
The Magician's Deception: Understanding the Globalist Agenda
How the Hegelian Dialectic Manipulates Public Perception
I wanted to take some time to talk about a crucial concept that helps explain the policies and events we see unfolding globally, specifically in relation to the universal IDs being promoted by governments around the world. It’s important to understand that the governments we observe are, in many ways, just actors working on behalf of their globalist masters. They are strategically implementing - or sometimes ignoring - policies to manufacture a specific, desired result. This process is designed to create the appearance of a naturally occurring sequence of events, a false sense of causality. The mechanism I’m talking about is the Hegelian dialectic, often simplified into the cycle of "problem, reaction, solution".
The Hegelian Dialectic: A Manufactured Cycle
The Hegelian dialectic is a concept attributed to Hegel. For the purposes of understanding global events, we can define it as a cycle where an outcome is achieved through the stages of problem, reaction, and solution.
Creating the Appearance of a Problem
The first step in this dialectic is for those who want a specific outcome—the globalists—to create the appearance of a problem. This is the critical initial deception, the sleight of hand.
The Public's Reaction
This "revealing" of a problem to the public is calculated to trigger a predictable public reaction. This reaction, whether it’s audible or internal, is the audience’s predictable response to the stimulus they are presented with.
The Magician's Analogy
To make this clear, think of it like a magician on stage. The magician performs some flourish - a flash of light, a puff of smoke—and an elephant suddenly appears. The crowd is stunned; they react with surprise, shock, or whatever their individual propensity dictates.
The Predictable Response
The magician knew he was going to perform the trick, so the crowd's reaction is entirely predictable. The audience reacts because they have been prepped by seeing the event unfold on the stage.
The Conclusion: The Solution
After the audience reacts, the magician guides them towards a conclusion—the solution. This solution is what the magician intends for the audience to believe they have arrived at on their own.
The Illusion of Causality
The entire "problem, reaction, solution" cycle is a mechanism for the public to come to a conclusion at the end, believing they witnessed a genuine sequence of events when, in fact, it did not happen that way at all.
The Audience's Conclusion
In the magic show example, the audience's conclusion is that they watched a magic trick where an elephant magically appeared and disappeared. This conclusion becomes the solution to the confusion of what they saw on stage.
Ignorance of Reality
What the audience doesn't know is the reality of the situation. They don't know if the elephant was real, fake, or a projection. They are left with a story, not the truth.
The Spread of the Common Story
What is entirely predictable is that the audience members will all tell the same story: the magician, the black robes, the flash, the smoke, and the appearance and disappearance of the elephant. This becomes the common story because it's what they collectively saw.
The Connection to Predictive Programming
This magician trick illustrates what is going on with predictive programming and the Hegelian dialectic in the real world. The globalist activists create the appearance of a problem to advance their agenda.
Weaponized Migration: A Case Study
Consider the issue of weaponized migration. The global government activists create the appearance of a problem, such as immigrants "raping local women, stealing from people, murdering people," etc.. The public has a reaction, thinking, "it's just a terrible thing, it's awful, and it shouldn't be happening".
Government as the Creator
The astonishing truth is that the government itself often created the very issue by bringing in this weaponized mass migration and paying for it all with taxpayer dollars. The problem wasn't a natural occurrence; it was a deliberate action designed to elicit the reaction that would then allow for the desired solution to be introduced.
This is the power of the Hegelian dialectic as applied by the globalists: to manufacture consent through crisis. They create a problem, observe the public’s predictable reaction, and then step in to offer the solution they intended all along—a solution that fundamentally changes society in a way that benefits their agenda, whether it’s implementing universal IDs or consolidating power. The key to resisting this is to look past the smoke and mirrors of the stage, recognize the cycle of problem, reaction, and solution, and ask what really happened behind the scenes, rather than accepting the collective, predictable story we are meant to tell.