Saturday, January 1, 2022

Airline Travel Chaos Continues, Another 4,324 Flight Cancellations Today


ABC was warning yesterday that airline travel was likely to continue with major disruptions as the industry claims Omicron impacting their operational capacity.

(VIA ABC) […] Federal Aviation Administration is warning of staffing issues of its own, such as sick air traffic controllers. In addition, the FAA warned on Thursday that weather, holiday traffic and COVID-19 “are likely to result in some travel delays in the coming days.”

“Like the rest of the U.S. population, an increased number of FAA employees have tested positive for COVID-19,” the FAA said in a statement. “To maintain safety, traffic volume at some facilities could be reduced, which might result in delays during busy periods.” (read more)

There are currently 4,324 flight cancellations today via FlightAware.


2021: The Year of the Hacker

2022 will only bring more attacks as the 
stakes rise in the ongoing global cyber war.


In many ways, 2021 was the year of the hacker. The year began with information technology professionals still scrambling to access the scope of the wide-ranging SolarWinds attack and ended with more attacks and ransom payouts than any other year in history.

The constant proliferation of new ransomware and state-sponsored hacking organizations, including Advanced Persistent Threat Groups (APTs), is sure to make 2022 an even more profitable year for criminals operating on the so-called “Dark Web,” while cybersecurity issues in general will continue to take a more prominent presence in matters related to national security and diplomacy.

Government agencies like the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) and the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) worked around the clock to suppress the constant cyber threats facing America with varying results, and here are some of the more notable attacks they saw in 2021:

  • January: Former CISA Director Christopher Krebs, who was fired by President Trump after his endorsement of a November 17 Joint Statement from the Elections Infrastructure Government Coordinating Council and the Election Infrastructure Sector Coordinating Executive Committees claiming that “The November 3rd election was the most secure in American history,” is hired as a consultant by SolarWinds, victim of perhaps the most wide-ranging hack in history. The controversial statement fails to acknowledge the Hall County, GA, ransomware attack against Georgia’s election systems less than a month before the election that disabled the county’s voter signature database.  
  • February: DHS announces several new programs focused on the improvement of American cybersecurity. Among these initiatives is an increase in cybersecurity funding for state and local governments via Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) grants and “The Reduce the Risk of Ransomware Campaign.” 
  • March: The cyberattack against Microsoft Exchange Server software targets several key flaws in the program and offers hackers unfettered access to the email accounts of more than 30,000 U.S. organizations. The attack was the work of Chinese Advanced Persistent Threat Group Hafnium. Although the U.S. and our European allies would threaten new economic sanctions against the Chinese government for the attack, none have come down as of December 2021. 
  • April: Russia’s DarkSide Ransomware Gang begins executing perhaps the most damaging attack in U.S. history when they target Colonial Pipeline. Although reports of the attack didn’t surface until May, the attack was actually initiated in late April of 2021 and shut down a 5,500-mile pipeline responsible for delivering 45 percent of the east coast’s fuel supply. Shortly after the Colonial attack, DarkSide would target Brenntag, a chemical distribution company, in an attack that netted the cybercriminals 150 GB of data and a ransom payment of over $4 million. 
  • May: As part of the various supply chain woes that the United States experienced in 2021, a major attack against meat manufacturer JBS Foods by a Russian-based outfit known as the REvil Ransomware Gang slowed beef distribution in America this past spring. The hack would produce one of the largest ransom payouts in history, with REvil receiving $11 million from JBS. 
  • June: June saw Colonial Pipeline CEO Joseph Blount appear before Congress to answer questions regarding the DarkSide hacking attack. Many observers and experts in the field of cybersecurity questioned whether Colonial violated the 2020 Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) advisory outlining penalties for businesses that are found to have issued ransom payments to groups or individuals under U.S. sanctions. 
  • July: REvil carries out an attack against IT infrastructure vendor Kaseya by leveraging a fake software update that targets Kaseya’s clients. According to the hackers, up to one million entities had their computers encrypted and the group demanded a ransom of $70 million in bitcoin. 
  • August: CISA’s Jen Easterly announces the formation of the Joint Cyber Defense Collaborative at the Black Hat cybersecurity conference on August 5. The program taps “Big-Tech” companies Google, Amazon, and Microsoft, to assist the federal government defending critical infrastructure against future attacks. 
  • September: A Labor Day weekend attack targets historically black Howard University with ransomware and disrupts online classes for several days amid the still-ongoing COVID-19 pandemic.  
  • October: Sinclair Broadcast Group is targeted by a Russian-based hack that shuts down email, data, and phone networks. Microsoft reports that Russian APT group Nobelium, who are thought to be responsible for the SolarWinds attack, spent several months attacking entities responsible for reselling Microsoft cloud services. Prior to Halloween, candy manufacturer Ferrara is the victim of a ransomware attack. 
  • November: According to reports, foreign hackers breach nine entities in the education, defense, healthcare, energy, and technology sectors.  
  • December: Israel and the United Arab Emirates agree to share defense and cyber intelligence. CISA warns that a new vulnerability potentially threatens the security of hundreds of millions of devices. The vulnerability,known as Log4j, is associated with a utility that runs as part of many common software applications.

2022 will only bring more attacks as the stakes rise in the ongoing global cyber war. We are sure to see countless new ransomware strains and state-sponsored Advanced Persistent Threats (APTs) rise as the Biden Administration scrambles to respond, and the question of whether they are competent enough to deal with emerging threats is sure to play a role in the outcome of this November’s critical midterm elections.


And we Know, We the People news, and more-Jan 1st


 


Happy New Year! Feast your eyes on this amazing 1st news report of this year. 🥳🍷🎈

ICYMI: https://welovetrump.com/2021/12/30/the-pentagon-is-constructing-a-new-courtroom-for-war-crimes-trials-at-guantanamo-bay/

https://www.thegatewaypundit.com/2021/12/must-watch-dr-robert-malone-drops-bombshells-much-anticipated-interview-joe-rogan-says-federal-government-lawless-actively-violating-nuremberg-code/


2022: Not More of the Same

Rather than a continuation of the trends of 2020-2021, it's likely something entirely new and different will emerge, and its source will come from outside the system, its leaders, and their plans.


End of the year reviews, along with predictions for the coming year, are a staple around this time. But, as Yogi Berra wisely said, “It’s tough to make predictions, especially about the future.” 

I took a look at what I wrote last year, and a lot of it held up reasonably well. (You can be the judge). I argued that the system and its managers are not doing a great job, the coronavirus crisis exposed their incompetence and malevolence, and that bad economics and crime would be major factors in marring the year ahead. Specifically, “a crisis of authority and legitimacy is emerging from failures in the most fundamental tasks of a society: the provision for basic needs, physical security, and a fair and accepted means of making decisions and picking leaders.”

The year 2021, in many respects, was a less dramatic, slow motion encore performance of 2020, complete with renewed COVID restrictions, sustained high levels of violent crime, and with media and Big Tech going even deeper down the censorship rabbit hole.

Change is afoot. Certain trends in motion for the last two years have been overplayed, such as de-incarceration and COVID panic. Something new will take their place. 

Also, the managerial class appears less certain of itself, shocked by the dramatic fall in Biden’s and the Democrats’ popularity and his failures to deliver on his own stated terms. This seems to explain the recent diffidence on COVID restrictions, which were one of the defining features of 2020-2021 America. 

For the next three years, events outside of anyone’s control and off of our collective radar loom large. While the details may be unknown, it’s worth hazarding a guess about the general subject matter. 

Trouble Overseas

Most presidents have to deal with a foreign policy crisis of one kind or another. This is what may be deemed one of Donald Rumsfeld’s “known unknowns.” It is possible such a crisis will emerge in Taiwan or Ukraine, but something important and consequential could just as easily happen in Mexico, Saudi Arabia, South Africa, or South Korea. 

Any major development would be a serious stress test of Biden and the federal government. The military has shifted focus to one kind of conflict—great power competition—after having again been bested and demoralized by a long brushfire war. This change of focus may prove short-sighted. 

Great power wars are unusual, especially in the age of nuclear weapons, whereas smaller conflicts occur fairly regularly. Very little about Biden’s national security team or the top leadership of the military inspires much confidence that another Grenada, Panama, or Lebanon-type incident will turn out for the best. And great power competition or not, it is more likely that China or some other foreign competitor will test America’s mettle in a theater like this by using proxies, rather than tackling us head-on. 

Perhaps Biden’s lethargy and the general American mood will keep us out of such conflicts. Responding to the recent flare up of tension with Russia and Ukraine, Biden has said that he would not send troops. This is not such a bad thing, even if it is done for the wrong reasons, because an American empire no longer benefits actual Americans. 

But it would be nice if we still had the ability to project power and thwart those who mean us harm. We may need to do so.

The Great Re-Sort

There has been a lot of talk about the Great Reset, as if 2019 were some benighted dark age. But thanks to the anomaly of a conservative Democrat representing Trump-loving West Virginia, this vague scheme of rearranging society has lost steam. Truly, it never really had much of a constituency. 

Yet a real trend is underway that will have important consequences: the Great Re-Sort, the mass movement of people from blue to red states. Retirements, strict COVID rules, high crime and high taxes all played a part, amplifying trends that have been underway since the 1980s. “Work from home” undid some embedded work habits, opening new areas to white-collar workers previously tied to offices in coastal, cosmopolitan cities. Thus, Nashville and Miami and Austin are all booming, as are small towns throughout the country. 

This movement will reduce the economic and political influence of the blue states, spread some wealth to less prosperous communities, and likely create new hubs based on industry and other affiliations. 

Unfortunately, influence is a two-way street. Low population areas like Montana could see their culture change very quickly. More populous “purple” states like Florida could find themselves turning blue, as happened to Arizona. 

While the internal migrants know enough to leave, cause and effect often eludes them. Thus some of the migrants complain about the culture and habits of the place they’re going to, even though they deem it more desirable than their former homes in New York or California. Rather than understanding or assimilating, they act like locusts, destroying one place and then moving on to destroy another. 

Is COVID Played Out?

Another thing to expect in 2022 is some COVID revisionism. There have already been some hints of the managing-expectations variety, including Biden’s dramatic announcement that there is “no federal solution” to the recent surge of cases due to the Omicron variant. 

Now, of course, it is unfair to judge Biden or any politician on the basis of the spread of a disease, just as it made no sense to blame George W. Bush for Hurricane Katrina. And, as I recently argued, Omicron may be a good news story. But Biden cynically blamed Trump for COVID deaths, even when he had little in the way of specific criticisms of Trump’s policy. Now the emptiness of his rhetoric and his promise to “shut down the virus” is evident.

It is possible we will see a relaxation in mandates and even a change of heart regarding the vaccines themselves, which may have a few surprises in storethat can only be observed through longitudinal study.  Biden’s kind words for Trump’s development of the vaccine appear to be crafted not merely to encourage Trump supporters to get the vaccine, but, just as likely, to preemptively pass the buck for what comes next. 

In short, the regime appears to be on the cusp of adopting a more mature, balanced approach to COVID, but the exact reason for their change of heart regarding masks, lockdowns, and vaccines remains to be seen. 

What Goes Up . . .

Another thing that always makes a mess of our plans is the economy. George H.W. Bush was riding high after the Gulf War victory, only to be undone by the 1992 recession. 

Presently the economy and financial markets appear to have diverged. The stock market has boomed, lifting wealth for anyone with exposure to it. And wages are up too, at least in nominal terms—I recently drove by a McDonald’s offering $14.50 per hour, even though the minimum wage here in Florida is $7.25. At the same time, unemployment is at an all-time low. 

Yet, in spite of that good news, when I go to Publix it more and more resembles a Soviet store, with empty shelves and items unpredictably missing, prices for what remains almost twice what they were a year or two ago. Ford’s website is still listing 2021 models, when automakers routinely used to list next year’s models starting in the fall. Something remains broken.  

It is hard to believe that the rivers of money floating around have not led to some mal-investment and bubbles, whether in particular companies, asset sectors, or otherwise. In 2020, we had a swift and deep recession followed by a swift recovery, which has now overshot the mark with inflation. 

Without knowing anything in particular, recessions tend to follow booms, and this is the most inflationary boom since the 1970s. 

Not Civil War, But Malaise

While various observers on both the Right and Left have suggested the high tension of the Trump years might mean a civil war, it appears more likely that the future will look like the past, only worse. 

Biden’s inefficacy has made him loathed and mocked, but he is not particularly frightening. In fact, his impotence and obvious mental decline render him more pathetic than anything else. It’s hard to believe we are stuck with this guy for three more years, just as it’s hard to believe he will make it that far. 

He is virtually in hiding, rarely leaving the Capitol area, other than to take weekends in Delaware. There, he can break away from reporters, discretely obtain whatever medical concoction is keeping him going, and avoid the White House visitors’ log, as he meets with the committee of “wise men” advising him. 

Biden has governed the way he was elected. His victory in a crowded field was the product of the DNC’s machinations to get everyone in line to defeat Bernie. The general election was also a committee product, namely the bipartisan schemes of leading figures in politics, business, and the media to remove Trump and what he represented from power. In the general election, they changed the rules, extended the voting season, collected ballots by hook or by crook, and coordinated these activities to make sure Biden limped across the finish line. 

The various organs of power painted themselves into a corner with the Biden-Harris combo, and they know their party will get trounced in the 2022 congressional races, and likely the next presidential election as well, if either of the principals on the current ticket run. The powerful also know that the hope of finding a Biden alternative depends on him remaining in power for three years and somehow getting Harris to step down, neither of which outcomes is a guarantee. 

So, perhaps it’s a little facile, but I predict the unpredictable. A lot of factors outside of anyone’s ability to make predictions will have a disproportionate impact on the course of 2022. Rather than a continuation of the trends of 2020-2021, it seems more likely something entirely new and different will emerge, and its source will come from outside the system, its leaders, and their plans. 


Lessons from 2021


Good riddance to 2021. 
Here's to a country filled with proactive patriots in 2022.


The last year has pretty much been a dumpster fire, and I’m glad to see it go. God only knows what 2022 holds, but the past year has provided some invaluable lessons we can—and must—use, to wrest control of America from those who would destroy her.

No. 1: On many important issues, the media deliberately lies or disseminates inexcusably false information.

Trump did not “collude” with Russia. COVID did not emerge in a wet market. The COVID shots do not prevent anyone from catching or transmitting the virus. Ivermectin is not just veterinary medicine. The border isn’t secure. Higher prices aren’t the result of companies “gouging” customers. Kyle Rittenhouse did not shoot three black men. We did not evacuate all Americans in Afghanistan before the disastrous military pullout. The January 6 mobs at the Capitol last year were not part of an “insurrection.” The Virginia gubernatorial election was not about white supremacy. Parents at school board meetings are not “domestic terrorists.” Joe Biden is not in excellent health. (How many presidents routinely speak from a fake Oval Office?)

The national media is either professionally deceitful or completely incompetent, or both. They cannot be trusted.

No. 2: Sweeping mandates like those proposed by the Biden administration are unconstitutional.

The federal government has no right to force people to inject experimental chemicals and gene “therapies” into their bodies. The “science” (if by that we mean accurate information) about the efficacy and risks of these shots is unclear, incomplete, and evolving. It is medically, scientifically and ethically untenable to insist upon a one-size-fits-all manner of treatment for 330 million vastly different individuals. Even some of the most ardent advocates for COVID shots are beginning to acknowledge that it is nonsensical and dangerous to keep insisting on more shots every time the virus mutates.

No. 3: Government propaganda turns ordinary people into little tyrants.

The COVID hysteria peddled by the government (not to mention inconsistent information), aided and abetted by broadcast, print and social media, has created a perpetual sense of panic in some of the population. In addition to lockdowns, business closures, travel bans, mask mandates and vaccine passports, we must endure those who behave horribly to anyone who isn’t wearing a mask or vaccinated. Last week, former actress and Playboy model Patricia Cornwall was removed from a Delta flight after she swore at, slapped, and spit on an 80-year-old man who was unmasked while eating. (This incident, like countless others, was captured on video and posted on social media.) Former Planned Parenthood President Dr. Leana Wen has said that unvaccinated people should be confined to their homes. CNN anchor Anderson Cooper discussed with Microsoft founder Bill Gates the possibility of depriving them of their Social Security payments. It’s not uncommon to see irate statements on social media insisting that those who opt not to get the COVID shots should be incarcerated or even executed.

If you want to know how to create a nation full of Nazis, there’s Exhibit A.

No. 4: It’s time for a transgender category for sports competitions.

Lia Thomas, the biological male who swam for the University of Pennsylvania men’s team, transitioned and now swims on the women’s team. Thomas has shattered records, causing outrage among some defenders of women’s sports. USA Swimming official Cynthia Millen resigned in protest. Millen said, “Men are different from women, men swimmers are different from women, and they will always be faster than women. Boys will always have larger lung capacity, larger hearts, greater circulation, a bigger skeleton, and less fat . . . no matter how much testosterone suppression drugs (Thomas) takes, he will always be a biological male and have the advantage.”

Denying the physical advantages of biological males in sport is absurd. (Further proof of this is the near complete absence of female-to-male gender transitioners competing in men’s sports.) Here again, real scientific truth is sacrificed on the altar of “progressive” narrative. If some men want to transition and identify as “female,” give them their own sports category and let them compete in it. If there aren’t many, so what? It will be that much easier to set records. But allowing them to steal opportunities from biological females is wrong.

No. 5: Teachers need to stick to teaching.

According to recent reports in Education Week and Business Insider, U.S. students are falling seriously behind their counterparts in other industrialized nations. U.S. high school math scores are now in the bottom half among the 71 countries surveyed, and 24th in science. Millennials in the U.S. workforce rank dead last in math and problem-solving, relative to those in other developed nations.

Not every failing can be laid at the feet of the schools; many of our problems start in the home. But it is inexcusable that, facing these statistics, we have districts, schools and teachers wasting students’ time and taxpayers’ money preaching “systemic racism” and “white privilege,” encouraging sexual promiscuity and gender confusion, promoting pornography, denying or making excuses for assaults and eliminating advanced classes for students who need them.

No. 6: The well-being of children is a winning issue; it transcends politics.

All parents want their children to be healthy. None want pornography in schools. They want privacy and safety in bathrooms, locker rooms, and classrooms. They want opportunities for advanced academics and supplemental support when children need them. These concerns are not limited to Republicans, conservatives, white people, or the wealthy. As seen in Virginia, Democrats get eviscerated on these issues, justifiably, because accusing parents of being racist or too ignorant to know what’s best for their children is callous, transparently false, and stupid, yet Democrats continue to do it. Fine. Let them lose.

No. 7: When Americans speak up and stand together, we win.

Whether at school board or city council meetings, in our businesses, in the streets, in the courtrooms or at the polls, when Americans take the offense and tell those in power what we will and will not stand for, we win. For too long, those in control of the government, our schools and our media have counted on and exploited a trusting, poorly informed population. Things have changed. Millions have had their eyes opened. The elites don’t like it—and that tells you plenty.

Good riddance to 2021. Here’s to a country filled with proactive patriots in 2022.


Under the Arc de Triomphe, the European flag of discord

 

Celebrating the start of the French presidency of the European Union, the unfurling of a gigantic European flag above the tomb of the unknown soldier made all the right-wing candidates for the presidential election react.

While usually it is the French flag that flaunts the famous Parisian arch, floating above the remains of the Unknown Soldier, for a few days a gigantic European standard has replaced it under the Arc de Triomphe. This is one of the events with which France celebrates the start of its presidency of the European Union, which begins this Saturday, January 1. Other famous places in the capital were also dressed in the colors of Europe on this occasion, in particular the Eiffel Tower, adorned with the twelve stars selected in 1986 as the symbol of all European institutions.

Read alsoMajority defends European flag to strengthen cleavage with Eurosceptics

But the Arc de Triomphe is not just any public place. Erected at the request of Napoleon from 1806 to perpetuate the memory of the victories of the French armies, it has never ceased, since its inauguration in 1836, to serve as a support for the celebration of the soldiers who died for France. Since the Liberation of Paris in 1944, it has become customary to let the French flag fly under the arch: “Under the other French presidencies of the Council of the EU, the tricolor has been maintained or cohabited with the EU flag»  


It did not therefore take long for the appearance of the European flag, alone and as a replacement for the French flag, to make many Internet users react, immediately followed by all the right-wing presidential candidates, without exception.

SEE ALSO – New Year: the Eiffel Tower sparkles in the colors of the European flag to celebrate the transition to 2022

Zemmour, Le Pen, Pécresse …

Marine Le Pen thus deplored a “provocation” Who “offends those who fought for France“, Asking Emmanuel Macron to intervene to restore the presence of the national flag. A request to the Head of State also addressed “solemnly“By Valérie Pécresse:”We owe it to all our fighters who shed their blood for [le drapeau tricolore]“Added the Republican candidate, explaining her point as follows:”Presiding over Europe yes, erasing French identity no!»

As for Eric Zemmour, he also relayed an image of the European flag under the Arc de Triomphe with the comment: “after the sacking and packaging, the outrage“. Florian Philippot, Gilbert Collard, Nicolas Dupont-Aignan as well as many deputies of the National Rally have also expressed, at least on social networks, their dissatisfaction.

There were not many people to defend this choice, the majority having instead chosen not to venture into the controversy. One of the few to have responded to criticism from the right is the deputy (LREM) François Jolivet,  


«The presence of the European flag under the Arc de Triomphe does not shock me, since it marks the start of the French presidency of the European Union. Lifting France onto the roof of Europe, putting it in control, has its something patriotic.»

Read alsoThe keys to understanding the French presidency of the EU

More numerous, on the other hand, were those who especially criticized Valérie Pécresse for her participation in a controversy that they considered came from the extreme right. “Running after Marine Le Pen, copying her tweets and polemical bass, what sadness, Valérie Pécresse!»Retorted the Secretary of State for European Affairs Clément Beaune – who relayed on his account the images of many Parisian monuments in the colors of Europe, such as the Eiffel Tower, the opera or the Notre-Dame de Paris cathedral … but not the Arc de Triomphe.

Clément Beaune also clarified to BFMTV that the tricolor would soon resume its place: “The device is in place for a few days, with the illuminations, and the French flag will obviously be reinstalled afterwards, without the European flag.»

Read alsoClément Beaune: “Pécresse, it’s bad Macron or bad Ciotti”

In the meantime, as the Brut journalist Remy Buisine has shown, the hundreds of thousands of people massed on the Champs-Élysées last night despite the cancellation of the fireworks have waited in vain for the traditional countdown for the New Year, usually projected onto the Arc de Triomphe: this has obviously been removed as well, given the health restrictions.   



https://news.in-24.com/news/445830.html   





Six Cultish Things Globalist Elites Want You to Look Forward To in 2022—and Beyond!

What the globalist elites want for us is something that resembles corporate fascism. 
Or, in other words, one big fat globalist cult.


The year is 2022. The place: a New York City so overpopulated that everyone is sleeping and dying on outdoor stairways. All sweating like pigs because of global warming. People have become unwitting cannibals because there is no more food. Elites still dine on delectables, but all that remains for the hoi polloi is the promise of a green wafer allegedly made of plankton, but in reality “It’s PEOPLE!!”

That’s the setting of the over-the-top 1973 movie “Soylent Green,” produced in the wake of Paul Ehrlich’s classic fear porn book The Population Bomb. Time has proven Ehrlich’s predictions of mass starvation due to population growth to be massively wrong. Ehrlich also lost his famous wager with the economist Julian Simon who predicted a more prosperous world. Still, Malthusian propaganda dies hard because it’s such an effective tool for social engineering.

“Soylent Green” is a random example, chosen because its year 2022 happens to be upon us. Certainly, dates and science used in science fiction have a heavy emphasis on fiction. The “Blade Runner” rebellion of genetically designed replicants was set in 2019. And, of course, Big Brother ruled in George Orwell’s 1984. Though much has come to pass, including genetic engineering and the surveillance state, there’s proof enough that we can’t predict the future with certainty.

Even so, we humans love to prophesy. So, for that job, who you gonna call? Well, we could call on some folks—mostly billionaires—working for a monopoly on the future. These are your globalists and transhumanists who have an advantage in predicting the future by just telling you what your future will be like while blockading the alternatives. 

In 2020, World Economic Forum (WEF) founder Klaus Schwab came out with his book “COVID-19 and the Great Reset” which brags about how the Wuhan virus presented us (actually, him) with a wunderbar opportunity to remake the world in Schwab’s own image. Others who are in on the game include George Soros, Bill Gates, John Kerry, and a host of other high placed leftists. Along with transhumanists—folks like Ray Kurzweil, Martine Rothblatt, and just about every Silicon Valley billionaire and wannabe billionaire—Schwab has proudly stated that when he and his friends get done with us, they expect to have “changed what it means to be human.”

Such fevered dreams are typical of every utopian cultist in locations that range from Munich’s HofbrauHaus in the 1920s, to Jonestown, Guyana in the 1970s, to Davos, Switzerland today. They position themselves as the all-knowing, all-caring arbiters of how every single person on planet Earth must think, speak, and act. For the greater good, you see. And they sincerely believe that tomorrow belongs to them.

So let’s take a look at just six of the Great Reset’s “predictions” for your life and how you will live it, post-2021 or ASAP, but definitely by 2030. Let’s also note how each of these forecasts represent standard operating procedures of cult leaders, reflecting a desire for total control over what you can own (nothing,) where you can go (nowhere, without their permission,) what you can eat (no meat!) what you can learn (only what’s programmed for you,) your very identity (digital,) and who owns you (a “private-public partnership.”) Notice also the cultic hypnotic technique of putting their predictions in the form of imperatives.

1) “You will own nothing and you will be happy.” This seems to have become the mantra of the Great Reset. In fact, the original WEF 2016 video received so much backlash for its anti-property approach, that Big Tech and Big Media made a point of “fact-checking” it as misinformation. (Which only makes it ring even more true.) 

The idea that in the New Normal you will rent or share everything, that “all products will become services,” and you’ll live in a sort of collectivist Borg may appeal to some. But you’ll be totally dependent on others who tell you what you can rent or share, based on a social credit score. This is exactly the modus operandi of cult leaders. In the case of the Great Reset, it’ll be run by an oligarchy who control access to the goods and services they deem will meet your needs. Small businesses cannot exist independently. Your job is to comply and be happy as a slave of the state.

2) “There will be a global carbon fee to make fossil fuels history.” A keyword here is “global,” with a central authority able to enforce the use of new energy sources. And if you think that a centralized bureaucracy will come up in a timely fashion with other forms of energy that allow you to live independently, I’m sure they have an oil field in Saudi Arabia they’d like to sell you. The goal here is scarcity and control over your mobility, which always add up to social control. 

So how will they solve this problem? Easy, they tell us: through Strategic Intelligence.” Big Think will be brought to you by all of the higher education institutions and think tanks that have abolished intellectual curiosity. It will be imposed on you by those who have imposed a censorship regime that brooks no dissent or thoughtful questions. Any new idea that gets past the censors is automatically deemed “misinformation.” Not sure how this is supposed to work, but don’t worry, folks like John Kerry are on the case.

3) “Public-private partnership” has fast become a euphemism for a billionaire class taking over both national governments and the entire private sphere of life. President Dwight D. Eisenhower warned about this sort of thing in his 1961 farewell address. He spoke of the need for “balance between the private and public economy,” and the “potential for the disastrous rise of misplaced power” that could endanger liberty. He added that government contracts had become “substitutes for intellectual curiosity” at our universities. He also foresaw the possibility of public policy itself becoming “the captive of a scientific, technological elite.” Eisenhower’s prescient keyword here is “captive.” Like in Stockholm Syndrome or in the world of cults.

This monopolistic elite has not only come to pass,they also use a specious term as a fig leaf to cover up what they’re doing. Stakeholder capitalism” is a collectivist concept which means that just about everybody can claim a stake in any business. The WEF says it’s a model that’s “gaining momentum, in part thanks to the ‘Greta Thunberg effect.’” A mob mentality helps this along. The WEF elites could then decide which businesses may exist under their watchful eye.

4) Artificial Intelligence to change our habits of mobility and to promote “machine learning.” Self-driving cars sound pretty good if you believe you’d be allowed to decide where they take you. But “shaping the future of mobility” means centralized transportation systems that you can’t possibly control. Living so close to the amenities that you can walk anywhere in 15 minutes sounds good if you spend half your life in traffic. But once you get rid of your car, you’ve limited your mobility, which means you’ve limited your freedom. Controlling the environment and the mobility of people is another standard practice of cults.

Machine learning” is central to the development of artificial intelligence, including brain implants that allow mind reading. That’s perhaps the next step beyond the irritations of “autocorrect” when you try to send a text and all of those unsolicited recommendations that Facebook and Amazon throw at you after you hit the “like” button or order a movie.

5) “Digital identities”—the beginning of the end of real identities and privacy. Elites at the World Health Organization have long contemplated vaccine passports, essentially in the form of a QR code meant to be carried by every human. They anticipate that it will not just be carried on your person or phone, but literally in your person, implanted under your skin. No doubt at some point, your body inevitably will provide a scannable record of your entire health history.

Therefore, the WEF offers a laughable irony in the form of its “Vaccine Confidence Project.” To help build trust in the hesitant, you see. (Hmmm. How about letting people actually talk about the merits, and not threatening to haul them off to concentration camps for not submitting?)

6) “You’ll eat less meat.” Under the guise of saving the planet (cow flatulence emits methane gas, you see) the WEF tells us to do our part and not eat meat. Well, it can be a rare treat, the WEF assures us, in its tweet of “a taste of what’s to come.” You’ll get your steak from a 3D printer that uses cells from a living cow that are grown in some sort of culture. (Sounds kinda Soylent.)

As cult expert Margaret Thaler Singer pointed out, cults typically put their members on meatless diets lower in protein. Yes, people can replace meat protein by carefully monitoring their diets and eating more nuts and beans. But, in general, shifting to a meatless diet often creates ill effects, including gastro-intestinal distress, sleeplessness, emotional stress, and hormonal changes. The cultist’s primary motivator for imposing a low protein diet, according to Singer, is to render people more docile and compliant.

These are just six of the globalist/transhumanist ideas for the future. There are probably at least 660 more, not least of which is an imposed state religion of transhumanism. While dictating your future, the WEF also makes a lot of demands that isolate us from one another, thereby rendering us easier to control. Some of these demands are monolithic thinking, acceptance of critical race theory, gender ideology, social and emotional learning in the schools, identity politics, political correctness, and censorship of wrongthink by Big Tech.

Just as in “Soylent Green,” the WEF employs fearmongering based on environmental disaster. It promotes the demonization of the unvaccinated (a sort of cannibalism) and a two-tiered system in which a small corps of privileged elites flout the mandates and scarcity they impose on others. In other words, it resembles something very much like corporate fascism. Or just one big fat globalist cult. 

Let’s resolve in 2022 to push back hard against it. I’ll start by getting rid of my smartass phone and eating more meat. Happy New Year! 


What Did Black Lives Matter Really Accomplish In 2021?

If there’s one thing we can take away from 2021, it’s that the Black Lives Matter movement and all of its hype men in the media are full of it.



If there’s one thing we can take away from 2021, it’s that the Black Lives Matter movement and all of its hype men in the media are full of it.

What exactly did any of them accomplish this past year? Aside from putting two arguably innocent people in prison, the track record is remarkably poor, considering all of the destruction it took to get us here.

The trial of Kyle Rittenhouse, a case that had absolutely nothing to do with race despite the media’s claims to the contrary, ended in a full acquittal of the accused 18-year-old. Now he’s a folk hero.

Major cities are back to re-funding their police departments after the ridiculous attempt to appease the BLM idiots, which led to the appalling but woefully predictable surge in violent crime across the country.

Jussie Smollett’s claims of assault at the hands of racist Trump supporters are now officially recognized by the law to have been a fraud.

Kamala Harris, America’s first affirmative action vice president, is a complete national embarrassment.

Reparations and racial quotas haven’t really gone anywhere, otherwise.

After as much as $2 billion in property damage, plus the endless promotion from the national media, you’d think BLM might have more to show for its rampant, multi-year rioting.

To be sure, BLM did find victory in the conviction of Derek Chauvin, the former Minneapolis police officer who had the misfortune of being called to confront an unwieldy, sickly, giant drug addict attempting to pay for cigarettes with fake bills. That may have been the movement’s greatest accomplishment to date, the intimidation of a jury petrified that an acquittal of former officer Chauvin would certainly mean more looting, vandalism, and violence.

Chauvin was just one of four cops unlucky enough to have been there that fateful day in 2020. Following multiple law enforcement attempts at getting Floyd to cooperate, in his own vehicle, on the sidewalk, and then finally in the squad car, the hysterical Floyd forced himself to the ground. A mob formulated and Chauvin and the other officers tried to maintain control of both the 6’4”, 223 lbs. Floyd and the hostile crowd.

There was a lethal level of fentanyl in Floyd’s blood system at the time of his death, according to the medical examiner who performed his autopsy. The examiner said that had Floyd been found in the exact same state but at home, he would have concluded that he died of a drug overdose. But the BLM crowd won this one.

And they also won the conviction of Kim Potter, another former police officer in Minnesota who was convicted of killing Daunte Wright, a man with a rap sheet the length of a CVS receipt.

Earlier this year, Potter and two other cops engaged Wright in a traffic stop because he was driving with expired license tags. He also had an arrest warrant for failing to show up for previous court dates related to illegal firearm possession and evading arrest.

There was also the niggling detail about Wright having been accused of holding up a woman at gunpoint in an attempted robbery, but that’s neither here nor there.

Like Chauvin, it looks like she will be serving some time behind bars. Another victory for BLM.

None of it sounds like a triumph for BLM, let alone the country. But I guess that’s one thing we can take from 2021.