StormCloudsGathering: The Open Internet Is Coming to an End

3 months ago
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We have one last chance to communicate over the internet before everything goes crazy. I've been silent for a long time, so there is a lot to be said. We'll have to break it into pieces.

Three months into the genocide of Gaza, with over 23,000 civilians killed (by conservative estimates), it should be clear that Israel won't be dissuaded by public condemnations, protests or boycotts. It should also be clear that the international organizations that are supposed to intervene in this kind of situation have no intention of doing so, and that the United States and Europe will continue assisting the aggressor (in spite of public outcry). Only Yemen had the courage to stand up.

Israel's goal isn't just to steal the remnants of Palestine. Their goal is to take a portion of each of the countries that surround them (to form Greater Israel). To accomplish this they needed a wider regional war. Hence a massacre designed to provoke the muslim world. Now that war is kicking off. Yemen and Lebanon are the opening act, but the main target is Iran.

This comes at a moment when Russia is preparing to deliver the final blow in Ukraine; an event which will set off a chain reaction of its own. With simultaneous escalations in the middle east and Europe and the world's most important shipping lanes becoming war zones we now have the perfect cover story for the Great Reset. If the public can be convinced that the rapid decline in living standards that follows was caused by enemies abroad their anger will be channeled into military aggression.

This is the final information war of the internet as we know it. Those of us that refuse digital id won't be allowed on the new system. Officially the "Zero Trust Strategy" — which calls for all internet users to be authenticated at all times (ending anonymity) — is scheduled to be fully implemented by 2027. But a catastrophic cyber event (like the one that the WEF says is anticipated sometime within the next 12 months) would obviously accelerate the process. The best way to predict a crisis is to create it yourself.

I won't be signing on to the new internet under any condition, and I hope you don't either. So anything that needs to be said should be said now. But where to start? I promised you guys one last video (and I intend to deliver), but I've come to the conclusion that I have to approach this one in a different way. My primary objective is to convey something that could improve the outcome for as many people as possible. As such, it doesn't make sense to create it in a vacuum. Rather than spending months writing, recording and editing to then drop a video in final form, what if instead we open a conversation? Part of what I intend to say is already decided (we'll save that for last), but I'm going to give each of you a chance to influence the direction and focus of the rest. So I've created a temporary email address for people to send comments and questions (wordsbeforewar@use.startmail.com). I won't be able to respond to each email directly, but I will read them until that address goes down.

To start the conversation here's a glimpse of where I am coming from: I've spent the past 8 years living off-grid and building a farm in the jungle (on very difficult terrain). During that time I went through a series of cataclysms including a direct hit from a category 5 hurricane and two life threatening illnesses; the last one culminating in a near death experience. I learned a few things from all that. Might some of it be useful to you? Let me know.

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