“After being sued by 38 states, Google admitted last March that its weird-looking cars outfitted with roof cameras facing four directions were not just taking pictures; they were collecting data from computers inside homes and structures, including ‘passwords, e-mails and other personal information from unsuspecting computer users.'” ~ Steven Rosenfeld, “4 insane ways Google has been invading our privacy. It’s even worse than you thought…”

By Catherine Austin Fitts

Our theme for the 1st Quarter 2020 Wrap Up is “The Real Deal on Going Local.”

We start our discussion of what is happening at the local level with the publisher of Technocracy News, Patrick M. Wood. Check out our recent interviews with Patrick on Technocracy and Opportunity Zones, which provide critical insights to understand the rapid changes underway.

In this week’s interview, Patrick and I review “the final mile” as the Internet of Things (IOT) continues to be integrated into local communities and residential housing. This is a tsunami of digital and wireless technology, accompanied by an unprecedented deluge of new laws and regulation related to “sustainable development”—and the resulting push to use these to centralize ownership and control of local land, real estate, and economies.

Where we are now is bad enough. Unfortunately, Washington and Silicon Valley are busy lobbying for even worse proposals—from the Green New Deal to implanting chips in our bodies and injecting nanotechnology that lodges in our brains and nervous system—as well as printing and handing out trillions to insiders. In combination, these proposals are not just working toward the end of property rights but toward a slavery system managed centrally with the aid of AI, mind control, and wireless systems. For people used to a culture that believes in individual sovereignty and divine intelligence, it can be challenging to fathom that this is really happening.

Patrick has a deep command of the multiple systems integrating into our local communities. In addition to serving as editor-in-chief of Technocracy News, he is now working to educate his neighbors at Globalization of Arizona and Citizens for Free Speech. In our interview, Patrick provides an excellent overview of how things are coming together in our communities and residential neighborhoods.

In Let’s Go to the Movies, I will review Josh del Sol’s powerful award-winning documentary Take Back Your Power 2017 on “smart” meters and the “smart” grid. It does an excellent job of connecting the dots between “smart technology” and the compromising of our property rights and draining of our health and finances.

Subscribers can e-mail or post questions and story suggestions for Money & Markets for this week here.

1st Quarter Wrap Ups:

1st Quarter 2020 Wrap Up: The Real Deal on Going Local – The Infrastructure Challenge with Chuck Marohn
1st Quarter 2020 Wrap Up: News, Trends & Stories, Part II with Dr. Joseph P. Farrell
1st Quarter 2020 Wrap Up – News Trends & Stories, Part I with Dr. Joseph P. Farrell

17 Comments

  1. Thanks for another great interview. Obviously you both do a lot of homework before the event that makes the final presentation seamless. (not seem less, ha ha). I am curious- do you discuss a roadmap ahead of time about the sequence of questions and absorption to readers, or do you both just let it rip and see where it goes. Thanks.

    1. Wide variation between guests and topics. Some require tremendous amount of preparation – others not as much. I always provide guests with info on what I want to cover. Our goal is to get you actionable intelligence.
      The reason we have other hosts for Science, Wellness and Food is I needed people with greater mastery of those topics. Will continue to add other hosts for that reason.

  2. Looking at the gov site with list of Opportunity Zones shows census tract numbers in the county where I live, but can not find how to relate the tract nos. to addresses/county areas. Can you help me identify which local entities would be most likely to provide me that information. I get very frustrated with bureaucrat office clerks.
    Thank you Catherine for these wonderful conversations with Patrick Wood. It helps to drill down closer to Patrick’s book Technocracy Rising. It is a hair raiser for sure.

    1. Other subscribers have had similar frustration. Here is where I would start

      1. Local economic development office
      2. Local title registrar
      3. Local title firms and appraisers
      4. State economic development office – one people had to go to the state as it was the governor who was allocating zones
      5. Tax authorities – ultimately the state and local tax authorities are likely going to have to take things into account so they may know.

      Would very much appreciate your letting us know what you find.

      Thanks!

      1. Catherine,
        I looked up NC Economic Opportunity Zones. Voila, A map showing 252 zones in NC. I plugged in my address and it appears that I am not in one. I live in Guilford Co. just above one in Randolph Co. Over a number of years a consortium consisting of a family foundation and other private investors have been buying lots of farmland so they could have enough to sell to what they heralded would be an auto plant. No takers. A railroad that is owned by the state also was put in the mix to assure land bordering the railroad would be included. The railroad was an integral part of the enticement. I have made bets over the last 10 yrs that no auto company would open a plant in that location (unless perhaps as a military munitions plant) in NC. So this consortium, I guess owns the land and gets to pay no taxes? And it can just sit there doing nothing, especially farming.
        Thanks for your assistance
        Alison Cline

    2. Your state and investment advisors in your state should have mapping programs that also will identify a specific address. Some of the programs are easy to use – others are difficult. What is your state?

  3. NYS is having a HUGE unemployment insurance problem. The NY dept of labor has an archaic system that was SLAMMED when the shutdown happen. People are ready to riot. Then Cuomo announced a partnership with Google on getting more servers and help managing their system.

    I just wanted to hurl. Never let a crisis go to waste.

    1. The plandemic is designed to cut off money to sellers and feed money to buyers. All the excuses of the cut off are designed to make it look like accident, incompetence, complexity to give the buyers time to siphon more money out of the Treasuries and central banks. Looking more like a cut and run. Still to early too tell. No problem is getting money to the insider hedge funds in 1-24 hours. 🙂

  4. One of my favorite pastimes is to watch shows like Antique Road Show or anything on antiques. On Pawn Stars, the first ever Apple Computer became available for sale. They went into the history of the Apple Computer and how the company started. The biggest thing that I learned, when the first Apple computer hit the market in the 70s guess how much the retail price was….

    $666.66….

    That’s where it truly hit home for me. These people are not joking.

  5. Is the library going to be uploaded – or maybe I am seeing a holding page?

    Also is there a recording on Narco dollars? I thought I heard it once and can’t find it – THANKS!!!

    1. Library is there. Just click on it in the navigation bar. If it is slow to come up could be the DDS attacks we have been experiencing since we published Jon Rappoports audios.

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