Why elite scandals never change anything: Prof. Jiang Xueqin
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| I blackmail. I don't get got. Cohen taught me. |
(Prof Jiang Media) Jan. 8, 2026: Modern societies tend to believe that exposure brings accountability — that when scandals surface, power is finally put at risk.
In this lecture, Jiang Xueqin questions this belief. By examining history, political systems, and recurring patterns of elite behavior, Prof. Xueqin argues that scandals rarely dismantle power structures. More often, they reinforce them.
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| We work for Zionist Israel and get many perks. |
Through a series of high-profile case studies, this discussion explores why exposure so often fails to generate real reform, why moral anger dissipates without consequence, and why modern societies repeatedly confuse visibility with accountability [and there is no real transparency].
What appears to be a moment of truth, Prof. Xueqin suggests, may instead function as a diversion — shifting attention away from structural power toward spectacle.
This video investigates how elite systems endure scandal, why genuine accountability remains structurally elusive, and why societies continue to misplace faith in exposure as a corrective force.
- 🎓 Speakers: Interview with Danny Haiphong and Professor Jiang Xueqin
- 📅 Year recorded: 2025 📖
- Full conversation: • The Epstein TRAP: Trump, Israel & the DEATH...
Check out Prof. Jiang Xueqin's recommended books to supplement his ideas:
- ► The Divine Comedy (The Inferno, The Purgatorio, and The Paradiso) by Dante Alighieri
- ► Anna Karenina by Leo Tolstoy
- ► Confessions of an Economic Hit Man by John Perkins
- Check out Prof. Jiang Xueqin's FULL curated reading list: docs.google.com/spreadsheets...
The lectures featured on this channel are delivered by Prof. Jiang Xueqin. 🔗 Original lectures and channel: @PredictiveHistory



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