Schwamb ⚑️
Schwamb ⚑️

@realhumanschwab

47 Tweets 266 reads Mar 01, 2022
You are being prepared for convergence into a "World Brain". Biometric ID and total enslavement are only the next phases in a plan that dates back to 16th-century alchemy.
Buckle up 🧡
From the 1930s and onwards, a philosophy professor named Oliver Reiser (1895 - 1974) wrote a number of books and articles where he described how humanity would evolve into an interconnected collective organism he called "the World Sensorium."
A collective organism into which all mankind would be converged through technology. The idea is related to H.G. Wells' 'World Brain' as well as Jesuit priest and evolutionary scholar Pierre Teilhard de Chardin's 'Noosphere', from his work 'The Future of Mankind'.
The evolution of this organism would be directed by a world government and united by common beliefs. A world religion. In Wells' conception, there would be a "World Encyclopedia" that would determine consensus reality.
The entirety of the earth would be reconstructed under the symbol of Solomon's Temple, not of stone in Jerusalem, but electromagnetically. This would be done through a worldwide system of satellites and antennae. Through the use of something called "Radio Eugenics"
This meant that evolution would be controlled by hot-fixing and updating human gene expression remotely. This concept immediately brings to mind my research on the Ebner effect.
It also reminds us of the many studies that demonstrate the molecular, morphological, biochemical, and mutagenic effects of EM fields.
This video is titled "Magnetogenetics: remote non-invasive magnetic activation of neuronal activity with a magnetoreceptor"
The central belief of Reiser was that geomagnetic forces were directing the evolution of species based on a very specific complex cyclical process. He also envisioned a "memory field" around the Earth which he called this field the "psychosphere".
Though this idea will be dismissed as "pseudoscience" by the redditoid, this is indeed yet another example that such creatures only care about the consensus of the "cult of domesticity".
It appears Reiser was either a visionary genius or he had access to arcane informationβ€”
Yes, you read that correctly "Probable mechanisms of the magnetic field influence on gene expression and virus-host interactions"
Reiser called his overarching vision "Cosmic Humanism" and the project went by the name Prometheus-Krishna. He was inspired by Alice Bailey's neotheosophyβ€”telepathically dictated to her by mystic beingsβ€”and the principles of alchemy, in which man is transformed and perfected.
Reiser frequently published articles in the theosophical Lucis Trust newspaper 'The Beacon' and the last chapter of his 'Promise of Scientific Humanism' was titled, "The New Alchemy"
He is... extremely explicit.
Reiser's last book Cosmic Humanism and World Unity was published by the think tank World Institute in New York, founded by lumber magnate Julius Stulman. An office was also located in Jerusalem.
Stulman doesn't have a wiki page but he is not forgottenβ€”
After Reiser's death, the network he created was inherited by Ervin LΓ‘szlΓ³. The Hungarian systems philosopher popularized Reiser's ideas with his book 'You Can Change the World'. LΓ‘szlΓ³ describes an assemblage of NGOs promoting sustainable development, using the Internet.
The theosophically oriented LΓ‘szlΓ³ was a member of an environmental think tank called the Club of Rome. This think tank was responsible for the idea of using climate alarmism to corral humanity into global governance.
This message was also integrated into the World Future Society whose members included Al Gore, the New Age guru Barbara Marx Hubbard, Alvin Toffler, and Willis Harman of the Stanford Research Institute.
Incidentally, the Stanford Research Institute (SRI) was instrumental in the CIA's Stargate Program, which researched man-machine interpolation, astral projection, and remote viewing.
schwabstack.substack.com
In their infamous document 'Changing Images of Man', SRI very explicitly illustrates the power structureβ€”the decentralized network of NGOs populated by actors with shifting, multi-tiered allegiancesβ€”which LΓ‘szlΓ³ proscribes.
The plan for a cybernetically controlled world organism has in recent decades been disseminated throughout these networks. The events of the past two years are a testament to that. If you would like to know moreβ€”
schwabstack.substack.com
If you would like me to put more on the timeline, retweet this thread to show there is interest.
Ervin Laszlo served as one of the referees for SRI International's project, Changing Images of Man at Stanford University in 1970. This was part of a series called Explorations of World Order where Ervin acted as editor.
This series was published by Pergamon Press, the publisher for the Club of Rome. Pergamon Press is a scientific publishing house founded by Robert Maxwell, the father of Ghislaine Maxwell.
As we all know, Ghislaine Maxwell supported Jeffrey Epstein in his visionβ€” a dream shaped by futurism, eugenics, and human evolution. Epstein claimed to have funded many prominent researchers, some of whom now deny taking any money.
Epstein's Zorro Ranch was located in New Mexico for a reason, so he could be close to the Santa Fe Institute where he was a donor and frequent visitor. The Santa Fe institute specializes in complex systems research.
newrepublic.com
One of their main research projects is "machine-human hybrid societies". They are also focused on artificial intelligence and synthetic brains, all integral components for a global superorganism. These projects are part of a central research theme of "collective intelligence".
The president of SFI is David Krakauer, here he is at the World Economic Forum, Annual Meeting of the Global Future Council 2016. The Global Research Council is responsible for the "in 2030 you will own nothing" forecasts (threats).
The idea of "collective intelligence" is central to the World Economic Forum. Global Future Councils are, according to Klaus Schwab, a collective intelligence network made manifest in their "Transformation Maps"..
These maps are created by co-curators (human brains) and augmented by "a machine curated feed of the latest findings and analysis from top universities and research institutions and are enhanced by technologies used in machine learning artificial intelligence".
Due to the "reproducibility crisis" and the ongoing scam of AI development, researchers have turned to the exploitation of society as a computational substrate.
Because they failed to summon their ersatz archons, they want to cheat and put you in the "black box".
Providing "holistic strategies" for the various Global Future Councilsβ€”a kind of transdisciplinary advisoryβ€”is the Global Agenda Council on Complex Systems. Nearly every person on this council is involved in some way with the formulation or the study of a global brain.
We will examine two council members hereβ€” Dirk Helbing (left) and Francis Heylighen (right). Helbing is a member of the International Centre for Earth Simulation in Geneva and a board member of the Global Brain Institute (GBI) in Brussels. Heylighen is the director of the GBI.
GBI studies "the distributed intelligence emerging from the worldwide ICT network that connects all people and machines." Their work seems to indicate a belief that a global mind already exists.
This pseudo-mystical video was found in their "Global Brain Videos" section:
Heylighen is also a director of The Center Leo Apostel (CLEA) founded in 1995 as a transdisciplinary research department. It is situated at the Vrije Universiteit Brussel (VUB), where the Global Brain Group was founded.
CLEA publishes a mixture of complexity science and spooky quantum mysticism. Named after and based on the philosophy of Apostel, a loyal disciple of Jean Piaget.
Of course, Piaget was the director of the International Bureau of Educationβ€” a League of Nations NGO.
CLEA has an odd doppelgangerβ€” 'World Futures: The Journal of General Evolution', a very similar transdisciplinary journal that also publishes the works of cyberneticists and quantum woo... both categories beloved by Heylighen.
Also, it appears to be edited by Ervin LΓ‘szlΓ³.
It seems 'World Futures' is the Journal of the General Evolution Research Group, the research arm of the Club of Budapest, LΓ‘szlΓ³'s quasi-spiritual splinter group from the Club of Rome.
So we have two transdisciplinary journals with nearly identical content coming from people deeply connected to globalist organizations, publishing the work of the same scientists.
And we have an interesting link to this word "transdisciplinary" that barely existed before 1970.
In 1970 Erich Jantsch wrote "Inter-and-Transdisciplinary University: A Systems Approach to Education and Innovation". Jantsch was the co-founder of the Club of Rome.
Jantsch, like LΓ‘szlΓ³ and all the rest, was a crypto-mystic, interweaving esoteric principles into his "science".
@threadreaderapp unroll, my machine friend
A blend of Theosophy, Kabbalah, and science fiction. Here we also have the global or "gestalt" mind.
Notice the publisher.
The first step that The Club of Rome's founders made after its inception in 1968 was to convene a team of experts to develop a suitable methodology. They gave their holistic approach to socio-technical systems the name "systemic innovation".
What were their actionable proposals?
Well, to create a system of research institutes like SRI, CLEA, the Global Brain Institute, or the myriad DARPA funded institutes at Arizona University, such as the Biodesign Institute, the Global Security Initiative, or the Center for Strategic Communication.
Not to pick on ASU, these things are *everywhere*. It makes you realize just how miraculously convenient 'identity politics' has beenβ€” imagine if the students suddenly caught on that their universities were actively engaged in "socially engineering" a horrific sci-fi dystopia?

Loading suggestions...