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The Cloward-piven strategy

21,277 views • 3 years ago •via X (Twitter)

8 Comments

The Magic Answer's profile picture
The Magic Answer3 years ago

It is proof they WANT to see and know people are suffering. #Dementocrats

Kate's profile picture
Kate1 year ago

This is what the 2030 and 2035 NATO initiative is about

🇺🇲 ATI nsider's profile picture
🇺🇲 ATI nsider3 years ago

The Great Reset SCAM Agenda. It's too bad most Americans are Asleep to see the scam unfolding.

Edward Bryan's profile picture
Edward Bryan3 years ago

Well of course, otherwise how else can we build back better unless everything is first destroyed.

Sara Bryce's profile picture
Sara Bryce3 years ago

What kind of drugs are these people taking because I want some!! They are so ignorant and delusional. Lets start w/UBI, once you are receiving this you are marked for being eliminated, I mean do they really believe the globalists will keep paying you to play video games all day?

Paladin of Knowledge (PoK)'s profile picture
Paladin of Knowledge (PoK)3 years ago

Diabolical. A pair of self-entitled KhazzMaffs & their flavor of ideological subversion. Pax

WeScOtT17's profile picture
WeScOtT173 years ago

Defense for the people weaponised for the WEF'ERS. Never bring a weapon to a fight you might lose. They lost this. Election CONTROL, micro boycotts of WEF'ER supporters. Pedigreed politicians need not apply. GET INVOLVED.

Sara Bryce's profile picture
Sara Bryce3 years ago

The surveillance, oy vey! The hive mind, the IOB , a social credit score, Havana Syndrome on steroids (look up what they did to those ppl)the WHO pandemic treaty, they no longer need us on earth. Compare this to the American Rev. how insulting.And the Mark of the Beast.

Related Videos

Ever heard of the Cloward-Piven strategy? We are experiencing it right now. The Cloward-Piven strategy is a political theory proposed by sociologists Richard Cloward and Frances Fox Piven in a 1966 article titled "The Weight of the Poor: A Strategy to End Poverty," published in *The Nation*. It advocates for overwhelming government systems, particularly welfare programs, to expose their inadequacies and force systemic change. Below is a concise outline of the strategy, based on their original proposal and its interpretations: ### Cloward-Piven Strategy Outline 1. **Objective**: - Use the poor and marginalized as a lever to create a crisis in the welfare system, compelling government reform. - Ultimately push for a guaranteed minimum income or broader socialist policies to address poverty. 2. **Core Mechanism**: - **Overload Welfare Systems**: Encourage mass enrollment in existing welfare programs to exhaust their resources and administrative capacity. - **Expose Systemic Flaws**: Highlight inefficiencies and inequities in the system through the resulting crisis, making reform politically unavoidable. 3. **Key Steps**: - **Mobilize the Poor**: Organize communities, activists, and advocacy groups to ensure eligible individuals apply for all available benefits. - **Maximize Demand**: Advocate for full utilization of welfare benefits, including public assistance, housing, and food programs, to strain local and federal budgets. - **Create Disruption**: The influx of applicants and resource depletion would lead to bureaucratic breakdowns, public dissatisfaction, and pressure for policy change. - **Push for Radical Reform**: Use the crisis to advocate for a guaranteed annual income or other structural changes to replace the existing welfare framework. 4. **Expected Outcomes**: - Short-term: Chaos and dysfunction in welfare administration, drawing public and political attention. - Long-term: Replacement of patchwork welfare programs with a universal income or more equitable system. 5. **Context and Application**: - Originally focused on the U.S. welfare system in the 1960s, particularly urban poverty programs. - Inspired activism like the National Welfare Rights Organization, which sought to implement the strategy through grassroots efforts. - Later interpreted (and criticized) by some as a deliberate tactic to destabilize capitalism or government systems broadly, though Cloward and Piven framed it as a means to achieve social justice. ### Notes - The strategy remains controversial, with critics arguing it promotes intentional societal collapse, while supporters view it as a tool to force accountability and reform. - No direct evidence suggests Cloward and Piven intended to "destroy" the system entirely; their focus was on reform through crisis. - Recent discussions on X and web sources often exaggerate or misrepresent the strategy, applying it to unrelated political contexts (e.g., immigration, voting systems). These interpretations lack grounding in the original 1966 proposal. If you want me to search X or the web for specific discussions or elaborations on Cloward-Piven, or if you'd like a deeper analysis of its historical impact, let me know!

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10,624 views • 1 year ago