1The Myth of American Exceptionalism
101Political Reconstruction and Democratic Participation
2Deconstructing Five Centuries of Systematic Oppression
102Terrorist Violence and Paramilitary Organizations
3Centering Indigenous and Marginalized Voices
103Federal Withdrawal and Compromise of 1877
4Processing Historical Trauma and Contemporary Connections
104Freedmen's Bureau and Land Redistribution Failure
5First Contact, First Violence: The Genocide Begins
105Hiram Revels and Black Political Representation
6Encomienda System
106Colfax Massacre and Supreme Court Response
7Requerimiento Document
107Convict Leasing and Prison Labor
8Disease as Biological Warfare
108Completing the Conquest: Final Indigenous Genocide
9Economic Motives
109The Architecture of Elimination
10Case Study 1: Virginia Colony Powhatan Wars
110Sitting Bull: The Destruction of Indigenous Leadership
11Case Study 2: Massachusetts Bay Pequot War
111The Carlisle Industrial School: Perfecting Cultural Destruction
12Case Study 3: King Philip's War
112Allotment Implementation and the Cherokee Nation
13Legal Documentation
113Alaska Native Land Claims and Resource Extraction
14Building the Slave Economy
114The Destruction of Indigenous Economies
15Legal Transformation from Servitude to Slavery
115Regional Variations in Elimination Strategies
16Economic Integration with Global Capitalism
116The Role of Science and Academia in Genocide
17Northern Complicity and Profits
117The Living Legacy of Genocide
18Racial Ideology Construction
118Gilded Age Extremes: Monopoly Capitalism Triumphant
19Case Study 1: Anthony and Mary Johnson's Rise and Fall
119Monopoly Formation and Market Control
20Case Study 2: Stono Rebellion, South Carolina, 1739
120Extreme Wealth Concentration and Inequality
21Case Study 3: New York Conspiracy of 1741
121Labor Suppression and Industrial Violence
22Barbados Slave Code Influence
122Political Corruption and Corporate State Formation
23Colonial Capitalism: The Wealth Machine Begins
123Standard Oil Trust and Market Manipulation
24Land Speculation and Indigenous Dispossession
124Pullman Strike and Federal Military Intervention
25Merchant Capital and International Trade
125Ludlow Massacre and Corporate Terrorism
26Early Manufacturing and Labor Control
126Chinese Exclusion and Labor Market Manipulation
27Banking and Credit Systems
127Imperial Dawn: Global Expansion Begins
28Brown Family Slave Trading Empire
128Economic Motives for Overseas Expansion
29New York Slave Market Operations
129Military Development and Naval Strategy
30Pennsylvania Walking Purchase Fraud
130Racial Ideology and Colonial Justification
31Dutch West India Company Records
131Anti-Imperial Resistance and Suppression
32Imperial Apprenticeship: Military Violence as State Policy
132Philippine-American War and Colonial Genocide (1899-1902)
33Military Institution Development
133Hawaiian Annexation and Corporate Coup (1893-1898)
34Frontier Warfare Tactics
134Panama Canal and Gunboat Diplomacy (1903)
35Economic Motives for Military Expansion
135Open Door Policy and China Market Penetration
36Legal Framework for Military Violence
136Corporate-Government Relations in Early 20th Century America (1900-1929)
37Pontiac's War and Biological Warfare (1763-1764)
137Regulatory Agencies and Industry Capture
38Lord Dunmore's War and Land Speculation (1774)
138World War I and the Military-Industrial Partnership
39Sullivan Expedition Scorched Earth Campaign (1779)
139Post-War Consolidation and the Red Scare
40Gnadenhutten Massacre Documentation (1782)
140International Corporate Expansion and Dollar Diplomacy
41Revolutionary Contradictions: Founding Fathers' Hypocrisies
141The Federal Reserve System and Banking Control
42Constitutional Compromises Protecting Oppression
142War Industries Board and Corporate Profiteering
43Founding Fathers' Economic Interests
143Palmer Raids and the Suppression of Labor Radicalism
44Revolutionary War Economic Warfare
144United Fruit Company and the Banana Republics
45Elite Democracy and Popular Exclusion
145Cold War Capitalism: Global Economic Empire
46Jefferson's Slavery and Sally Hemings
146International Financial Architecture
47Washington's Slave Ownership and Military Leadership
147Labor Movement Destruction Globally
48Constitutional Convention's Slavery Debates
148Development Aid and Corporate Welfare
49Revolutionary War Indigenous Dispossession
149Iran 1953 - Overthrowing Democracy for Oil Profits
50The Founding Fathers' Financial Records
150Guatemala 1954 - United Fruit Company's Coup
51How Other Nations Viewed American Hypocrisy
151Chile 1973 - Destroying Democracy for Copper Profits
52Enslaved and Indigenous Responses
152Congo 1960-1965 - Assassinating Independence
53The True Costs of Revolutionary Hypocrisy
153Permanent War Economy: Military-Industrial Supremacy
54How Revolutionary Contradictions Became Systemic Features
154Military-Industrial Complex Formation
55How American Contradictions Affected World Development
155Global Military Base Network
56The Enduring Power of Revolutionary Contradictions
156Arms Sales and Military Export Industry
57Manifest Destiny's Genocide: The Systematic Elimination
157Intervention Patterns and Corporate Protection
58Indian Removal Act and Legal Framework
158Vietnam War and Military-Corporate Profits
59Military Campaign Coordination
159Latin American Interventions and Corporate Interests
60Economic Motives for Elimination
160Revolving Door and Defense Contractor Integration
61Cultural Genocide Implementation
161School of the Americas and Military Training
62Trail of Tears - Cherokee Removal (1838-1839)
162Neoliberal Conquest: Contemporary Capitalism Unleashed
63Sand Creek Massacre (November 29, 1864)
163Deregulation and Financial Speculation
64Wounded Knee Massacre (December 29, 1890)
164Privatization and Public Service Destruction
65California Gold Rush Genocide (1848-1873)
165Union Destruction and Labor Suppression
66King Cotton's Empire: Slavery as Economic Engine
166Extreme Inequality and Wealth Concentration
67Cotton Revolution and Territorial Expansion
167Savings and Loan Crisis and Corporate Welfare
68International Market Integration
168NAFTA and Manufacturing Destruction
69Financial System Development
169Prison-Industrial Complex and Mass Incarceration
70Internal Slave Trade Expansion
170Welfare Reform and Poverty Criminalization
71Solomon Northup's Kidnapping and Enslavement
171Digital Empire: Technology as Control and Extraction
72Nat Turner's Rebellion and Economic Response
172Surveillance Capitalism and Data Extraction
73New York Financial District's Slave Connections
173Gig Economy and Labor Exploitation
74Underground Railroad Operations
174Digital Colonialism and Global Extraction
75Industrial Exploitation and Early Capitalist Development
175Democratic Manipulation and Information Control
76The Architecture of Industrial Exploitation
176Facebook and Psychological Manipulation
77The Lowell Female Labor Reform Association and the Struggle for Industrial Democracy
177Amazon and Labor Surveillance
78The Great Railroad Strike of 1877 - Industrial Violence and State Power
178Congo Cobalt Mining and Tech Supply Chains
79Chinese Railroad Workers and the Intersection of Racial and Economic Exploitation
179NSA-Silicon Valley Surveillance Partnership
80Child Labor in Industrial Production
180The Continuing Legacy: Present-Day Manifestations
81Continental Empire: Territorial Expansion Through Violence
181Indigenous Rights and Contemporary Challenges
82Economic Motives for Territorial Expansion
182Structural Racism and Economic Inequality
83Military Strategy and Diplomatic Manipulation
183U.S. Military Interventions and Global Presence
84Racial Ideology and Territorial Justification
184Environmental Justice and Climate Change
85Resource Extraction and Settlement Patterns
185Standing Rock and Pipeline Resistance
86Mexican-American War and Treaty Violations
186War on Terror and Economic Impacts
87Bear Flag Revolt and California Conquest
187COVID-19 and Inequality Acceleration
88William Walker's Nicaragua Conquest
188January 6th and Democratic Institutions
89Gadsden Purchase and Railroad Interests
189Resistance Movements and Social Organization
90Civil War Myths: Economic Interests Versus Moral Narratives
190Corporate Responses and Institutional Adaptation
91Economic Causes and Sectional Capitalism
191Political System Challenges and Reforms
92Slavery as Central Economic Issue
192International Dimensions and Global Context
93War Production and Profiteering
193Conclusion
94Emancipation as Military Strategy
194Reckoning and Responsibility: Toward Historical Truth and Justice
95Draft Riots and Class Conflict
195Global South Views of American Power
96Sherman's March and Economic Warfare
196Truth and Reconciliation Processes
97Contraband Camps and Self-Liberation
197Reparations Programs and Economic Justice
98War Profiteering and Corporate Contracts
198Institutional Reform and Democratic Transformation
99Reconstruction Betrayed: Abandoning Black Freedom
199International Accountability and Global Governance
100Economic Reconstruction and Labor Control
200Final Reflection