The Story I Can Tell Now

I’m trying to learn how to hear my convictions, to follow the leadership of my heart. My convictions told me to shut down the old blog. I obeyed without being sure I understood the reasons for that decision. That’s how it should work when the mind lags behind the heart.

At least part of the reason is that a window of opportunity has closed. We have a message to the world, but it’s always been a two-edged sword. It is part warning and part offer. The offer remains open, but the time for warning is over, as the cutting begins. Warning to the world at large was the purpose of that old blog over the past few months, to advise folks of the coming wrath. It was mostly aimed at outsiders, and was accessible to them.

This blog is private, in that it does not show up much in search engines, and isn’t part of the automated advertising system connected with WordPress.com. We are running WordPress software on a private server account with no active support, versus the old blog which leased server space from WordPress, and got some limited support in the bargain. I have more control over how it works here, but that sacrifices the free publicity I had on the old blog.

In other words, the prophetic outreach is closed. That much is clear to me, but I sense there’s a lot more attached to that. Right now, I don’t have the words to express it. To me, it’s rather like this is just a smaller piece attached to something much bigger. All I can see is the part that touches my domain.

I’m sure there are other prophetic callings out there not yet silenced, but for me, it signals that it’s too late for some people, that certain events have been set in motion and there’s no turning back now. Even saying that is parabolic; we simply don’t have words to describe what it means. All we can do is make a crayon scratch image of it. I am not to concern myself with whether anyone outside our community is touched by the message.

So, the primary focus is making sure I am faithful to the community, to deliver whatever the Lord puts on my heart. Even that seems like it’s rather ephemeral. Most certainly I’ll try to keep the Bible lessons coming, to make sure they are published and accessible. Those have attracted the strongest reaction from everyone. Everything else is subject to modifications.

I’ve explored a lot of options for keeping in contact. I asked the question: How would I share those Bible lessons if different kinds of problems arose? There are too many to summarize. The current server is about as safe as it gets, barring dramatic changes in the Internet landscape. If I had to, I could reduce things to just an email newsletter distribution system. I guess that depends on whether I have your email in my emergency contact list, and whether your email service will accept such a thing from the various email services I use. I’ve had stuff bounce in the past for some of you.

On that note, let me reiterate that I still recommend getting an account with Proton Mail. They have both free and paid accounts available, and any communications we make over that system is encrypted, and remains on their servers. I’ll be using the address catacombrez@protonmail.com. The only possible challenge there is whether you can access that service from where you are at the time.

I know I linked to an article warning of grave possibilities, but for the most part, I expect disruptions will come from direct attacks on the financial and supply system, not the Internet itself. Communist China already has the Great Firewall limiting their traffic with the rest of the world, and Russia recently made moves to install a “switch” to cut themselves off from the global network if things get too intense outside their borders. Other countries have already used a similar switch to limit their citizens’ communications via the Net. Still, I don’t expect major disruptions to the Net itself.

Here’s something odd about the whole question: There is no doubt that the vast majority of computer geeks, including those who actually design and run all the background services that make the Internet work, hold globalist sympathies. And yet, it is the globalist leadership who has so far shown themselves least competent at using those services. The worst computer security failures so far have all been among the globalists. They have suffered the worst unauthorized disclosures, while their enemies have remained mostly secure. You get the distinct impression those of a globalist mindset truly do not understand the nature of computer networking, but that they also have the most to lose by exposure.

At any rate, I’m strongly convinced that certain things have changed forever, and it can be understood properly only from the heart as matters of eternal moral truth. I’m sure there are plenty of things for which God is still waiting to see how much, and what kind of wrath is warranted, but some issues that I’ve been working on are finished. I have no further message for the world at large.

My convictions lead me to prepare for economic collapse in the form of a long slow failure with several sudden disappearances of consumer goods and services. The best market opportunities will be in localizing things people previously took for granted from outside suppliers. All of that “just-in-time” delivery will collapse. Reduce your dependencies where possible.

The tension between states and the federal government will grow, but there will be no obvious final rupture, just a long list of increasing hostilities. It will appear to be mostly stumbling into various stages of a civil war. But at some point it will be obvious that it’s over. There will be no apparent organization behind the resistance, until way late in the game. There will be a violent backlash from the political right, but it is hopelessly incapable of getting organized, so it will be messy and without discipline. Then again, the left side only appears to be organized; they have already begun turning on each other.

Other predictions I’ve made haven’t changed: Big Tech will largely destroy itself. The tech business landscape will change dramatically. Israel will destroy itself, too, but that’s going to be a complete surprise. Mainstream American evangelical religion will suffer a huge shock, marked by an exodus, partly because of the leadership’s toxic obsession with Israel. You should understand that the vast majority of Christian Zionism stands firmly on how profitable it has been so far. A significant portion of the leadership is corrupt and cynical, not true believers at all in the cause of modern Israel. And make no mistake: The real Zionist Jews despise Christians, but will milk them until dry. They’ll throw evangelicals under the bus in a heartbeat.

And I know it’s very hard to grasp this, but there is a very secretive cabal who run the Zionist game, but they actually don’t give a damn about the modern State of Israel, nor Jews. It’s just a ruse, a way of drawing everyone’s attention away from something else they are doing to seize control of the whole world. It’s hard to pin them down because they are only sort-of-Jewish in identity. It’s part of why they exist as a group, but it’s not the whole story. They are the global bankers, but more than that. They’ll take a hit in coming apocalypse, but it won’t end their cabal. They’ll start over.

God alone knows what that world will be like, and I have no idea how much of it I’ll get to see.

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One Response to The Story I Can Tell Now

  1. feeriker says:

    On that note, let me reiterate that I still recommend getting an account with Proton Mail. They have both free and paid accounts available, and any communications we make over that system is encrypted, and remains on their servers.

    Heartily second, third, and fourth. I’m planning on buying a paid Proton Mail subscription very soon in order to ensure that my critical emails are not dependent on the Google beast. Proton Mail isn’t perfect (their paid personal mail packages only allow a maximum of five mailboxes and they also limit the total number of emails peer day to 1000 per mailbox, which, admittedly, is probably more than enough for what most of us will use our accounts for), but it’s far better than anything else out there. One potential danger: governments targeting the protonmail.com domain if the service becomes popular enough. This brings me back to the question of the feasibility of connectionless or hybrid internet protocols that can evade domain filtering. Were my engineering skills more robust, I would be throwing myself wholeheartedly into trying to make such technology a reality.

    Mainstream American evangelical religion will suffer a huge shock, marked by an exodus, partly because of the leadership’s toxic obsession with Israel.

    Mainstream American religion in general, to include “evangelical” denominations of corporate churchianity, has already slit its own throat by caving in to Caesar during the COVID scam and abandoning both its flock and the Great Commission. Most of these “churches” have all but completely abandoned what little outreach and evangelism they ever practiced pre-COVIDIOCY, and their complete silence and absence in the present only adds to their negative reputation among believers and non-believers alike. Any catastrophically foolish move by Israel, especially one that lays bare the extent of American evangelical ties to it, will only drive the final stake through its heart.

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