
One of the currently most successful human harvesting activities in free enterprise societies can be found in the United States — private jailing. Because the collection and control of humans in this case allows the possibility of utilizing their labour for little or nothing, it is a particularly juicy investment that is highly profitable.
That this practice is controversial goes without saying. Beyond issues of ethics and morality, the nation’s court systems are being influenced in order to improve the crop that is harvested. In practical terms, private prisons are exercising a powerful influence over who winds up in jail and for how long. 1
The United Kingdom is currently taking a less aggressive approach to another aspect of collection and control of humans. As yet there is no mention of utilizing their labour as a source of greater profit. There is, however, no reason that this aspect of harvesting could not be used at some point in the future to improve the return on investment.
The UK approach to human harvesting is currently limited to the investment opportunities created through the provision of emergency housing. Solid profits can be made, to the extent that some investors are already proposing to erect purpose-built housing to service the demand. There is every possibility that a successful emergency housing industry will, in order to maximize profits, also attempt to influence government over the numbers and kinds of humans that are harvested, just as the American jailing industry has managed to influence the U.S. court systems.
For more on this lucrative UK investment opportunity which is growing along with the affordable housing crisis, read more in The Guardian: Britain’s Housing Scandal
Footnotes
- For more on this subject, read in GlobalResearch: The Prison Industry In The United States: Big Business Or A New Form Of Slavery?