Call It Conspiracy

Call It Conspiracy by Larry Abraham opens with a premise that challenges the mainstream understanding of political events: the assertion that global socialism functions as a strategic mechanism for the super-rich to consolidate power. Abraham identifies a hidden elite who do not merely tolerate socialism, but design and promote it as a controlled framework for centralizing authority and managing populations.
The Shape of Power
In Abraham’s analysis, the elite do not act randomly or through ideological fervor. They plan. They coordinate. They build influence through interlocking institutions—foundations, think tanks, corporate boards, central banks. They exploit socialism’s promise of equality to justify increasing state control. This centralized control becomes a conduit for their deeper goal: private global governance masked as public policy. The ideological content of socialism serves as a rhetorical device. Its true utility lies in its capacity to remove competition, eliminate local decision-making, and concentrate economic levers.
Finance as a Force Multiplier
Abraham draws a clear connection between international finance and revolutionary change. The Bolshevik Revolution, he argues, received direct funding from Western banking interests. These financial networks, not abstract historical forces, shape events. They fund both liberal democracies and Marxist regimes. By controlling credit and monetary policy, they direct industrial expansion, labor relations, and political transitions. Financial control precedes ideological outcomes. Those who issue currency, set interest rates, and manage global debt possess tools more powerful than armies or legislatures.
The Rhetoric of Reform
Political movements advocating redistribution become instruments of elite strategy. Abraham identifies the psychological trap built into this rhetoric: the illusion of inevitability. When people believe that socialism represents the future, they cease to resist its expansion. Abraham treats this belief not as a misunderstanding but as a planned psychological operation. Education systems and media shape public expectations through repetition. The result is not consent, but conditioning. The masses internalize elite decisions as historical necessity.
The Manufacture of Consent
Abraham’s thesis does not rest on secret meetings or coded messages. It rests on a pattern of convergence: academic theories, public policies, and international agreements move in a coordinated direction. The actors remain consistent. The Rockefellers, Rothschilds, and key members of the Council on Foreign Relations appear at pivotal junctures. Their speeches, donations, and policy documents produce structural effects. Abraham tracks how these networks infiltrate regulatory bodies, media outlets, and military alliances. Power resides not in visibility but in continuity.
The Illusion of Opposition
The book dismantles the conventional dichotomy between capitalism and communism. Abraham defines both as controlled variables within the same experiment. Public debates stage conflict. Behind the scenes, financial sponsors ensure both sides advance the same trajectory: centralized oversight, surveillance systems, and dependency. Socialist programs expand under capitalist administrations. Deregulation under socialists benefits multinational monopolies. Ideological theater distracts from operational unity.
Plausibility Through Precedent
Abraham reinforces his argument by invoking historical analogs. Julius Caesar used democratic forms to mask imperial ambition. Napoleon manipulated revolutionary sentiment to crown himself emperor. These precedents clarify intent. They show that power often enters through the back door of reform. Abraham challenges readers to observe present structures with the same analytical rigor. Global governance initiatives, digital identity systems, and environmental treaties serve technocratic ambitions dressed in moral urgency.
The Role of Academia
Universities do not merely transmit knowledge; they manufacture frameworks. Abraham traces how curricula shift to exclude questions of motive, agency, and design. Political science reduces systems to impersonal processes. History classes frame war and revolution as outcomes of social tension, never elite engineering. Sociology abstracts behavior into statistics. Economics separates finance from governance. Abraham argues that such segmentation benefits those who orchestrate convergence. A compartmentalized mind cannot see patterns.
The Function of Mass Media
The media do not fabricate facts; they curate context. Abraham shows how editorial framing decides what qualifies as a crisis and what passes without comment. War, debt, inflation—each emerges within a media atmosphere that discourages deeper inquiry. Dissent is permitted only within narrow lanes. The spectrum of acceptable opinion excludes structural questions. Commentators debate methods, never motives. The effect is disorientation. The audience sees motion without meaning, crisis without cause.
Reframing Socialism
Abraham treats socialism not as a workers’ movement but as a management technique. Its purpose is control. Its appeal lies in promises—health care, education, jobs. Its result is central planning, rationed resources, and bureaucratic oversight. The elite retain private control over industries while the public submits to regulatory systems. Abraham emphasizes that this process unfolds through legal means. Voters authorize their own containment through democratic rituals emptied of agency.
American Constitutional Displacement
The United States Constitution, designed to limit centralized authority, becomes irrelevant under global convergence. Abraham shows how executive orders, federal regulations, and international treaties bypass legislative constraints. Power migrates upward. Local sovereignty erodes. Abraham asserts that this erosion is not accidental but engineered. Policy think tanks write the blueprints. Political candidates deliver the language. Bureaucrats implement the structure. The constitution functions as a symbol, not a shield.
Reagan as a Case Study
Abraham evaluates Ronald Reagan through this lens of continuity. Despite conservative rhetoric, Reagan expanded federal budgets, supported international financial institutions, and negotiated treaties aligned with elite interests. Abraham positions Reagan as a rhetorician, not a reformer. The administration’s public image contrasted with its policy outcomes. Abraham argues that this dissonance reflects deliberate strategy: to neutralize dissent by co-opting its language.
The Pattern of Selective Overthrow
Abraham observes a consistent pattern in regime changes. Leaders resisting centralized banking, refusing multinational loans, or challenging global mandates face sudden destabilization. Media reports focus on corruption or civil unrest. Behind the curtain, Abraham identifies financial penalties, sanctions, and covert operations. The fall of South Vietnam, Iran’s Shah, Nicaragua’s Somoza, and Rhodesia’s Ian Smith fit this pattern. Abraham asserts that these removals align with elite goals of compliant governance.
From None Dare to Global Reach
Building on the foundation of None Dare Call It Conspiracy, this updated work extends the argument into the late 20th century. It integrates new geopolitical shifts, financial instruments, and institutional expansions. Abraham maintains that the original thesis remains valid. The mechanisms evolve. The objective persists. Global socialism, branded as justice, functions as a delivery system for elite consolidation. Abraham affirms that resistance requires awareness, structural literacy, and moral courage.
The Demand for Inquiry
Abraham challenges readers to ask: Who benefits from political paralysis? Who funds ideological extremes? Who drafts the regulations that redefine liberty as compliance? These questions do not emerge from ideology. They emerge from evidence. The book demands neither faith nor loyalty. It demands observation. It asks readers to follow the money, decode the language, and assess the outcomes. The call is not to alarm but to act.
Toward Structural Clarity
Call It Conspiracy outlines a paradigm of control through consent. It proposes that convergence, not coincidence, drives global change. It maps the institutional pathways of elite influence. It describes how financial power, ideological rhetoric, and bureaucratic expansion intersect. It clarifies how systems designed to protect liberty have been redirected to manage behavior. Abraham offers not a theory, but a lens. Through this lens, patterns align. Structures reveal intent. Decisions gain coherence. History reorients toward agency.














