61

Land of Confusion: The Great Reset in Motion

Colin Todhunter

The global disruptions we have seen in recent years are frequently presented as a chaotic sequence of events: a ‘pandemic’, inflation, energy shortages and war. Little wonder that most people are confused. However, a structural analysis reveals a more deliberate controlled demolition of the 20th-century social contract.

We are witnessing a transition from a productive capitalist model, which required a healthy mass labour force, to what Yanis Varoufakis calls a techno-feudalist order.

The engine of this transition was a desperate financial stabilisation strategy carried out by means of a public health event. As identified by Professor Fabio Vighi, the global financial system reached a point of terminal instability in late 2019, evidenced by the collapse of the US repo market (where banks lend to each other).

By freezing the real economy through lockdowns, central banks performed massive liquidity injections to save the banking-finance tier. If that money had entered a functioning economy, it would have triggered hyper-inflation. By keeping the population at home, the elite performed a stealth bailout that preserved the dominance of the financial class by sacrificing the productive middle class.

However, a geopolitical reset also had to take place. For decades, Germany’s economy relied on three pillars: cheap Russian gas, high-tech exports to China and a US security umbrella. By late 2025, all three have been fractured. As Prof Michael Hudson notes, the ‘sabotage’ of the Nord Stream pipelines was a structural necessity for the Western financial elite.

If Germany continued to integrate with Russia and China, it would have created a power pole independent of the US dollar. The conflict in Ukraine served a purpose: it resulted in Germany replacing Russian pipeline gas and being forced into a massive build-out of liquefied natural gas (LNG) infrastructure and reliance on LNG from the US. Unlike pipeline gas, LNG must be super-cooled, shipped and re-gasified, a process that is inherently 3–4 times more expensive.

The result is that, in 2025, German industrial output is at its lowest since the 1990s. Heavy industries like BASF (chemicals) and ThyssenKrupp (steel) are relocating to the US or China. Meanwhile, Germany is pivoting from an industrial giant by betting on creating jobs in the likes of the green energy sector (including becoming a ‘hydrogen hub’), semiconductors and microelectronics, robotics and biotech and diverting its capital into a €150 billion annual defence spend.

At the same time, while Germany collapses, the City of London thrives on global volatility. Among other things, the City is the global hub for war risk insurance and energy brokerage. When a pipeline is destroyed or a strategically important shipping lane is threatened, the price of war risk insurance triples. The London insurance market (Lloyd’s) extracts these ‘risk premiums’ from the global economy.

The City’s brokers treat geopolitical instability as a volatile asset class. Even as British households are crushed by energy bills, the financial centre remains profitable by extracting wealth from the very chaos that foreign policy helps to manufacture.

Moreover, the City of London has secured its position as the indispensable middleman of the transatlantic energy pivot. While the physical gas originates in the US and is consumed in Europe, the financial and legal architecture of this trade is almost entirely managed in London.

Commodity brokers and exchanges like ICE (Intercontinental Exchange) in London have seen record volumes in LNG futures and derivatives. These are financial bets on the future price of gas. As volatility increases, the fees and commissions extracted by London-based traders and clearinghouses skyrocket.

More than 90% of the world’s marine insurance, including the specialised, high-premium coverage required for LNG tankers, is underwritten through Lloyd’s. By enforcing strict war risk premiums on any ship entering European waters, London effectively imposes a private tax on every molecule of gas that replaces the lost Russian pipeline supply.

This ensures that while European industry is struggling with high energy costs, the City’s financial firms extract a massive toll from the logistics of the replacement supply.

Of course, the structural readjustment of economies leads to huge social tensions. This is where the ‘Russian threat’ comes in. It has been elevated to an all-encompassing internal narrative used to manage domestic dissent and to galvanise the public to rally behind the flag. The bogeyman serves a vital psychological function by converting the growing anger of the impoverished into a patriotic duty to endure hardship.

Under this regime of ‘permanent emergency’, any industrial action, protest or systemic critique can be branded as malign foreign influence or subversion, allowing the state to use new, expansive policing powers to suppress internal friction.

To justify the redirection of billions in tax revenue away from failing public services and into the military-industrial complex to create ‘growth’ in a failing economy (a desperate attempt to revive a collapsing neoliberalism—see chapter two here), the state must maintain a high-decibel level of existential fear. In the UK, the Defence Industrial Strategy 2025 explicitly frames militarisation as an engine for growth, using the spectre of a Russian invasion to legitimise a state-subsidised transfer of wealth to high-tech defence contractors.

By manufacturing a permanent state of war-footing, the elite ensure that a main pillar of the economy is the one that directly serves the security of the state, while the population is told that their dwindling healthcare and pensions are a necessary sacrifice for national survival.

In this respect, we also see the changing status of the human being. In the industrial era, the state ‘subscribed’ to the working class, investing in the NHS and education because it required a fit population to drive production. Artificial intelligence, robotics and economic decline increasingly make much of this labour force redundant.

As capital may no longer find the reproduction of labour desirable or profitable, the state withdraws its subscription. The visible rot in the NHS is the result of deliberate divestment. (The UK private health insurance market has surged to a record £8.64 billion, a nearly 14% year-on-year increase.)

If the worker is no longer required for production, the state views healthcare as a ‘non-performing cost’ to be liquidated.

When a population is no longer an asset but a fiscal liability, the state moves from care to managing exit. It’s no accident that we have seen calls for the rapid legalisation of assisted suicide across the West. It might also help to explain the prescribing of midazolam and do not resuscitate orders in care homes during the COVID event. Data shows that the UK government purchased vast quantities of midazolam (two years’ worth of stock in just two months) in early 2020.

In 2025, official impact assessments noted that legalising assisted dying would result in “considerable cost savings” for the NHS and state pension system—estimated at up to £18.3 million within a decade for pensions alone. The Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill Impact Assessment (May 2025) officially quantified the ‘benefits and pensions’ impact. It estimated that by year 10, the state would save roughly £27.7 million per year in unpaid pension and benefit payments due to assisted deaths.

By accelerating the ‘offboarding’ of the non-productive elderly (whatever happened to the COVID era marketing slogan of ‘saving granny’?), the system wipes billions in future pension liabilities off the state balance sheet.

Moving forward, what can we expect? We will see the elite continue to rollout the narrative of permanent emergency under the guise of climate crisis and Russian threat to provide the ideological discipline required to justify a boosted austerity. Meanwhile, digital ID and central bank digital currencies will create a system of total surveillance. In this emerging system, the citizen is replaced by the ‘managed subject’, whose access to the economy is contingent upon a social credit score.

Sources and References

Deutsche Bundesbank (Dec 2025): “Current Economic Policy Challenges in Germany.” (Primary data on the contraction of German industrial output and the fiscal burden of energy transition).

Hudson, Michael (2025): American Imperialism in Plain Sight. (On the “Super-Imperialism” of the US dollar and the structural dismantling of European industrial autonomy).

ICE (Intercontinental Exchange) (2025): Global Energy Derivatives Annual Report. (Statistics regarding the surge in LNG futures trading and the financialization of European energy markets).

Law Society of Ireland Gazette (May 2025): “Assisted Dying Will Result in Huge Savings in Britain.” (On the fiscal implications of legalizing MAiD in relation to state pension and NHS cost reductions).

Lloyd’s of London (Nov 2025): “The Geopolitics of Marine Risk.” (On the expansion of war risk premiums and London’s role in underwriting the transatlantic energy corridor).

London Market Group (Nov 2025): “Helping to Secure the Future.” (On the City of London’s strategic positioning within the post-pipeline energy architecture).

Robinson, S. (2020) ‘Supplies of sedative used for COVID-19 patients diverted from France to avoid potential shortages’, The Pharmaceutical Journal, 19 May.

UK Ministry of Defence (2025): Defence Industrial Strategy 2025. (Official policy framing military expansion as a central pillar of the new national economic model).

Varoufakis, Yanis (2024): Technofeudalism: What Killed Capitalism. (The foundational theoretical framework for the shift from profit-based production to rent-based digital extraction).

Vighi, Fabio (2025): Emergency Capitalism. (On the use of systemic “crises” to manage the terminal instability of the global financial system).

World Economic Forum (2025): Global Risks Report. (Data regarding “social fragility” and the management of populations in the age of automation).

Colin Todhunter specialises in food, agriculture and development and is a research associate of the Centre for Research on Globalization in Montreal. His open access books on the global food system can be accessed via Figshare (no sign in or sign up required).

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les online
les online
Dec 23, 2025 11:30 PM

Another First for Australia: Islamic State (ISIS) has never previously
attacked members of, or The Only Democracy In The Middle East,
attacking mostly rival Moslem groups. According to The Authorities,
‘Islamic-State inspired shooters’ broke from that well-established
tradition at Bondi Beach recently…

Johnny
Johnny
Dec 24, 2025 12:09 AM
Reply to  les online

The only first prize aUStralia gets is
KISSING THE EMPIRES ARSES.

Captain Birdheart
Captain Birdheart
Dec 24, 2025 12:34 AM
Reply to  Johnny

1777////?

Erik Nielsen.
Erik Nielsen.
Dec 24, 2025 1:24 AM
Reply to  les online

Australia is build on the most hardcore criminals in the British Empire being sent to Australia by the Penalty Court and all their kids they got there.

Off course ISIS wont attack members of their own race in the land of the down under.
You better run and take cover. https://youtu.be/XfR9iY5y94s .

les online
les online
Dec 23, 2025 10:37 PM

Now, if Finland can be encouraged to provoke a military reaction from
Russia, Finland, being in NATO, can call for assistance to fight Russia..
The UK will assist by supplying the weapons Finland needs to fight
Russia to the last Finlander – and the government can go on a wartime
footing, it’s excuse for massively cutting back the social welfare budget…

Johnny
Johnny
Dec 23, 2025 10:29 PM

Rewriting history (or should that be HERstory?) as it happens:

https://consortiumnews.com/2025/12/23/hillary-clinton-is-wrong-the-genocide-isnt-fake-news/

Erik Nielsen.
Erik Nielsen.
Dec 23, 2025 11:53 PM
Reply to  Johnny

The Nobel Peace Prize medal receiver Obama planned a $1 trillion rejuvenation of US nuclear arsenal.
https://theintercept.com/2016/01/07/hillary-clinton-nuclear-weapons/ .
Hitlary Clinton had difficulty in seeing the rational in this Obama’s decision.

How could so many people be so wrong about this completely liberal dumbhead Obomba?
Because he was coloured and just SO more natural than us whites???

les online
les online
Dec 23, 2025 9:36 PM

The released US Department of Justice’s ‘Epstein Files’ competes with
an alzheimer’s memories for the number of redactions…

Captain Birdheart
Captain Birdheart
Dec 23, 2025 9:22 PM

‘Global’

no proof, no society

Captain Birdheart
Captain Birdheart
Dec 23, 2025 9:32 PM

Album of the year, 1982,

Actually, maybe not,

https://paris1942.bandcamp.com/album/paris-1942

Aloysius
Aloysius
Dec 23, 2025 8:31 PM

The trouble is, while the conservatives always love a good Russia threat, it’s the liberals who really hate Russia. How that happened, I am not clear on.I guess they think the Ukraine is the land of freedom and opportunity or something.

Erik Nielsen.
Erik Nielsen.
Dec 23, 2025 9:56 PM
Reply to  Aloysius

Because Russia is the traitor of the working class. The kulak. They left the poverty role and became independent. Nothing is more despicable for a Liberal.

On top of it Russia returned to Orthodox Christianity when every true revolutionary know there is no God.

Russia left the Gulag camp concept and flirted with the enemy: The Imperialist Colonialist Capitalist Oligarch suckers and exploiters on the global working class labour masses.
What a despicable country!

Veri Tas
Veri Tas
Dec 23, 2025 8:10 PM

Yes, this explains it all. Thanks!

George Mc
George Mc
Dec 23, 2025 7:47 PM

It’s remarkable how familiar all this is.

The bogeyman serves a vital psychological function by converting the growing anger of the impoverished into a patriotic duty to endure hardship.

…this regime of ‘permanent emergency’

…the state must maintain a high-decibel level of existential fear. …

manufacturing a permanent state of war-footing… the population is told that their dwindling healthcare and pensions are a necessary sacrifice for national survival.

The formula was ever thus. Only now it seems the stakes are higher, the booty has grown etc.

And of course, the general public is no longer required. The drum beats gather to induce a state of despair whilst opiate sales skyrocket. The Western masses are being led into a voluntary euthanasia.

One thing we can rely on is the constant supply of sedentary entertainment. Much of which will come in the form of “news”. Scandals, invented crises, the greatest taboos shockingly exploded. New virus scares, biological reversals, the sexes switching, the old World War Two show constantly whipped up via memes I won’t mention since I don’t want this comment to go into indefinite pending etc.

There will be more Bondi Beaches, more 9/11s, more serial killers on the rampage, more climate scares etc.

I wonder if any of this will be mentioned on the TV New Year schedules?    

Johnny
Johnny
Dec 24, 2025 12:12 AM
Reply to  George Mc

Yep, fear and flag waving.
As dumb as a bucket of bolts.

The Real Edwige
The Real Edwige
Dec 23, 2025 7:10 PM
Aloysius
Aloysius
Dec 23, 2025 8:37 PM

Definite wins, yessirree. Inflation will take care of A. But it’s a step.

They’ll get B. with the next “measles outbreak.”

Erik Nielsen.
Erik Nielsen.
Dec 23, 2025 10:02 PM
Reply to  Aloysius

Let the deceases govern.

Erik Nielsen.
Erik Nielsen.
Dec 23, 2025 10:02 PM

MAGA. Congratulations.

landy
landy
Dec 23, 2025 6:39 PM

Well Colin you have achieved in this article what none of the others researchers have achieved since I first come hear.
Great article real journalism. take note Iain, Kit!

sandy
sandy
Dec 23, 2025 6:08 PM

The provocation of Russia has been a permanent obsession of the West. Permanent enemies is a requirement of capitalist functionality. It keeps the servant class occupied and employed, and competitors scrambling. NATO treaty abrogation, provocateuring a Cuban Missile Crisis at the Russian border and blowing up natural gas pipelines was to facilitate US LNG supplanting Russian NG. But as usual, US war plans have multiple potential profit centers like simulating a Great Reset Ukraine digital remote control war society for the Pentagon and Banksters, and a long term test site for drone and other electronic remote control warfare. Many of us researched this in 2014 and tried warning folks, but few would listen or few could hear in a shadowbanned, two-way mirror world that the net has become.

Lost in a dark wood
Lost in a dark wood
Dec 23, 2025 5:57 PM

The war is between Pax Americana (Pompeo etc) and Davos (Kissinger etc). Prior to covid, Davos had completed the capture of all major agencies and institutions (police, medical, universities), media, corporations and political parties; a.k.a. the “long march”. Together, they were engaging in the destruction of western democracy and culture; e.g. through the Great Replacement. However, Pax Americana had captured US military intelligence (NSA). Then, via getting Trump elected in 2016, they went on to capture the CIA, the FBI, Unit 8200 (presumably), Twitter, Google. With regard to psywar, Pax Americana has done the following (inter alia):

– (Probably) tipped the result on the Brexit referendum
– Torched the Huawei 5G network – thereby forcing abandonment of intended implementation.
– Armed Ukraine to withstand initial invasion in Feb 2022
– Blew up Nord Stream
– Formed alliances in the Capsian region to open energy routes
– (Possibly) torched EVs in carparks and cargo ships
– Directed Tommy Robinson since c.2014
– Hijacked the narrative of the Southport psyop
– Destroyed the capacity of Hezbollah and Iran to attack Isreal
– Maybe developing the capacity to plant real car bombs as a “revised IRA” false flag operation.

A threat rises in the east . . . but who’s pulling the strings?

Armando Romani
Armando Romani
Dec 23, 2025 5:28 PM

Bravo. An excellent summary of the current state of affairs.

gbossa
gbossa
Dec 23, 2025 3:40 PM

Those “economic” reasons for the elite’s timing of the covid operation and the subsequent madness of the pipeline bombing and Ukraine war have always made the most sense to me. Excellent analysis.

Although the deck is stacked against us we should always remember and take heart in the fact that the French developed a rather simple machine way back in 1792, based on the law of gravity, that proved very effective in discouraging elite over-reach.

Erik Nielsen.
Erik Nielsen.
Dec 23, 2025 2:30 PM

Finally someone who understood the beast lives comfortable in the City of London.

Suspicious of everything
Suspicious of everything
Dec 23, 2025 1:08 PM

£27.7 million a year? Pennies.

Iain Davis
Iain Davis
Dec 23, 2025 12:44 PM

Thanks. Outstanding

landy
landy
Dec 23, 2025 6:40 PM
Reply to  Iain Davis

It was.

judith
judith
Dec 23, 2025 12:42 PM

Thank you for this article.
I did not know about the LNG from America.
Very sad about Germany.
And the rest of the world for that matter.

This is a keeper.

Johnny
Johnny
Dec 23, 2025 12:18 PM

Has the ‘Titanic’ of Capitalschism hit the iceberg of avarice and doomed to sink no matter how many manipulations they manufacture?

Armando Romani
Armando Romani
Dec 23, 2025 5:31 PM
Reply to  Johnny

Read the piece again. The head-on crash into a wall of the western economies is a feature, not a bug.

Munk
Munk
Dec 23, 2025 11:10 AM
Erik Nielsen.
Erik Nielsen.
Dec 23, 2025 2:05 PM
Reply to  Munk

To be an accountant is not a dull job but exiting! https://youtu.be/JrsB1RfksEA .

ariel
ariel
Dec 23, 2025 2:25 PM
Reply to  Erik Nielsen.

Did you mean ‘exciting?’, ‘exiting’ means taking the WAY OUT.

Erik Nielsen.
Erik Nielsen.
Dec 23, 2025 10:06 PM
Reply to  ariel

Off course, my fault ehh no, the keyboard’s fault! Sorry for my keyboard’s fault :-).

ImpObs
ImpObs
Dec 23, 2025 11:02 AM

Best article I’ve read from Colin.

Meanwhile, digital ID and central bank digital currencies will create a system of total surveillance. In this emerging system, the citizen is replaced by the ‘managed subject’, whose access to the economy is contingent upon a social credit score.

It’s way beyond Digital ID they want to legislate mandatory client side scanning on all devices capable of internet conectivity. That’s phones, computers, tablets, and TV’s.

UK Lawmakers Propose Mandatory On-Device Surveillance and VPN Age Verification
The UK flirts with an extreme future where every device is surveilled.

landy
landy
Dec 23, 2025 6:42 PM
Reply to  ImpObs

google does this already using outlook, hotmail, you tube and if your using a vpn it does block you from using the service or that website / video.

Veri Tas
Veri Tas
Dec 23, 2025 8:17 PM
Reply to  landy

Is a website / video that blocks us if using VPN worth visiting/watching?

Erik Nielsen.
Erik Nielsen.
Dec 23, 2025 10:53 PM
Reply to  ImpObs

Then let phones, computers, tablets, TV’s and other ‘devices’ have a lonesome tonight.
and I am gonna live without you – https://youtu.be/qFJnajUkreI .

Lost in a dark wood
Lost in a dark wood
Dec 23, 2025 10:40 AM

The engine of this transition was a desperate financial stabilisation strategy carried out by means of a public health event. As identified by Professor Fabio Vighi, the global financial system reached a point of terminal instability in late 2019, evidenced by the collapse of the US repo market (where banks lend to each other).

It was the other way round. The scamdemic had been planned for decades, but it was launched in early 2020 (straight after Davos) for the purpose of removing Trump. It was then immediately followed by the often contradictory BLM operation. In late 2019 insiders would know that these operations were going to be launched. And this foreknowledge caused the repo market to fail.

George Mc
George Mc
Dec 23, 2025 6:02 PM

for the purpose of removing Trump.

Honestly? The entire pandemic pantomime to remove a puppet whose strings they themselves were pulling?

landy
landy
Dec 23, 2025 6:43 PM

purpose of removing Trump. 😂 
Crack hopium from Q…

Lost in a dark wood
Lost in a dark wood
Dec 23, 2025 7:28 PM
Reply to  landy

The man with a plan!

Brianberou
Brianberou
Dec 23, 2025 9:19 AM

A very thorough, well researched and written a article, except, who actually controls and owns the City of London and its subsidiaries ie names ?

Erik Nielsen.
Erik Nielsen.
Dec 23, 2025 1:52 PM
Reply to  Brianberou

King Charles and his financial Advisors (Rothschilds, a.o.). The group of 300. UKColumn has a fine article around names of the Influential Investor groups in London.

Brianberou
Brianberou
Dec 23, 2025 6:03 PM
Reply to  Erik Nielsen.

Professor Carol Quigley alluded to a long line of names in his book Tragedy and Hope but the real core of who controls the controllers or who guards the guards has yet to be stated.

undergroundpoet
undergroundpoet
Dec 24, 2025 12:24 AM
Reply to  Brianberou

To be determined

landy
landy
Dec 23, 2025 6:44 PM
Reply to  Erik Nielsen.

 UKColumn has a fine article around names of the Influential Investor groups in London.

 😂 

Erik Nielsen.
Erik Nielsen.
Dec 23, 2025 11:20 PM
Reply to  landy

Uk-column 15 Dec at 45:06 Ladies in Red https://www.ukcolumn.org/video/uk-column-news-15th-december-2025 .

Sami-Mama
Sami-Mama
Dec 23, 2025 6:46 PM
Reply to  Erik Nielsen.

Do you have the title for that?

Armando Romani
Armando Romani
Dec 23, 2025 5:33 PM
Reply to  Brianberou

Hint: It rhymes with “cloth mild.”

Brianberou
Brianberou
Dec 23, 2025 6:05 PM
Reply to  Armando Romani

They are like the shadows in Plato’s cave.

Fran crowe
Fran crowe
Dec 23, 2025 8:48 AM

Thank you for such a concise and comprehensive description of the world today. One of the best articles I’ve read on OG.

Hornbach
Hornbach
Dec 23, 2025 8:47 AM

An extremely well written article, thank you !
I believe we need such sharp synthesis, it helps putting the ideas in place so the puzzle is not so complicated anymore. My only sorrow is that I know how difficult (maybe impossible) will be for me to discuss the ideas (and the reliable sources) with the members of the family “on the other side”, no matter how articulate I am they just ignore or deride whatever I try to explain. Thank you again !

judith
judith
Dec 23, 2025 12:40 PM
Reply to  Hornbach

Well, God love you for even attempting the conversation.
Just thinking about it gives me angina.
Although, I must confess, I do save a number of articles from these substacks and independent sites in the event someone does wish to engage in a conversation with the crazyy “conspiracy theorist”.
“Here’s the proof!”
A girl can dream.

Erik Nielsen.
Erik Nielsen.
Dec 23, 2025 1:54 PM
Reply to  Hornbach

Yeah this is unfortunately a common response from the sheeple.

Lizzyh7
Lizzyh7
Dec 23, 2025 3:39 PM
Reply to  Erik Nielsen.

Much of it due to the ever shortening attention spans. The problem is actually explaining this stuff requires a lot of detail as well as historical references. And let’s face it, many today will sometimes try to listen for longer than 5 minutes, but most will not. A quick subject change, or picking up the ever present device to check for whatever seems more important, and you lose them. I am working on letting go of even attempting to explain, but damn that’s hard and frustrating to think with maybe 10 more minutes of attention, the message might get through and a lively discussion just might happen. And of course, many will simply give you the deer in the headlights stare before babbling something about “conspiracy theory” or better yet, “I just wanna live my life, I can’t worry about all that.”

Erik Nielsen.
Erik Nielsen.
Dec 23, 2025 11:37 PM
Reply to  Lizzyh7

“Yes but we cant do anything anyway”, “Yes but we cant do anything about it”, “Yes but that is unfortunately the conditions we have, and we have to live with it”. “I dont wanna hear about it, I am puking”. “They said we should do it, then do fock do it!”. “This is what they want, then do it!”. “I dont wanna hear more, I am gonna scream if you continue”. “This you are unfortunately going to live witht”. “Swallow it”, “Swallow it for devil’s sake”..

Veri Tas
Veri Tas
Dec 23, 2025 8:22 PM
Reply to  Hornbach

We’re all in the same boat.

Erik Nielsen.
Erik Nielsen.
Dec 23, 2025 11:39 PM
Reply to  Veri Tas

Have mercy with us. We are coming:comment image