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THEY DON'T WANT YOU TO BUY A HOUSE: The Hidden Agenda Behind America's "Housing Crisis"

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THEY DON'T WANT YOU TO BUY A HOUSE: The Hidden Agenda Behind America's

THEY DON'T WANT YOU TO BUY A HOUSE: The Hidden Agenda Behind America's "Housing Crisis"

You've seen the headlines. Mortgage rates are "too high." Inventory is "historically low." First-time buyers are being "priced out." The mainstream media wants you to believe this is just a normal market cycle—a temporary blip caused by inflation, supply chain issues, and the Federal Reserve's interest rate hikes. But if you pull back the curtain and connect the dots that the corporate press refuses to touch, a much darker, more deliberate pattern emerges.

Welcome to the Great Reset of American Homeownership.

Let's start with the numbers that don't make sense. Home prices have skyrocketed over 40% since 2020, even as wages have barely budged. But here's what the talking heads on CNBC won't tell you: this isn't a supply-and-demand problem. There are plenty of empty homes in America. According to census data, there are roughly 16 million vacant housing units in the United States. That's one vacant home for every eight households. Meanwhile, BlackRock, Vanguard, and State Street—the same three asset managers that control the S&P 500—have been quietly buying up single-family homes at a pace that would make a robber baron blush.

These aren't "mom and pop" landlords. These are corporate conglomerates using algorithmic pricing software to coordinate rent increases, colluding to keep inventory tight, and lobbying politicians to kill any legislation that would help you own a home. They've turned the American Dream into a rent-seeking nightmare.

But it gets deeper. Look at the Federal Reserve's role in all of this. Jerome Powell and his crew have been hiking interest rates to "fight inflation." But whose inflation are they fighting? Yours. The cost of bread and gas goes up, and they punish you with 7% mortgage rates. But the real inflation—the asset inflation that makes billionaires richer—they've been fueling for decades. The Fed's own policies have created a two-tiered economy: if you already own assets, you win. If you're trying to buy your first asset, you're locked out.

And here's the part that will really make the hair on your neck stand up: the Federal Reserve, the World Economic Forum, and the UN's Agenda 2030 have all published documents suggesting that homeownership rates are "too high" and that a "rentership society" is more sustainable for the planet. They literally want you to stop owning things. The "Great Reset" isn't a conspiracy theory—it's a documented policy goal. Klaus Schwab's World Economic Forum has explicitly called for "you will own nothing and be happy." And the fastest way to make that happen? Make homeownership impossible for the average American.

Now, let's talk about the "new home" you might be eyeing. If you're actually in the market for a new construction home, you're walking into a minefield. The big builders—DR Horton, Lennar, Pulte—they've been caught red-handed using "dynamic pricing" algorithms that know exactly how much you can afford. They're using your credit card data, your browsing history, and your employment information to squeeze every last dollar out of you. And the materials they're using? Lumber prices have been manipulated by speculators on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange, not by actual supply. The same hedge funds that crashed the housing market in 2008 are now betting against your ability to buy.

And the "new home" itself? Have you noticed that newer houses are getting smaller, cheaper built, and more expensive? That's by design. The building codes are being rewritten to force you into "smart homes" with mandatory IoT devices, energy monitoring, and "green" technologies that the government can control. Your new home isn't a home—it's a subscription box. You'll pay for the structure, then pay again for the software, then pay again for the energy, and if you miss a payment, they can turn off your thermostat or lock you out of your own mortgage.

But don't take my word for it. Look at the recent push for "zoning reform" and "missing middle housing." The same globalist foundations pushing for open borders and mass migration are also pushing to eliminate single-family zoning. Why? Because they want to replace your suburban sanctuary with high-density rental units. They want you packed into pods, paying rent to a corporation, with no generational wealth to pass down. The American nuclear family with a white picket fence is a threat to their globalist agenda because it creates stable, independent citizens who don't need the state.

And the timing couldn't be more suspicious. As we approach the 2024 election, the housing crisis is being weaponized. Both parties have failed you, but the deep state is using this pain to push for "universal basic housing" and "rent control"—which are just Trojan horses for government ownership of all housing. Don't fall for it. They want you grateful for a government-subsidized apartment while they live in their gated communities.

So what can you do? First, stop trusting the real estate agents. They're not your friends—they're incentivized to close the deal, not to protect your future. Second, if you can buy, buy now. Not because it's a good market, but because it's only going to get worse. The window is closing. Third, consider alternative ownership models—land trusts, co-ops, even tiny homes on raw land. Get off the grid, get out of the system, and own something tangible. Fourth, start asking questions. Why is BlackRock buying homes? Why is the Fed crushing the middle class? Why are the same people who want to "save the planet" also determined to take your home?

Final Thoughts


It’s hard to ignore the irony: we’ve engineered smarter, more efficient houses, yet the very market forces that produce them often price out the young families and first-time buyers who need them most. The real story of the “new home” isn’t just about solar panels or open floor plans—it’s about a fundamental disconnect between what we can build and who can afford to live in it. Until we address that chasm, the most innovative house on the block remains, for too many, a beautifully constructed mirage.