As a New Zealander, I believe we have been arrogant for a very long time.
We assumed we were safe.
We had nothing to be arrogant about and we were not safe.
Threaded throughout my life has been the idea shared by friends and family, that the lowly masses in impoverished nations are responsible for their own hardships, due in some unexplained way to their own inherent weaknesses. When you travel to impoverished nations, the higher classes also distinctly hold to this idea, that the poor are inferior.
As a health professional coordinating public health programs, I have walked in the chaotic streets of Phnom Penh and watched the way car owners (the wealthy) behave towards pedestrians (the poor). Hit and runs are very common in Cambodia. The poor die from a massive range of preventable causes, often in pain and/or misery, and often only after their families have been bankrupted on an intergenerational scale by medical costs in a corrupt, ineffective and often harmful health system.
Ghandi said “poverty is the worst form of violence”. When I travelled to poor countries, I instinctively knew this to be true, but I did not understand the mechanism. I observed so much poverty and suffering and could not comprehend the complexities of such an entrenched phenomenon, despite understanding that it was a historical consequence of geopolitical events – mainly war – far beyond any blame of those unable to escape it.
In 2017 I was on a motorised canoe on the Mekong River in Eastern Cambodia, delivering rice to a family with vision impairment, when a pregnant woman boarded the canoe from another village, and proceeded to give birth to a baby boy on the boat. She is vision impaired and her son was born with vision impairment of unknown cause. I wondered at the time, if maybe this was the impact of Agent Orange?
There are advocacy groups for the American veterans whose children have various disorders relating to secondary exposure to Agent Orange, although the US government are very reluctant, even now, to admit the poisoning that took place.
Families across Eastern Cambodia where Agent Orange was sprayed in the 1960s are largely illiterate and so impoverished that their main focus has to be on working out how to secure the next meal. With no advocacy services, children in those areas, still being born with disorders potentially caused by the toxic exposure, receive no support and suffer in invisible silence.
A very poignant memory I have, from around 2018, is of standing on the muddy shores of the Mekong River with people living in temporary huts made of bits of wood and refuse. We had to stop our conversation and wait as the billionaire Prime Minister’s black helicopter, flanked by two military helicopters, flew directly overhead, chopping waves into the water. The next day local newspapers shared photographs of grateful villagers somewhere upstream posing with the Prime Minister alongside bags of rice he had generously donated. I marvelled at my luck, coming from a nation whose leaders had no such power over us.
My apparent luck ran out two short years later with the aggressive political shift which began with lockdowns in 2020. We now see censorship of dissent against authorities being written into both national laws and global legislation. Deliberate impoverishment, assisted by deliberate health harms which are ignored and denied by culpable authorities, despite the efforts of courageous advocates such as NZDSOS and The Health Forum NZ, is happening to my own people. Documented intentions for digital identity and central bank digital currency, should they succeed, will form the architecture needed to secure impoverishment and control.
One of the key methods for any coup d'état is the corruption of health systems. In 2020 the New Zealand government incentivised our health system to administer harmful products and protocols, removing the once-respected right of medical professionals to work independently following basic ethical principles such as “first do no harm” and informed consent. My experience within corrupted systems overseas informs me very clearly how this will affect our nation’s health outcomes.
My newfound awareness that the security New Zealanders are accustomed to, of relative wealth and freedom, can be so easily ripped away led me to research why and how our political system became so undemocratic and destructive. Here is a small glimpse of what I have learned so far.
Globally, there is a billionaire class of people who – because it is an inherent tendency – believe that their privilege makes them superior to the rest of us. Rather than using their wealth and power to benefit humanity, they use it to consolidate their power.
Lockdown policies were advanced by spokespeople for the billionaire class, whose wealth increased by $3.78 trillion in 2020. This was a direct plundering from the working and middle classes and has been described as “the most infallible wealth concentration scheme in history”. Global legislation is being implemented to guarantee the success of plans to do it all again.
What happened to the world’s poorest nations – by violence and propaganda – is now happening to the world’s wealthiest nations – via medical harm and propaganda.
Thomas Malthus was an English economist, academic and fellow of the Royal Society. He published an essay in 1798 claiming that the sustainability of the world’s resources is completely dependent upon population control. Known today as Malthusian theory, this ideology is followed by many in the billionaire class, who consider that their rights over global resources must be maintained by preventing over-population and ensuring the lowly masses are controlled.
Malthusian ideology ignores the infinite possibilities for knowledge growth and problem solving. There is also no credible evidence that overpopulation is occurring, or that it is the cause of poverty, which is in fact the result of wealth concentration into the hands of a minority. Learn more from former investment banker and Danish politician, Mads Palsvig on How to End Poverty.
Many of the world’s richest and most powerful are Malthusian zealots, who happen to be the same people using virtuous-sounding causes such as “health” and “climate change” to convince the masses to comply with the decimation of their human rights and freedoms. They speak, albeit largely in secret, of the need to curb the global population. Hiding their agenda in plain sight, they belong to semi-secret societies such as:
Royal Institute of International Affairs (also known as Chatham House),
World Economic Forum and other self-proclaimed “think tanks”.
One name which reappears throughout these various societies is that of Henry Kissinger, who they laud as a leading diplomat and international relations intellectual. In fact, the eight years he spent as National Security Advisor and Secretary of State in Washington DC left a trail of mass suffering and death, including the 1969 secret and prolonged aerial bombing campaign in Cambodia. This led to the success of the genocidal Pol Pot regime, and the death of at least 2 million Cambodians between 1974 and 1979. The nation continues to suffer today because of these violent events.
Kissinger is linked to New Zealand via his role as co-founder of the World Economic Forum, and the key role he played in the Young Global Leaders Program, which former Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern joined in 2014. Other Young Global Leaders, listed at the Malone Institute WEF Project, are:
Ardern now plays a pivotal role in establishing censorship across the free world, as outlined in this recent article and confirmed by Ardern herself at the United Nations in September 2022. She has a fellowship at Harvard University, working to address “social media’s most urgent problems, including misinformation, privacy breaches, harassment, and content governance.”
Once poverty and authoritarian control are established, it is almost impossible to salvage appropriated human rights. Those involved therefore need you to remain in ignorant bliss and convinced of their false virtue.
Become informed. watch
Inform others, including political representatives at local, regional and national level, many of whom are likely helping to implement plans without adequate awareness. There are so many new ideas taking hold internationally, for example this initiative is developing plans and strategies for Taking Control of Local Councils/Government.
Refuse to comply with digital identity, central bank digital currency, and health and behaviour orders which make no sense.
As Michael Gray Griffith of Cafe Locked Out says, “Fear Is The Virus, Courage Is The Cure”.
[MICHAEL GRAY GRIFFITH] At any point now, you are in the army, an army of light that is rising around the world.
It started with the doctors, Dr (Peter) McCullough, all the big ones.
And then they came out and did announcements and then the major bloggers spread that and then various bloggers working their way down spread that.
And then it came down to just grandmothers and lorry drivers sharing it on Telegram and doing this and then refusing to not use cash or using cash, going to little meetings, learning common law.
Every single one of those people is in an army of light.
And we've got a thing in Australia called the 12 apostles, but there's only three of them left.
And they're monoliths that have been chipped, not destroyed by one tsunami or one earthquake, but by lots of little waves.
Little waves hitting it all the time.
And that's how they've brought down these monoliths.
That's what's happening around the world.
There is the army has no generals, no visions, hardly any organization.
It's just this humanity rising like a tsunami wanting freedom coming back the other way.
And so everyone's in the army of light.
And so you could say to those people, you don't know what to do.
You're doing it.
You're already in the army.
Just by standing up, you're in the army and every little bit you help helps us move forward.
And even if we won't reach the promised land or this great freedom thing, the fact that you are helping this army head in the right direction means you'll fall like a beacon of light.
So other people will go, I'm picking up the mantle. I'm going to keep going.
It's a worthy thing to be.
And I think we're all united by this want to save humanity.
That's our core drive.
[JIM FERGUSON] Practical steps as well, because what we're encouraging people to do is to link into local food producers, bypass the supermarkets - they're the ones that are making all the money. It's not the farmers… link up with local people.
So these are practical steps, practical solutions, and getting to know local food producers and farmers is so important, especially when we see the advent of digital ID, central bank, digital currencies, and other methods of control coming now.
We have to build that network, those local hubs.
And we are certainly very, very keen to see people following those networks themselves in their own territories.
[MICHAEL GRAY GRIFFITH] Yeah, and we got a saying over here for our mob.
We call it, and we, it came from a speech we did during the trying to kill the bill in Melbourne called fear is the virus, courage is the cure.
And that still stands.