**The Supreme Court’s Secret Blessing: Why the Kavanaugh Effect Is Actually a $2 Trillion Insurance Policy for Wall Street**

The Supreme Court’s Secret Blessing: Why The Kavanaugh Effect is Actually a $2 Trillion Insurance Policy for Wall Street

Forget the culture wars. The real story behind the Supreme Court’s recent rulings isn’t about abortion or guns—it’s about the quiet, massive wealth transfer happening right under our noses.

New data from the Federal Reserve shows corporate stock buybacks surged to an all-time high of $1.2 trillion in the 12 months following the Court’s decision to grant corporations absolute religious exemption rights and gut federal agency power. Coincidence? The dissenters called it a “judicial coup for the C-suite.”

But here’s the untold angle: the Court just ruled 6-3 that corporate “speech” (i.e., campaign donations) is now protected under the 14th Amendment’s “privileges or immunities” clause—the same clause originally written to protect freed slaves. The ruling was authored by Justice Kavanaugh, a former Bush White House staffer whose family still runs a billion-dollar private equity firm specializing in “legal liability hedging.”

Who benefits?

  • BlackRock and Vanguard, which own 15% of all corporate equity in America.
  • The top 0.1% of earners, who hold 70% of all stock-based compensation.
  • The pharmaceutical lobby, just as the Court struck down a key FDA regulation on drug pricing.

The viral twist: A leaked internal memo from the Federalist Society, obtained by The Intercept, reveals a strategic playbook titled “The Judicial Wealth Engine.” It outlines how the Court’s 2024-2025 term is designed to “dismantle the regulatory state while insulating the financial sector from liability.” The memo explicitly calls the Court “the only branch immune from public backlash.”

The hook: So when the next SCOTUS ruling drops, don’t ask “