The author, Miles Mathis, reflects on his recent birthday trip to Austin and then dives into an examination of Hanlon’s Razor. He argues that the adage, “Never attribute to malice that which is adequately explained by stupidity,” is a false and misleading principle, suggesting it’s often used by powerful entities to mask their malevolent intentions with claims of incompetence. Mathis contends that recent global events, particularly the COVID-19 pandemic and vaccine rollout, were not accidental but meticulously planned and executed with malicious intent. He criticizes public figures like Howard Stern and Sean Penn for their perceived complicity, labeling them as agents of chaos.

Mathis proposes his own adages: “Never assume that someone who has profited from an event didn’t create it” and “Never assign to chance that which you can more easily assign to the CIA”. He asserts that major events are rarely accidents and that the mainstream narrative is often a fabrication designed to conceal the truth about “the usual suspects.” He uses the example of alleged contamination in vaccines and public supplies as evidence of deliberate poisoning rather than negligence.

The author then discusses the Russell Brand controversy, viewing the accusations and subsequent demonetization as a managed event orchestrated by MI6 and UK Parliament to discredit and “cancel” him. He believes Brand, like Andrew Tate, has a manufactured popularity that was amplified through fabricated tragedy. Mathis also addresses the power of large tech companies like Google, YouTube, and Tiktok to censor and demonetize individuals, arguing that their actions violate Constitutional rights and that people should pursue legal action.

Shifting to labor issues, Mathis expresses support for unions (UAW, UPS drivers) as a counterbalance to “rich industrialists.” He criticizes the mainstream media’s portrayal of unions and suggests that certain political factions mislead workers into opposing them. He uses wage comparisons between bankers and UPS drivers to illustrate the media’s deceptive reporting, questioning the reliability of search engines like Bing and AI like ChatGPT.

Mathis recounts his experience with a heavily biased Microsoft Edge news homepage, attributing the personalized and extreme Donald Trump-focused content to a deliberate strategy of public factionalization by the government and intelligence agencies. He argues this division prevents public unity and revolution, making citizens easier to control. He reiterates that Hanlon’s Razor fails to account for the deliberate malice behind government actions, pointing to the CIA and other intelligence agencies as the true orchestrators of events.

He concludes by describing the purported “blueprints” for a “New World Order” that prioritize centralized control and mass extermination, driven by a group he refers to as “the Phoenicians,” characterized by their cyclical failures and persistent pursuit of global dominance for profit. Mathis believes this “New World Order” will ultimately fail, much like past endeavors of these groups.

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