Post by Pedro_deleon revealed the real truth behind the Climate Hysteria
His Post “Are renewable energy sources green?”
Hidden within the article was the answer. Thank you Pedro for posting this.
No green energy is not what we are lead to believe. It’s all coming together. All of the expensive Green energy initiatives are being forced upon the “developed” world. At the same time we allow the developing world a free pass with coal and other carbon fuels. Why? Basically to bankrupt Western Civilization to redistribute wealth to the point that a World Global Welfare state can rule.
We are seeing the non-sensical destruction of Europe and the Five Eyes which are the most industrialized economies. Where does Russia and China fit in?
The Great Reset makes sense now.
If the West follows the “greening” of our countries we will fail. EV’s, Wind and Solar are now being exposed for what they are. Hopefully it’s not too late.
The big question is how large is the conspiracy to destroy the West? The Young Global Leaders are just part of the problem. The Billionaire Class have likely been coerced into the fold with promises of staying on top. Who knows at this point.
The pieces are all fitting together. Covid leading to compliance and the much sought after Digital ID/WHO Vax Travel Passport. The Climate Hysteria leading to levelling the wealth of nations leading to a Global Welfare state run by the so called Elites.
This is our future if we let them.
Even the Ukraine-Russia war makes sense. It is expending resources, changing the energy and food sources of Europe and another few years and they are destroyed economically.
The massive migrant shifts worldwide condoned by our leaders now makes sense. There will be no borders and costs of caring for these migrants will bankrupt us as well. You can figure out the rest.
There will be no talk of balanced budgets in the West. Look at Canada and the US. Enough said.
If the sane don’t take action soon, it’s all over.
Welcome to Globo-Fascism. Global CBDC here they come!
As an aside, they will confiscate all Gold and likely silver at some point as they can not have a parallel economy. We must fight this now. This is why Fully has a point about the Mission statement of this site.
“The Great Reset makes sense now.”
Oh for sure. It one very large Agenda with multiple angles of attack on sovereign, national and personal.
“Global Warming” now “Climate Change” soon “Global Cooling” is just a
Convenient Pretext for dystopian Centralized Control.
I had not put all the pieces together until I read your post.
It all makes sense.
Now we have to weed out the evil bastards who are captured by the WEF.
In the West they have a 25-30% following of the brainwashed.
The current educational system will guarantee that this number grows.
Not so Fast
There is a Counter “Revolution” taking place in the Youngest generation
Jeff Childers :
The Asbury College Revival electrified the Christian community early this year, but its long-term effects, if any, remain unknown. But yesterday, the Wall Street Journal ran an uplifting article headlined, “The Surprising Surge of Faith Among Young People.”
Earlier this month on April 8th, CNN ran a similar story headlined, “Predictions About the Decline of Christianity in America May Be Premature.”
Yesterday, the UK Telegraph ran a story with a headline asking, “Could Gen Z Save the Church of England?”
The Journal article’s sub-headline explained, “Young adults, theologians and church leaders say the increase is a response to the pandemic.” According to a December survey of young adults aged 18 to 25, about one-third of the group now say they believe—more than doubt—the existence of a higher power. That’s a significant increase from pre-pandemic polling.
The Journal quoted Becca Bell, an 18-year-old college student from Peosta, Iowa, who explained that believing in God “gives you a reason for living and some hope.” Becca doesn’t attend Church regularly, but she’s started following the social media accounts of people who are openly religious.
The figures from various polls are mixed and don’t paint any clear picture yet, but the Journal quoted a number of anecdotal accounts of increased church attendance and young people who’ve now returned to their childhood faith after a period of doubt.
Historically, times of war and widespread suffering have often resulted in social revival of religious belief. My own pandemic experience supports the headlines. My family are regular attenders, and even when traveling we (almost) always find a local church to visit on Sundays. Over the last three years I’ve attended services in over a dozen cities and even more churches. All of them were surprisingly — and encouragingly — full, energized, and active.
But that’s not the extent of what I can report. As many of you know, when the mandates rolled out, my firm and I became a hub of information guiding people on how to successfully request a religious exemption and avoid the traps and pitfalls laid out by devilish lawyers and HR firms. In addition to publishing several exemption guides and sample letters on C&C, Substack, and our website, the demand was so overwhelming I had to start holding group zoom sessions to answer people’s questions.
At times we hosted zooms with up to 100 people each, and because of the volume I even assigned another lawyer experienced in employment and vaccine law to help teach people how to navigate the religious exemption bureaucracy.
Part of our standard advice was, although the law allows a newly-acquired religious faith to serve as the basis for religious exemptions, folks still needed to “walk the talk” and actually start attending services, studying their Bibles, and reconnecting with their faith. That way, their sincere religious exemption requests would be factual and true, and not susceptible to being picked apart by skeptical reviewers.
What surprised me the most was that I never got any pushback to that advice. People all agreed with the advice.
In one case, I had a private zoom with the top cardiac surgeon, and department head of a major multi-billion-dollar regional hospital, a hospital that was regularly in the news during the pandemic. He didn’t want to take the jabs. When he asked me about his chances of successfully getting a religious exemption, I asked him about his faith.
Like many, the top heart surgeon and multi-million dollar fund-raiser blamed time demands and other distractions for his lack of church attendance or even interest in religion. After a long zoom and two follow-ups, the hardened surgeon ultimately broke into tears on the call, while describing how joyful he and his wife were now, after meeting with a pastor and beginning to reconnect with his long-abandoned faith.
He wasn’t the only one, not by a long shot. During the pandemic I also privately counseled airline pilots, politicians, doctors, nurses, college professors, scientists, students, and even top pharma salespeople.
I can’t pin down when the thought finally appeared full-formed in my mind, but at some point I began to actively wonder if the mandates were going to backfire, in the sense that, because of the availability of religious exemptions as one of the only ways to keep your job without taking the jabs, the mandates raised the religion issue to a new kind of ultimate salvatory prominence.
It wasn’t just people reconnecting with their own faith. We also ordinarily advised already-churched folks to share the Gospel and the joyful basis of their faith in their religious exemption statements, so that hardened HR reviewers and corporate lawyers would be forced to read those testimonies over and over.
In another significant example, I once took a call from a high-profile Texas pastor, who’d just posted his very first YouTube video, giving suggestions about writing sincere religious exemptions. But now he needed legal advice. Suddenly, he said, because of his YouTube video, people had started calling him from all over the country, asking him to write letters supporting their exemption requests. The pastor fretted because, since he didn’t know these people personally, he might be somehow legally liable if he wrote an exemption letter for someone but they weren’t truly saved.
I gently and gracefully chided him. “Pastor, you’ve got this all wrong,” I explained. “Every single person who calls you is a an opportunity for you to bring that person to faith, so that their religious exemption letter WILL BE true. God’s put you on a pole, like the bronze serpent, so that you can reach people in a way you never could have before.”
He got it.
The bottom line is, during the worst days of the pandemic, a lot of people spent a lot of time thinking about their lapsed religious beliefs, or their lack of religious beliefs, whether or not they ever actually applied for the exemptions.
In other words, maybe for the first time in many people’s lives, they were forced to consider how an active religious faith provided an undeniable upside and benefit.
Although qualifying for a religious exemption is not any kind of proper basis for having faith in an ever-present, loving Creator, God reaches people in every conceivable — and sometimes inconceivable — kind of way.
Have the pandemic’s mandates helped fuel a worldwide religious revival? I think they may have helped. Maybe a lot.
Either way, SOMETHING is happening, and the querulous headlines are beginning to evidence that. We’ll see if it continues, but if it does, there’s probably nothing besides a pandemic that could have accomplished a worldwide revival.