Thursday, May 7, 2026

Food Collapse, AI Control & The Next Plandemic? Steve Connects the Dots Again

 


This week's podcast from Steve at EyesIsWatchin:

Dept explodes past World War II levels as oil prices surge, fertilizer collapses, and food shortages begin building worldwide.

At the same time, mainstream agencies openly discuss geoengineering programs involving aerosol injection, solar radiation management, and cloud manipulation while more people begin questioning what’s really happening in the skies above them.

Meanwhile AI layoffs keep accelerating as billions pour into automation, biological computing, and massive data centers driving up energy demand across the country.

And right as all of this unfolds, new outbreak simulations, hantavirus scares, contact tracing narratives, and inhalable biotech “solutions” begin surfacing once again.

Food, energy, AI, surveillance, and the next global health narrative all seem to be converging at the exact same time.

Listen to Steve connect the dots in a way few people can ....


The New World Disorder: This Isn’t Conspiracy Anymore

In Greg Reese’s video about the New World Order (NWO), the central narrative is that humanity is moving into a new phase of centralized global control disguised as progress, safety, and unity. The video frames modern crises — economic instability, war, surveillance technology, digital currencies, AI systems, mass migration, and collapsing trust in institutions — as interconnected pieces of a larger transition rather than isolated events.

The underlying theme is that power is steadily shifting away from individual nations and local autonomy toward transnational systems: central banks, multinational corporations, unelected global organizations, intelligence alliances, and technocratic governance structures. Reese presents this not as accidental drift, but as a coordinated restructuring of society.

The video leans heavily into the idea that fear and instability are used as catalysts. Economic crashes justify digital financial systems. Health crises normalize tracking and behavioral control. Conflict expands surveillance infrastructure. AI and automation create dependency while simultaneously reducing human independence and labor value. The argument is essentially that each crisis becomes a stepping stone toward deeper centralization.

A recurring thread in Reese’s work is that language itself is manipulated. Terms like “sustainability,” “global cooperation,” “safety,” and “resilience” are portrayed as emotionally appealing branding for systems that ultimately reduce individual sovereignty. The narrative suggests that people willingly surrender freedoms because the new systems are packaged as convenience, security, or humanitarian necessity.

The video also appears to tie into broader “Great Reset” and technocracy themes: programmable digital currencies, biometric identification, algorithmic governance, censorship framed as misinformation control, and AI-assisted social engineering. The implication is that the emerging world is less about traditional dictatorship and more about invisible behavioral management through technology and economic dependency.

At its emotional core, the video isn’t just about politics. It’s about the fear that human beings are becoming disconnected from self-governance, spirituality, critical thought, and authentic human community while increasingly merging into machine-driven systems optimized for compliance and predictability.

A major reason these narratives resonate with many people is because there are real-world trends feeding them: expanding digital surveillance, consolidation of corporate/media power, CBDC discussions, AI integration, and declining public trust in institutions.

Alien Disclosure or Narrative Control?

 

Julie Telgenhoff

Recently, multiple religious leaders claimed they were privately briefed by U.S. military intelligence officials in preparation for possible UFO disclosure — a story the White House has notably not denied. At the same time, President Donald Trump continues teasing the release of “never-before-seen” UFO files that he says are coming “very, very soon.” 

For some, this feels like the beginning of long-awaited transparency. For others, it feels like carefully staged conditioning.

Because if the public is truly being prepared for the possibility of an alien presence — or even an alien threat — then maybe the deeper question isn’t simply whether something is coming.

Maybe it’s why the narrative is being introduced this way in the first place.

And maybe the bigger issue isn’t whether extraterrestrials exist at all, but who has been shaping the modern disclosure movement from the very beginning.

Because once you start tracing the origins of modern UFO disclosure culture, one name repeatedly surfaces: Rockefeller.

The Rockefeller Initiative wasn’t some fringe side story buried in conspiracy circles. It was a documented effort involving high-level meetings, funding, organization, and direct attempts to push UFO disclosure into the mainstream political conversation decades ago.

That changes the framing entirely.

Because if the “truth movement” surrounding UFOs was being influenced, guided, and financed from elite levels all along, then the question stops being: “Are aliens real?”

And becomes: “Why was this narrative being cultivated so carefully in the first place?”

That’s where the entire conversation starts to shift. What if the disclosure movement was never about suppressing information? What if it was about directing attention?

Because there’s a profound psychological difference between telling humanity: “You are being visited by extraterrestrials…” versus: “There may be advanced human technology, hidden civilizations, black-budget systems, or undisclosed terrestrial developments operating beyond public awareness.”

One pushes people outward into space. The other forces people to look inward, toward Earth itself.

And that distinction matters.

The brilliance of the UFO narrative is that it creates distance. If something is labeled extraterrestrial, then it immediately becomes unreachable, unknowable, and outside ordinary human accountability.

But if advanced technology originated here? If hidden infrastructure existed beneath the surface? If certain factions had access to propulsion systems, energy technologies, or scientific breakthroughs withheld from the public? Then the issue stops being cosmic curiosity and starts becoming a question of power, secrecy, and control.

From that angle, “aliens” become the perfect cover story.

Not suppression.... but... REDIRECTION (look here, not over there)!

And this is where the recent David Wilcock “death” news becomes fascinating from a psychological perspective. Because regardless of what actually happened, the effect of the story is what matters most.

Source: Instagram
The moment a controversial figure becomes associated with disappearance, death, silencing, or martyrdom, the narrative around them changes instantly.

Every failed prediction fades into the background. Every inconsistency becomes irrelevant. And instead of being viewed as a flawed personality, the person transforms into a symbol.



A silenced voice.

A dangerous truth-teller.

A man who supposedly “knew too much.”

That shift is incredibly powerful because people rarely scrutinize martyrs. They defend them emotionally. And in doing so, the larger narrative gets reinforced automatically.

In this case, the narrative is UFO disclosure itself.

If someone died over disclosure, then disclosure must be important. If disclosure is important, then the alien narrative gains emotional legitimacy. And once again, public attention gets steered right back toward extraterrestrials, off-world beings, cosmic threats, and interstellar saviors.

Exactly where the focus has been directed for decades.

From this perspective, it almost doesn’t matter whether Wilcock’s situation involved mental health struggles, manipulation, voluntary disappearance, internet mythology, or something else entirely.

The emotional effect is the real event. And the effect is working.

Because the public conversation never settles on: “What hidden technologies might already exist here?”

Instead, it loops endlessly back to: “What’s coming from out there?”

That may be the most important distinction of all.

Especially when you consider how modern disclosure culture was never entirely grassroots to begin with. The Rockefeller Initiative demonstrated that elite influence inside the UFO movement is not speculation. It’s historical FACT!

Which raises an uncomfortable possibility: What if disclosure itself is the product?

Not truth.

Not revelation.

But perception management.

A carefully controlled release of ideas designed to condition humanity toward a specific framework before the final narrative is fully introduced.

Historically, this is exactly how large-scale psychological conditioning works.

First, mystery gets introduced through sightings and rumors. Then entertainment media normalizes it. Government agencies slowly acknowledge pieces of it. Leaked files appear. Former insiders speak out. Public skepticism softens over time. And eventually, the population no longer debates whether the phenomenon exists.

They only debate is how to emotionally respond to it. And by that point, the framework has already been installed. Maybe that’s the deeper question people should be asking now.

Not: “Are aliens real?”

But: Who benefits from humanity believing the answer must always come from the sky instead of from hidden systems already operating here on Earth?

Because whoever controls the story controls perception.

And perception shapes reality far more than most people realize.

Also See: 

What If the Moon Landing Was Only Part of the Story?

Wednesday, May 6, 2026

The Quietness of Conviction

 

by Julie Telgenhoff

There comes a point in life where authenticity stops feeling like a personality trait and starts feeling like survival.

Not survival in the dramatic sense. It's more subtle than that, more internal.

It’s the moment you realize your body knows when you’re betraying yourself.

Most people are taught morality through religion, rules, social approval, or fear of consequences. But what if morality exists deeper than institutions? What if the body itself reacts when we move against our own inner knowing?

I’ve noticed this throughout my life in ways I can no longer ignore.

If I hurt someone unfairly, my body feels heavy afterwards. Not guilty in the programmed sense, but more like a disturbed and uneasy feeling. As if something inside me recognizes the dissonance before my mind fully processes it.

The same thing happens with dishonesty.

In sales, I could never comfortably manipulate people just to close a deal. Even when I understood the psychology behind selling, there was always a line I couldn’t cross without feeling it physically. There was a tightness within my core and a feeling of restlessness. A kind of internal static. 

The body keeps score long before the mind admits what’s happening.

And maybe that’s what authenticity really is.

It's not performance.

Not branding.

Not going along to get along.

Not trying to appear spiritual.

Authenticity may simply be the absence of internal friction.

A person aligned with their deeper knowing moves differently through the world. They stop shrinking themselves to gain approval. They stop saying yes when their entire nervous system is screaming no. They stop wearing masks to be liked or editing themselves so that other people can remain comfortable.

Because eventually, the soul gets tired of being edited and ignored.

What’s interesting is how normalized self-betrayal has become in modern life. People work jobs that violate their conscience. They stay in relationships that drain them. They repeat beliefs they don’t truly hold just to avoid rejection. They perform versions of themselves that earn acceptance while quietly disconnecting from who they actually are. 

The image they project into the world becomes more important than their internal truth, and eventually, they become disconnected from their body. 

Then people wonder why they feel anxious, exhausted, numb, sick, disconnected, or chronically unsettled.

Maybe the body isn’t malfunctioning as much as it is communicating.

Maybe the anxiety isn’t always weakness, but a signal.

Maybe exhaustion isn’t laziness, but a reaction.

Maybe depression, in some cases, is what happens when the soul can no longer tolerate the gap between who we are and who we pretend to be.

That doesn’t mean life becomes easy once you choose authenticity. In many ways it becomes harder. You lose approval. Some people become uncomfortable and abandon the relationship. Certain doors close. And you begin to choose a more solitary existance in order to regulate your own nervous system. 

But something else happens too.

Your nervous system calms down.

Your words become more concise and cleaner.

Your energy stops scattering.

You begin living from conviction instead of performance and approval-seeking. 

And conviction feels different.

It isn’t loud arrogance.

It isn’t superiority.

It isn’t the need to control or manipulate others.

It’s simply the quiet decision to stop abandoning yourself and begin living your best, authentic life. 

Similar articles: 

The Currency of Clout vs. the Frequency of Soul