Trump Fronts The Billionaire Cartel Gaslighting Your Groceries
Trump the frontman steps up and tells you prices fell and energy is cheap. Your grocery receipts say otherwise. That is the trick. Billionaires are not a bug in the system. They are the system. Clap while the register screams.
Trump the frontman, reciting price fairy tales to a strapped nation – Then the frontman struts on stage. He claims prices are down. He claims energy is cheap. He says if you feel squeezed it is because Republicans are too modest to brag and Democrats are liars. A lifelong Republican voter asks why groceries keep rising and he tells her she is mistaken. The pitch is simple. Do not trust your receipts. Trust me. The republican base is expected to clap on command while the register screams.
I am Harlan Quill. I love this country, fix my own leaky pipe, pay my taxes, hold the door for strangers, and rage at the ultrarich who turned a nation of neighbors into a marketplace of marks. I watched a former president pull a velvet curtain over a burning kitchen and call it a breeze. Prices are not down. The stage lights are a lie, bright enough to blind a working mother and send her home wondering why the math hurts.
Here is the trick. Point at the line on a chart that slopes gently now that last year’s fever has cooled and call it relief. Ignore that the level is still high enough to drown a paycheck. Ignore that food at home jumped hard from 2021 through 2023 and settled into a new, cruel normal. Ignore record profits at packaged food giants that bragged about “price over volume,” and egg companies that harvested a bird flu crisis like manna.
He knows the applause buys time. The donors buy the airtime. The story he sells buys silence from people who would rather be lied to than admit they got fleeced in broad daylight.
The checkout is a siren. Paychecks are quiet and shrinking
The beep at the scanner is an ambulance wail now. Each chirp says another hour on the clock, another side gig, another interest charge. Wages rose and then the bill for groceries rose more. Real families live in the space between receipt totals and quiet pay stubs, that echo chamber where budgeting apps pretend scarcity is a lifestyle choice.
I have stood behind a man counting singles for milk and cereal. I have watched a cashier remove items, line by line, like a surgeon with blunt tools. You can measure that pain. It is not a feeling. It is arithmetic.
You are not underpaid. You are being extracted.
Sticker shock is not a mood. It is a measured economic assault
They call it inflation psychology. I call it a war of attrition. Corporations tested the boundaries of our tolerance and found them farther than anyone feared. Superbowl ads crooned while executives raised list prices, cut package sizes, and dared you to notice.
This is not a brain fog. It is strategy. It is PowerPoint decks that model how many pennies can be stripped before loyalty breaks. It is a discipline among conglomerates that learned to signal the all clear to one another without saying the word cartel.
This is not dysfunction. It is domination.
Who rigged the cart. A cartel of monopolies and private equity
Look at your basket and trace the fingerprints. Beef passes through four giant packers. Soda through two near-total gatekeepers. Chips through a handful of snack empires that absorb competition like a vacuum bag. Your grocery store might have two names on the door, but behind them sit lenders, real estate trusts, and private equity funds that chew up regional chains and spit out closures.
Cerberus rode Albertsons for years. Kroger wants to swallow Albertsons whole. Dollar chains swarm rural zip codes like kudzu while local grocers fold. Blackstone and company carve warehouses into rent streams that squeeze every box of pasta long before it meets a shelf. This is a network, not a marketplace. It is engineered to funnel your paycheck up the ladder.
Profit margins soar while workers juggle overdraft and coupons
Packaged food margins widened as inputs fell. Companies cut promotions and dared you to switch. They discovered you would not skip toilet paper, and they taxed your non-choice. Energy prices cooled from a peak yet pumpers held retail margins fat. These are facts from earnings calls, not vibes. The outcome looks like this. A mother pawns a tablet to keep the lights on. A teacher switches to payday loans to bridge a gap for groceries. The C-suite rewards itself for discipline, which is code for restraint in not giving anything back.
Every dollar that kept us housed and fed grew wings. Every banner headline about record profits is a confession that your pain was planned.
The frontman takes the mic and declares prices are falling
He swaggers. He points at a ticker. He says you should feel grateful. He is a frontman for capital, singing the chorus while the real band counts money out of sight. The people who benefit sit in climate controlled rooms and text each other congratulations for pulling off the great repricing of American life.
It is not ignorance. It is complicity. He knows a show when he sees one. He spent a lifetime selling rooms on gold plating and filed bankruptcy while contractors ate dust.
Do not trust your receipts he says. Believe the showman
He tells you the scanner is a liar. He says the grocery manager is part of a plot by Democrats. He says the gas sign you pass every day is a hallucination brought on by liberal despair. He points at the stock market and declares that it is your pantry. He calls the pain a hoax. He wants you to doubt your own eyes, to doubt your own family, to doubt the empty lane on your kid’s plate.
The audacity is the point. If you accept that your memory is wrong, you will accept anything.
Editorial boards scold shoppers for noticing the theft
The pundit class tells you to stop complaining. They say the economy is strong if you look at the right graph. They tell you to admire the deceleration of injury. They write about your anger as a vibe and your hunger as a narrative. They defend supply chains like museum exhibits and get invited to luncheons where prices are folded into honorariums.
I am not interested in civility that asks the robbed to praise the locksmith. The center fetishizes calm while the house burns. That calm is a luxury good. The editorial tut-tutting is a protection racket for ownership.
A lifelong Republican asks why bread rose. He denies her
I watched a woman in a county fairgrounds ask the question in perfect American plain speech. Why did bread go up two dollars. She was not trolling. She was keeping a family alive. He told her she was wrong. That denial is a slap in the face of every person who knows the price of milk like a prayer.
This is not a partisan ache. It is the national pulse. It quickens when you pass the bakery aisle and pretend you do not want what you cannot afford.
Receipts do not lie. Corporate earnings calls boast of squeezes
You can hear the truth. It sits in transcripts where executives brag that consumers accepted higher prices, that elasticity stayed muted, that mix management and fewer promotions boosted margins. They describe shrinkflation with a smile, then photoshop the boxes so you do not notice. They celebrate price realization like a sport.
Fact based fury matters. Look at egg producers posting windfalls while citing disease. Look at snack conglomerates taking two and three rounds of price hikes while raw costs fell. Look at grocers booking gains from fees charged to suppliers who want shelf space, a toll booth that ultimately taxes you.
Energy giants gouge at the pump then fund the applause lines
Oil and gas titans posted record profits when global shocks tightened supply. Refinery margins exploded. Retail spreads stayed high even when crude fell. Those profits greased super PACs, funded conferences, paid for teleprompters that tell the frontman to promise cheap fuel as soon as the votes clear. Meanwhile, small towns lose bus routes and commute miles grow. The pump is a turnstile that spins money upward.
They call it market discipline. I call it a screwdriver slipped under your ribs at mile marker 214.
Rural and urban tables alike are stripped of protein and time
The cruelty is bipartisan in geography. In farm counties the only store left is a dollar chain with sad produce and salty calories. In cities, rent devours checks before groceries. Time is the other food group. People work two jobs, ride two buses, microwave dinner at 10, and pray the car starts tomorrow. The divisions they sell us are theater. Hunger knows no party. It knows the smell of a hot deli and the humiliation of walking away.
We are one people being looted by the same high towers. They expect us to argue while the magnets pull dollars off our plates.
Children skip seconds. Elders split pills to buy eggs
I have seen the quiet calculus at family tables. Kids pass the bowl with a shrug. Grandparents say they are not hungry tonight and hide the half dose in a pocket. This is a country that built aircraft carriers and mapped the stars. If we tolerate this, we are admitting that the point of America is dividends and the acceptable sacrifice is our kin.
Do not look away. This is not a statistic. It is your neighbor.
Not broken at all. Late capitalism is working to plan
The system is not failing. It is winning for those who designed it. They want prices sticky on the way down, wages sticky on the way up, and politics stuck in a blame loop. They want you angry at immigrants, at professors, at your cousin on disability. They want your rage misdirected while they automate the checkout and cut another cashier.
The plan is simple. Derisk the rich. Socialize the harm. Privatize the sky.
Patriotism is a full pantry and a union card
I do not measure love of country by hand over heart while jets scream overhead. I measure it by solid paychecks that buy meat and vegetables, by a lunch bag with fruit, by a rail of spices that cost less than amusement. I measure it by a union card that turns a job into a life, by a pension that lets you pass on the fishing rod.
A patriotic government would treat food like electricity. You should not have to beg to eat well. We can run factories and run a democracy. We can organize workplaces and still mind our own business about how neighbors live. That is responsibility and freedom at once.
Name the enemy. Concentrated capital colonizes daily life
Say it. The enemy is concentrated capital. The enemy is the billionaire class that buys policy and prices. The enemy is private equity that buys hospitals and bill collectors in the same week. The enemy is a supermarket merger that would hand your aisle to a boardroom in another state. The enemy is the consultant who designed the end cap to bait your wallet and the algorithm that knows your cravings better than your spouse.
They colonized our days, from the morning coffee to the dinner plate. They extract margin from sunrise to sleep. Every beep is a tithe.
Break the stranglehold. Tax windfalls cap margins prosecute fraud
We know the tools and we should use them without apology. Tax windfall profits in food and fuel, hard and retroactive. Cap retail margins on staple goods during shocks. Prosecute price fixing with prison terms, not token fines. Block mergers that shrink choices and kill towns. Break up giants that coordinate prices without a word. Force divestitures in meatpacking and grocery retail. Mandate plain labels for package size changes. Fund public food markets and regional co-ops that keep dollars local.
Do not say it is too hard. They built a machine that steals from you in plain sight. We can build a counter machine that feeds us.
Democracy demands deconcentration. Seize power from price fixers
Democracy is not a mood. It is a material fact that lives or dies by what we can afford and who sets the terms. Deconcentration is the line between a republic and a racket. Organize workers at the warehouses. Strike when they punish whistleblowers. Boycott brands that celebrate extraction. Join antitrust fights at the city council and the statehouse. Elect trustbusters who carry receipts, not donor lists. Fund mutual aid in your neighborhood to bridge the gap, then fight to make the bridge permanent through public provision.
We will remember the year the frontman told us to doubt our eyes. We will remember the applause lines paid for by oil and snacks. We will make a ledger of every beep and every bruise, and then we will act together until the price fixers lose their grip and the people set the prices of their own lives.
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