Forwarded from The Blindspot Archives
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Forwarded from /CIG/ Telegram | Counter Intelligence Global (Niklas Larssen)
Multiple entries appear copied almost word-for-word.
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Forwarded from Ode and Frens (✟ The piggy who had none ✟)
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Forwarded from Shares from the Toilet
Japan is home to over 40% of the companies older than 100 years globally
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Forwarded from Shares from the Toilet
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The way she captures light is unreal
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Forwarded from Vault of Secrets - Unpopular History
When identity, payment, carbon data, and compliance records all connect, you do not need an obvious police state.
You just need access control.
Then they built the behavior layer.
People call it social credit when they want to sound dramatic.
Call it whatever you like.
Trust scoring.
Risk bands.
Compliance history.
Eligibility status.
Priority access.
Behavioral markers.
The name does not matter.
What matters is that the system starts deciding how much friction to place in your life.
Maybe your payment goes through slower.
Maybe your permit takes longer.
Maybe your energy costs more.
Maybe your travel gets flagged.
Maybe your access is under review.
Maybe your account needs “additional verification.”
That is how modern control works.
Not always with a hard “no.”
Usually with friction.
Enough delay.
Enough inconvenience.
Enough exclusion.
Enough uncertainty.
Enough pressure to make obedience feel easier than resistance.
And because people had already been trained by COVID to accept changing access rules, and had already been frightened by the Iran war into wanting stability at any cost, they adapted fast.
Then came the final piece.
AI.
It entered through the back door, just like everything else.
Not as a ruler.
As a helper.
To predict outbreaks.
To manage logistics.
To balance the grid.
To track emissions.
To detect fraud.
To allocate resources.
To model risk.
It looked neutral.
Clinical.
Efficient.
Better than politicians.
Better than bureaucracy.
That was the final trap.
Once AI could see the health system, the energy system, the payment system, the carbon system, and the identity system all at once, it became the only thing capable of managing the full machine.
And once it became necessary, it became permanent.
That is how the world changed.
Not because the WHO, UN, WEF, IMF, World Bank, CFR, or anyone else stood on a stage and said, “We are taking over.”
They did not have to.
They just kept building the pieces.
The WHO built the health emergency logic.
The UN built the moral framework.
The WEF built the language of stakeholder management.
The IMF and World Bank built the crisis-finance and digital-infrastructure logic.
The standards bodies built interoperability.
The war in Iran built fear.
COVID built obedience.
Climate change built urgency.
Net Zero built the policy shell.
Carbon accounting built the measurement layer.
Digital identity built the human interface.
AI built the enforcer.
By the end, countries still existed.
Flags still existed.
Markets still existed.
Elections still existed.
But the real power no longer lived in those things.
It lived in the stack.
The health stack.
The identity stack.
The payment stack.
The carbon stack.
The energy stack.
The compliance stack.
The AI stack.
And once everything important ran through that stack, the question of who officially ruled no longer mattered.
The system ruled.
That is the warning.
Do not wait for a dramatic takeover.
Do not wait for marching boots.
Do not wait for one obvious tyrant.
That is not how this kind of world is built.
It is built through crisis.
Through convenience.
Through fear.
Through climate panic.
Through carbon math.
Through digital management.
Through “temporary” emergency systems that never go away.
The Iran war lit the fuse.
COVID taught them the method.
Net Zero gave them the mission.
Agenda 2030 gave them the roadmap.
And the institutions gave it a polite face.
By the time people realized they were no longer living in a free world, they were already using the app to enter it.
Joseph Gonzalez (2026). How the World Changed IInto the NWO. Available at: https://bantamjoe.com/2026/03/18/how-the-world-changed-into-the-nwo/
You just need access control.
Then they built the behavior layer.
People call it social credit when they want to sound dramatic.
Call it whatever you like.
Trust scoring.
Risk bands.
Compliance history.
Eligibility status.
Priority access.
Behavioral markers.
The name does not matter.
What matters is that the system starts deciding how much friction to place in your life.
Maybe your payment goes through slower.
Maybe your permit takes longer.
Maybe your energy costs more.
Maybe your travel gets flagged.
Maybe your access is under review.
Maybe your account needs “additional verification.”
That is how modern control works.
Not always with a hard “no.”
Usually with friction.
Enough delay.
Enough inconvenience.
Enough exclusion.
Enough uncertainty.
Enough pressure to make obedience feel easier than resistance.
And because people had already been trained by COVID to accept changing access rules, and had already been frightened by the Iran war into wanting stability at any cost, they adapted fast.
Then came the final piece.
AI.
It entered through the back door, just like everything else.
Not as a ruler.
As a helper.
To predict outbreaks.
To manage logistics.
To balance the grid.
To track emissions.
To detect fraud.
To allocate resources.
To model risk.
It looked neutral.
Clinical.
Efficient.
Better than politicians.
Better than bureaucracy.
That was the final trap.
Once AI could see the health system, the energy system, the payment system, the carbon system, and the identity system all at once, it became the only thing capable of managing the full machine.
And once it became necessary, it became permanent.
That is how the world changed.
Not because the WHO, UN, WEF, IMF, World Bank, CFR, or anyone else stood on a stage and said, “We are taking over.”
They did not have to.
They just kept building the pieces.
The WHO built the health emergency logic.
The UN built the moral framework.
The WEF built the language of stakeholder management.
The IMF and World Bank built the crisis-finance and digital-infrastructure logic.
The standards bodies built interoperability.
The war in Iran built fear.
COVID built obedience.
Climate change built urgency.
Net Zero built the policy shell.
Carbon accounting built the measurement layer.
Digital identity built the human interface.
AI built the enforcer.
By the end, countries still existed.
Flags still existed.
Markets still existed.
Elections still existed.
But the real power no longer lived in those things.
It lived in the stack.
The health stack.
The identity stack.
The payment stack.
The carbon stack.
The energy stack.
The compliance stack.
The AI stack.
And once everything important ran through that stack, the question of who officially ruled no longer mattered.
The system ruled.
That is the warning.
Do not wait for a dramatic takeover.
Do not wait for marching boots.
Do not wait for one obvious tyrant.
That is not how this kind of world is built.
It is built through crisis.
Through convenience.
Through fear.
Through climate panic.
Through carbon math.
Through digital management.
Through “temporary” emergency systems that never go away.
The Iran war lit the fuse.
COVID taught them the method.
Net Zero gave them the mission.
Agenda 2030 gave them the roadmap.
And the institutions gave it a polite face.
By the time people realized they were no longer living in a free world, they were already using the app to enter it.
Joseph Gonzalez (2026). How the World Changed IInto the NWO. Available at: https://bantamjoe.com/2026/03/18/how-the-world-changed-into-the-nwo/
Bantam Joe
How the World Changed Into the NWO
Let’s start with the Iran War and Hormuz disruption, the oil shock, the UN’s Agenda 2030 and SDGs, the WHO’s 2025 Pandemic Agreement and amended health rules, the WEF’s stakeholder-capitalism…
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Forwarded from 4bidden WISDOM
Biology of Earthworms
By Wilfrid Norman Edwards (1977)
Table of contents -
1. Morphology.-
- 1.1 Segmentation: external.
- 1.2 Chaetotaxy.
- 1.3 Genital and other apertures.
- 1.4 The clitellum and associated structures.
- 1.5 Pigmentation.
- 1.6 The body wall.
- 1.7 The coelom.
- 1.8 The alimentary canal.
- 1.9 The vascular system.
- 1.10 The respiratory system.
- 1.11 The excretory system.
- 1.12 The nervous system.
- 1.13 The reproductive system.
2. Taxonomy.
- 2.1 Systematic affinities and descent.
- 2.2 Families, genera and species.
- 2.2.1 Moniligastridae.
- 2.2.2 Megascolecidae.
- 2.2.3 Ocnerodrilidae.
- 2.2.4 Acanthodrilidae.
- 2.2.5 Octochaetidae.
- 2.2.6 Eudrilidae.
- 2.2.7 Glos.
By Wilfrid Norman Edwards (1977)
Table of contents -
1. Morphology.-
- 1.1 Segmentation: external.
- 1.2 Chaetotaxy.
- 1.3 Genital and other apertures.
- 1.4 The clitellum and associated structures.
- 1.5 Pigmentation.
- 1.6 The body wall.
- 1.7 The coelom.
- 1.8 The alimentary canal.
- 1.9 The vascular system.
- 1.10 The respiratory system.
- 1.11 The excretory system.
- 1.12 The nervous system.
- 1.13 The reproductive system.
2. Taxonomy.
- 2.1 Systematic affinities and descent.
- 2.2 Families, genera and species.
- 2.2.1 Moniligastridae.
- 2.2.2 Megascolecidae.
- 2.2.3 Ocnerodrilidae.
- 2.2.4 Acanthodrilidae.
- 2.2.5 Octochaetidae.
- 2.2.6 Eudrilidae.
- 2.2.7 Glos.
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Forwarded from 4bidden WISDOM
Biology_Of_Earthworm_S_Wilfrid_Norman_Edwards_Springer_Nature,_New.pdf
16 MB
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