Episode 13: The Invisible Hand Official

: Elizabeth Keen uses the case to track down the man who killed her husband, Tom. She discovers that her primary antagonist, Ian Garvey , is actually a high-ranking US Marshal, complicating her pursuit of justice.

: His powerful rhetoric during the eviction attracts the attention of Brother Jack , a leader of a political group called The Brotherhood. This encounter sets the stage for the narrator's move from a search for personal identity to a role in organized social movement. The Blacklist : Season 5, Episode 13 Episode 13: The Invisible Hand

: Witnessing the eviction of an elderly Black couple, the Provos, makes the systemic nature of white oppression tangible. Seeing their lifelong possessions—including "freedom papers" from 1859—discarded on the street triggers the narrator's first major public speech. : Elizabeth Keen uses the case to track

: The narrator's consumption of a street-sold yam becomes a radical act of self-acceptance. For the first time, he rejects the shame associated with Southern Black culture and decides to stop acting according to white approval. This encounter sets the stage for the narrator's

In this TV episode, the "Invisible Hand" refers to a group of vigilantes targeting individuals who are legally untouchable but morally reprehensible.

: The group is composed of people whose lives were ruined by corporate negligence—specifically a chemical spill. They kidnap Anna Hopkins, a former executive responsible for the disaster, to force a confession.