USAID

The Trojan Horse of Humanitarianism.

The “U.S. Agency for International Development” sells itself as the good guy — building schools, digging wells, handing out vaccines. But behind the smiling brochures is a long track record of regime meddling, puppet-building, and greasing the wheels of global agendas that serve D.C., not the people on the ground.

They say “foreign aid.” What they often mean is economic leverage. Political favors. Quiet groundwork for coups that just happen to benefit U.S. interests.

They flood countries with NGOs that answer to donors, not locals. They partner with multinationals and contractors that write million-dollar checks for results no one checks. And when those nations push back? Suddenly, their leaders become “corrupt” or “dangerous to democracy.”

This ain’t conspiracy — it’s receipts:
From Latin America to Southeast Asia to Africa, USAID has worked in tandem with intelligence agencies, big business, and global banks to “shape” outcomes under the banner of peace and progress.

To the untrained eye, it looks like charity.
To the folks on the ground, it looks a whole lot like empire.

Verdict: Not SphstRDnck.
If your mission’s so pure, why hide the playbook? Real help doesn’t come with strings and a surveillance drone.