Published: August 6, 2025
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There's an American family with 14 billionaires. More than any family on Earth. And they control the ENTIRE global food supply. It's not the Waltons. It's not the Kochs. 99% of people have never heard their name. Here's how they became the richest invisible dynasty: 🧵

Image in tweet by Logan Weaver

Meet the Cargill-MacMillan family. Combined net worth: $65 billion. They own 88% of Cargill Inc, the largest private company in America. $177 billion in annual revenue. This is how it all started:

It started in 1865 with William Wallace Cargill. A 21-year-old from New York who saw opportunity in post-Civil War chaos. He opened a single grain storage facility in Iowa. His insight? Control the storage, control the trade. But he had a bigger vision:

By the 1870s, William brought his three brothers into the business. They weren't just storing grain anymore, they were buying it directly from struggling farmers at low prices. Then shipping it via railroad to hungry cities at high prices. William's strategy was brilliant:

Image in tweet by Logan Weaver

While farmers competed against each other and drove prices down, he consolidated their grain. While cities competed for limited supply and drove prices up, he controlled distribution. He positioned himself as the middleman in America's most essential trade.

But William saw something even bigger coming: In the 1880s, he started buying: - Flour mills - Feed companies - Processing plants He wasn't just trading grain anymore, he was turning it into everything Americans needed to eat.

By the 1890s, Cargill was buying grain directly from farmers. Then transporting it via railroad to cities. Then processing it into food products. From farm to table, all under one roof.

When William died in 1909, the business faced a crisis. Massive debts. Overextended operations. His son-in-law John MacMillan Sr. took over a company on the brink of bankruptcy. MacMillan made the decision that changed everything: "We stay private. Forever."

Image in tweet by Logan Weaver

MacMillan spent the 1910s restructuring and stabilizing. By the 1920s, Cargill was expanding globally. During the Great Depression, while competitors failed, Cargill bought their assets for pennies. World War II was even better, they fed entire armies.

The family kept expanding through the decades: 1940s: Animal feed and soybean processing 1960s: Became a commodities trader 1980s: Bought meat processing plants 2000s: Acquired global food companies Each generation found new ways to control more of the food chain.

By staying private, they could make moves no public company could: - Long-term investments without quarterly pressure. - Aggressive acquisitions without shareholder approval. - Global expansion without public scrutiny. Family decisions made in boardrooms, not headlines.

Today, Cargill controls more of your food than you realize: That McDonald's egg? Cargill supplies it. Your beef, pork, turkey? Cargill slaughters it. Your chocolate, salt, oil? Cargill refines it. They're in everything you consume. Their numbers?

Absolutely insane: - 155,000 employees worldwide. - Operations in 70 countries. - Control 22% of U.S. beef production. Along with 3 other companies, they control 70-90% of global grain trade. Yet most people couldn't name a single family member.

Image in tweet by Logan Weaver

The family split into two branches: Cargills and MacMillans. About 90 family members own the company. 14 of them are billionaires, more than any other family on Earth. They've built the ultimate invisible empire, controlling necessities while avoiding attention.

The lesson? The most powerful families aren't the ones you see on magazine covers. They're the ones controlling what you can't live without. While everyone watches the latest tech IPO, generational wealth is built by controlling everyday necessities. Smart money follows the

Instead of chasing the latest trends, build wealth through consistent, systematic strategies. Focus on long-term growth, not short-term hype. Here's exactly how to do that:

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That's it. Thanks for reading. Follow me @LogWeaver, for more stories like this.

@LogWeaver You forgot the part where they are the biggest trafficker of illegal immigrants in the US. And have paid off both parties for decades, so they look the other way.

@LogWeaver http://surmount.ai - You created an entire thread about Cargill-MacMillan to advertise your tech? I noticed what you did there. 😂

@h_hexxe Free education + advertising = growth

@LogWeaver Whatever happened with the laws against monopoly and anti competitive actions?

@njmakay Those laws are only applicable to the poors

@LogWeaver I have several jars of mayonnaise in my refrigerator. So, despite your assertion, they do not control the entire food supply.

@ThomasDownes8 😂 playing chess while others are playing checkers

@LogWeaver This is the research needed to shine a light on these families. They are all the heads of the Globalist NWO

@laidlaw_bruce Doing my duty 🫡

@LogWeaver I was under the impression there was a Federal Trade Commission (FTC) and the Antitrust Division of the Department of Justice (DOJ) preventing this from happening?

@LogWeaver Very informative thread. Thank you for taking the time and v energy to post it.

@LogWeaver Nepotism at its best?

@ByrneAdri4500 Doesn’t get much better

@LogWeaver @IanCarrollShow would like this info

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