Corp Wars - 01-20-2024
Episode Summary:
"Corp Wars" by Clif High, published on January 20, 2024, presents a fascinating yet complex narrative blending science fiction with political and social commentary. The book delves into the concept of hypernovelty, a state of rapid and unprecedented change in society and technology. High illustrates this through the lens of corporate power, suggesting that corporations, not governments, are the new global powerhouses.
The book opens with observations of unusual activities on the moon, speculated to be battles between corporate entities like Lockheed Martin and Raytheon. High postulates that these corporations are not just competing on Earth but extending their rivalry to extraterrestrial territories. This sets a tone of corporate dominance over traditional government structures, hinting at a future where corporations have the upper hand in technological advancements and space exploration.
High discusses the idea of a secret space program, not run by governments but by corporations for their own interests. This ties into the broader theme of corporations surpassing government authority, especially in areas of advanced technology like alien reproduction vehicles. This concept challenges the traditional narrative of government-led space exploration, suggesting a future where private entities hold the keys to space and its mysteries.
Another significant aspect of the book is the critique of media figures and their portrayal of authority figures. High is critical of individuals like Carrie Cassidy, who he accuses of blindly following and propagating the views of so-called whistleblowers without critical analysis. This criticism extends to the general public's tendency to accept information from perceived authorities without questioning its validity, a behavior that High predicts will change as hypernovelty progresses.
High also touches upon the impact of hypernovelty on individuals, predicting mental breakdowns and a general unraveling of societal norms. This is linked to the erosion of trust in authority and established systems, leading to a more fragmented and uncertain world. The book also critiques the influence of individuals like George Soros in the U.S. justice system, pointing to a broader theme of elite manipulation and control.
In conclusion, "Corp Wars" offers a provocative look at the future, dominated by corporate power and technological advancements. High's narrative warns of the dangers of unchecked corporate authority and the need for critical thinking in the face of rapid societal changes.
Key Takeaways:
- Corporate entities like Lockheed Martin and Raytheon potentially surpass governments in space exploration and technology.
- Hypernovelty describes a future of rapid change and declining traditional authority.
- Public and media often blindly follow authority figures without critical analysis.
- The book predicts societal shifts towards skepticism and independent critical thinking.
- Clif High critiques figures like Carrie Cassidy for their portrayal of whistleblowers.
- The influence of individuals like George Soros in the U.S. justice system is criticized.
- The narrative warns of unchecked corporate power in a rapidly changing world.
Predictions:
- Corporations will become more powerful than governments, dominating in areas like space exploration.
- Societal norms will unravel, leading to mental breakdowns and a fragmented world.
- Public trust in traditional authorities and systems will erode, leading to more skepticism.
- The book forecasts a shift from blind acceptance of authority to individual critical thinking.
Key Players:
- Clif High (Author)
- Lockheed Martin (Corporation)
- Raytheon (Corporation)
- Carrie Cassidy (Media Figure)
- George Soros (Influencer)
- Elohim (Referenced Entity)
- Gene Decode (Referenced Person)
- Mark Richards (Referenced Person)
- Heather Hyen (Referenced Person)
- Brett Weinstein (Referenced Person)
- Jay Widener (Referenced Person)
- Corey Good (Referenced Person)
Corp Wars - 01-20-2024
Hello, humans. Hello, humans. 45 minutes later shut this off. Too bad it's warm.
Pretty cold here. It's actually easier to take the cold when we don't have. Or when it's dry. When the air is dry, which we get around here with cold, the air just gets really dry. Then all of a sudden the temperature rises from the mid teens and 20s up into the.
But we get the increase in the moisture and then everybody gets cold because of the moisture in the air.
Usually we're in the upper 80s into the 90s in terms of moisture content. Anyway, so I'm going to keep on with hyper novelty theme for some time as we get into this, right? Because there's so many weird ramifications of it. Boy, pelicans flying overhead. Interesting.
They're bigger than eagles, actually. Anyway, so as part of hyper novelty, we come unhinged.
There could be a lot of untethered heathers running around freaking out, that kind of thing. But also it's going to extend to larger groups, to aggregated groups within our social order. So I expect, as part of hypernovelty, to see the emergence of corporations that are near to nation states or more powerful than nation states. So let us hypothesize that, indeed, it is factual that Lockheed Martin has an alien reproduction vehicle assembly line that is producing tic tac UFO kind of things, or ufos, what we're going to call ufos. It's producing these.
They're human made and they're being used by Lockheed Martin, but they're simply not being given to the government. The government isn't being told shit. Once these people get hold of this technology, they say, fuck you, government. We're more powerful than you, and you guys cannot be trusted. So that cannot be trusted.
Part's really going to be playing into it here in hyper novelty. And you will not believe the ramifications that I'm expecting to appear as a result of this. You guys can't be trusted. Hitting the top down, right? So in my opinion, as we go through this over these next few years, the United States is going to recognize itself in a new state of being that is not federal control, but is much more akin to the early days of the republic, with very little government control at all, and a lot of corporations just going off and doing their own shit.
So let's hypothesize that Lockheed Martin has some of these, and they're not alone. There are other corporations that have these vehicles, different kinds of them. So there's at least two different kinds of technology involved. With alien reproduction vehicles that corporations have. Then we have to ask ourselves, okay, so if you were a corporation and you had ufos, would it be in your interest to go and colonize or explore as a corporation?
Fuck the government. No government involved. So it would be Lockheed Martin's lunar base, right, that kind of thing.
Or Raytheon. Right. These kind of things, right. I actually happen to have a relationship way in the past with Raytheon at a couple of different levels, as did my father, because he was testing Raytheon gear in Vietnam for the Department of Defense as part of his being the military governor of the highlands in Vietnam. War for the Americans, right?
This in the latter stages of the war, the vietnamese government had broken down. And we get to a situation here where us government was actually running the government in Vietnam because of the dysfunction of the corrupt government there. That was basically the cause for everybody wanting to go communistic. It was planned, it was designed, it's a mother weapon kind of thing. But nonetheless, that was the stated reason was the government was so corrupt that they went communist just to get rid of all the corruption, which is what they're trying to do in the United States.
They're trying to say, everything's so corrupt. You're going to have to become a communist thing to get rid of all of the corrupt Das that George Soros put in. So there's 3000 plus counties in the United States. It is estimated that George Soros has put in over 2000 district attorneys and has put in an additional 4000 people into the justice system in terms of locally appointed judges, et cetera. So they actually owe their allegiance to George Soros.
They don't work for the United States government at all. They don't work for you guys. They work for George Soros anyway. So this is going to come out in hypernovelty. And so we may well have a situation now where the activity that I'm seeing on the moon that I can accurately tell you why I suspect that I'm looking at a battle.
So I can say this item, that item, this action, this movement, all of these things reflect an organized strategy and a directed strategic violence ongoing on the lunar surface. So it's not a war because wars are settled by banksters and through negotiation from one bank to another, when they're all done with the killing and stuff and they have accomplished their goals of putting in what population they want, where they want. So it's not that kind of a thing. Right. But it's a contention.
So we'll call it a war for lack of a better term, but these are wars of conquest. I think that I'm watching that someone is attempting to kick off the motherfuckers that are on the moon or to take over a big chunk of the moon in preparation for kicking off the motherfuckers that are on it or in it or both in any event, though. So we're seeing a contention and all of that. And now I have to wonder. They say like, secret space program and all of that, as though the government is in charge.
It's like, hey, guys, that is not necessarily the case. You may have area 51 and s four and all of that, and these guys may have their secret space program and that kind of shit, but hey, people, the corporations are off on their own. It is only because you were born before the years of hyper novelty that you automatically assume that a secret space program, a breakaway civilization, is organized as government, pyramidal, et cetera. It may well simply be corporate divisions. So we may have.
And if that's the case, let's assume that indeed some of what I'm saying is accurate. And we have organizations like Lockheed Martin and Raytheon and some of these other places up there fighting someone on the moon, okay? Fighting something on the moon. They're doing it for their own purposes, the corporations are, and for their own goals, but they may also be contending with each other. Just because Lockheed Martin kicks the people off the moon doesn't mean they're going to welcome Raytheon in their new territory.
So it's going to be a very much more complex world, guys. It's not going to be easily delineated and structured in a paramedical fashion. That's all going away. That is an artifact of the thousands of years of abuse by the Elohim who had that structure, okay? And they impose that structure on all of humanity.
And humanity normally does not operate that way.
Usually humanity prefers to organize itself as collectives of tribes. And this was always the big problem for the royals in Scotland and so on, is that you had to argue with all the fucking tribes to get them to get out there and go to war with know come and help you fight somebody, right? Which is the way it should be. You should not be able to give an order and have all these men go and plunge themselves into death. You should have to really have to work your ass off to argue them into a position that they want to take that risk.
I've got another stop coming up and I'm trying to chug down some vitamins here as I go along. It's been a weird. Anyway, so we may have Lockheed duking it out with Raytheon also fighting the Elohim and also fighting the ringmakers of Saturn, for all I know. Anybody that tells you they know is so full of shit that you need to just ignore them. Right?
This is like Kerry Cassidy or gene decode talking about AI, all right? That as soon as Gene decode starts talking about AI, he's off in fantasy land. This guy has no technical grasp. I doubt he was a technician in the navy. I actually doubt that he served.
To be honest. His language doesn't reflect that. He sounds like a fuck tard and a liar, to be honest. Somebody caught in fantasy land means other people believe him.
What was he? Patriot something. One of these podcasters had Gene decode and Carrie Cassidy on the other day. And it's like, oh, my God, they're both discussing AI. And Carrie Cassidy lives entirely in a fantasy land relative to AI and anything technical, right?
She just assumes that if she's seen it in the movies that that's valid because the movies are predictive programming and they wouldn't tell you about it unless they actually could do it. So it's like, okay, this is not an adult way to go through life. And so her interview the other day with Jay Widener, which is really a good interview from the perspective of hearing Jay Widener talk about this, but in there you see her exact mental situation because she cannot believe that Jay Widener came to this conclusion on his own. And she assumes that he must have been told by some whistleblower or someone with authority. So see, there is what you're going to run into.
Carrie Cassidy is a prime example. She's like the woo version of our untethered Heather Hyen, Brett Weinstein's wife. Carrie Cassidy loves authority. Loves it, just loves it, loves it, loves it. She can't live without that authority.
And hypernobility is just going to kick her in the ass because first off, I don't believe any of her whistleblowers, right? I do not accept she gives these whistleblowers authority. She says this murderer, guy convicted of most heinous murder you can kind of imagine sort of thing, and a group murder, a svengali kind of mind manipulator. Fellow is a convicted prisoner, convicted murderer doing life in prison. And he has convinced Carrie that he has authority.
She's actually just like given him authority because he stated stuff and she never assumes anybody's lying to her. And this guy is doing nothing but lying to her. 100% and she's been there and she's got like twelve interviews with this guy who's in prison because he was in the secret space program and they can't have him out walking around. Well, okay, Carrie, let's be realistic. Just like Jay Widener told her, we're not children.
Let's understand that this guy is lying. That if he actually was in the secret space program and he actually did have knowledge that was so dangerous to the secret space program, why would they allow him to live? They would not. They would just simply kill him. Human life is cheap to the people at the top here.
But anyway, so Carrie Cassidy is super enamored of authority. She has the authority of whistleblowers for everything she says. And so thus she can say all this horseshit and she just assumes it's true because a whistleblower told her and he wouldn't tell her. He would not deliberately lie because he has the authority of having lived through it, done it, or whatever the fuck, right? And it's like Jay Widener was telling know people lie that he worked with Corey good, the butthead who lied day after day after day after day on their Gaia tv shows to everybody's face for years.
He lied. And then the fucker sued me for telling, stating my opinion that he was lying. He sues me, I win the lawsuit, which I'm kind of proud of because of the way I did it strategically, but anyway. And then he had to admit, Corey good had to admit under oath and deposition that it was all lies. And so if Gene decode has to be put under deposition because he gets sued, is he going to admit that all his bullshit is lies?
Now, Carrie Cassidy, she's not lying. She's reporting to you what some whistleblower told her, what some person that she has granted authority to, to have this opinion and to be the backstop for her opinion is saying that XYZ is factual, so she can robustly say this is factual when in fact it's horseshit. All of this stuff about AI is not technically possible. So Gene decode says that AI sweeps the Internet three to 500 times a day. It reads every fucking thing in the Internet.
He's so lame. I mean, it hurts my head to hear shit like that. There's so many different reasons that that is not feasible at all. And then he goes on to give attributes to AI of having willpower and having desire. No, AI has desire.
They don't want to do anything. There's no there there. So Carrie Cassidy judges AI by know she wants this and so on. So she thinks AI is sentient as she is, and that's debatable as to whether or not she's actually sentient at any given point. But that's what she does.
She attributes all of these things to AI. She personifies it, and that's not the case. But Gene decode does that, too. And these people are saying this one guy, this patriot podcast or whatever the fuck his name was, was saying that these were the two people that really knew AI well. They're the two people that are throwing out all kinds of fantasies, but they don't have a fucking clue about.
So in my way of thinking, hyper novelty is going to be really bad on both of these guys because nobody's going to be accepting authority anymore. And if Kerry Cassidy brings up Captain Mark Richards, I'm going to say he's a liar. We can just dismiss what he says. He's a liar. And so she was in a real world of hurt with this interview with Jay Widener, which is fascinating to watch, the psychology of her, as well as Jay describing how he came to this understanding about JFK, which I think is brilliant and is quite factual.
Right. In any event, though.
But Carrie kept going back to this, quote, whistleblower. She kept going back to her authority about all of this. And Jay had to keep reminding her, he's lying, he's lying. He's not telling you the truth. He didn't actually shoot Kennedy.
He was not there. It didn't happen that way. There was nothing for any of these people to be in on. Right. So it was not a giant conspiracy.
And everybody telling her that. Exactly. It was a giant conspiracy is 100% wrong. It was a conspiracy, but not the way we think. Right.
That's why you should go and watch Jay Widener's documentary, which is pretty cool. I put it on two times speed because I just don't have that much time and I whipped right through it. But you really should do that. You should go and watch it anyway. So we're going to have the situation where even, and it's probably especially in the woo woo world for those people that have this hidden authority bias.
All of Carrie Cassidy's 100% of her 18 years or whatever it is, 20 years, 21 years, whatever the hell, but 100% of all of her work is simply throwing authority onto people and accepting whatever bullshit that they put out. And then she regurgitates it. That is her modus operandi. That's what's actually happening in her videos year after year. After year.
So she won't have the luxury of being able to regurgitate stuff relative to a supposed backstop of authority as we move into hyper novelty. And it's going to really impact her because people know set up and know. Your Mark Richards is not a captain. He's not in the space program. His dad was not in the space program.
He's in jail for murder. He's lying to you because he's got nothing better to do and he's just sitting in prison. So he makes up all these interesting stories and he gets a real thrill when he gets online and sees you say his name in these interviews and put authority on him. He gets a big rush out of it's all psychological thing for know, I used to work corrections. I worked around these people.
Terry probably could have worked corrections as I had and still would have this attitude that anybody saying this shit and claiming to be a whistleblower has an authority. There was one person in all of her interviews that actually was legit and he was killed shortly after he talked to her. Every other person that she's ever talked to is full of shit to some major degree. And so this is the situation we're at at the moment, is that we're moving into hyper novelty. And she's going to have to face that the same way that Heather is going to have to face that she has no authority.
She's got no underpinning that none of the studies that she relies on, all of the journals that she relies on have to be thrown away or examined to the minutiae in the particulars of that moment to see if it was actually valid. You can't accept them as saying they did a good study and wrote up this good report of this study here, XYZ study. And therefore I will trust them on the QRS study. You can't do that because the authority doesn't transfer that way anymore. And so we don't have that world.
That being the case, it's going to be really tough on these people, both Carrie and Heather. And they're both going to be untethered. Like I say, it's going to be really rough on Carrie Cassidy because every single one of her whistleblowers is going to be disputed. And then, even then, there will be no government. There will be no authority that we will grant that authority to as we go forward.
Now, obviously this is a particulate kind of an event, okay? It's not really an event. It's happening now. The hyper novelty. Lots of people are starting to discover it.
They're getting into the issues here of what we're all going to face. And that's the way of our world here as we go forward. Is this cracking open the coconut to see what's really in the damn thing? Right? We want to know what's really in there.
Hang on a second. I'll stop here. So these next few months, as we get into the hyper novelty, more and more could be really hard on lots of these people. I expect that we'll have some level of mental breakdowns that will be visible in videos and stuff, not just in the normies getting stuck walking across the sidewalk, across the crosswalk, that kind of thing. Right?
It's going to be much more widespread and much deeper. And it'll really hit. Like I say, it's really going to hit the woo people, so many of whom are like Carrie and have an inbuilt bias favoring normalty, normalcy, normality and authority. Anyway, so I got to go. I got to pick up some more stuff here.
And then two more quick stops and I'm home to do work. So anyway, I'll put these up in a while, but hypernovelty is going to bite our ass. People. Talk to you later.