How does an ordinary person who’s elected to the US House and Senate achieve power and influence enough to get re-elected and thus maintain a longterm political career? After all, it takes big bucks and lots of national connections.
The Uniparty is the answer: ready made for little guys to align themselves with others in the same boat around the world. In fact, back scratching works well. It transcends both Democrats and Republicans, conservatives and liberals. Present yourself however you want to your constituency. Just don’t ever talk about your “other” hidden alliance. No one will know.
The Uniparty could have been left or right, but it bears the liberal stamp because of when it really got organized during the New Deal period, emphasizing FDR-style welfare control of the masses—and United Nations-type dreams of One World peace and justice and globalism.
The 1960s gave the movement a big shot in the arm thanks to the advent of the Mainstream Media and the Hippies, energized by Civil Rights marchers and a public demand for feel good liberation after WWII. Sex and drugs and secular self-righteousness were exactly what people wanted.
One online encyclopedia defines the Uniparty as “a term that describes the globalist establishment’s control over politics and policy to the extent that every or nearly every major political party or politician are controlled by them and, thus, have far more in common than different, policy-wise. It is essentially synonymous with the deep state, as it retains control almost regardless of which political party or politician is elected.”
Though terms like globalist and deep state could have been applied to a wholesome and well-meaning social superstructure or religious set of beliefs, they were implemented quite differently: “An example is the general movement by both the Republican and Democratic parties in the United States to continually expand the size and reach of the Federal government into every area of one’s life, the only significant difference being whether the apparatus should be run by unionized government employees (the Democrat party approach) or private-sector contractors (the Republican party approach).”
More recently, we find such political alliances made in both the US Senate and House (check these lists yourself). It’s less about impeachment and troop withdrawal than about political self-preservation and clout. Trouble is, neither the politicians or the media give honest accounting to the American public. It’s about posturing, and they’re getting away with it.