| Time | Text |
|---|---|
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The Great Reset Revisited
00:03:37
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| Derek, how would this great reset affect us as Christian America? | |
| Well, it would be a fundamental restructuring of global society. | |
| I mean, this really would be a reset back to square one. | |
| Back to Babel. | |
| Back to Babel. | |
| And I mean that, yeah, in a very literal sense, actually. | |
| And we can talk about that. | |
| But on a practical level, it is basically moving away from the values that made America great. | |
| This idea that we should be free to pursue happiness. | |
| That is one of the founding principles on which the United States was created. | |
| Life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. | |
| We're not guaranteed happiness, but we're guaranteed the freedom to do those things that would perhaps bring us happiness and to profit from the fruit of our labors. | |
| This was a lesson that was learned in the 1620s by the Plymouth colony, the pilgrims who landed at Plymouth. | |
| They tried a collectivist or socialist model for their colony in which they all worked and shared everything together. | |
| And they found very early on, and this is documented by the journal of the first governor of Massachusetts, William Bradford, that it didn't work because the single men resented having to go out and plant and plow and harvest to feed the children of other men. | |
| And the women and children would, according to Bradford now, would feign weakness. | |
| Oh, I don't feel well enough to go out in the field today and my children are working, knowing that they were going to benefit from the young, healthy single men who were out in the field. | |
| So they nearly starved to death. | |
| It was only when the governor said, okay, this isn't working. | |
| Here's what we need from you. | |
| A bare minimum from you for the health of the colony. | |
| But then if you want to work extra, you get to keep all of that. | |
| Essentially, they reset the original colony there in Massachusetts on a capitalist system. | |
| And then they began to profit. | |
| And according to Governor Bradford, it was nothing short of miraculous. | |
| Suddenly, women were willing to go out in the field and bring the children with them to help plant and weed and harvest. | |
| And everyone prospered. | |
| It's a biblical model. | |
| It is a biblical model. | |
| But the great reset would take us back to a socialist model where we are all dependent on the government for our universal basic income, which is a term we've been hearing more and more recently. | |
| Digital currency. | |
| Digital currency to bypass this physical cash because, well, some people are unbanked and we need to be able to get them their relief money from the government in a way that bypasses the banks. | |
| The only way to do that is by giving everyone a digital wallet. | |
| How do you track, how do you secure the digital wallet? | |
| Perhaps through a mark in the hand or the forehead. | |
| It doesn't take a lot of imagination to see how this would be very, very useful to a global government because with a digital currency, every single transaction is tracked and recorded. | |
| You cannot do anything privately anymore. | |
| The idea of privacy, and this is part of the, these are among the documents that are publicly posted at the World Economic Forum's website, the promoters of this great reset. | |
|
Why They Keep Returning
00:00:31
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| We will own nothing. | |
| We will just rent everything. | |
| We will have no privacy. | |
| And everything will be wonderful. | |
| It will be a socialist utopia. | |
| But the problem is they've tried this in the past. | |
| And the Soviet Union collapsed under its own weight. | |
| The Chinese attempt at it only began to prosper when they essentially mixed their socialist ideals with capitalism. | |
| But for some reason, they keep returning because it's all about bringing us under the control of a centralized government. | |
| They want to make it global. | |