A recursive meta-governance model exists—one that reshapes the world, one crisis at a time: quietly, morally, technically, structurally, and legally. And it’s being put to use in official capacity—again and again and again.
What begins as the measurement of carbon dioxide becomes a financial system.
What begins as a pandemic response becomes digital identity.
What begins as a moral campaign becomes censorship and algorithmic governance.
1. Identify a systemic crisis or moral failing
The first move is to spotlight a claimed, significant threat or injustice—often one that transcends borders with no obvious or sovereign remedy. It could be environmental collapse, a pandemic, disinformation deemed a threat to our way of life, or systems of inequality often amorphous, undefined, or impossible to quantify precisely. These are framed as urgent, moral imperatives that cannot go ignored—for the ‘common good’.
The framing of the issue should generate emotional weight—fear, guilt, empathy—and create a consensus that something must be done, fast.
Examples:
Climate change (UNFCCC/IPCC) is defined as an existential planetary emergency.
Pandemics (WHO/WEF) are portrayed as security threats on par with terrorism.
Misinformation (UNESCO/WEF) is cast as a digital epidemic that undermines democracy and our way of life.
2. Reframe the problem as technical, borderless, urgent, and non-negotiable
Once the alleged crisis is established (typically facilitated through pervasive media campaigns of fear), it is quickly reframed as a technical systems problem—complex, globally interconnected, and solvable only through expert knowledge, computational modelling, and international coordination.
This removes the issue from cultural, political, or ideological debate and presents it as requiring allegedly neutral, data-driven solutions—generally beyond the capacity or authority of any single nation, or even capability of most individuals.
Examples:
WEF’s Global Risks Reports classify climate, cyber risk, and misinformation as interconnected systemic threats.
BIS/IMF describe financial instability not in terms of debt or injustice, but as contagion and liquidity issues.
UN Food Systems Summit (2021) portrayed global food inequality as a systems engineering problem, sidelining land rights or sovereignty.
3. Design systems-based interventions using expert modeling
The solution becomes a dashboard, a computational model, a theoretical framework—all outside the domain of the nosy contrarian. Experts and consultancies build scenario tools and performance metrics, while social scientists are employed to identify behavioral levers.
The goal is to manage populations and risk—not through laws or politics—through continual feedback loops. This reframes governance as a continuous, technical process—solvable only through engineering. Assuming the model is correct, the system can be optimised to enforce the prescribed solution.
Examples:
IPCC emissions pathways define carbon budgets and net-zero timelines as scientific absolutes.
WHO’s Pandemic Preparedness Frameworks use behavioral and epidemiological models to guide future lockdown or vaccine strategies.
The World Bank’s Human Capital Index quantifies individuals as assets to be developed, managed, and invested in.
4. Create mediating institutions or PPP platforms
Now comes the rollout: intermediary institutions are established—or existing ones are upgraded—to manage the solution. These typically employ mediation through multistakeholder platforms, with public-private partnerships created to operationalise the effort.
The mediators operate ‘above politics’ (yet typically below public visibility), ultimately resulting in a technocratic class, operating outside of democratic accountability. These bodies slowly and silently begin to broaden their scope under claims of operational efficiency or out of alleged necessity, consolidating power across sectors—all while claiming political neutrality.
Examples:
COVAX (Gavi, WHO, CEPI, World Bank) distributed vaccines globally, prioritising corporate IP and donor control while bypassing national sovereignty.
UN Global Compact gathers corporations and civil society into voluntary global rulemaking, supplanting elected authority.
The International Sustainability Standards Board (IFRS Foundation/WEF) sets global ESG rules that corporations must follow, despite no democratic oversight.
5. Wrap the intervention in moral and affective legitimacy
Technical solutions are not easily ‘sold’ to the people, consequently, these are reframed in ethical language and emotional appeal. The narrative becomes about care, safety, equity, and responsibility, and efforts begin to fuse this morality with education, eventually evolving into outright cultural engineering.
This is crucial: it makes the governance system not only acceptable, but morally unquestionable. Dissent is no longer considered disagreement—it becomes dangerous, selfish, or regressive. Citizens become moral agents, carrying out the will of computational models created without oversight, that is neither democratically elected, accountable, nor even open to challenge.
Examples:
The SDGs are framed as humanity’s shared moral roadmap—making compliance feel virtuous, not optional.
One Health (WHO/FAO/UNEP) uses interspecies care to expand biosecurity controls across sectors.
The UN “Verified” campaign (2020) promoted “trust in science” during COVID, conflating loyalty to official messaging with moral virtue.
6. Deploy soft law, digital infrastructure, and algorithmic enforcement
Rather than enforce behavior through legal coercion, the system now governs through platforms, nudges, and ethical compliance to technical standards. Voluntary frameworks, normative codes of behaviour, interoperability protocols, algorithmic filters, and access conditions begin to direct how people act, what they can do, and what they can say—without direct laws.
Governance becomes ambient, yet elusive—everywhere, and nowhere. You never see it, but you always feel its presence.
Examples:
Digital ID programs promoted by the World Bank, UNDP, and ID4D regulate access to healthcare, banking, or aid based on identity compliance.
ESG ratings (UNPRI/BlackRock/WEF) determine which companies get investment, effectively setting global behavior standards via private capital.
Social media trust & safety boards (inspired by UNESCO/WEF standards) throttle or boost content via opaque rules—governing speech through reach.
7. Use crisis moments to ratchet the system forward
A sudden, major crisis becomes a moment to consolidate gains. Emergency powers, temporary tools, and pilot programs are normalised and expanded. Once people have accepted new behaviors or institutions ‘for their safety’, these almost immediately shift, demanding adherence to alleged developments such as ‘mutations’ or ‘unpredicted outcomes’, progressively demanding ‘holistic’ solutions to every new problem.
This works to create conditions from which it becomes difficult to return to prior norms. The result: institutional ratcheting—what was once exceptional becomes standard, yet this standard is not set in stone, as ‘the science’ is said to ‘change’.
Examples:
Post-2008 Financial Crisis (BIS/IMF) expanded central bank roles, coordinated surveillance, and tightened cross-border capital rules.
COVID-19 (WHO/WEF/ID2020) accelerated adoption of digital health passports, travel restrictions, and biosecurity systems.
COP26 (2021) introduced language of “loss and damage,” allowing future climate compensation mechanisms to be ratcheted into finance and legal frameworks.
8. Crystallise into hard law or binding frameworks—with embedded renewal mechanisms
Once the system is normalised, it becomes law. Soft measures turn into mandates. What was once optional becomes legally binding. But crucially, these laws are not static—they include open-ended language, ‘adaptive governance’ clauses, built-in review cycles, or complex terminology or phrasing that seems ambiguous or premature in a contemporary context—designed for later activation.
This makes it easy to later expand legislation, reframed during future crises, or quietly developed into new domains.
Examples:
WHO’s proposed Pandemic Treaty transforms voluntary pandemic protocols into binding legal authority—with powers that can expand in future emergencies.
EU’s Digital Identity Regulation legally mandates interoperable digital ID infrastructure for all citizens—opening the door for programmable access across sectors.
The Paris Agreement locks countries into emissions targets, with a built-in Global Stocktake every five years—ensuring continuous ratcheting and reinterpretation.
A machine that builds - but never ends
This 8-step process does not conclude—it loops back on itself, only now from a higher level of control.
Once a full iteration is complete—and a framework is codified in law—it becomes the platform for new developments of governance—often under different names, in different domains, yet following the same structural logic:
The Carbon Dioxide measurements (Keeling > World Climate Conference > IPCC > Paris Agreement) opens the door to carbon finance, net-zero supply chains, and ESG regulation.
Pandemic crisis (Public Health Surveillance > WHO > Digital health passes) becomes a precedent for digital ID, biometric travel systems, and programmable entitlements.
Financial crisis (BIS/IMF > Basel III) justifies monetary coordination, CBDC experimentation, and financial inclusion mandates.
Misinformation crisis (Information Terrorism > UNESCO > WEF) paves the way for automated content moderation, digital literacy education, and narrative control standards.
The issues change—but the underlying mechanism remains the same:
Crisis → Technocracy → Platform → Normalisation → Law → …
And the cycle then repeats, under a more specialised guise:
Each crisis produces its own system of control, outside of democratic legitimacy.
Each system of control becomes the baseline for the next crisis.
And each new cycle establishes a higher level of institutional power.
What begins as the measurement of carbon dioxide becomes a financial system.
What begins as a pandemic response becomes digital identity.
What begins as a moral campaign becomes censorship and algorithmic governance.
The issues may change—but the structure remains the same.
Case study: The Covid-19 pandemic.
1. Identify a systemic crisis or moral failing
A novel coronavirus is said to emerge. Governments and institutions, with media amplification, frame it as an unprecedented global threat—one that affects all humanity, knows no borders, and demands extraordinary sacrifice.
The narrative becomes a moral one: protect the vulnerable, save lives, stay home, comply. Dissent is equated with selfishness or danger. Collective guilt becomes a tool of mobilisation. ‘Us versus them’ framing dominates a compliant media.
Key institutions: WHO, WEF, UN, Gavi
Framing phrases: ‘We’re all in this together’, ‘flatten the curve’, ‘only two weeks’
2. Reframe the problem as technical, borderless, urgent, and non-negotiable
The pandemic is redefined as a failure of global systems—of health infrastructure, early warning networks, data harmonisation, and preparedness protocols.
This depoliticises the crisis: it is no longer about biopolitics or sovereignty—it is a global technical problem in need of global technical management, requiring global public health surveillance, and global coordination.
Key reports:
WEF Global Risks Report (2021) links pandemic to future digital security and economic instability
WHO’s IHR review stresses need for improved global coordination
ID2020/WEF papers cite lack of digital identity infrastructure as a barrier to pandemic response
3. Design systems-based interventions using expert modelling
Computational models become the basis for lockdown policy. Dashboards and predictive tools drive mass behavioural interventions: mobility restrictions, social distancing, contact tracing, even quarantine policy.
Vaccination strategy is guided by scenario planning. Social compliance becomes a metric. ‘Science’ becomes synonymous with simulation. ‘Impartial’ expert polls are promoted as the ‘best available science’, predicated on the idea of universal scientific infallibility—science is promoted to become a religion which you simply must ‘trust’, even if it frequently appears to ‘change’.
Tools:
Imperial College London’s virus spread modelling
IHME’s global dashboard forecasts
WHO’s ACT Accelerator blueprint (Access to COVID-19 Tools)
4. Create mediating institutions or PPP platforms
Public-private coalitions are launched to coordinate the response. These include vaccine development, distribution, certification, and data governance. Global public health surveillance and laboratory capacity demand similar upgrades.
COVAX becomes the vehicle for global vaccine equity—run by Gavi, CEPI, WHO, and the World Bank. Simultaneously, new governance frameworks are proposed for interoperable vaccine passports and identity.
Platforms:
COVAX (Gavi/CEPI/WHO/UNICEF)
CommonPass (WEF + The Commons Project)
ID2020 (Microsoft, Gavi, Accenture, Rockefeller Foundation)
5. Wrap the intervention in moral and affective legitimacy
Health is framed as not just a personal good by social scientists, but a collective moral duty. To refuse lockdown, masking, or vaccination is to endanger others.
The language of care, solidarity, and public responsibility is used to frame bio-surveillance infrastructure as benevolent. Digital ID is positioned as inclusive, secure, rational, future-proof, and protective.
Narratives:
‘No one is safe until everyone is safe’
‘Vaccine equity for all’
‘Leave no one behind‘
6. Deploy soft law, digital infrastructure, and algorithmic enforcement
Legal mandates are avoided. Instead, access to public space, employment, and travel is controlled via apps and digital passes. Behaviour is modulated through continuous nudging, incentives, and peer pressure—implemented by platforms, not parliaments.
Compliance becomes a condition for participation. Refusal lead to ostracisation.
Examples:
Green Pass (EU) and NHS Covid Pass (UK) as access systems
Trust and Safety Boards throttle content on social media regarding vaccines or lockdowns
QR code contact tracing becomes ubiquitous across Asia and parts of Europe
7. Use crisis moments to ratchet the system forward
As talk of new, even more ‘dangerous variants’ increase on television, the pandemic paves the way for new permanent systems:
health passports
biometric ID
digital wallets
workplace vaccine mandates
real-time health surveillance
What began as temporary measures for health become the blueprint for identity, access, and mobility controls—integrated into smart cities and financial platforms. Everything is promoted through convenience.
Examples:
EU Digital Identity Framework proposed as extension of vaccine pass infrastructure
WEF’s Known Traveller Digital Identity pilot resumes post-pandemic
African Union Digital ID strategy accelerated as a health inclusion tool
8. Crystallise into hard law—with embedded renewal mechanisms
Countries begin formalising vaccine pass systems and digital ID legislation, not just for pandemic use but for broader e-government and financial access. The WHO’s proposed Pandemic Accord introduces binding legal structures for a future ‘emergency response’ which embed digital surveillance and coordination.
Meanwhile, new pathogens, or climate-health links become justifications to expand the infrastructure.
Examples:
WHO Pandemic Treaty draft includes language around universal health certification
EU Digital Identity Regulation enshrines interoperable ID linked to biometrics and e-wallets
CBDC pilots begin incorporating digital identity and programmable access
Case study: Climate Change.
1. Identify a systemic crisis or moral failing
Rising carbon dioxide levels are framed as the root cause of an impending planetary catastrophe—global warming, extreme weather, biodiversity collapse. A deeply moral narrative is constructed: the Earth is dying, and industrial civilisation is to blame.
It becomes a civilisational crisis, requiring urgent collective action. To emit is to sin. The framing generates guilt, fear, and the idea that those who resist ‘climate action’ are putting future generations—and the global, ‘marginalised’ poor—at risk.
Key institutions: UNFCCC, IPCC, UNEP, WEF
Framing phrases: ‘The science is settled’, ‘Save the planet’, ‘Net zero or zero future’
2. Reframe the problem as technical, borderless, urgent, and non-negotiable
Climate change is redefined not as a political or economic issue, but a planetary systems failure.
Temperature targets are defined through expert consensus. Solutions are presented as technical (carbon pricing, emissions tracking, moderation in consumption), not ideological or cultural. Everything is presented as urgent. There is ‘no time’ for democratic deliberation.
Key reports:
IPCC Assessment Reports define emissions limits as scientific necessity
WEF Global Risks Report places climate as the top threat to global order
World Bank climate finance strategy frames it as a development finance opportunity
3. Design systems-based interventions using expert modelling
Emissions targets, carbon budgets, and climate models define permissible behaviour at planetary scale. Abstract modelling becomes the basis for national policy. Climate becomes a matter of computational modelling—though critically lacking in oversight:
‘1.5°C or 2°C’
‘tonnes of CO₂ per capita’
‘safe planetary boundaries for humanity’
These models justify policy pathways, funding schemes, behavioural change campaigns through nudging, and—not least—global surveillance.
Tools:
IPCC scenarios (RCPs, SSPs) simulate possible futures
Carbon accounting systems (GHG Protocol, ISO 14064)
Climate risk dashboards used by insurers, banks, and regulators
4. Create mediating institutions or PPP platforms
Institutions are created—or expanded—to monitor, verify, and manage emissions and claimed climate risk. UN bodies, banks, corporate alliances, and NGOs collaborate in public-private ‘climate governance’ platforms.
These mediators operate above sovereignty (but below public visibility), establishing metrics and frameworks that shape global policy through indirect influence, with no democratic accountability should these be proven wrong.
Platforms:
UNFCCC and COP summits as agenda-setting arenas
Task Force on Climate-related Financial Disclosures (TCFD)
Science Based Targets initiative (SBTi) + WEF alliances
5. Wrap the intervention in moral and affective legitimacy
Climate action is positioned not just as policy, but as a moral imperative. Young people, indigenous groups, and vulnerable populations are mobilised as symbolic representatives of planetary justice. Having the nerve to oppose or even question ‘climate solutions’ is to endanger life itself, and certainly ‘not scientifically literate’, thus deserving of outright censorship from public debate.
Corporate and institutional compliance becomes a sign of virtue. The individual becomes a moral agent, responsible for collective survival.
Narratives:
‘Climate justice now’
‘Your carbon footprint is killing the planet’
‘This is our last chance to act’
6. Deploy soft law, digital infrastructure, and algorithmic enforcement
Emissions are tracked, scored, and disclosed through non-binding frameworks—yet these quickly are rewarded through easier access to finance, trade, and legitimacy. Behaviour is influenced through ESG ratings, climate risk disclosure requirements, and personal carbon calculators.
Governance moves from law to infrastructure and reputation management.
Examples:
ESG investment filters based on emissions disclosures
Voluntary carbon markets with complex offset rules
Apps and calculators encourage citizens to modify habits via gamified feedback
7. Use crisis moments to ratchet the system forward
Each IPCC report, wildfire season, flood, or climate conference is framed as a ‘last chance’. Every event is used to consolidate commitments, introduce new regulations, increase surveillance, and increse the flow of public funds to blended finance ‘biodiversity restoration projects’ through further climate taxation.
Language shifts from voluntary to mandatory, from ambition to enforcement. Climate becomes a permanent emergency.
Examples:
COP26 introduced “loss and damage” and net-zero enforcement mechanisms
EU taxonomy dictates what counts as “sustainable” for investors
Mandatory climate disclosures emerging in the UK, EU, and beyond
8. Crystallise into hard law—with embedded renewal mechanisms
Global temperatures suddenly increase sharply, outside modelled expectation. Out of alleged necessity, soft frameworks become embedded in binding legislation:
national carbon budgets
mandatory emissions disclosures
net-zero targets
green taxonomies
ESG compliance rules
But these laws contain flexible clauses: pathway revisions, science updates, periodic reviews—ensuring they can be expanded and tightened over time. However, foundational changes require international agreement, in effect eliminating sovereign decision-taking on central matters.
Examples:
Paris Agreement includes 5-year “Global Stocktakes” to continually raise ambition
EU Green Deal includes carbon border taxes and industry targets
Mandatory ESG reporting becomes law under the Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD)
Case Study: The Financial Crisis
1. Identify a systemic crisis or moral failing
The global financial system spirals sprials towards a collapse. Media and institutional framing define it as the result of reckless speculation, greedy banks, and regulatory failure. The crisis is moralised: capitalism has lost its way.
Without immediate intervention, the entire economic system is set to allegedly implode, promptly sold to the people through claims of impending retirement fund collapse. People are asked—indirectly—to bear the cost of saving the system which failed them. No realistic alternatives are considered, especially those suggesting a transfer of power away from central banks.
Key institutions: BIS, IMF, ECB, US Fed, G20
Framing phrases: ‘Too big to fail’, ‘Systemic risk’, ‘Global contagion’
2. Reframe the problem as technical, borderless, urgent, and non-negotiable
The predicted collapse is recast not as a political or structural issue, but a liquidity crisis—a failure of risk modelling and the interconnected financial architecture.
The solution proposed is technical: stress tests, capital buffers, financial surveillance, and even closer integration. Technocratic, supranational institutions present themselves as the only ones with the strategic placement, expertise, ability and tools to contain the issue.
Key reports:
BIS: Basel III Framework—strengthening capital requirements and risk modelling
FSB reports on cross-border systemic risk
IMF surveillance and liquidity support programs
3. Design systems-based interventions using expert modelling
With the crisis reframed as a technical failure of the global system, the response is handed to experts and central bank economists. A series of interventions are introduced—justified by data, modelling, and the appearance of scientific precision.
New frameworks are deployed to monitor and manage what is now called systemic risk:
stress testing banks
calculating leverage ratios
designing capital adequacy formulas
using predictive models to anticipate shocks
The financial system is reframed as a machine to be tuned by experts. The public role is simply to fund it, and certainly not speculate why their last fixes appears to have only amplified the problems.
Tools:
Basel III capital risk models
IMF’s Financial Sector Assessment Programs (FSAPs)
Real-time payment system designs by BIS and national banks
4. Create mediating institutions or PPP platforms
New institutions emerge—or existing ones are upgraded—to coordinate the response. These take the form of public-private partnerships or multilateral platforms that operate transnationally, outside direct democratic control.
Their role is to mediate between markets, states, and global objectives for the ‘common good’, but in practice they centralise decision-making and entrench the authority of central banks, development banks, and financial technocrats.
These bodies frame their function as neutral coordinators, yet through their solutions proposed they act as the architects of global economic governance.
Examples:
FSB (Financial Stability Board) coordinates systemic risk frameworks across G20 nations
BIS Innovation Hub develops cross-border financial infrastructure
World Bank + IFC expand blended finance and ESG-aligned investment channels
5. Wrap the intervention in moral and affective legitimacy
Mediated finance is reframed as a tool for stability, inclusion, equity, and human development. New goals are set, which promise to address several systemic issues in one go: sustainable finance, green bonds, financial inclusion for the unbanked.
The same system that collapsed is rebranded as the solution to further address inequality, underdevelopment, and structural unfairness—with improved algorithms, surveillance, and centralised control by democratically unaccountable ‘mediators’.
Narratives:
‘Build back better’
‘Finance for the SDGs’
‘Digital inclusion is a human right’
6. Deploy soft law, digital infrastructure, and algorithmic enforcement
New norms are introduced not through law, but through voluntary frameworks, ESG disclosures, and digital finance platforms. Access to capital gradually becomes conditional on meeting risk, climate, or governance standards.
Individuals are nudged into digital-only payment systems, credit scores, personal carbon tracking, and fintech ecosystems. Inconvenience is weaponised, with legacy systems eventually becoming ‘uneconomical’.
Examples:
BIS Project Helvetia and Project Dunbar—testing CBDC interoperability
UNDP digital finance strategy promoting e-wallets, credit scoring in the Global South
ESG and SDG-aligned funds dictate who gets capital and on what terms
7. Use crisis moments to ratchet the system forward
New crises (COVID-19, inflation, geopolitical shocks) are framed as further proof of the need for integrated, digitised, centralised monetary systems. Cash is seen as risky, slow, marginalising, exclusionary, and framed as facilitating unetical, even illegal practices.
The answer? Central Bank Digital Currencies (CBDCs)—convenient, net zero compliant, equitable, inclusive, and… programmable, and easily traced.
Examples:
G7 and G20 support CBDC pilot frameworks
Nigeria (eNaira), China (eCNY), and EU (Digital Euro) test digital currencies
World Economic Forum promotes public-private models for "digital financial inclusion"
8. Crystallise into hard law—with embedded renewal mechanisms
Initially rolled out through public services, Digital ID becomes mandatory for access to financial systems. CBDCs begin to enter legal frameworks. Carbon tracking, ESG compliance, personal carbon allowances, and smart contracts are embedded in programmable money.
The infrastructure is now legal, global, adaptive, and inescapable—designed to further evolve with each new financial disruption.
Examples:
EU’s MiCA Regulation formalises crypto, stablecoin, and digital asset compliance
India’s Digital Public Infrastructure combines ID, e-wallets, and credit scoring
IMF's CBDC handbook proposes design templates for programmable currencies
The Pattern, Complete
Each step builds toward the next.
What begins as a virus becomes a verification system.
What begins as care becomes compliance.
What begins as concern becomes calculation.
What begins as an atmospheric molecule becomes a global compliance regime.
What begins as market collapse becomes monetary transformation.
What begins as financial rescue becomes programmable compliance.
As the memory of the crisis fades, the infrastructure remains. This eventually expands into emission credits, ESG scoring, personal behaviour tracking, vaccination schedules, 15-minute cities… the crisis never ends—it only evolves.
And with it, the system that governs it.
This is governance without consent, without democratic representation, without accountability… and without even oversight, or the possibility of appeal. All pivoted on the needs of the collective, not the desire nor drive of the individual.
All framed around the logic of oppressor versus oppresed: the women, the elderly, the poor, the marginalised. Those who allegedly are not given an opportunity to speak up, yet are promised a chance—if they are selected as stakeholders during a future ‘mediation’ process. A mechanism, casually exploited in every capacity through the inclusion of a permanent mediating entity, operating outside of democratic legitimacy, employed under principles of ‘subsidiarity’, where irrelevant policy is decentralised and matters of importance are centralised—globally.
Summarised, the entire methodology can be said to fly under the radar as—
One of the first examples of this was the War on Terror. Amorphous, borderless, technical solutions like invasive security checks, exagerated.
Another aspect of the system is to get everyone to inform on each other.
Invisible menace has the potential to be more terrifying than violence as it can last longer- you can draw it out for a long time- even an eternity- the thing you can’t see. Good story tellers understand this- Hitchcock understood this. The psychos running the Bio-Security State know this.
This is why the perpetuation of the invisible virus that can strike anyone at any time is so useful as a control mechanism. The catapulting of GoF and "Covid" variants and on and on was part of the Covid Psyop. Those who perpetuate these fabrications are part of the problem, knowingly or not, and are doing the work for the Bio-security State by maintaining and heightening the fear mechanisms.
The beauty of the idea of a “virus” is that it is an invisible, submicroscopic enemy. The result is an unparalleled spread of panic and fear, trumping even that of terrorists. The "War on Covid" and “viruses” in general has effectively replaced the "War on Terror®."
"The Virus®" is the new Al Qaeda.
People who have fell for this illusory terror are desperate for explanations and heroes and “bombshell reports.” They want something simple and not too far afield that can explain it all away.
Start talking about global operations, conditional UBI, programmable CBDCs, digital slavery, mass surveillance rolled across the world via an endless series of manufactured crises it becomes too much to fathom even as it is happening right before our eyes.
“It’s just a virus and some bad actors” say the public. “A bioweapon that needs to be contained next time” say the subverted Covid oppositional actors.
Plenty of narrative reinforcement to go around. The “lab leak”, "bioweapon" story constantly resurfaces amongst the “acceptable” ‘Covid sceptics’ and serves as a smokescreen.
The “lab leak” propaganda has always been a red herring to cover up the actual crimes epidemic of violent government and medical assault against people, of false attribution of death, and of intense propaganda using fraudulent tests and bogus studies that were committed.
Reifying the Big Lie that there ever was a "pandemic" caused by a "unique viral pathogen" in 2020 covers up the crimes of what actually happened in the hospitals and nursing homes as well as provides cover for those who designed and executed this operation.