- In Elbert County, Georgia, stands the Georgia Guidestones, often referred to as "America's Stonehenge," bearing inscriptions in twelve languages with cryptic messages and controversial directives, including reducing global population to fewer than 500 million.
- The Guidestones are part of a larger narrative involving influential figures, organizations and debates about population control, as explored in Jim Marrs' book "Population Control: How Corporate Owners are Killing Us."
- Notable figures like Prince Philip and Maxwell Taylor have expressed views on reducing global population, particularly in less developed countries, through controversial means such as disease, starvation and conflict.
- Researchers argue that the overpopulation threat is not about population growth but rather population density and resource distribution, questioning the validity of population control policies.
- The discussion of population control raises ethical and democratic questions, especially regarding the targeting of specific populations and the acceptability of methods, as seen in historical eugenics and forced sterilization programs.
In the rural outskirts of Elbert County, Georgia, stands a mysterious granite structure known as the Georgia Guidestones, often referred to as "America's Stonehenge." Commissioned in 1979 by a man using the pseudonym Robert C. Christian, the Guidestones bear inscriptions in eight modern and four ancient languages, offering a blend of cryptic messages and unsettling directives.
Among these is a call to reduce the global population to fewer than 500 million, a directive that has sparked controversy and raised questions about the motives behind such an audacious vision. This plot is outlined in great detail by Jim Marrs in his book "Population Control: How Corporate Owners are Killing Us."
The Georgia Guidestones are just one piece of a larger puzzle that intersects with a darker chapter in global history—a narrative involving influential figures, shadowy organizations and contentious ideas about population control. This story delves into how these ideas have shaped policies and sparked debates about justice, democracy and the future of humanity.
The Guidestones’ message is both fascinating and chilling. Among its ten major directives is a call for humanity to reduce global population levels to achieve a "perpetual balance with nature."
3 comments:
Job done, the vaccine has gotten most of the western world, (this will destroy the world's economy and cause starvation) those that did not vaccinate will find themselves in war and during the wars a bioweapon will be released. Sounds like the four horsemen to me.
Prince William warns that there are too many people in the world (2017).
It's getting really weird. A monument to the occult erected in a Bible belt state 45 years ago - reminds me of the occult nature of Earth Day 10 years earlier. A military aircraft slams into a commercial aircraft and vice versa a commercial ship slams into a military ship two weeks later.
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