NPConspiracy Clown Cult (10/9/24)

TST Radio - Podcast tekijän mukaan Ryan Gable

The usage of psychological warfare has increased in both necessity and effectiveness over the last century. Former KGB agent Yuri Bezmenov said that “highest art of warfare is not to fight at all, but to subvert anything of value” so that that no-one can perceive an enemy at all. In 2021 the world’s largest meat supplier JBS was hit with a major cyberattack; in 2022 the US-FBI began warning of cyberattacks on US food plants after there were numerous incidents of fires at facilities from coast to coast; the latter also occurred on the heels of supply chain slow downs and rising costs due to pandemic policies; now we have just learned that American Water Works has been hit with a cyberattack, a major assault effecting 14 million Americans in 14 states, including 18 military installations. With every instance of a cyberattack we can refer back to Cyber Polygon of the WEF, an online training platform preparing the world for a “comprehensive cyberattack” that would make the pandemic seem like a joke. There are 36,000 food processing plants in the US according to the USDA, and according to the National Fire Protection Association and National Fire Incident Reporting System, there were 490,500 structural fires in the US in 2020, with 5,308 fires at manufacturing and processing plants, rending a 1% statistic of the overall number of facilities. Reuters reported that there was no proof of an organized conspiracy to reduce the nation’s food supply through arson, but that doesn’t mean there isn’t a conspiracy to sabotage the largest facilities, or at least create that impression in the media. Now with hurricane Helene and Milton many believe that the same forces behind the above conspiracy are also behind these storms, as well as wildfires. But we need to ask the question: are select facilities being hit with cyberattacks or fires, and some storms, fires, etc., the result of some conspiracy to destroy the United States or is that simply the narrative that has been crafted in order to bring the people into further conflict. The Internet is now filled with arguments over whether storms are the result of weather control or climate change; whether a fire at a food packing facility was an accident or planned; if a cyberattack on a water facility is a conspiracy or just low level hackers; whether wildfires in California or Wyoming are from climate change or DEWs. To suggest that we must have a baseline for these things is seen as denial of the truth, which varies per person. But a baseline helps us to determine how many cyberattacks there are every year and thus if the most recent one are abnormal. A baseline helps us to determine if a wildfire is normal or the result of arson. A baseline helps us to determine if a storm is normal or the result of some human tampering. A baseline also helps us to determine if our health has been getting worse for years as a result of diet, and not virus. It is not acceptable to simply say the reasoning doesn’t matter because of “insert whatever conclusion.” Perhaps it is too much of a conspiracy to suggest that the conspiracies are part of a conspiracy to “subvert anything of value.” In these conditions we see the NPC meme play out in real life, with programmed responses even by those who claim to be guarding the sheeple. This is cult territory. People will say you have ‘weird talking points’ or are ‘concealing the truth’ for not telling them what they want to hear. It is a spirit of the trickster, “a clown figure working in continuous opposition to the well-wishing creator…” And the people responsible, like the PG&E admitted they were for the Camp fire, are able to get away murder. Don’t consider yourself, don’t consider nature, don’t consider the sun, just put all the blame on the Deep State and all the faith in Donald Trump, who now wants to rid the US of all criticism of a foreign government. -FREE ARCHIVE & RSS: https://www.spreaker.com/show/the-secret-teachings 

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