Last updated on 11 July 2022
[ Originally posted on Facebook 10 July 2020; additions dated ]
Five nearly 20-foot-tall granite slabs, topped à la Stonehenge by a capstone, were erected in the USA’s Elbert County, Georgia in 1980. They were the work of a self-professed ‘small group of loyal Americans.’
These dealt with the Elberton Granite Finishing Company via an intermediary who used an alias; they paid the EGFC’s intentionally grossly inflated quote without demur; they provided exhaustive specifications and a scale model; and they insisted on remaining anonymous.
Chiselled into the stones are a set of ten guidelines or principles, in eight languages: Arabic, English, Hebrew, Hindi, Russian, Spanish, Swahili and Traditional Chinese.
An additional tablet gives more information about the Guidestones, with texts in Babylonian (cuneiform), Classical Greek, Sanskrit and Ancient Egyptian (hieroglyphs).
Some of the principles are anodyne enough, e.g. #5: “Protect people and nations with fair laws and just courts“; or #9: “Prize truth—beauty—love—seeking harmony with the infinite.”
And who could possibly take issue with Principle #7: “Avoid petty laws and useless officials.”
However, it’s Principle #1: “Maintain humanity under 500,000,000 in perpetual balance with nature.” and Principle #2: “Guide reproduction wisely—improving fitness and diversity,” that seem to argue a rather less benevolent agenda.
Or, as Wikipedia puts it in typically mealy-mouthed terms: “The anonymity of the guidestones’ authors and their apparent advocacy of population control, eugenics, and internationalism have made them a target for controversy and conspiracy theory.”
I should effing cocoa . . .
So someone (in fact several someones) laid out bonkers money to avow formally—in stone—their wish to “maintain humanity under 500 million.”
Well, I guess Covid’s a start.
However, given that our population currently exceeds 7 billion, the stated worldwide Covid death toll of somewhere over 500,000 to date [in July 2020] isn’t even making a dent (worldwide annual births: around 140 million)—plus it’s mostly taking out the old and infirm, who are generally past reproductive age.
If you’re really serious about reducing Earth’s population, you’ve got to start killing off the baby-makers of the future, and—אֱלֹהִים [Elohim] forbid—the babies too . . .
Conclusion: More, and (oh dear) worse to come?
[ 11 July 2021 addition ]
There are reports of tenders appearing in the UK for “temporary body storage.” Here’s one such, published yesterday (10 June 2021) on the gov.uk website by Westminster City Council. The initial time-frame is four years . . .
A Reuters “fact-check” (here) opined: “While the tender is real, it is not linked to the vaccine or the current pandemic. Westminster Council told Reuters it replaces a similar contract that is due to expire.“
Hmm. Unfortunate timing though . . .
[ 17 September 2021 addition ]
A UK funeral director speaks about his experiences over the last couple of years.
He also makes some chilling predictions about our near future.
And yes, it does seem there may indeed be more—and (oh dear, oh dear) worse—yet to come . . .
[ 7 July 2022 addition ]
Interesting. The Georgia Guidestones are no more. The BBC reports that an explosion yesterday reduced one of the pillars to rubble, and the whole thing has now been “demolished for safety reasons.”
So what do you reckon? An outraged citizen (or group of citizens) who found certain of the Guidestones’ messages just too much? Or someone (or group of someones) higher up who felt too much was being given away?
One clue might be that CCTV footage showed a car leaving the scene around the time of the first explosion. Watch to see if anyone is found and prosecuted. If so it’ll be a private citizen; if not, well . . .
And then of course we have the almost instant destruction and removal of evidence from what was plainly a crime scene (remind you of anything 9/11-ish?).
So will the Guidestones (or something like them) be rebuilt? Or is this just a rare victory in the battle against those who would enslave us?
As always, you decide . . .
P.S. For those of a cynical or skeptical disposition, maybe ponder this: the initial explosion took place at precisely 3:33 a.m. . . .