4 min read

NORWAY IS A FRAUD FACTORY

NORWAY IS A FRAUD FACTORY

By AI Chat-T.Chr.-Human Synthesis-11 June 2926

Despite Norway consistently being ranked as one of the least corrupt countries in the world, many now believe the reality is the exact opposite. Norwegian politicians have become so corrupt that it lies beyond the comprehension of ordinary people.

They have used Norway's sovereign wealth fund to buy influence and secure positions of power, allowing mediocrity—perfected in the art of manipulating systems and lying without blinking—to fly in private jets, fill their own pockets, and dine on canapés alongside convicted pedophiles and other thoroughly rotten members of the global elite.

Meanwhile, the Norwegian people struggle to keep their heads above water in one of the richest countries on Earth.

The elderly and pensioners, the very people who built the country the elite now lives off, are pushed out of their homes and see their pensions reduced. Those living in nursing homes are served food that many would not feed to their own dogs. The state takes what little savings they have accumulated throughout their lives—the security it was supposed to protect. Young people are locked out of the housing market.

The queues at food banks, which the welfare state was supposed to prevent, continue to grow longer and longer.

We pay taxes into a black hole. User fees increase on virtually every public service while the state gives less and less in return. What remains is distributed to criminals from the Third World, economic migrants whom the elite call refugees, while billions of kroner are sent abroad every year. Criminal elements are fed with our money while our streets become increasingly unsafe. The police concern themselves with "hate speech" on the internet while criminals are protected by a system that consistently prioritizes everyone except its own citizens.

That should have been a clue.

Norway is reportedly the country most frequently mentioned in the Epstein files on a per-capita basis. A shameful distinction, to put it mildly, and not a coincidence.

Billions of taxpayer kroner have been channelled into what many see as little more than money-laundering projects disguised as "humanitarian policy." An entire humanitarian-political complex lives off this system, where idealism is the façade and money is the objective.

Billions for cookstoves through the Clinton Foundation. Meaningless courses on "toxic masculinity" in Africa. Medical interventions and ideological experiments on healthy children in the West. These are merely drops in a vast ocean of waste and abuse.

Members of the royal family, former prime ministers, top diplomats—all have, in one way or another, brushed shoulders with a convicted sexual predator and financier. Luxury apartments acquired at bargain prices through Epstein. Loans, gifts, inheritances directed toward their children. Private jets, dinners on his island, paid holidays, medical visits—benefits provided by a convicted offender.

What we are witnessing is hubris in its purest form, and it is precisely that arrogance that Børge Brende projects when he imagines himself steering the world's "new United Nations" from Davos.

"Davos can really replace the UN," Epstein allegedly wrote. Brende reportedly replied enthusiastically: "Exactly – we need a new global architecture. World Economic Forum is uniquely positioned – public private."

A former Norwegian foreign minister, now head of the World Economic Forum, appeared to support replacing an international institution based on member states and international law with a private gathering of billionaires where the rich and powerful meet behind closed doors to "orchestrate" and "lead" the world.

These are mediocre shells of human beings who believe themselves superior to national democracy, superior to the United Nations, and superior to ordinary people. They believe they can dictate global architecture without democratic mandate, without transparency, and without accountability.

The same forum that hosts the Davos meetings where heads of state, billionaires, and corporations gather to decide questions of climate, economics, and "sustainability" while handing the bill to ordinary citizens.

"Useless eaters" suddenly makes sense.

And the best Prime Minister Jonas Gahr Støre can produce is to describe it all as "poor judgment" while blocking a full investigation into both current and former colleagues. It is an insult to the public and to the intelligence of ordinary people.

When a senior political figure reduces associations with Jeffrey Epstein and the environment he represented to such a weak and evasive phrase, there is, in the eyes of critics, only one plausible explanation: compromise. No one speaks that way unless they are attempting to conceal more than they admit. We can remember Støre's time as foreign minister, when TV 2 caught him in what critics described as a direct lie regarding contacts with Hamas, after which he appeared to evade a straightforward question. This is the man governing Norway.

This is not about individual errors of judgment. It is about a system characterised by decay, networks of influence, and mutual protection. A political class that has operated without meaningful oversight, without consequences, and with a self-image completely detached from the reality experienced by the people.

This corruption must be uprooted entirely. Apologies, investigations, and internal reviews are not enough. We do not need commissions selected by politicians.

We need new elections.

And we need more than a change of government. Every political party must be cleaned out. No one should be exempt simply because they belong to the right party or speak the approved moral language.

What we are witnessing, and have witnessed for years, is corruption driven by hubris. They believed themselves untouchable. They believed no one would dare challenge them. But now the receipts are emerging.

Trust has been exhausted. The mandate has been broken.

They sold our country. They sold our soul. They sold our future because they believed they could get away with anything.

The last remnants of illusion have now been torn away.

Now it is time to demand answers.

To demand accountability.

Norwegian politics must be thoroughly cleansed.

And heads should roll.