Rubio Out in the Gulf Protecting the Oil Bag, Camp Mystic Ducks the Lawsuit with Bankruptcy, and Adams' Top Man Gets Bagged by the Feds
From the Middle East shipping lanes to the corrupt halls of NYC, the elites are trying to keep their money straight while regular people are left paying the price.
Look, we got to talk about what went down this Wednesday, because the elites are out here moving wild both overseas and right in our backyard. First, we got Secretary of State Marco Rubio flying out to the Gulf, trying to make sure the global oil bag doesn't get messed up. Then, we see Camp Mystic running to the courts to file for bankruptcy after a terrible flood took 28 lives. And to top it all off, one of former NYC Mayor Eric Adams' main guys just got slapped with federal charges for bribery and money laundering. It’s the same old story: the people at the top doing whatever it takes to protect their pockets while the regular folks get the short end of the stick.
Let's start with Rubio's trip. This man went on a whole tour across three Gulf nations just to tell everybody that the Strait of Hormuz has got to stay open and toll-free. No cap, this is all about keeping that oil flowing cheap so the big corporations don't lose a single dime. Rubio out there talking heavy like the U.S. owns the water, trying to make sure nobody puts a tax on the shipping lanes. They call it diplomacy, but the streets know it's just big-money security work disguised as government business.
The Strait of Hormuz is where all the major money moves in the global oil game. If that lane gets blocked or if they start charging tolls, prices on the block go through the roof, and you already know who feels that hit first—the everyday people trying to fill up their tanks and buy groceries. Rubio’s out there doing damage control for the system, making sure the supply chain doesn't choke up, because the moment it does, the whole economic illusion starts cracking.
Meanwhile, down in Texas, we see how the corporate game really works when tragedy strikes. Camp Mystic just filed for bankruptcy protection. This is coming almost a year after a massive flood at their spot killed 28 people. Instead of standing tall and facing the music, these corporate bosses are running to federal court to file that paperwork. It's a classic dodge to freeze the lawsuits and keep the victims' families from getting the real justice and payouts they deserve.
The system is set up so that if you got enough money and a squad of lawyers, you don't ever have to take real accountability. They call it Chapter 11, but in the hood, we call it dodging the bill. Those 28 families are left grieving, while the executives get to restructure their debts and hide behind a judge. It shows you exactly how much the system values human life when it goes up against corporate survival—the money always comes first.


