Forum Topic

The Elite & The Great Work

The ‘Great Work’, as named by the ruling elite, is their plot for the rest of society. I will come onto the plot, but I will first fill you in with some valuable background information:Background: The ruling elite believe they are superior beings, and see the rest of society as unintelligent rabble who do little but overpopulate, pollute and damage the planet, serving little or no positive purpose, whilst still providing a level of threat to their power. They hate the various religions that are practiced around the world, which they consider to be nonsense. As far as they’re concerned, there is only one religion – theirs, which is an anti-Christ belief with little known about it outside of their circles. They distinguish little between race, colour and creed – anyone outside of their circles is assumed trash. As ‘superior beings’, they have a strong desire to protect their bloodlines. Whilst they are incredibly wealthy, it is their ‘religion’ that drives them; they will do anything to get what they want, and shape the world as they want it, to the extent of preaching contrary to their beliefs, in order to infiltrate organisations that promote different policies, views and values - to take control and redirect paths. They operate via secret societies and recruit via connections and introductions. Certain individuals in positions of influence are headhunted – judges, journalists, politicians, scientists – anyone who can help aid their cause.  New recruits are judged over time and may work their way up the ranks, depending on how well they perform. Trust is crucial and, at certain points, recruits’ commitment will be tested – such as being requested to ‘spit at the cross’ and ‘give blood’. The most successful recruits will, at some stage, reach the point where there is no turning back or face unimaginable punishment, so have no choice but to hang in and hope for their promised slice of the pie.    The Plot: is to integrate the world population so, eventually, there will only be one race outside of the elites’ bloodlines. With religious roots and outlets destroyed, this ‘slave’ race, which will be heavily depopulated (and maintained through sterilisation), will serve no other purpose than to serve the elite through world governance in a communist society. The ruling elite, through their global enterprises, will take over all businesses, with the slave population provided with just enough money to live on and serve the elite. Privately owned properties will be assigned to the State, and any savings will be taken and used to help fund all slaves under a new cashless credit system. The slave society will be tracked and traced at all times without ever being in a position to rise and challenge the regime. Medicine and vaccines as deemed necessary will not be forced upon the slaves but credits, required to live on, will only be issued to those who comply. The World Order monetary system will not be dissimilar to Microsoft’s cryptocurrency reward system recently approved under patent no. WO/2020/666.Before the new Orwellian social and economic system can be implemented, the elite must first somehow destroy the existing social and economic system, preferably without anyone realising, so look out for any signs of their cunning plan being put into place.

Michael Brown ● 2008d40 Comments

Matt. What a surprise. I suppose lockdown boredom makes work for idle conspiracy theories. Or alternatively, flippant comments which I should probably plead guilty to. Interesting that no one took up my challenge to mathematically analyse the rates of change to either verify or disprove the SAGE predictions - and, anyway, Sue thinks is pseudo science 😸 It was slightly contrived and flippant but the maths was basically sound. Taylor (and Maclaurin) series can be used to approximate other mathematical functions. For example, they can be used in computers to calculate the sine function to a specific number of decimal places. (If I remember correctly it's because the computation is easier and more efficient than the real series defining the function.) They do have an issue in that they become unstable outside a limited range of values and deviate from the function they are approximating - as part of my maths course I wrote a program to analyse the point where a Taylor series started deviating from the sine function it was approximating. As part of my telecoms PGDip I looked at their use to approximate speech curves as part of a form of speech compression using "adaptive predictive differential pulse code modulation" that's used in digital telephony (ADPCM) - or was at that time. So if they can approximate speech wave forms they could in theory be used to approximate the curve of hospital admissions which should be more uniform. Then for a curve of hospital admission versus days one would differentiate once to get the rate of daily admissions for a specific day, then differentiate a second time to see the acceleration of the admission rate for a day. (Yes, an easier way is to look at the rate at which the seven day rolling average is increasing, which should approximate to the second order differential.) As I've said elsewhere my maths is rusty so happy to have any errors corrected - although some recently during my OU astronomy course (well, maybe 10 years ago now) I was normally providing advice to those who'd recently done GCSEs or A levels ... anyway, happy to discuss further.https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taylor_serieshttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Differential_calculushttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adaptive_differential_pulse-code_modulation

Michael Ixer ● 2007d