all something that they are planning to do to you. Very simple. And and and this you you you only have to know this based on the track record of their behavior relative to their words, relative to their statements.
So whenever they say that someone else is doing it, that's either what they are currently doing or what they're planning to When they accuse someone of something, they are already doing it or they're planning to do it themselves. Yeah. So, you know, the the situation in America is gonna get very bad, and and I've talked about it numerous times, and and it's it's irreversible. There's nothing that can be done to to change the trajectory Mhmm. That downward trajectory.
Nothing can be done to change the downward trajectory. If something could have been done, the nationalistic OCGFC would have done
it. Yes.
But the the even now, then no one's interested. Even now, you have you have you have record level share buybacks by by companies. Mhmm. No one is investing. Yeah.
The the America First bring manufacturing jobs back to America, no one is on board with that at all. No one is this is all a joke to them. Yeah. They they are whatever money that they're getting, whatever tax credits they're getting, whatever rebates they're getting, whatever tax cuts they're getting, whatever bailouts they're getting, all of that is being pushed into financialized capital Mhmm. Where they
The price.
Buy back their shares Yeah. Pump up their share price because they can't get their share price up by being a good company Mhmm. That produces useful things that people want. They can only do it by buying their own shares back to pump up the price so that they can make fake pretend money. Mhmm.
No one is interested in investing in the American economy. The only people who are investing in the American economy is The UAE and Saudi Arabia and Qatar Yeah. Because they're buying it. Mhmm. They're buying the American economy.
Mhmm. And like like with the with the with oil, for example, you're you're gonna see, believe me, within the next, I don't know, ten years, say, maybe less. It's hard it's very hard, like, as as someone who analyzes geopolitics, these last I don't know, the the last five, six years or so Mhmm. The the time frames are all wacky. Mhmm.
The time frames are are don't make any sense anymore because what used to take ten years now takes a year Mhmm. To happen. The the the the scale of how rapidly things are moving. So normally, I would say within the next ten years, but it could be within the next five, it could be within the next three. Whatever oil facilities that you have in the in in America, the drilling and so forth Mhmm.
And the refineries, that's all gonna be bought by the Gulf Because you can't because they're they're derelict now. They're, you know, pump what what did you say? The drill baby drill? Yeah. Trump's drill baby drill.
No one can afford to do that at at the at the current price. No one can afford to do that. It's not affordable for them. And they're making sure that it's not gonna be affordable for them. They're they're they're the Saudi Arabia and Russia, OPEC plus Mhmm.
They're all regulating the price of oil in such a way that that it is not affordable for America to drill. Mhmm. All of those facilities are gonna go derelict, and they're gonna get bogged. Yeah. So even so so so you see, this is how the planning works.
People have talked about, for example, in the in the context of Gaza, why doesn't The Gulf cut off the oil and do an oil embargo like they did in the seventies? Well, because it's not the seventies and because America is a net exporter. It's the the the biggest exporter now. So the the the dynamics of that have changed, but that doesn't mean that you give up. Now you have a plan of what what do we do about that?
Mhmm. Well, we buy their facilities. Now their oil becomes our oil. They're gonna be colonized. The same way that you colonize everyone else in the world who has oil and gas.
Mhmm. Like I was talking about in a in a recent video about Nigeria Mhmm. That they barely get any revenue from their own oil, from their own natural gas. They barely get any of that. It all goes to the to to Western companies because they have these very unfair contracts.
Same in Egypt. I remember back when I used to write about Egypt a lot, there's that company Apache. They get 50% of the oil that they extract, 50% goes to them. Why? Why should you get any of it?
You get paid for the extraction. Why do you take the product itself that's that's that that you extract? Mhmm. It makes no sense. But you were you got stuck into this deal, you got coerced into this deal, you you felt, you know, that you had to you had to agree to it and whatnot.
But so the these same types of deals are gonna happen to America. These same types of deals. That now The Gulf is gonna get 50% of what what they extract from the from Oklahoma. Mhmm. Know?
Qatar is gonna get 50% of what they extract from Texas and what have you. Just just watch. This is gonna happen because they can afford it. They can afford to buy your facilities and they can afford to drill because they also control what the price is gonna be.
K. I don't have any other questions. If there's any questions, please feel free to type in the chat. Some fortress fighter is also saying I'm just gonna read it out.
Alright.
Invoking Article six would turn that against them. Right? Or would they be able to pivot away from that?
I'm not sure whether that is Yeah. That's the
the invoking you see, this is maybe maybe there's a misunderstanding here that the OCDFC is American, you know.
Well, I mean, this is again, you have to understand the the two different factions. There's the nationalistic and the anational. For the anational OCGFC, I think that they would support the invocation of Article six
Mhmm.
Because they want to see America contained, they wanna see America isolated. Yes. They wanna see America defanged, weakened on the global stage. So I think I don't I don't think that the a nationalistic GFC would necessarily be against it, but I do think that to a certain extent, the a nationalistic GFC are against the United Nations in and of itself. Mhmm.
They're they they don't like the idea of that even existing. Yeah. And because because there is this conflict between the a nationalistic remember, just think about the a nationalistic gypsy as a colonial power, as an empire. They just don't have a country. It's a floating empire that tries to acquire territories for the for to to have sovereignty over territories.
Okay? They are contending with localized domestic OCGFC in the global South who are state led, who are interested in they they have nationalistic interests within their own country. Like, example, again, the the sovereign wealth fund of Saudi Arabia is primarily interested in developing Saudi Arabia. The the sovereign wealth fund of Abu Dhabi is primarily interested in developing The Emirates. Mhmm.
Now they're doing that through global investments, global investment strategies. And Abu Dhabi is the most sophisticated and strategic in their international investments. Okay. They're the they're the really the the flagship for the entire global South, in my opinion. Okay.
Right? Even more than China in terms of what they have done with them with their capital and how they have used it used it strategically and how they have navigated and managed their relationship with international OCGFC to to create partnerships and leverage, to bind them into relationships rather than allowing them to become hostilities. But they're they're primarily interested in their country and developing their country. So these are all nationalistic. They're all under governments.
So you don't wanna see, like, if if if if America gets kicked out of the UN, that's good for everybody because now international law can actually be applied to America, which in and of itself will will will weaken America in terms of the kind of damage that they can do globally. And it will also undercut or or undermine the extent to which they are pursuing a path of oppression and tyranny within their own country against their own people because they will be subject to international law. Because they're violating international law against their own citizens on a daily basis. Yeah. But they but no one ever gets to say anything about it because they dominate the United Nations.
So if
they got kicked out of
the United Nations, they could be held accountable for their mistreatment of their own people. Mhmm. America will be treated like any other country in the world. Mhmm. So, obviously, that's good for the anational OCGFC in terms of that, but it will also mean that now the United Nations actually operates according to global consensus.
Yeah. Global consensus of the localized OCGFC state led state led OCGFCs all around the world Mhmm. Which limits their power. Mhmm. So they're they're I think they're a bit conflicted about it, but I think that they would rather the the UN not exist at all.
But, if the UN does exist, think they they would probably like to see The US out. I don't think that they I don't think there's a reason why they should be against
that. Yeah. Okay. So let's see what other questions we have.
But the plan, I think,
in my in my opinion,
the plan is is for the dismantling of the UN. Yeah. Overall, that's what that's that's the general preference.
And to product, should we ex
Which is not the preference of the people of the Global South.
Yes. As as I think your question is being answered. Should we expect the UN to ever get real powerful action? I mean
That that's how you do it. The the prerequisite for The U for the United Nations being able to actually operate properly And as it was I won't say as it was designed to operate because it was always designed to be a colonial institution. Mhmm. But as it as it is on paper, in order for it to actually operate the way it is on paper Mhmm. The United States has to be removed.
Yeah. There's not another way to do it. Yeah. Without removing it, then you should dismantle the whole organization.
Yeah. I I would urge you to please go to the main Middle Nation channel channel on the Article six playlist. Mhmm. Go through them. We've exhausted all of the
Yeah. And we have the article six website as well. Yes. You can go to the invoke the sixth website that has a lot of a lot of data and information about Can I
to please also share the link to the website?
Share the link to the website and share the link to the petition as well.
Yeah. To the petition as well, please. Okay. What do you think about the this is is is is Daryl your support? What's the question?
Daryl Daryl Watkins, I'm not very sure if I've missed an earlier question. Is there a way to support her efforts more and are her efforts in vain? I'm sorry. What are you yeah. Who are we talking about?
We need to be yeah. Okay. So you've been requested to be more specific about your question. The admins have actually
to him,
so I'm not very sure.
I think we should help her. Believe all women.
Oh, okay. Let's okay. We've already
Whoever she is, help her out.
Yeah. We have about fifteen more minutes into the live. So let's try to keep on stick to topic. Stick to the topic. And please look out for I don't wanna reveal anything, but please watch out for the next prompt and the next video to be discussed.
So I will just do a quick overview. We first talked about what we tried to define what the OCGFC is. Mhmm. Okay? We clarified that.
And then the inevitable question of if the OCGFC are the Jews.
Right.
So that was a nice
Well, first first first, if it if if the OCGFC is a conspiracy, it's a cabal, it's an organized monolithic group.
Yes.
No. And then, you know
Yeah. And then, you know, about the yeah. I mean, them being a the of a particular group that was clarified and not only just on the life, but please peruse the videos that Chayil has produced about this. And then
And and and actually go go go on to, like, Twitter or X Yeah. And and look on the hashtag Yes. A hundred days of middle nation Yes. And you'll see the content that that brothers and sisters have been putting out Yeah. Around this because it's it's very good.
It's excellent. There's a lot of really, really good content that people are putting together.
Yeah. And we would like
to To explain these ideas even further.
I'm Sorry. We would like to invite all of you to also participate. And, again, don't feel hesitant because you don't think you are you'll you'll be able to contribute just as equally well as others because there's space in the social media group on Telegram to train you, to guide you, to advise you. Just please be confident and come forward if you're interested in participating because it will enhance your own development, it will enhance your own understanding, and you would be more of an active consumer of middle nation content. You're not just receiving and just letting it pass through your, you know, your mind.
Instead, you're interacting with the information that's being provided for you, and you are able to use the vocabulary that's being put forth in Shane's analysis. And it will be your tool in communicating your understanding
Mhmm.
Of reality as it takes place in the world. This is very important because it provides clarity and clarity would would give you, you know, a sense of proportion in your assessment of anything, you know. Well, it it also helps you know, one of the best
one of the best ways to learn something is to is to either to teach it or to imagine that you have to teach it. That's one of the best ways that you can ever learn anything. Mhmm. Like like like if you watch one of the videos or or if if just say just say that the concept of the OCGFC. Mhmm.
Imagine that you have to explain this to someone. Yeah. So what do you need for yourself internally in your own comprehension? What do you need explained to you? What do you need to research for yourself that will enable you to teach someone about it?
That helps you and yourself learn, and then it becomes very concrete in your own understanding. And then it's, you know, this becomes an it's an active process now. Because like I said in the I think the first life that we did on the on the challenge Mhmm. One of the one of the most frequent comments that I get from people is that I put into words what they already felt, what they already believed, but they didn't have the way to articulate it.
Mhmm.
I'm I'm giving voice to what they couldn't say but have felt. And that's incredibly valuable to me because it means that like like for you for for the person who says that, that means that you can feel free to use whatever I say, internalize it because you this is already you. I'm already saying what you think already, and I'm just putting it into into words. So I I don't own my words or my concepts or my ideas any more than you own them. We we both are equal owners of this because the only thing I'm doing is explaining it.
Mhmm. I'm just able to articulate it, but you know it already. You know everything that I'm saying already, you know it. Mhmm. In your gut, you know it.
In your life experience, you know it. In your own observations of reality, you know it, But you just haven't maybe been able to put it into a certain kind of language, a certain kind of articulation that I'm that I'm putting forward. So, you know, one of one of the worst things that they do to us in the West with this especially with this constant flooding of narratives, you're never even able to articulate your reality. Yeah. They tell you what your reality is, and they give you a limited lexicon to express yourself that that within that within that lexicon, it's never honest, it's never accurate about what you're really going through, about what you really feel, about what you really observe, about what you really understand, about what you really perceive.
The limited lexicon never articulates that. But they but they just give you a certain type of expression, certain type of paradigm, a certain type of worldview, a certain type of narrative that because you've also been habituated to, I will take whatever is available on the shelf. You know what I mean? Through the through the through the the
the Conditioning.
Through the conditioning of consumerism. Mhmm. You don't go to like, if you go to a shop with something in mind that you wanna buy, and they don't have the thing that you want Mhmm. You'll buy whatever substitute
Yes.
Whatever they give you. Yeah. The same way that, like, you know, most people don't for example for example, let's just see what's on Netflix and we'll just watch whatever it is. Mhmm. Never mind that there's nothing I want to watch on this.
They're not producing anything that's worth watching. Mhmm. But I want to watch something, so therefore I will watch whatever that something is that they decided to give me. That's why and I've talked about this before. They don't they don't even trying with movies anymore.
Mhmm. They're just making the same movie over and over again, and everyone knows that it's rubbish, but you'll go anyway because they've conditioned you to not reject what you didn't ask for.
Mhmm.
You're not giving me what I want, and therefore, I'm supposed to reject the thing that you're trying to give me, but they have conditioned you to accept it anyway. And this also goes with the narrative. The narrative that you're giving me is not what I feel. It's not what I've been through. It's not what I observe.
It's not what I perceive. Mhmm. I reject your narrative. Mhmm. And also, even if I don't have a counter narrative, even if I don't have the words to articulate, I still reject what you're giving me.
Yeah.
I'm not gonna now start regurgitating and repeating whatever you gave me, and I'll pretend that the narrative that you gave me is coming from me and it's my narrative. No. But inshaAllah with a Middle Nation content, now you have some articulation that helps you Mhmm. If you recognize it, Yani. Yes.
I'm just saying for the people who feel that way, if you recognize what I'm saying as that's what I've always felt, that's what I've always perceived, that's what I've always observed, that's what I've been through, that's what I'm going through, that's what I feel in my gut, well now you have some words.
Mhmm. Like tiptronis s s is saying 100% you're translating what's in our hearts.
Alhamdulillah. Alhamdulillah.
And yeah, thank you for connecting the dots. Fatihma KTV.
Alhamdulillah. You know. This is a fight.
Yeah.
Everyone understand this. I mean, especially for Muslims, but but there's there's multiple levels of this fight. Mhmm. The core fight, the most fundamental fight is between Kufr and Iman Yeah. Obviously.
Mhmm. And we understand that as Muslims. Mhmm. But there's also the the the OCGFC, the the the the class conflict Mhmm. The the westerners are against each other.
Mhmm. Your elites are against you. And and and like I said before, Shaitan is against us, and your the the westerners are fighting us because they are subordinated to Shaitan, and we are fighting Shaitan, and Shaitan is fighting us. Mhmm. That's why there's a conflict between westerners and and Muslims Mhmm.
Just because of the the the who who you're allied with.
Yes.
But this is we're we're in a we're in a serious fight, and and and they fight a lot of their fight is through narrative, which is just another word for programming and indoctrination and brainwashing. They're trying to brainwash you, they're trying to indoctrinate you, they're trying to program you, and even if that and this is the worst thing, is that even if the programming doesn't take hold, you still go along with it without believing it.
Yeah.
You go along with it, you're in you're not in it's not even in denial. Don't even know where that would be called.
It's kind of a compulsion.
You're you're you're you're by coercion, you're forced to play along Yeah.
With a narrative that you know perfectly well isn't true. And part of the reason is because they like I've said before, and I just said, part of the reason is because no one articulates the reality.
Yeah.
So you don't even have a a response.
Mhmm.
So you just have to play along. Yeah. Because you don't have the currency of articulation. Yeah. So you just have to take whatever they're selling.
It just reminds me of the story of the emperor without clothes. Mhmm. You know, the emperor is walking.
Yeah. Everyone has to play along.
Everyone is like tongue tied or I don't know, paralyzed.
Yeah.
Takes a child to point out. I mean, it's a story, but it's telling, you know.
But I mean, this is but but the the the the difference here between that and the and the western situation Mhmm. Is that they've taken out the word naked from your language Yeah. In that in that scenario. Yeah. So we don't have a we don't even have a word for what the what the emperor What
what is yeah. What is So
paraded. Have to we have to use words like it's a different kind of outfit. His nudity is a different kind of outfit. Yeah. Because they've removed the word naked from your language where you can't even call it what it is.
Mhmm. So they've removed from your language any ability to call anything what it actually is.
Mhmm. Welcome, Heather, watching from Latin America.
Welcome. Welcome. In the needles.
Yeah. Some someone I believe it's the same brother from the chat, I think.
Who produces really very nice content, brother. If that if that's you, brother.
Thank Yeah. Brother, really appreciate your participation in the challenge. This is the same in Christianity. They take as true what they know doesn't make sense, but they don't seek the actual truth having demonized it. I'm really sorry for anyone who's in this kind of a this quagmire of, you know, confusion and darkness really.
I mean, I feel, you know, I'll I'll I'll I'll probably make a video about this, but it's very important to understand the roots of people, the origin of people, and their the chronology of their development. The same way that on an individual basis, if you know someone's backstory, you know more about them, and you can predict their behavior better, if you know their history, if you know what their experiences have been and how they grew up and where they came from and what they were taught growing up and so on. And the same is true on a on a civilizational level in my opinion. And if you go back and look at the origins of the West, the origins of Europe, you you can it's fairly easy to understand them.
Okay. There's a there's somebody called Darryl Watkins. I'm a US citizen, born and raised Baptist Christian, but so much of what is spoken in terms of the I mean, I think he means middle nation, he says in terms of the nation. Makes so much sense to me.
I'm the right.
To you.
Please. Welcome.
Okay. We have two more minutes left before the live ends.
Oh, okay.
Yeah. So.
I didn't think we'd actually have that much to talk about, to be honest. Yeah. I'm glad I'm glad that it went through. Yeah. Basically, the the the rule of thumb is that the OCGFC in our part of the world are state led.
Mhmm. They are under the state. They're under state power, and they are interested in the development of their states. Mhmm. That obviously puts them in conflict with the a national OCGFC.
But the a national OCGFC want to doesn't mean that they they won't deal with them. They they have no choice but to deal with them because the transition is something that must happen. The transition to the global South must happen. So they are they are themselves, the a national OCGFC, them themselves are forced to negotiate with state led private sector power in the in the Muslim world and global South generally.
Mhmm.
Although although there are certainly parts of the world that are not as fortified. Yeah. I I think that the Muslim world is in the best position Mhmm. And China. Mhmm.
China and the Muslim world are in the best position with regards to negotiating their terms. But there are other parts of the world that are more vulnerable.
Yeah. And they are trying their best to also align with align their interests with China.
Yeah. And this this is where BRICS becomes very helpful for you.
Yes. And please stay tuned. This would yeah. Okay. Spoil ers so there will be really elaborate explorations on this topic we just just about scratched the surface here so stay tuned for the next prompt the next video to peruse and our live the next live will take place on the August 12.
August?
What's today? Eighth?
Today is the eighth.
Okay.
Yeah. August 12, four days
from now. Alright.
Inshallah. Okay. So Thank you everyone for joining. Everyone for joining.
Insha'Allah, see you again in four days?
Yes. In four days.
Live in four days. Insha'Allah, they'll be content between now and then as well.
تمّ بحمد الله