Sunday, May 24, 2026

The Great Unravel And Algorithmic Tyranny


The Great Unravel: A blueprint for survival in the age of algorithmic tyranny

There's a moment every generation faces when the ground shifts beneath their feet. For our grandparents, it was the Great Depression. For our parents, it was the transition from manufacturing to information. For us—for you—it's the collision of economic collapse, artificial intelligence and a globalist agenda that sees human beings as obsolete bugs to be debugged from the system.

"The Great Unravel: Surviving the Workforce Collapse and AI Revolution" isn't a dry academic text. It's a survival manual written in blood and fire and it understands something the mainstream media refuses to acknowledge: the economic crash we're seeing right now isn't a glitch. It's a feature.


The freightways never lie

You want to know what's really happening to the economy? Don't watch CNBC. Don't read the Wall Street Journal. Look at the trucks.

The Cass Freight Index has been flashing red for months. Tonnage is falling. Spot freight rates are cratering. Yellow Corp, one of America's largest trucking companies, went bankrupt while the mainstream media yawned. FedEx and UPS are bleeding jobs and they're calling it "cost-cutting."

This is the nervous system of the real economy and it's screaming. While Wall Street parties on printed money, the physical movement of goods—the actual economy—is seizing up. The book makes this devastatingly clear: the stock market is a fantasy. The freight data is reality. And the two are about to violently reconnect.


The myth of the safe job

Here's where it gets personal. Remember when you were told to get a degree, climb the corporate ladder and you'd be set for life? That was a lie. And the book exposes it with surgical precision.

Tech giants like Meta, Google and Microsoft aren't just firing people—they're systematically eliminating entire job categories. Software engineers, project managers, mid-level executives—the very people who thought they'd outrun automation are now standing directly in its path. The book calls this the "concierge economy": a world where a handful of humans make high-level decisions and every layer of execution gets handed to algorithms.

The same companies that begged for lockdowns are now using AI to replace the workers they claimed to protect. Microsoft ditched its DEI team as "not business critical." That's corporate code for "you're all replaceable."

And then there are the ghost jobs—fake postings companies put up to look like they're hiring while they feed your resume into the very AI systems replacing you. The job market isn't just tight. It's a mirage.

The unbreakable rule that saves you

But here's what the globalists don't want you to know: AI can be clever, but it can never be inspired. It can mimic, but it cannot feel. It can calculate, but it cannot love.

The book's most powerful chapter, "The Unbreakable Rule of AI," should be memorized by every parent, every worker, every human being. AI works by spotting patterns in data. It predicts the next most likely word, pixel or note. It has no inner life. It doesn't wake up with a wild idea or feel the sting of injustice.

Your creativity, your ability to connect seemingly unrelated ideas, your moral intuition—these are not bugs in the machine. They are gifts. And they are exactly what the globalists cannot control.

This is why decentralized technology like Brighteon.AI, trained on truth rather than corporate censorship, was created. We don't reject the tool; we reject the master. Use AI as a research assistant, but never let it write your soul.


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Economic Wars, Global Blackouts, and the Collapse of Modern Stability


The Terrifying Rise of Economic Wars, Global Blackouts, and the Collapse of Modern Stability


The modern world is entering one of the most dangerous periods in recent history. Economic wars, rising geopolitical tensions, massive blackouts, water shortages, and collapsing infrastructure are no longer isolated problems, but signs of a growing global crisis. Behind the illusion of technological progress and stability, entire systems are beginning to weaken under pressure, creating a climate of fear, uncertainty, and instability that continues spreading across nations with alarming speed


For decades, modern civilization cultivated the illusion of permanence. Cities expanded endlessly beneath oceans of electric light, financial markets operated every second of the day across interconnected continents, and governments repeatedly assured populations that technology, globalization, and economic progress had made humanity stronger than ever before. Entire generations grew up believing that shortages, instability, and systemic collapse belonged to the distant past, trapped inside history books alongside world wars and economic depressions.


Yet beneath the surface of modern life, hidden behind digital screens and political speeches, structural weaknesses continued to grow silently year after year. Today, those weaknesses are no longer invisible. They are beginning to emerge simultaneously across economies, infrastructure networks, energy systems, and geopolitical relations with a force that many analysts now describe as one of the most dangerous global transitions since the twentieth century.

The modern crisis did not begin with a single war or financial crash. Instead, it evolved gradually through a chain of interconnected disruptions that slowly destabilized the balance sustaining global civilization. International trade routes became increasingly vulnerable to military tensions, economic sanctions transformed global markets into instruments of political warfare, and inflation began consuming the financial stability of millions of households across both developed and developing nations. 

At the same time, governments accumulated unprecedented levels of debt while energy systems struggled under growing demand and aging infrastructure. What once appeared to be isolated incidents now resemble components of a much larger and deeply interconnected crisis.

Recent economic reports from international institutions continue warning that geopolitical fragmentation and military conflict are weakening global growth while increasing the probability of prolonged instability across energy and financial markets. The International Monetary Fund has repeatedly stated that the economic consequences of modern conflict are no longer regional problems but systemic global threats capable of reshaping trade, inflation, and long-term financial security.

The most alarming aspect of the current situation is the speed at which fear now spreads through modern societies. In previous centuries, economic panic moved slowly, limited by geography and communication barriers. Today, a missile strike, cyberattack, banking failure, or energy disruption can destabilize global markets within minutes. 

 Entire populations witness crises unfold in real time through social media, live broadcasts, and digital financial systems that react instantly to uncertainty. This constant exposure has created a climate of psychological instability where ordinary citizens increasingly fear not only war itself, but the collapse of the systems that support daily life.

Electricity, water access, food distribution, fuel supplies, internet connectivity, and banking services are no longer viewed as permanent guarantees. Instead, they are increasingly perceived as fragile mechanisms vulnerable to disruption at any moment.

Across multiple regions of the world, governments and infrastructure experts have already begun warning about the rising vulnerability of electrical grids.

Artificial intelligence infrastructure, massive data centers, electrified transportation, digital economies, and extreme urban expansion are placing extraordinary pressure on national energy systems already weakened by climate stress, cyber threats, and underinvestment.

A prolonged blackout in a major urban center would no longer represent a simple inconvenience. It could rapidly evolve into a humanitarian emergency capable of shutting down hospitals, freezing financial transactions, disabling transportation systems, contaminating water supplies, and paralyzing emergency response services.






Britain A Test Case For Digital ID Control


Global Tyranny: Britain being used as a test case for digital ID control


British politician David Kurten, leader of the Heritage Partyjoined Daniel Forsius from the Swedish independent media outlet News Voice to discuss the escalating crisis in the UK.


From people being jailed for protests against migration crimes and social media posts, to the King’s Speech pushing digital ID, and the growing resistance with massive protests – Britain is being used as a test project for global control.

“There’s a lot of agitation in the UK at the moment among the people because they realise the Government is acting against the people, they’re not for the people,” Kurten said.

It’s not only in the UK.  “I think all of the governments are working in lockstep together because [they all have an allegiance] to the World Economic Forum and the powers that be and the global cabal,” he said.  “And at one point or another, some nations are pushing forward the agenda faster in some areas than others, and other times its other nations that are pushing forward.”

“But, I think at the moment, the UK is being used to push forward with the digital ID … but they’re also doing the same thing in Australia, New Zealand and Canada as well, it seems the English-speaking countries are being used at this very moment in time to push forward that part of the agenda.”

It’s not only the digital ID that the global cabal is trying to impose on nations.  “I feel like I’m fighting 20 different battles all at the same time and they manifest in different nations at different times.”


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Saturday, May 23, 2026

Conflicting Reports From Iran


Hormuz will stay under Iran’s management, Trump’s post ‘inconsistent with reality’ — Iran’s Fars news
By  and 


Iran’s Fars news agency says the Strait of Hormuz will remain under Iran’s management under the provisions of the latest exchanged text for a deal between Iran and the US.

Fars, a semi-state outlet close to Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, dismisses as “incomplete and inconsistent with reality” Trump’s announcement two hours ago that the deal was now being finalized and would include the reopening of the strait.

Trump posted on social media that an agreement with Iran “has been largely negotiated.” He specified that the deal would include the opening of the strait, the key pathway for the global oil supply that Tehran has largely blocked since the beginning of the war some three months ago.


NYT: Iranian officials say Tehran has agreed to deal for all fighting to stop, Hormuz to reopen

While Iran’s Fars news has derided President Donald Trump’s talk of a deal being nearly done, with the Strait of Hormuz to reopen, three senior Iranian officials tell the New York Times that Tehran has agreed to “a memorandum of understanding that would stop the fighting and reopen the Strait of Hormuz.”

The deal would release $25 billion in Iranian assets frozen overseas, the officials are quoted as saying.

The Times says the officials say the agreement “would halt fighting on all fronts, including in Lebanon.”

They add that its terms focus “on opening the strait— including lifting the US naval blockade against Iran and allowing free commercial traffic without Iran charging any tolls.”

And, reports the Times, the officials say issues relating to Iran’s nuclear program will be put off, to be negotiated within 30 to 60 days.

The Times adds the caveat that it is “not clear if the proposal Iranian officials said they had agreed to was what President Trump was referring to in his post on social media.”

Citing Middle East officials, The Times also says the leaders of Arab and Muslim-majority countries with whom Trump spoke in a conference earlier today told him that they support the proposal and urged him to accept it.


Report: Iran has agreed to relinquish stockpile of highly enriched uranium as part of deal with US

Iran has agreed to give up its stockpile of highly enriched uranium as part of an agreement with the US to end the war, two US officials tell the New York Times.

According to the officials, Iran has committed in a general statement to giving up the uranium, rather than reaching an agreement with the US on exactly how it will relinquish it. Instead, the exact details will be worked out during the negotiations that will begin once a deal is reached.

The report comes days after Iranian sources claimed that Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Mojtaba Khamenei, had issued a directive that the near-weapons-grade uranium should not be sent abroad.


State Of Emergency In Orange County As Failing Chemical Tank Nears Catastrophic Explosion


Newsom declares state of emergency in Orange County as failing chemical tank nears catastrophic explosion



Emergency crews launched a high-stakes "offensive" overnight mission at a Southern California aerospace facility to neutralize an adjacent chemical tank, as the internal temperature of a failing primary tank has steadily climbed to 90 degrees Fahrenheit, prompting Gov. Gavin Newsom to declare a state of emergency Saturday and the evacuation of over 40,000 residents.

Orange County Fire Authority Incident Commander Greg Covey shared the "bad news" Saturday morning that crews who went into harm's way overnight and manually checked the failing tank's internal temperature gauge, which had been obscured from drone cameras by cooling water.

The temperature had reached 90 degrees, rising by an average of one degree per hour since it was recorded at 77 degrees on Friday morning.

Orange County Fire Authority Interim Chief T.J. McGovern and Covey previously warned there are only two catastrophic outcomes: The tank could fail and spill between 6,000 and 7,000 gallons of "very bad chemicals," or undergo "thermal runaway" and explode, potentially triggering a chain reaction with neighboring fuel and chemical tanks.

The primary goal of the overnight operation, conducted with the support of a chemist team, was to neutralize a 15,000-gallon tank, removing its explosive potential in case the neighboring 7,000-gallon tank detonates, according to Covey.

Despite the rising temperatures, officials have developed a potential third outcome to avoid disaster.

By using a heavy, continuous deluge of water, crews hope the volatile chemical will "cure" and harden at a slower rate from the outside in, similar to an ice cube.

Covey said the team is hoping the void space at the top of the tank will absorb the overpressure from the curing process, preventing an explosion.

Simultaneously, crews are preparing aggressive contingency plans in case the tank fails and spills liquid.

Responders are establishing diking and damming measures to divert the potential fluid down a grade into a commercial holding area.

The diversion would prevent the toxic chemical from reaching storm drains, river channels and the ocean, preventing an "environmental disaster."

"Letting this thing just fail and blow up is unacceptable to us," Covey said, noting that experts from across the country are consulting on the crisis.

Newsom declared a state of emergency Saturday afternoon, allowing resources to flow to the scene.

The California Governor's Office of Emergency Services has been mobilized for more than 24 hours and state agencies are supporting impacted communities to protect public safety and assist local officials as response efforts continue, Newsom wrote in a statement on X.

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40,000 Evacuated In Southern California As Chemical Tank Threatens Leak Or Explosion