dojo->convergency
convergent emergency
convergent emergency
| Time | Text |
|---|---|
| I am now recording. | |
| Hello, humans. | |
| It's April 20th, 420, in the parlance of the times. | |
| It's been a while. | |
| There's all kinds of things to discuss. | |
| But in a looking ahead in an anticipatory sense, it's worth noting that right now we're in this period of time that can be called the convergence. | |
| So we used to use that term in the phone business. | |
| So in the 70s and the 80s, in telephony, there was this idea of this ultimate period that would occur that was called the convergence. | |
| And it would be where phone technology converged with computer technology. | |
| Now, there were very few people that anticipated smartphones. | |
| There were very few people that anticipated handheld computers that you could walk around. | |
| In the handheld computers we have today, you could replace everything that they used to get people to the moon and back at NASA in the 60s with the capacity of the handheld phones today. | |
| We weren't anticipating convergence that way. | |
| In the telephony industry, what we were more concerned about at that stage within the industry itself was the convergence of computing power into the telephony infrastructure such that we could monitor the telephony infrastructure and affect changes to it in real time. | |
| Bear in mind, prior to the digital switching signal device, telephones in order to telephones had to have manual interactions with the actual phone call itself. | |
| And in order to have a conference call was a big damn deal because you had to take a whole PBX, private business exchange, a whole little thing with all these little tubes and stuff, for yourself in order to arrange conference calls. | |
| So it's very expensive and all these kind of things and very limited, very difficult to do that. | |
| And so in my lifetime, I lived through and participated in the introduction of satellite telephony. | |
| I used to run AT ⁇ T uplink stations here in the Pacific Northwest for business conferences. | |
| You know, they'd pull up in a semi-truck and set up this equipment and so on. | |
| And then I was in charge of making the connection, finding the transponder, finding the sections within the transponder, arranging it all and so on in order for the uplink to occur. | |
| It was a big deal at the time in the 70s. | |
| Now it's like, you know, you get GPS out of your damn car uplinking to satellites, right? | |
| And they don't, and anyway, so we've had convergence. | |
| We're in the midst of the technical convergency, where we've got telephony, where we've got basically communications coupled with computing power for both directions. | |
| So it enhances the computer to be able to connect to other computers, but it also enhances the ability to connect by having computer control over the actual physical line, so to speak, that allows you to do the multiplexing, the slicing and dicing of a single frequency into many, multiple different kinds of frequencies, right? | |
| So the convergence, in my opinion, began with the introduction of SS7, the signal switching 7 patent series, in the early 1980s, because that gave us two channels for every phone call. | |
| I don't want to go into the technical details. | |
| You guys don't really care about much of that. | |
| But from that point on, we had this gradually growing convergence of the communications and the computing power affecting each other, making each other a stronger, different, and more flexible, more usable substrate for humanity, and also creating new things that existed on top of them. | |
| So, you know, the internet, the World Wide Web, the advertising for it, all of this kind of stuff, social media, all of those things are part of this convergence. | |
| And this is a convergence at two levels of technicality within the larger mass of humanity. | |
| So if we looked at ourselves as a, what would be a great, good way to show that? | |
| Anyway, so we've got the computing power and we've got the comms communications in our convergence. | |
| There's potential to con that there's other convergences that are also occurring, all right? | |
| And so we have other layers of separate track themes that go through humans and that are also showing up as converging with other things within our time. | |
| And so we're going to get into other layers of abstraction, right? | |
| We're talking about communications, but that of course also includes social media and all of the content and that kind of stuff, right? | |
| But it has a hardware component with the physical lines and all of those sorts of satellites and all that kind of stuff, right? | |
| The computers themselves are hardware, but they also have the software component. | |
| They don't run without software on them. | |
| They're useless to us because we don't really interact with the computers. | |
| We interact with the software. | |
| But if you think about it, you're not really interacting with a thing per se. | |
| and this is why I get really pissed at people like Carrie Cassidy and all these guys going batshit over alien AI, when you're interacting with software, now bear in mind within our communications, we also have the software allowing you to do the convergence itself here, right? | |
| The joining of these two technologies across each other, through each other, and so on. | |
| The software itself is what creates the social media and so on. | |
| The software allows us to control the hardware, but of course the software can't run without the hardware itself. | |
| And the software is not a thing. | |
| It is text, okay, that is compiled, which in this case does not mean to simply stack together. | |
| It means to organize and alter such that the compiled text goes from a human language over to machine code. | |
| And as machine code, the machines run it, right? | |
| And this is the convergence of our society around all of these different things. | |
| None of these things exist. | |
| If we were to remove computers, communications, and all of these kind of things, we would have a lot of people die that are dependent on it, you know, health aids and so on. | |
| But we'd have the structure of the social order collapse to some degree, but humanity would not cease to exist because we pre-exist all of this stuff, and this stuff is part of our convergence with our own thoughts being able to manifest out into reality in a way that cannot exist absent this initial convergence. | |
| So we couldn't have gotten here. | |
| There's maybe a couple of other ways we could have gotten here because we can't limit ourselves by saying, I can't imagine it, therefore it could not exist. | |
| Okay, so there are ways that we could have gotten to this state that didn't involve this initial convergence. | |
| But what we're going to see here is that we're stacking. | |
| And stacking itself is a concept within software. | |
| It's stacking even the idea of your morning stack in vitamins, right? | |
| Which is a form of convergence. | |
| And we stack our software. | |
| So if you're into web development, you might be a back-end full-stack developer writing server codes, that sort of thing. | |
| So we stack there as well. | |
| But we are also stacking our convergences here by having other convergence here. | |
| And so we're basically coming up to where we're having a convergence with the human mind. | |
| And at least Elon Musk with his Neuralink and this kind of stuff is open about the concept of that level of convergence because we must discuss it. | |
| Now, I don't favor it, and I can argue for days and days and days. | |
| I can argue to the point where if we agree to certain rules, okay, that we have to argue standing up, nobody can go pee until the argument is over, and no refreshments and no intermissions at all, | |
| then I will win, okay, because I and I get to go first because I'm just going to stand there and go on for about seven or eight hours until your bladder explodes and your mind will go long before that. | |
| But I can certainly argue that position. | |
| Now, where we're at now is we're starting to stack our convergences and we're going through the first of a convergent sees, okay, sort of sort of like an emergency in that sense of the word. | |
| This is a convergency where there's the aspect of it a quickening. | |
| And these the convergencies that we're stacking, the convergences that we're stacking now with the human mind, we're also going into stacking on top of other layers. | |
| So if you look at the sort of chart here behind me, you can envision it going up as we add more and more and more convergences, but we also need to think of it as coming out from the board here, right, as being three-dimensional, because there will be convergences that will be stacked on minors, other majors, and so on as we build into this period of time. | |
| And so we're having a convergency of history, for instance, okay? | |
| So we're having a convergence of the communications, the computers, and the human mind, which will produce for us a new version of our own history as we go forward here. | |
| This new convergence here of our history and our mind is going to affect our minds. | |
| We will understand more about ourselves and how we got here because of what we're going to do with history over these next few years. | |
| And this will exist because of the connections down this way to the computers, to the communications, and then back into the mind all through the software component of it, right? | |
| The software controls it all. | |
| And we're going to get better at the software because there's something about software. | |
| Software is self-converging. | |
| So you can write more software that aids you in writing your first software and debugging it. | |
| And it just keeps getting bigger and bigger and bigger and better and better and better, self-refining in that sense. | |
| So we have software now converging with and on techniques that will enable us to do better software more consistently and more grand software. | |
| So I'm going to divert here for just a second to let you know the general nature of the trend. | |
| So I started writing code in machine language, okay, or also called machine code. | |
| And that's assembly language, which is the language of the people that assembled the firmware in the initial computers. | |
| 2K, man, we had 2K of RAM. | |
| What you could do with that? | |
| Holy crud. | |
| And you could time slice. | |
| I won't go into that. | |
| Anyway, so there's assembly, then we get into C, then we get into the object-oriented stuff, oops, languages, which were there's a plethora of them. | |
| And then there's all different kinds of structured and functional programming, which is like Lisp and so on, all evolving over time as we go forward. | |
| Now there's hundreds of languages: Perl, Python, all of these various different, you know, Prolog, all these various different kinds of languages that are some very specific to different kinds of machines, others are general purpose, some intending to do grand things and evolving over time and so on. | |
| But here's the general point of all of this. | |
| We're right at this point right now where all of these languages right here that ultimately go to create the convergence that we call the internet, that we call the World Wide Web, is now taken a very large step upward in the sense that we have languages like Clojure and Clojure script, which will generate JavaScript. | |
| So they compile that you write code in these languages in regular human readable text. | |
| Well, programmer readable text. | |
| They're not regular humans. | |
| Anyway, you write languages, you write your code in the closure or closure script, and it compiles to another. | |
| Okay, when you compile stuff in computer terms, you make it more dense, pushing it down towards machine code. | |
| So only the machine really can read that. | |
| I can read machine code because I'm old and I go back that far, but most programmers wouldn't even have any reason to read it, right? | |
| In any event, though, now we've got languages like ClojureScript that when they compile, they compile out to JavaScript, which is a very, very, very advanced language. | |
| So you're not really compiling down to machine code. | |
| You're compiling into complex, and I'm talking really bloody complex JavaScript. | |
| And so complex that once you've written it in the closure script, it is difficult for a human to track and follow it in the JavaScript because it's not necessary that a human read it or understand it at that level because the instruction set that's provided by the overall closure compilation process provides instructions to the machine that a human would need to understand in order to follow it, | |
| but the machine doesn't need to know that, it doesn't need to have that in the code in order to execute properly. | |
| So it's this sort of removing the human readable element out of code and in a compiled fashion, very much like machine code does, but doing it at an advanced level such that your structures are fantastically complex and mostly, mostly bug-free. | |
| So we're getting to the point where software has made a convergence with itself to produce a level like this, right? | |
| Now this is, in my way of thinking, is where we're heading into artificial intelligence. | |
| And artificial intelligence is going to be most useful in designing other computer code. | |
| Now there's something to bear in mind. | |
| Kerry Cassidy and all of these people are batshit crazy about artificial intelligence. | |
| They're scared of it. | |
| They think alien artificial intelligence floats out of the sky and can be sucked up their ass or something. | |
| Artificial intelligence, all computer code has a single point of reference that you need to know. | |
| If it's not in the code now, that code cannot make any, it cannot alter itself to put it in there in a form in which it would execute. | |
| So software can't alter itself, cannot make any decisions, can't do anything that is not pre-programmed into it. | |
| So if there were space alien AI and space alien AI had no knowledge of humans, it could not understand, it couldn't change itself to have an awareness and an interaction with humans as humans when it encountered them. | |
| So the whole fear thing, this whole fear of alien AI and all of this kind of shit, right? | |
| Now, there's reasons to fear AI in this form because it can make you a better surveillance state, right? | |
| You can write more complex code that has less bugs in it and less vulnerability to surveil people. | |
| So you can use AI as a weapon. | |
| I'm not saying that it's not dangerous in that regard, but AI is not going to wake up one day and decide it's intelligent. | |
| That's an misunderstanding of how computers work and what will happen. | |
| There's no there there. | |
| There's no self ever in software. | |
| No software is self-aware. | |
| No software has awareness at any functioning level at all. | |
| So, you know, it's like, okay, you know, the Forban project, all of these things with supposed AI that's going to entrap humans and all of this stuff. | |
| You have to understand you're not fighting anything that's in an AI sense that is going to learn. | |
| It never learns. | |
| It can't alter its behavior relative to you. | |
| So, you know, it's very, very, very stupid to be afraid of it. | |
| Anyway, so we're at the convergency of many of them. | |
| A convergency is where we get multiple sets of convergences occurring that are going to be interacting with each other and they will cause emergencies as convergences take over and eliminate other things. | |
| Okay, so we have a convergence right now of decentralized computer software generated currencies because that's a convergence with the human mind to decide that we can use text from code to create currency to do our interaction because all that interaction is is a trade in taking wealth and transferring it for | |
| goods And so it doesn't matter what we use for currency, and software can be made to be a very good currency on many different levels. | |
| Okay, so we're at multiple convergences. | |
| This convergence of decentralized human-created new form of currency that's beyond the central bank system has caused a convergency in the form of an emergency within that central bank system as it's being subsumed, as it's being destroyed and shredded, and it's self-destructive as well, but it's at the end of its cycle because it's an evil fucking thing and we need to get rid of it. | |
| But nonetheless, it is part of the convergence of the software with the human mind, even with our own history that is producing this new item here, this new direction that is going to destroy the central bank. | |
| So one thing about all of these kind of things here is that if we look at it, the first convergence here, that destroyed the old style PBX. | |
| It put out, which is a private business exchange. | |
| It put all of the telephone operators out of business, right? | |
| And it's just started changing and changing and changing and changing. | |
| The whole system, everything started rolling off from that. | |
| It takes us a while because the lower you are in a convergence, you are more towards hardware, okay? | |
| So hardware is at the base of all convergence. | |
| The more you are towards this, the longer it takes to implement. | |
| The more you are up towards the software for the ephemeral and so on, the quicker you can implement. | |
| But there's going to be a time lag as you have to create that software. | |
| So down here, you would have to create the hardware. | |
| You'd have to get it installed. | |
| You'd have to distribute it out to the country and blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. | |
| Up here in the software, you only have to create the software once, and then you can write once, copy many, and it gets distributed really fairly quickly. | |
| But you've got to make sure that you really know what you're doing because once it's out there, it's out there, right? | |
| So if you build in a major vulnerability, you're screwed from that point on. | |
| You've got to go through all the revisions and all these kinds of different things. | |
| So you're basically taking the complexity and you're reversing it in a sense, right? | |
| The hardware here, you've got to debug it incredibly slowly as you go along. | |
| And here you may have a mistake that allows the software to get out and then you've got a major bug in the software and you've got to go back and try and backfill and there's all those kind of problems later on. | |
| Whereas you'd get the problems out of the way, so to speak, in the hardware part first. | |
| So part of the things about this is that we're going to, about this time, the convergency, is that we're going to see this stacking and we're going to see our stacking here continue. | |
| So we'll see like UFOs show up, right? | |
| UFOs. | |
| So we're going to stack on and have a convergence of UFOs. | |
| Because we've got computers, because we've got our communications, we can track the fuckers better. | |
| And we've got better equipment. | |
| So we've got better hardware to go and look at them now. | |
| And that hardware is also computer directed and feeds into our computer, into our communications and converges with everything else to make us this much better. | |
| And we'll use software and even have AI to help us track fast little movements of them and so on, right? | |
| So without AI, you don't have modern fighter jets because you could not possibly have humans fly the jets and try and do any of the tracking shit at the same time. | |
| Just you don't have enough channels in your brain. | |
| So in this Convergency, a lot of people are really freaking out, okay, because this Convergency is going to want, okay, so let me back up a bit. | |
| All of these things right here, like the old PBX being eliminated, the old PBX system, these are natural outgrowths of a convergence. | |
| One of the natural outgrowths of humans is that we will have all these convergences that will naturally, natively, by force, in the sense of forces through the air, forces through humanity, want us to decentralize. | |
| Because centralization is not a survival characteristic. | |
| We've got every, all of our, if we put all of our wheat in a single warehouse and that catches fire, we're fucked, right? | |
| So centralization does not in any way aid the species. | |
| Decentralization is where it's at over time. | |
| As survival, as growth, as making us better humans, becoming more than we are, etc., etc. | |
| It's all decentralization. | |
| No one has ever become enlightened from a centralized, organized religion. | |
| You may be enlightened and on the enlightenment path, and you may join that religion, and you may exhibit shit within that religion, but the religion itself is not responsible for you being enlightened. | |
| Religion does not deliver that. | |
| But anyway, so we're at all of these convergences. | |
| Speaking of things, we're going to have a conversion with religion. | |
| A convergence there, right? | |
| We're going to have that with the human mind, with our history in UFOs. | |
| All that shit's converging. | |
| We have a convergency. | |
| We've got it with our health, right? | |
| And we've got, so we've got the terrible, fucked up world here where everybody is unhealthy. | |
| So we have a convergence here at the moment with our history, the human mind, even probably UFOs, but certainly religion, because there's religions out there that are trying to kill us. | |
| They're putting chemtrails in the sky. | |
| They're putting crap into the vaccines. | |
| They're destroying our food, all of this kind of stuff, right? | |
| And so we have this convergence here. | |
| All of these things are converging into our convergency at the moment. | |
| And we can say this for certain, that the central bank system is dead. | |
| Today, tomorrow, next year, year after, depends on how much they fight and this kind of stuff and how we go at it. | |
| But it's dead. | |
| It's dying. | |
| It cannot exist anymore. | |
| We must decentralize. | |
| And this will be true of, you know, the central religions going to go with it, right? | |
| So Catholicism is dead. | |
| The Pope is simply a, well, the Pope is a Khazarian. | |
| He's under their control. | |
| He's part of the Khazarian mafia. | |
| They have been ever since whatever year the Jesuits were formed by Ignatius of Loyola, all right? | |
| Because that's when we had the convergence of Zionism into the Catholic Church. | |
| Now, Zionism had taken over the Byzantine Empire and infiltrated it into the Greek Orthodox, itself, into the Greek Orthodox Church, a period of time before this. | |
| But Ignatius of Loyola, he created the Jesuits, and that's a Zionist, focused, Jewish, cultist, Kabbalist religion that has taken over the Catholic Church. | |
| And so we have all of these convergences. | |
| So what we're actually seeing now, what we're part of, is this battle between this convergency as all the skirmishes run into the real battles. | |
| This convergency of all of these forces that basically come down to centralization versus decentralization, if you really want to slice and dice and get a nice handle on it. | |
| And so you can say, oh, that's a force that's those people, that organization, that mechanism works for centralization. | |
| Okay, so they're fucked. | |
| They're out of here. | |
| They're just a matter of time before those fuckers fall off, right? | |
| And, oh, that's a force for decentralization that's disruptive, that's disturbing, whatever it is kind of trend. | |
| That'll stick around for a while and it'll go out this way. | |
| You can make these determinations now in seeing things because we're at that point where we have this convergency that will eliminate, all of these convergencies will go to eliminate centralization. | |
| All of these convergencies go to empowering decentralization. | |
| And so the very same thing that the technology, the convergence of computers into communications, joining the hardware, addressing the social aspects, the software, all of these things are a weapon, a tool of the centralized people, right? | |
| Those that want to destroy us, that want to be the centralized owners of humanity and all of that kind of stuff. | |
| But that weapon works both ways. | |
| And so it's also an empowering tool for all of those people that are getting out there and being decentralized in their actions and fucking around and creating new things and hacking the old systems, et cetera, et cetera, right? | |
| But in a general sense, we can use all of these tools to look at our own history and see where we're at right fuck now. | |
| And we're right at the convergency. | |
| And so you might, so wars last a lot longer than people think. | |
| And so they think, oh, well, the Vietnam War. | |
| Well, the Vietnam War started in the late 40s. | |
| Okay, if you go look at it, the Vietnam War started in the late 40s and it was only like publicly announced with the incident off the coast there as we get into the into the 60s, 50s into the 60s. | |
| And so we were at war all through the 50s in Vietnam. | |
| Just we didn't know it, right? | |
| And so all of these kind of things for wars and so forth, you have a one image in your head. | |
| Oh, the 1960s was, you know, 60 to 68 or until 70s when Nixon stopped at all of that. | |
| That was the length of the Vietnam War. | |
| No, no. | |
| You know, it's decades and decades. | |
| So wars last a lot longer than people figure. | |
| And so our convergency, which is a war between centralization and decentralization, will last a lot longer than people think at the moment. | |
| So I think that we'll see this war last at least another 18 years before those forces that are pushing for centralization will be completely eradicated. | |
| But this is across the whole globe. | |
| There will be huge, giant sweeping changes because it can happen very, very, very rapidly because software is at the core of everything. | |
| And so you can break down a control system extremely rapidly in a technical sense, liberate everybody there, free them, and then put in safeguards into the software just by the way you broke it up that would prevent it from ever regenerating as a structured control mechanism and do that extremely rapidly. | |
| Those kind of things could happen in a matter of months. | |
| And you could have huge changes. | |
| You know, you could go from a Federal Reserve note to a piece of worthless paper that's got debt attached to it to a solid substantial coinage and silver-backed or whatever. | |
| You could do that in a matter of months, right? | |
| And that's a huge change in history. | |
| Hundreds and hundreds of years of silver suppression over price changes, the wealth readjust, the central banks collapse. | |
| You could have all that happen in like 12 months. | |
| And wow, major change in the whole planet. | |
| So we're at that point. | |
| Now, for us, the convergency is going to have that quickening. | |
| It's going to have that speeding up and that intensity, that draw to you of curiosity, of change, of newness, that you can participate in. | |
| At that point, there's opportunity and chaos. | |
| So when everything starts breaking down, that's the point for you to start inventing the world you want to live in and pressing it out there and see if universe wants to support it. | |
| If you get a lot of shit, it doesn't necessarily mean you're wrong. | |
| It may mean that universe wants you to prove that idea. | |
| But if you keep getting that stuff over time, let it go and try something else, right? | |
| There is a point at which you will find that universe says, aha, that's what I want you to do. | |
| And whoosh, all the barriers fall and everything happens very, very, very easily. | |
| So if you're getting too much pushback, at some point, you've got to say, okay, is this worth it? | |
| But on the other hand, in the invention process, you want to try many ideas to see which one universe is going to favor. | |
| And we're at that point now where there's going to be a lot of chaos and a lot of potential and probability of universe favoring your ideas. | |
| Now, we've got a huge amount of stuff to correct. | |
| Hell's all of this stuff here. | |
| We've got to fix all this shit because it's all been polluted by these people going way back to the 1500s. | |
| Like I was saying, you know, the Ignatius Loyola out of Loyola, the creation of the Jesuits. | |
| But the ship goes back even further than that, right? | |
| So we know that the Illuminati were created on May 1st, 1776. | |
| That's why May Day parades, that's the only reason that May Day parades exist. | |
| Any other reason is just a layer on there so that you'll do the May Day parade for their ritual. | |
| That's how these guys work. | |
| But even those guys in 1776, they were old by that point. | |
| There was the lighting, as though I'm lighting this room. | |
| They predate the Illuminati by a couple hundred years. | |
| They were formed in like the 1500s. | |
| From them, both the Zionists and the Jesuits exist. | |
| And prior to that, we go back to, if you want to go, I'll skip a bunch of history because there's a shitload of history that's got to come out and people have to examine. | |
| But if you go all the way back into 700 in 92, 792 AD, that's the first time I found a reference in affected literature to the existence of this particular 6,000-year-old death cults internal understanding of themselves, okay? | |
| And so we have the Illuminati, we have all of the secret societies, all the esoterics out of the Russians, the Blavatsky's, all of these people. | |
| They're all part of this cadre, this thing that created Zionism, created communism, Marxism, psychiatry, the vaccine industry. | |
| All these things result from this particular line of thinking that we can trace all the way back into the 6,000-year-old death cult. | |
| And there's just expressing itself in our modern times. | |
| But we can go back into the 1790s in literature that the Kabbalists, the Talmudarians, as I describe them, not Talmudists, but Talmudarians, there's a difference, describe in their own literature about themselves. | |
| And this leads us into the lighting, the alumbrados, and then into the Illuminati. | |
| And this is, the word is spark. | |
| We would translate it as spark. | |
| And there's a lot of hidden meaning in the Zohar and the Talmud about the mistakes that God made that had to be corrected by men. | |
| Kind of a weird concept there. | |
| That involved losing the sparks of life. | |
| Now, you have to understand. | |
| Okay, so I don't have all those time to go into it, but it'd take about a couple hours to really get into it. | |
| But all of the references to the sparks, the sparks of life, all of these kind of things, you have to understand that as soon as you encounter those, you need to invoke this three-book key, and you have to be temporally sensitive to it. | |
| So here's the thing. | |
| The Talmud is 63 volumes. | |
| They were not all created in the same period of time. | |
| Thus, you have to know the year and the subset of the Talmud in order to read it appropriately and to know what was written at that time and available to the people at that time in order to know what they were discussing. | |
| So it gets really deep. | |
| Personally, I think I'd write software to understand this and translate it all into modern English for me and give me all the references. | |
| But the years and shit make sense. | |
| Or they're an aspect of it. | |
| That's why there's numeracy involved. | |
| And that's why numbers and the Gematria, the Gematria, all of this kind of stuff for Hebrew is so critical. | |
| It's because it is a component of this three-book key. | |
| You make the key work in English, but it's very, very difficult. | |
| I don't want to learn Hebrew, so I'm not going to go that route. | |
| That's why I'm saying I'd probably end up writing software if I wanted to get into it anymore. | |
| But when they start talking about sparks, you invoke the Zohar, Talmud, Torah conjunction in order to read this the way that it was initially explained to, for instance, the Knights Templar, right? | |
| Because they, in their attacks in the Middle East and then the Crusades and all of that kind of shit, these looting expeditions, in which vast amounts of human trafficking and slavery occurred, both directions, when they encountered the Middle East, the Knights Templar, these seven knights, were introduced to and made part of the Kabbalistic tradition. | |
| And this is Ka I don't have Kabbalistic in the mystical sense. | |
| And so they became inculcated, tainted at that point, their philosophy with this understanding, and they were only given part of it, right? | |
| So they were smart, they investigated it, they knew they were being fed a doctored version and so on. | |
| So it goes back that far that we've had this intermingling, this convergence of philosophical ideas and so forth. | |
| But here's the thing about all of these from 790 on, I think it was like 792 or something like that, 794, you start seeing the references to the spark, right? | |
| And when you do that, when you see these spark, light, illumination, and so on, you have to start understanding, you need to understand that there's another layer of information that you can glean out of what's going on there if you use this three-book key. | |
| And every single one of these references leads you back to a scientific understanding of what was going on. | |
| And you do not, from that point on, use the word God. | |
| That book has no reference to God as Christians or Muslims would understand it. | |
| Those books have references to the Elohim, and they're talking about a very scientific race that came to Earth and fucked with humans and has led to a very great degree of the problems that we've encountered over these last centuries as we're trying to unlearn or deal with that fuckery and the DNA problems and so on. | |
| So we're at the ultimate, in my way of thinking, convergency, right? | |
| The ultimate emergency within the convergence as we get into all of this shit here affecting humans and coming back to making us have better understanding of ourselves within all of this larger matrix that we call our lives. | |
| We're at that point of convergency. | |
| There could be a lot of people that are going to take it very badly and they're going to have emergencies as a result of this. | |
| I fully expect that the evil ones on this planet now will bring out the UFOs in this last ditch effort to save themselves, to try and retain control and so on, right? | |
| However, they may present it to us at that point. | |
| But we're getting very close to it because we're in this ultimate convergency and we're getting stacks on our stacks and they're moving out in three dimensions and all of that stuff is happening. | |
| We're also seeing the emergency aspect of it in the evil ones in the Khazarian Mafia here as they are reacting to the other aspects of the convergence of all of the self-enhancing, | |
| refining part of the convergence force within universe is affecting their structures, their underlying structures, and they're now starting to see it. | |
| So basically what I'm saying is the elite are panicking, right? | |
| And they're panicking because now it's dawned on them that this can't be stopped. | |
| It's just starting to dawn on them. | |
| They'll suppress the thought and they'll get it again the next day and panic some more and suppress it and so on as they go forward because they can't allow themselves to see the ultimate end of it all, which is highly predictable. | |
| And they're going to try everything. | |
| They're just going to keep throwing shit at this as far as they can because they don't want this convergence to occur because it represents the ultimate battle. | |
| And in our sense, it would be the ultimate battle of good versus evil. | |
| Good being decentralization, every human being able to be their own personal master, have their own destiny, yada, yada, yada. | |
| And the evil part being centralization, the central banks, you know, slavery, whipping your ass, all that kind of shit, right? | |
| So we're at that point now. | |
| This is the end times, okay? | |
| The end times from the perspective of the Khazarian Mafia was always known to be as this chaotic, always known to be this much of a giant battle. | |
| But they always thought that they were going to triumph because their savior, their antichrist, is supposed to appear at this time. | |
| Now, bear in mind, they think that that should occur now. | |
| That's why they accelerated their plans, right? | |
| That's why they had plans for 2030. | |
| They had the pandemic was supposed to really begin in 1920 or in 2025 and then last a number of years from there. | |
| And we were going to have this lead up to it in this period of time. | |
| And all these plans had to be shifted forward, not because Trump got elected, although that was an aspect of it, but there were other thinking within the Khazarian Mafia themselves to a particular, I didn't realize it until recently, to a particular astro theologic alignment from their perspective, right? | |
| And so this is a convergence of the planetary alignments at the same time. | |
| That's why they were trying to maneuver things. | |
| Now, bear in mind that these people think that the sparks of life were dropped by God, that he fucked up or he or she or fucked up. | |
| It fucked up. | |
| And that God fucked up and these sparks of life were dropped. | |
| And it's up to the cabal, the evil ones, the Khazarians here, the Khazarian Mafia, to restore the sparks of life. | |
| And in the process of that restoration, they become God. | |
| That's kind of how it works in their religion, right? | |
| They become the ultimate masters forever and there's a thousand years or more, thousand years reign of their structure. | |
| In order for this to occur, they had to do specific works. | |
| They had to change the moral tone of Earth in order that their Antichrist could appear and get the bullet to the head and survive in front of all of us and have all of us believe that this person is therefore divine and self-repairing and so on. | |
| It'll live forever and all of that. | |
| Now, they got a real problem with that one right now because I ain't going to believe shit because of CGI, right? | |
| Oh, I've seen that shit in the movies. | |
| No, dude, I ain't buying that. | |
| Oh, you're really the Antichrist? | |
| Here, let me check it out. | |
| Let me shoot you again in the head and see if that works, right? | |
| And then maybe I might get some credence. | |
| But hey, at the same time, I'm going to have my cousin Billy Bob over there try and blow your head off with a shotgun at the same time. | |
| You know, you see what I'm saying? | |
| It just is not going to wash. | |
| You don't have the same level of gullibility and so on. | |
| So the convergency is wiping them out. | |
| But we are at the point that the Khazarian mafia had a convergence of all of these forces and they had to act now. | |
| They were pressured by the time, pressured by the astrological alignments. | |
| Apparently, one of them was not able to be determined appropriately until Earth had moved into this particular region. | |
| It gets really obscure. | |
| But all of a sudden, they discovered like in 19 something, 1998 or 1999, oh my god, it's going to be here and it'll be here on 2021 or 2022. | |
| And so it has something to do with an alignment of planetary bodies here, and then those planetary bodies being themselves in that structure, in that convergence, in an alignment with something that's extra galactic or extra solar system. | |
| Again, it's all obscured by language, and I haven't gotten down into it that much. | |
| But this the Zohar is a thousand pages of really dense cosmology. | |
| All right. | |
| It says it's more dense than what you would read for the Jain religion, which they don't screw around with any extraneous words. | |
| It's really dense stuff. | |
| But this over here is obscuring it. | |
| It is more dense. | |
| But it points. | |
| So, long story short, the Khazarian mafia has reached a point of emergency within their convergence because they're no longer in control. | |
| And yet they think that right now are the conditions, and I'm talking like April, May, June, July, etc., for their Antichrist to appear. | |
| That if it's ever going to happen, it's going to happen now. | |
| And then if they miss this particular point, and in their religion, they have to participate. | |
| This won't occur unless they do all of this shitty work to get the Earth all polluted and stuff before a particular alignment and before the soul of, and I don't think there's a soul involved, but before this being comes down as their savior, right? | |
| And so they have to really work their asses off. | |
| And if they miss it, the next time that they'll have this convergence, I guess is like 2,800 years or something in terms of the astrological alignment. | |
| So they don't want to screw it up and blow it, but now they're discovering that, oh, fuck, oh, fuck. | |
| You know, we've only got X amount of time and things are slipping away and shit's happening. | |
| It's like, oh, yeah. | |
| So anyway, so this is the convergency. | |
| This is that point in time that the overwoo is leading to. | |
| You don't get one without the other, right? | |
| You can't get here unless you start down here and work your way up. | |
| So this is where we are now. | |
| This convergency is going to bring out heightened anxiety and stuff on lots and lots on people's part, especially within the Khazarian mafia, and it'll bleed over to the rest of us, but we needn't take it particularly seriously, right? | |
| I don't. | |
| I'm very relaxed. | |
| I'm mellow about all of this shit. | |
| It's a war. | |
| We've actually gotten into those serious good parts of the war. | |
| There's battle shit going on. | |
| And so we're going to work it out. | |
| It's being resolved now. | |
| And in war, okay, so nothing that happens in war should be understood as being a definitive kind of an understanding, right? | |
| It should be always held as in the woo, very amorphous because you don't know most of the shit that affected that particular aspect of human behavior that you're studying at that point, right? | |
| Gulf of Tonkin. | |
| You have no fucking idea what's going on if you assume that the Gulf of Tonkin was as presented. | |
| You only look at these things in hindsight. | |
| So I'm not taking any of this shit that's coming out seriously, but we are winning. | |
| The good guys are winning here. | |
| Decentralization is winning. | |
| Central banks are collapsing. | |
| The bad guys' stuff is being exposed. | |
| They live by secrecy, only by secrecy once all the secrets are gone. | |
| Then we'll probably, in my opinion, will probably go back to something like the 1890s, okay? | |
| And we'll probably enact a bunch of laws that say it will be a crime for you to try and get any public office anywhere and be a member of any secret society in any form, shape, or whatever. | |
| And we don't give a shit about religions. | |
| We don't give an ass, you know, no regard to religions whatsoever, as long as that religion is practiced in the open. | |
| And you're not name-stealing by hiding behind some other religion. | |
| We don't have a problem with that. | |
| So they may indeed, we may indeed act anti-Mason laws, in that sense, anti-secret society laws, because it'll come out that the World Economic Forum, as we all know, is a criminal organization. | |
| And there's, okay, so there are rumors here in Washington State, in my state, that there's grand juries being convened for political corruption. | |
| This is not something we do. | |
| It's not like we're Louisiana. | |
| We're not an old state. | |
| We haven't been around a long time with a lot of political corruption in there to have gone through this before. | |
| We were a state in like 1889, right? | |
| That's when we were made a state. | |
| So barely like 130 years old. | |
| And yeah, we've had political corruption and stuff, but we haven't had, haven't gotten to this organized level before. | |
| And so now I guess, oh, geez, we're going to have grand juries. | |
| Now, all we need to do is to have a grand jury somewhere in the United States decide that it is worthwhile proceeding, that it is allowable, that there's evidence that would substantiate a claim of RICO against the World Economic Forum, which is not part of any government, by the way. | |
| It's just a private criminal gang created by Klaus Schwab and some other bankers. | |
| And they fund Antifon, they have people murdered, all this kind of stuff, you know, run drugs, people, you know, adrenochrome, all of that kind of shit. | |
| So all we have to do is have a grand jury somewhere declare these people to be susceptible to a RICO enforcement and then start a RICO enforcement against them in one state. | |
| And then RICO becomes something that you can apply against any WEF member anywhere. | |
| And as it should be, we should just have to point it out. | |
| And as we point out how criminal and that they're connected with this criminal organization, then all of this will fall away. | |
| Now, I'm personally, because I'm not an attorney, I'm doing this very slowly. | |
| And, you know, as I have a few minutes here and there, I do some investigation for my own personal RICO suit against the fuckers in my state that are associated with the World Economic Forum criminal gang. | |
| This includes my governor and a number of the prosecuting attorneys around here and these kind of people, right? | |
| And so I'm going to file RICO cases against them because they've done some illegal acts and overstepped their jurisdiction. | |
| And I'm getting into some tricky kind of legal things because I want to keep it in the state court. | |
| I don't want them to try and bust it out into federal court in any way, shape, or form. | |
| So I'm going to go these particular routes. | |
| But in the meantime, there's other people that are also doing this. | |
| So it's starting to pile on there. | |
| And the convergence is coming out. | |
| So anyway, I got to get moving and get some stuff done here. | |
| I'm going to upload this. | |
| I wanted to say that the nice people at Pure Bulk had sent me a, they sent us a care package, Kathy and myself. | |
| Hang on a second. | |
| Let me see if I can do this appropriately. | |
| There we go. | |
| So I've got my Pure Bulk t-shirt on. | |
| Put it over here, I guess. | |
| Pretty cool, actually. | |
| Microfiber, I think. | |
| They feel good. | |
| They sent me some of these, and I'm going to do something special with a couple of them. | |
| So I'm going to get some. | |
| It won't happen anytime soon. | |
| I've got a lot of other projects. | |
| But I'm going to get some fabric pens and I'll autograph a couple of these things and we'll have some kind of a contest or something and I'll mail them out. | |
| So anyway, so this is whoops, whoops, whoops, coming from the Pure Sleep stuff. | |
| Selling pretty good. | |
| It's very well received. | |
| Doing very well. | |
| Anyway, so it was nice of the Pure Bulk guys to do this. | |
| It's a little chilly out here. | |
| It's like 50 some odd degrees at the moment, 55. | |
| Anyway, so that's our convergency. | |
| You should, in my opinion, sort of slide on over to the observer side and just kind of kick back and let things play out, not get too emotionally involved. | |
| You've got real work to do. | |
| You need to do things like, you know, take over your local school board and, you know, all of these kind of things. | |
| Involved locally and start kicking butt because as the system comes apart, as the central bank system comes apart, they won't be able to bribe people. | |
| And so a lot of people will just go away. | |
| So there's going to be a lot of work, a lot of jobs open because you won't have all of these bribed individuals that were being paid vast quantities of money to take poor paying jobs and promote an agenda that was against the general public. | |
| And so this aspect of the convergency is going to produce lots of opportunity for people to go out and do decent good work. | |
| Speaking of which, now, okay, so another thing, we've got our pure sleep thing taken care of. | |
| And I'll make our pure bulk thing here. | |
| I'll make another commercial for this stuff later on when it's a little warmer. | |
| But also what I'm doing is to, we've got a new project we're going to do, we're going into the steampunk business. | |
| Okay, so what we're going to do, because I live in a place, I just can't, it's just, the idea is just destroying my brain. | |
| So I decided, okay, I'll commit to it, I'll do it. | |
| We've got so much waste biomass up here that I just see it lying around everywhere. | |
| I just want to do something with it. | |
| And so what I'm going to do is make electricity out of wood. | |
| So what we're doing is we're working with Interstellar Aviation and Interstellar Aviation Company out of Russia. | |
| It's actually an American who's an expat in Russia, and he and I are going to do some design. | |
| We're going to design a green steam engine kind of a thing for electric production that'll be low pressure and he'll have a couple of other goals, but it'll be low pressure and will drive a Tesla turbine in order to drive a high efficiency electrical generator. | |
| And so basically what we're going to have is, you know, if you wanted to, you could use it as a backup and just have one of these things sitting around. | |
| And oh, well, we lost electricity, so you're going out and you fire up the barbecue and get a little fire going and it makes some steam and it produces electricity for you. | |
| And, you know, when the electricity comes back, if you want, you can, you know, shut it down and just go back on the mains. | |
| I'm going to use these things as continuous generation. | |
| We're going to try and come up with a closed system that works off of waste heat and ambient heat differences, sort of like the heat pumps for houses. | |
| Again, software controlled, again, to convergency of all of this stuff and put them on boats. | |
| So, you know, it's all of a steam-powered boat. | |
| A steam-electric boat. | |
| I know it's goofy, but you know. | |
| But anyway, actually, I think it'll be quite successful. | |
| Number of years, though, okay, so this is my steampunk adventure, and it'll take me probably 10 years or so before we're effective. | |
| But we're going to try and set Kale up as the head of manufacturing and actually make the buggers as we go along. | |
| So we've got to have some prototypes, get them working, have a history of, you know, the get-the-parts, all of this kind of stuff. | |
| A huge bunch of problems there. | |
| Anyway, so that's it. | |
| Took a long time. | |
| Sorry, guys. | |
| And we're into road building. | |
| I think we started in July on the bridge. | |
| So it's starting to get a little bit active for us. | |
| I'll try and get back to videos as I may and may do some other podcasts and stuff in the meantime. | |
| Anyway, okay, guys, so stay woo and watch out. |