Perhaps like us you have woken up recently to the notion that all politics is a theatre. Whilst we do not know exactly who is calling the shots, corporate entities including the military-industrial, medical, energy and telecommunication complexes ,as well as a wealthy and privileged few, have effectively captured our governments and international bodies.
Perhaps like us it has become clear to you that we are being led into a one world government slave system where we are the product, a system featuring centralised totalitarian power, gargantuan inequality, and dystopian ideals filled with horror beyond the human imagination.
If these realisations have hit you like a ton of bricks, taking a stand may seem futile. One may feel like shutting down, overwhelmed and disempowered to take no action at all, and continue to float along the river to the inevitable waterfall.
This is how the powers that should not be want you to feel. So what can we do about it?
Against a backdrop of manufactured chaos we are in actual fact being empowered by the insanity of official actions to step away from fear and withdraw support for the entities put in place to enslave us. In this series of articles, I will share some easy steps not only to unplug from the matrix and set oneself free but to agitate and disrupt it so that it loses its power to control others. It’s amazing how comfortable and easy it becomes once one makes a start!
1. Use cash as much as possible
There is a war on cash in a move to make everything digital. It’s already becoming illegal in some places. Cash keeps money local. Cash is anonymous and ensures your purchases are not being tracked and profiled by your bank and card providers (something they have been doing for decades). Cash is resilient in times of crisis and works without the internet and electricity. Cash cannot just be shut off by centralised control. There are many more great reasons to always carry and use cash here.
2. Stop using Amazon
Online retail giants like Amazon have decimated our high streets, gutted city centres and destroyed local communities. They put profit not merely over people but treat the people creating their profits unfairly. They have no place in a better way.
Why use Amazon when one can get everything one needs with more local, smaller and more ethical retailers? One may pay a little more, or wait a day or two longer to acquire a product, but generally supporting one’s local community means that local money stays local and one stops feeding corporate monopolies with abhorrent business practices. Amazon treats its workers terribly, housing them in monolithic faceless containers. It is likely that we will soon look back on this time and at Amazon and similar corporate giants as the anti-human, anti-life entities that they are, and the very idea of a private corporation with this kind of power will be considered outrageous.
3. Use supermarkets as little as possible
Supermarket shopping has become an increasingly bizarre experience. It started with us being required to bag our own groceries, then we had to scan them too at the check-out. Now staff-less shops tied to facial recognition are being piloted with digital ID and automatic profile tracking – the aim being to extract your money or CBDC credits directly from your account without contact.
Supermarkets often put on an ethical front, nice-washing and claiming that they source from fair and loving farmers. To the contrary, these corporate giants have been exploiting vulnerable workers, including farm workers and fishermen, for decades. Berry picking in Portugal is one example, where low wages are paid to workers for berries sold in upmarket supermarkets.
In summary, the modus operandi of supermarket giants is: pass the work onto the consumer, reduce staff and jobs, muscle down on supplier prices, and of course, make as much profit as possible.
There are health aspects to supermarket shopping too, such as food fraud and quality issues, which we will cover in another article.
If you have to go to the supermarket, refuse to use the self-checkouts, pay with cash, and talk to the staff – use it as an opportunity to brighten up the experience of others.
4. Use second hand stores for clothes shopping
If clothing manufacturing was to cease today there would be more than enough clothes in the collective wardrobe for everyone for quite some time. So why do we allow ourselves to be manipulated into refreshing wardrobes seasonally on a whim? The waste is colossal. New clothes are often manufactured poorly in terrible working conditions and made with synthetic fibres that spread microplastics into the environment and your body. It needn’t be this way. You can look swag and stylish without funding big fashion houses or fast fashion chains. Shoes, socks and underwear can be bought new when needed, but everything else needn’t be first use.
5. Stick to small and family run restaurants and outlets when eating out
There are a multitude of reasons to avoid fast food chains, the prime reason is health! Check out how KFC makes their gravy. Almost consistently a local family restaurant will outshine the competitors on quality and service. Importantly, the money stays local and does not go into the offshore globalist purse. Here are more reasons.
6. Be selective about the company we keep
If one works for a corporate giant, now may be a good time to start one’s own business or choose to work for a small independent or local business. Currently, there seems to be a large number of jobs available. Perhaps it has to do with the large number of people now unwell from Covid interventions? In any event, if at all possible, let’s avoid working for monstrous corporations and those who serve them. If the beast cannot find workers, its control and profits will diminish. Let’s consider what services are needed in our community, what will truly benefit others, what our talents are, and where our heart lies and a fulfilling way to spend our time and earn a living is likely to follow.
7. Be as local as possible
The last few points have had the same thing in common – locality. Make it local and make it unique to its locality, in all its individual radiance. This is the remedy to globalism and homogenisation. Try to go as local and small scale as possible. If one is lucky enough to have a local butcher, baker, greengrocer and so on, let’s support them. In essence, we use it or lose it.
Family businesses are also likely to have better pay and working conditions.
8. Disinvest from corporate giants
If you read this Substack regularly, you probably know that big pharmaceutical corporations have manufactured harmful drugs that have hurt millions of people around the world in the last three years, as well as prior to Covid, but have you checked your stocks and shares? Do you own Pfizer and Astrazeneca stocks? What about Amazon and McDonalds? Microsoft? Monsanto? Bayer? Many people may hold shares and profit from the crooked dealings of corporate giants, which are not limited to big pHARMa.
It is time to consider the many ways that we are complicit in the harms wreaked on mankind in the name of profit and withdraw our tacit endorsement of these harmful activities and enterprises.
9. Move our money from big banks
Big banks are major players and culprits in the ongoing agenda to enslave humanity via debt and inflation. They have repeatedly been shown to be criminal and are persistently propped up at taxpayers’ expense by crony governments when they fail. If the people in power who are supposedly representing us will not hold corrupt bankers to account, we must flex our power another way, by moving our money.
Find smaller, independent, ethical and local banks or building societies and consider community banking initiatives.
10. Stop paying for things we do not need
Let’s take a look at our bank statements this month and consider what we have and are spending our money on? Have we consented to these purchases or are they taken from us without our consent? Is our purchase contributing to our enslavement or freeing us? Why do we pay for the propaganda and surveillance tools that brainwash us and steal from us? Televisions, Alexa, mobile phones, and more.
Is the motivation for our intended purchase ‘convenience’ or an upgrade? Do we really need that next impulsive purchase, or can we make do without it? Will what we are considering purchasing end up in the trash by the end of the week, month or year? Let’s help free one another from wasting money by agreeing to reduce spending on birthdays and special events. Let our true gift be our genuine attention.
There is so much we can do without. Let’s declutter our lives. In renunciation of unnecessary stuff there is no lack.
In Conclusion…
Who in their right mind would welcome the WEF’s dystopian vision of the future?
The best way to reject dystopia is to stop feeding the corporate beast and invest in our own better way and actively engage with solutions to help co-create a better world. For those wanting to disengage from a corrupt system and disrupt the globalist agenda, we hope these ideas will help.
Let’s put our money where our mouth is, and let’s use less of it! Let’s put our money towards what nourishes us, our families and our communities, and not feed the beast that would have us shackled, diminished and bled dry, reduced to mere shadows of our divine selves.
You may want to explore the wonderful online portal SOURCE, created by our team at the World Council for Health, which focuses on sovereign empowerment for individuals and their communities. It's an ideal place to find like-minded people and share your experiences with others.
A selection of thoughtful alternatives to the increasingly unacceptable status quo. Kudos.
"WE are the people we've been waiting for."
I totally agree. Starve the dystopian beast. Enthusiastically support the independent sovereign marketplace, especially local options. Pay with cash. Cancel your TV license - defund the BBC! Turn off their corruptocracy crapaganda! Boldly walk in the opposite direction of this fascist globalist tyranny. Build anew. Whilst "they" are rotting we are sprouting green shoots. Joyful inspired horizons ahead! Yippee! What larks, eh!