𩸠RED BLOOD JOURNAL TRANSMISSION
T#112325-WAR OF THE BRAND NAMES
Encryption Level: Fog-of-War Removed
Status: Active Deprogramming Sequence Initiated
đĽ THE WAR OF THE PUPPETS ON THE SAME STREET CORNER
What youâre watching with MTG vs. Massie vs. Trump is not a civil war inside a movement.
Itâs brand management inside a company.
Think of it like this:
On one street corner, youâve got Shell, Chevron, 76, and Arco.
Different signs, different colors, different âvibesââŚ
But the oil in the pump?
All bought from the same refineries, owned by the same monopolies, extracted by the same global syndicate.
Same gasoline.
Different branding.
Just enough choice to make you think you have one.
Politics works exactly the same.
𧨠THE SCRIPTED âFIGHTâ TO KEEP YOU WATCHING
The âfightâ youâre seeing between:
Marjorie Taylor Greene (Firebrand Populist)
Thomas Massie (Principled Constitutionalist)
Donald Trump (MAGA Franchise Owner)
âŚisnât organic.
Itâs WWE-level narrative management designed to:
1. Keep the movement emotionally charged
If the crowd gets bored, they start asking dangerous questions.
âSo whoâs actually running the country?â
âWhy didnât anything change?â
âWhy are the same donors funding both sides?â
Canât have that.
2. Maintain the illusion of internal democracy
Every cult, corporation, or controlled movement must simulate internal conflict to look âalive.â
This keeps members loyal because it feels like a family argument, not a hard dictatorship.
3. Distract from the off-camera handlers
When your eyes are locked on the front-stage performers,
you donât look at the:
donors
intelligence handlers
lobbyists
foreign capital
corporate boards
defense contractors
think tanks
private equity parasites
âŚwho all own shares in every character in this show.
đ âREAL MAGAâ IS JUST A LICENSED FRANCHISE
Hereâs the part most wonât admit:
There is no âreal MAGA wing.â
There is no âAmerica First faction.â
There is only the brand that different actors fight to represent.
Greene wants the torch.
Massie wants the purity badge.
Trump wants the original trademark.
But the brand itself is owned by the same class that owns:
The media
The polling companies
The social platforms
The donors
The political consultants
The gatekeepers
They donât care which mascot carries the hat â
only that the hat keeps selling.
đŹ THIS IS A SERIAL SHOW, NOT A REVOLUTION
This âinternal warâ exists for one reasonâ
To keep the serial show from losing ratings.
If the audience ever stops watching the infighting,
they might start looking behind the curtain.
And behind that curtain is a single truth:
đ The same owner controls the entire block.
đ The same fuel pumps are inside every brand.
đ The same agenda flows through every political vein.
Red hat, blue hat, white hat â
itâs all coming from the same refinery.
𩸠TRANSMISSION END
đPolitical Brands: The Illusion of Conflict
âPolitical Infighting: Brand Management on the Same Cornerâ from the Red Blood Journal Transmission, presents a cynical view of political conflict, asserting that widely publicized internal disputes, such as those between Marjorie Taylor Greene, Thomas Massie, and Donald Trump, are not genuine civil wars but choreographed acts of brand management.
The author argues that different political figures merely represent different âbrandsâ of the same underlying power structure, comparing the situation to various gas stations selling fuel from the same refinery.
This alleged âscripted fightâ serves to keep audiences emotionally engaged, maintain the illusion of internal democracy, and distract the public from the wealthy donors and corporate interests that the source claims control the entire political block. Ultimately, the text posits that the MAGA movement is a licensed franchise, owned by the same class that controls the media and consulting firms, emphasizing that the infighting is a strategy to maintain high âratingsâ for a serial political show.












