2035, the beast system fully entrenched and a permanent tyranny has taken hold?
People who are still around in 2035 may want to look back and read the long article in the link below. Why are we building the ultimate digital police state? Why would any sane person consent to walk down the slippery slope we are all currently being forced to walk upon?
What sane and benevolent leader would lead their people down the road to the creation of a full blown digital dystopian society? What sane citizens would sit back and do absolutely nothing to stop any of this madness?
On second thought, maybe it’s really important for people who are existing today to read this article now. An important long read in the link below.
CAUTION: A Dystopian Morning in 2035...
They Warned Us 2,000 Years Ago. We're Building It Anyway.
https://wisewolfmedia.substack.com/p/caution-a-dystopian-morning-in-2035?utm_source=post-email-title&publication_id=1913427&post_id=176511526&utm_campaign=email-post-title&isFreemail=true&r=ez4wj&triedRedirect=true&utm_medium=email
Excerpt below from full article in link above.
[This Is Where We Draw the line
The time for polite observation has passed. The infrastructure is being built right now. The precedents are being set. The acceptance is being manufactured through convenience and fear.
Every system starts voluntary. Optional. Just for people who want the benefits. Then it becomes expected. Then normalized. Then mandatory. Then enforced.
We’ve seen this pattern before. We’re watching it happen again.
So what do we do? How do we stop a system that wraps itself in the language of safety and progress? How do we fight something that most people can’t even see yet?
Use cash. Use it everywhere. Use it deliberately. Every cash transaction is a vote against the digital control grid. Force businesses to keep handling it. Make it inconvenient for them to go cashless. The death of physical currency is the death of private transactions.
Reject biometric systems wherever possible. You don’t need to unlock your phone with your face. You don’t need to use iris scanners at the airport. You don’t need to give your fingerprints to every app that asks. Your biometric data can’t be changed when it’s compromised. It’s you. Permanently.
Question every convenience that requires surrendering privacy. Smart home devices that listen constantly. Apps that track your location. Services that analyze your behavior to “personalize your experience.” Each one is another data point in your profile. Another piece of leverage for future control.
Build parallel systems. Support local businesses that take cash. Use encrypted communication. Learn skills that don’t depend on centralized systems. Grow food. Store supplies. Know your neighbors. Real neighbors, not digital connections. The most powerful act of resistance is becoming less dependent on the systems they’re building.
Speak up now, while you still can. Challenge digital ID mandates. Oppose CBDC implementation. Question social credit systems disguised as “reputation scores” or “trust ratings.” Make noise. Make them defend these systems in public. Make it politically costly to implement them.
Teach your children what freedom actually means. Not the curated, monitored, algorithmically approved version. Real freedom. The kind that includes privacy. The kind that includes the right to be wrong. The kind that doesn’t require permission from an AI to exist.
Study the prophecies seriously. You don’t have to be religious to recognize that someone two thousand years ago described exactly what’s being built today. Whether you believe it’s divine warning or eerily prescient observation doesn’t matter. The pattern is there. Understand it. Recognize it. Refuse to participate in it.
Be prepared to sacrifice convenience. This is the hard part. The system they’re building is seductive because it’s easier. Faster. More efficient. You’ll be pressured to adopt it. Mocked for resisting it. Excluded from things if you refuse it. Be ready for that cost. Freedom has never been convenient.
Understand this might cost everything. If these systems become mandatory, refusal means losing access to banking, employment, travel, healthcare. It means being locked out of society. In the prophecy, those who refuse the mark can’t buy or sell. They’re hunted. Killed. That’s not hyperbole. That’s the historical pattern when totalitarian systems reach full implementation.
Are we being dramatic? Maybe. Maybe all these systems will remain optional. Maybe the benevolent motives are genuine. Maybe there’s nothing to worry about.
But if we’re wrong, we’ve inconvenienced ourselves with some extra caution. If we’re right, and we do nothing, we wake up one morning in that dystopian apartment with cameras watching our every move and drugs keeping us compliant.
The Fork in the Road
Humanity stands at a decision point. We can sleepwalk into a system that monitors every transaction, tracks every movement, scores every behavior, and enforces compliance through economic exclusion. We can tell ourselves it’s for safety. For the environment. For the greater good.
Or we can wake up. Right now. While there’s still time to resist. While cash still works. While you can still buy and sell without scanning your face. While some privacy remains possible.
The prophecy isn’t inevitable. It’s a warning. A signpost. A chance to choose differently.
But that choice has an expiration date. The infrastructure is almost complete. The acceptance is being manufactured. The transition is beginning.
That morning in the Wellness Collective isn’t some distant science fiction future. It’s a few policy decisions away. A few manufactured crises. A few more years of people accepting convenience over freedom.
The Mark is being prepared. The question is whether you’ll take it.
Because once you do, once the system is in place and mandatory and enforced, there’s no going back. No logging out. No opting out. Just compliance or exclusion. Submission or starvation.
This isn’t about left or right politics. It’s not about partisan divisions. It’s about human freedom versus technological totalitarianism. It’s about whether humans will remain sovereign individuals or become monitored, controlled, algorithmically managed resources.
The dystopia is optional. But only if we reject it now. Only if we refuse to participate. Only if we’re willing to fight for a future where you can think your own thoughts, spend your own money, and live your own life without asking permission from an AI or a social credit score or a global system that claims to know what’s best for you.
This is the line. This is the moment. This is where we decide what kind of world our children inherit.
Choose wisely. The cameras are already watching.]
What sane and benevolent leader would lead their people down the road to the creation of a full blown digital dystopian society? What sane citizens would sit back and do absolutely nothing to stop any of this madness?
On second thought, maybe it’s really important for people who are existing today to read this article now. An important long read in the link below.
CAUTION: A Dystopian Morning in 2035...
They Warned Us 2,000 Years Ago. We're Building It Anyway.
https://wisewolfmedia.substack.com/p/caution-a-dystopian-morning-in-2035?utm_source=post-email-title&publication_id=1913427&post_id=176511526&utm_campaign=email-post-title&isFreemail=true&r=ez4wj&triedRedirect=true&utm_medium=email
Excerpt below from full article in link above.
[This Is Where We Draw the line
The time for polite observation has passed. The infrastructure is being built right now. The precedents are being set. The acceptance is being manufactured through convenience and fear.
Every system starts voluntary. Optional. Just for people who want the benefits. Then it becomes expected. Then normalized. Then mandatory. Then enforced.
We’ve seen this pattern before. We’re watching it happen again.
So what do we do? How do we stop a system that wraps itself in the language of safety and progress? How do we fight something that most people can’t even see yet?
Use cash. Use it everywhere. Use it deliberately. Every cash transaction is a vote against the digital control grid. Force businesses to keep handling it. Make it inconvenient for them to go cashless. The death of physical currency is the death of private transactions.
Reject biometric systems wherever possible. You don’t need to unlock your phone with your face. You don’t need to use iris scanners at the airport. You don’t need to give your fingerprints to every app that asks. Your biometric data can’t be changed when it’s compromised. It’s you. Permanently.
Question every convenience that requires surrendering privacy. Smart home devices that listen constantly. Apps that track your location. Services that analyze your behavior to “personalize your experience.” Each one is another data point in your profile. Another piece of leverage for future control.
Build parallel systems. Support local businesses that take cash. Use encrypted communication. Learn skills that don’t depend on centralized systems. Grow food. Store supplies. Know your neighbors. Real neighbors, not digital connections. The most powerful act of resistance is becoming less dependent on the systems they’re building.
Speak up now, while you still can. Challenge digital ID mandates. Oppose CBDC implementation. Question social credit systems disguised as “reputation scores” or “trust ratings.” Make noise. Make them defend these systems in public. Make it politically costly to implement them.
Teach your children what freedom actually means. Not the curated, monitored, algorithmically approved version. Real freedom. The kind that includes privacy. The kind that includes the right to be wrong. The kind that doesn’t require permission from an AI to exist.
Study the prophecies seriously. You don’t have to be religious to recognize that someone two thousand years ago described exactly what’s being built today. Whether you believe it’s divine warning or eerily prescient observation doesn’t matter. The pattern is there. Understand it. Recognize it. Refuse to participate in it.
Be prepared to sacrifice convenience. This is the hard part. The system they’re building is seductive because it’s easier. Faster. More efficient. You’ll be pressured to adopt it. Mocked for resisting it. Excluded from things if you refuse it. Be ready for that cost. Freedom has never been convenient.
Understand this might cost everything. If these systems become mandatory, refusal means losing access to banking, employment, travel, healthcare. It means being locked out of society. In the prophecy, those who refuse the mark can’t buy or sell. They’re hunted. Killed. That’s not hyperbole. That’s the historical pattern when totalitarian systems reach full implementation.
Are we being dramatic? Maybe. Maybe all these systems will remain optional. Maybe the benevolent motives are genuine. Maybe there’s nothing to worry about.
But if we’re wrong, we’ve inconvenienced ourselves with some extra caution. If we’re right, and we do nothing, we wake up one morning in that dystopian apartment with cameras watching our every move and drugs keeping us compliant.
The Fork in the Road
Humanity stands at a decision point. We can sleepwalk into a system that monitors every transaction, tracks every movement, scores every behavior, and enforces compliance through economic exclusion. We can tell ourselves it’s for safety. For the environment. For the greater good.
Or we can wake up. Right now. While there’s still time to resist. While cash still works. While you can still buy and sell without scanning your face. While some privacy remains possible.
The prophecy isn’t inevitable. It’s a warning. A signpost. A chance to choose differently.
But that choice has an expiration date. The infrastructure is almost complete. The acceptance is being manufactured. The transition is beginning.
That morning in the Wellness Collective isn’t some distant science fiction future. It’s a few policy decisions away. A few manufactured crises. A few more years of people accepting convenience over freedom.
The Mark is being prepared. The question is whether you’ll take it.
Because once you do, once the system is in place and mandatory and enforced, there’s no going back. No logging out. No opting out. Just compliance or exclusion. Submission or starvation.
This isn’t about left or right politics. It’s not about partisan divisions. It’s about human freedom versus technological totalitarianism. It’s about whether humans will remain sovereign individuals or become monitored, controlled, algorithmically managed resources.
The dystopia is optional. But only if we reject it now. Only if we refuse to participate. Only if we’re willing to fight for a future where you can think your own thoughts, spend your own money, and live your own life without asking permission from an AI or a social credit score or a global system that claims to know what’s best for you.
This is the line. This is the moment. This is where we decide what kind of world our children inherit.
Choose wisely. The cameras are already watching.]
56-60, M