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There is an ongoing “ghettoization” policy in the Caribbean expropriating nationalist means of production to private and foreign ownership. This governance strategy is akin to Zionism in the Middle East where Israel is ostensibly operating as an American proxy subjugating poorer, lesser developed Palestinians by leveraging a more advanced domestic industry structure and finance schemes to extort maximum revenue from underdeveloped countries to passive income recipients sharing ownership of foreign means of production. This economic practice inevitably leads to the ghettoization phenomenon where undereducated and impoverished sovereign nationals are resorted to ghettos or hostels to be defrauded through predatory practices such as predatory lending and exclusionary biomedical exploitation. An excellent example is the colonialization of Curaçao in the Caribbean where islanders consist of former spaces while this Holland colony serves as the 6th largest exporter in the world by serving as a refinery port for Venezuelan crude which they do not refine themselves rather importing it back for domestic consumption by this tiny island. This largely dumbfounded electorate fits the scheme described in the turn-of-century Protocols of Zion.
Curacao is becoming the “Kuwait” of the international oil trade. Serving as a refinery station for crude from jack-strapped Venezuela, controlling Curacao may be the key to finalizing the achievement of depeacing the west and it’s industrialized countries’ dependence on oil imports. Oil refined at Curacao’s ports are slated for entry into the American economy at the new Ireland port and also to Asian destinations traversing the Panama Canal. Sealing off these routes with a naval blockade can paralyze the American/Asia domestic supply chain that us heavily dependent on easy access to refined petroleum. The culture of Curacao is based on the century’s old African slave trade during the colonization of the new world. An election manipulated through foreign interests would seal the fate of the cause for independence from Dutch colonial ownership because of the concentration of the population in the services sector, more than 80% of the electorate amenable to populist themes. Curacao is the secret of the Americas being the 6th largest exporter in the world with $500 billion worth of oil exports transferred through their ports. Curacao’s political status in the Americas could galvanize the autonomy of the region.
Along with negotiating new trade alleviations like the Jones Act and legalizing marijuana, I seek to pursue an avenue of autonomy in the Caribbean by introducing the Caribbean Space Agency, an agency that will bring new trade opportunities by a geopolitical presence in low orbit.