The Church Is the Original Power Structure — And It’s Time Someone Said It Out Loud
- Mr. John Washington
- 2 hours ago
- 2 min read

Let’s stop playing dumb.
The corruption in this country did not start with politicians. Politicians are just the front men. The real power has always lived behind institutions that trained people not to question them—and the church sits at the top of that list.
For centuries, religion has been the most effective control mechanism ever created. Not because of God—but because of who speaks in God’s name.
Churches have mastered something governments envy: unquestioned authority. They don’t need armies. They don’t need laws. They use belief, guilt, fear, and obedience. And when you wrap power in holiness, people stop asking questions.
That’s where corruption thrives.
People talk about the Freemasons like they’re some mystery. Everyone knows the name. No one really knows who’s pulling strings. That’s how power works—it stays visible enough to feel familiar but hidden enough to avoid accountability.
The truth is, churches operate the same way.
Thousands of denominations. Millions of buildings. Billions of dollars moving every year. Yet no real transparency. No real oversight. No real consequences. Power spread out just enough to look decentralized—but unified where it matters.
And let’s not pretend this is just a local issue.
The Vatican is not just a church. It’s a sovereign power with political reach, financial leverage, and centuries of institutional memory. The Pope isn’t just a spiritual figure—he leads one of the oldest power structures on Earth. The King of England isn’t just ceremonial—he represents a system that once ruled nations through “divine right.”
These systems didn’t vanish. They adapted.
And America didn’t escape them—it inherited them.
The United States has been infiltrated not by foreign soldiers, but by foreign ideas of power: rule through belief, control through loyalty, silence through tradition. Most politicians don’t even realize it. They step into offices shaped by forces older than the Constitution and repeat narratives they were trained to respect, not challenge.
That’s why nothing really changes.
That’s why corruption survives elections.
That’s why churches can demand money from the poor while claiming moral authority.
That’s why faith gets weaponized, politics gets polluted, and people stay confused.
And here’s the part nobody wants to hear:
This only works because people allow it.
People are taught not to question pastors.
Not to question institutions.
Not to question “God’s representatives.”
But Acts 17 already exposed the lie: God does not live in buildings made by human hands, and He is not served by human hands as if He needs anything.
So when churches operate like corporations, when religion functions like a tax system, when power hides behind faith—that is not God. That is control.
I’m here to expose it.
I’m here to challenge institutions that hide behind holiness while feeding off the people. I’m here to say what others are too scared to say because they don’t want to be labeled, attacked, or silenced.
I don’t care.
This country cannot be fixed until its untouchable institutions are touched. Until power is questioned. Until transparency replaces tradition. Until people matter more than systems.
If you’re comfortable, this message isn’t for you.
If you’re angry, good—you’re waking up.
If you’re ready to stand for truth over titles, then stand with me.
This isn’t a war against faith.
It’s a war against corruption hiding behind it.
And it’s long overdue.



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