Tuesday, April 14, 2026

Are You Ready for Your Carbon Credits?

 

Welcome to the year 2030. You just "rented" a digital high-five from your home hub because you successfully avoided opening your window during peak-heat hours. You don’t own the window, anyway—it’s part of your "Shelter-as-a-Service" subscription. You’re happy, or at least that’s what your biometric watch tells the central server.

But today, you’re feeling rebellious. You want a steak. Not the "Cricket-Crunch Patty" or the "Soya-Slab," but a real, sizzling ribeye. You tap the "Order" button, and the screen turns a judgmental shade of purple: “FATAL EMISSIONS ERROR: BIOLOGICAL BYPRODUCT OVERFLOW.”

A cheerful voice reminds you: "That steak is a 'Big Poop No-No!' Your methane quota is maxed out. One more beef session and you’ll be walking to your virtual reality yoga class for a month to earn back the credits. Why not try the algae-cube? It’s carbon-negative and only slightly slimy!"

Connecting the Dots: The Orchestrated Energy Crunch

You might wonder how we got from $3 gas to "Carbon Quotas" for your dinner. If you look closely, the path was paved long ago. Remember the current war with Iran in April 2026? On the surface, it’s a geopolitical nightmare, with oil prices surging past $100 and tankers stuck at the Strait of Hormuz. But what if this isn't just "bad luck"?

In the "Net Zero" narrative, the hardest part is getting people to give up cheap energy. To align with Agenda 2030's goals, the old world of fossil fuels has to become too expensive and too "unstable" to keep. High gas prices aren't a bug; they're a feature. They act as the economic pressure cooker that forces the transition. By making traditional fuel a luxury, the "powers that be" make the alternative—a fully tracked, credit-based system—look like the only "safe" way out.

From "Force Majeure" to Financial Control

While major energy companies declare "force majeure" on their contracts due to the conflict, the framework for the future is being built. The chaos provides the perfect cover to introduce Carbon Credits as the new global currency.

Think about it:

  • The Conflict: Keeps fuel scarce and prices high.
  • The Solution: A "Digital Green Wallet" that lets you keep living—as long as you play by the rules.
  • The Goal: Total alignment with Net Zero targets, where your every move, from your commute to your "big poop" after a steak, is measured in credits.

The New Normal: Own Nothing, Track Everything

The transition is almost complete. The gas shortages of today are the training wheels for the quotas of tomorrow. In the world of Agenda 2030, "owning nothing" means you don't have the "burden" of choosing your own energy or your own food.

So, ask yourself: Are you ready for your carbon credits? Or is that steak starting to look a lot more like a "once-in-a-lifetime" luxury? The dots are connected—the question is, are you ready to follow where they lead?

Monday, April 13, 2026

1981 Movie literally revealed the ENTIRE plan!

 

It sat there quietly in 1981, a low-budget film most people never saw, never talked about, never thought twice about. Early Warning wasn’t built to be a blockbuster. It didn’t need to be. It just needed to exist.

On the surface, it plays like a political thriller. A woman chasing a story. A journalist starting to see threads that don’t quite line up. An organization with a name that sounds almost too clean—something global, something unified, something just out of reach. Nothing about it screams “important.” Not at first.

But time has a way of changing context.

Watch it now, and the tone feels different. The ideas don’t feel distant. Systems of centralized control, narratives shaped behind the scenes, the slow merging of power structures under one umbrella—what once felt like fiction starts to feel strangely familiar. Not identical. Not exact. Just close enough to make you pause.

That’s where the concept of revelation of the method slips in.

The idea is simple, almost unsettling in its simplicity. You don’t hide everything. You show pieces of it—early, quietly, wrapped in story. Not as a warning, but as a kind of introduction. The public sees it, absorbs it, files it away. Over time, what once felt foreign becomes recognizable. Acceptable, even.

Seen through that lens, films like Early Warning take on a different weight. They stop being just stories and start looking like early drafts of something larger. Not predictions. Not coincidences. Just… placements.

And maybe that’s the part that lingers.

Not what the film says.
But when it said it.

Watch this short clip first to hear about the energy shortages and totalitarian control structure. 

 

FULL MOVIE HERE ON YOUTUBE!


Wednesday, April 8, 2026

Am I Guilty of This, Too?

 

by Julie Telgenhoff

The social media feed scrolls by like a slot machine now. Headlines screaming collapse, prophecy, secret plans, and divine warnings—each one written to spike the pulse before a person has even read the first paragraph.

Recently I noticed a certain publication that presents itself as Christian news. It’s only one example among many pushing the same emotional bait used by every other outrage-driven media outlet. Fear sells. Panic spreads. Truth becomes secondary to engagement.

But the click-bait machine isn’t limited to one corner of the internet. Mainstream media does it. Alternative media does it. Political pages do it. Sensational headlines have become the currency of the modern information economy. Fear spreads faster than facts, and outrage keeps people scrolling.

When a publication claims a Christian identity while using the same tactics, however, the problem takes on another layer. Faith carries an expectation of honesty, humility, and accountability. When those values are replaced with dramatic headlines designed to trigger emotion and drive traffic, it feels less like journalism and more like exploitation.

There was a time when the alternative media space existed because people sensed something was wrong with the corporate narrative. The idea was simple: question authority, verify claims, and think independently.

Somewhere along the way, a large part of that movement became the very thing it once criticized. Sensational headlines. Zero verification. Anonymous “sources.” Prophecy stretched to fit the news cycle.

It isn’t discernment anymore.

It’s theater.

The tragedy is that attaching the word Christian to this kind of content drags faith into the mud. Christianity was never meant to be a marketing category. Scripture repeatedly warns about false teachers who manipulate fear and curiosity for influence. When a website slaps a Bible verse next to a headline designed purely for clicks, that is not ministry.

That is branding.

The more uncomfortable truth, however, sits with the audience.

Clickbait only works because people share it.

A headline flashes across the screen: Global Event Imminent. Thousands hit the share button within seconds. Few pause to ask the most basic questions.

Who wrote this?
Where did the claim originate?
Is there primary evidence?
Does another source confirm it?

Discernment used to mean testing information before spreading it. Now many treat information like a viral chain letter. If it feels dramatic enough, it must be important.

It isn’t wisdom.

It’s intellectual laziness.

The internet has given humanity access to more information than any generation in history. Verifying a claim often takes five minutes. Yet many refuse to do even that. Rumors, speculation, and half-truths are pushed through the same pipeline where facts are supposed to travel.

Eventually the signal gets buried under the noise.

And the loudest voices win.

The real damage shows up quietly. When every week brings a new “end-of-the-world” headline that turns out to be nonsense, people stop taking serious warnings seriously. When every political rumor becomes “breaking news,” credibility evaporates. Truth seekers end up looking like caricatures because too many people refused to do the basic work of thinking.

Discernment is not just about spotting deception from governments or corporations.

It is also about recognizing manipulation inside communities that claim to be fighting deception.

Real truth doesn’t need theatrical headlines.

It survives scrutiny.
It welcomes verification.
It stands even when the emotional drama is removed.

So the next time a headline demands an immediate reaction, the most radical act might simply be to pause.

Read.

Investigate.

And ask yourself who benefits from the story being shared.

Because clickbait and sensationalism were never meant to travel at the speed of a share button. They don’t just mislead the person reading the headline—they damage the trust others place in the person sharing it.

And that means discernment and wisdom should come before we click that share button.

Monday, April 6, 2026

The Vampiric System and the Path to Sovereignty

 

by Julie Telgenhoff

One evening you open your phone just to check something simple. Within seconds a headline flashes across the screen: White House Lockdown. Another claims a leader has been secretly hospitalized. The comments are already exploding. People are arguing, predicting collapse, demanding answers. Your pulse jumps even though you have no idea if any of it is real.

It’s strange how quickly the body reacts. A jolt of anxiety. A need to know more. Your thumb scrolls faster, clicking one post after another, trying to understand what’s happening. Yet after twenty minutes you realize you are no closer to the truth. You only feel drained.

That sensation—like something quietly siphoned off your internal battery—is the hidden engine of the modern internet.

Information today is not just data. It is emotional currency. Platforms do not primarily reward accuracy; they reward reaction. The systems that run social media are designed to detect what captures attention and keeps people engaged. Over time they have discovered that the most reliable trigger is intense emotion: fear, outrage, tribal conflict.

Some people call this emotional energy “loosh.”

The word sounds mystical, but the experience is familiar. A story appears that provokes panic or fury. Thousands of people feel compelled to react immediately. The post spreads faster than verification can ever catch up. Every comment, share, and argument becomes a small transfer of attention and emotional charge.

It isn’t truth that travels fastest.

It’s adrenaline.

That is why the internet often feels less like a library and more like a battlefield. The headlines that rise to the top are not the calm or careful ones. They are the ones that trigger the strongest nervous-system response. The platform senses that response and amplifies it because engagement is the product being sold.

The cycle becomes self-reinforcing.

First comes the fear reflex. Someone sees a shocking claim and feels the need to warn others. They repost it immediately, not because they’ve researched it, but because anxiety wants company. Fear shared is fear diluted.

Then comes the reward. Notifications begin to appear—likes, comments, people thanking them for “spreading the word.” Each small interaction releases a burst of dopamine. The brain registers it the same way it registers a slot machine win.

Soon the person is checking their phone every few minutes, waiting for the next spike of attention.

A system designed around engagement quietly becomes a system designed around emotional extraction.

But this pattern is not limited to social media.

It exists in human relationships too.

In many families there is a figure who controls the narrative through influence, money, or personality. They subtly direct how others perceive events and people. When conflict arises, one individual—often the most perceptive or independent—becomes the designated problem.

The scapegoat.

Rumors circulate. Small distortions accumulate over years. The story about that person becomes fixed in the family mythology. And just like a viral headline online, the narrative spreads faster than correction ever can.

Every time the scapegoat tries to defend themselves, the system feeds on the energy produced by the conflict. Arguments create new material. Explanations become evidence against them. The emotional storm sustains the narrative that created it.

The internet didn’t invent this dynamic.

It industrialized it.

Both systems run on the same fuel: attention, reaction, emotional charge. And both systems weaken when that fuel disappears.

Eventually a realization arrives.

The battle cannot be won inside the arena where the rules were designed to drain you. Every attempt to prove the truth to someone committed to misunderstanding it only feeds the machine further.

The real leverage point is simpler.

Stop providing energy.

When a headline appears that is clearly engineered to provoke panic, let it pass. When someone insists on a distorted version of events, resist the impulse to correct every accusation. The moment you stop reacting, the mechanism loses its power source.

This is the beginning of sovereignty.

Sovereignty is not dramatic. It doesn’t look like defeating enemies or exposing conspiracies. Often it appears almost boring from the outside. A person simply stops participating in the emotional economy that once consumed them.

They develop a quiet filter.

If something demands immediate outrage, it probably isn’t worth the energy. If someone insists on misunderstanding, no explanation will change their mind. If chaos wants a reaction, silence is the most disruptive response.

Gradually life shifts back into the present moment.

The ghosts of old arguments stop sitting at the table. The noise cycle continues somewhere else—on screens, in comment threads, inside other people’s dramas—but it no longer determines the rhythm of your days.

You wake up, make coffee, step outside.

Maybe you rake leaves.

The world is still noisy. Headlines still compete for attention. People still argue endlessly about stories they barely understand. But the system only works on those who keep feeding it.

True sovereignty is the quiet that arrives when you no longer need a witness to your truth.

You are no longer pulled into every storm of outrage or every manufactured emergency. The system still spins, the headlines still shout, and people still rush to feed the noise—but it no longer has access to your energy.

You know what you know.

And for the first time in a long while, your attention returns to where it was always meant to live: the present moment.

The wind moves through the trees. Leaves gather across the yard. A rake scrapes softly across the ground.

Life, the real one, is still here.

And now you are finally free to enjoy it.