Wednesday, May 20, 2020

Unconfirmed Rumor

I’ve just learned, from an anonymous and nonexistent source with unconfirmed high-level access in practically every company, government, or organization you’ve ever heard of, including the suppliers of several curbside hotdog stands that are particularly popular in the blocks surrounding the State Capitol Building of Idaho, there in Boise, many you never have heard of, like the ones who are buying up credit default swaps on the Treasuries of certain American States, but buying them at the behest of other states, counties  and municipalities. . . 

Well, the point is that she is said to have certain connections, and that there is some possibility, however remote, of her knowing some things that might be worth sharing. And the word “she”, though habitually used here, should not be taken to be a real indication of this person’s gender or self-identity.

Well, she tells me that there’s an organization, an intelligent actor, that secretly controls all of the major conspiracy groups, even including itself. And it directs those groups to act in patterns that are sometimes predictable and most times anything but.

And that it all started as a plan to make a very few people unimaginably wealthy and leave most people either struggling or failing in their struggles to keep alive. But social engineering and architecture are dynamic, changing processes. Sometimes the changes go in the wrong direction; sometimes the right. So, due to a flaw that had been present from the very inception of the projects, the social engine continued to spread beyond the point of its planned final achievement, and wound up enslaving even the elites into a compulsive addiction/devotion to the belief that it would be possible to manipulate the oneness, the perpetuality of the universe, and achieve some sort of selfish personal good from that.

Fat chance. There is no “personal selfish good”. The phrase itself is a contradiction, an absurdity. For a good to be a good, it must be fundamentally good. And selfishness is not fundamentally good.

No comments: