Wednesday, December 14, 2016

So what happened on November 4th?

Question: "You mentioned several times that a major event was going to happen on November 4th, but I have seen nothing happen.  Did you screw up your dates, or just blowing smoke out of your ass again?"


Answer:

I too was a bit disappointed in what happened.  I had worked myself up into enough of a frenzy that I was expecting the clouds to part, and celestial trumpets to blare out!

Okay, not really, but I really was unsure how it would appear in the news.  And.... Like you stated, nothing seemed to happen.








But.... Something did happen.  Something big.


So, what happened?

At noon EST on November 4th, they publicly announced the ratification of the Global Treaty on Climate Change (or whatever the official title is).

Right about now I bet you're thinking:  "Boo... Hiss...  That treaty is BS!  Everyone knows that climate change is a hoax!"

Well, yes, the climate change agenda is a hoax.

But... (you know I love my buts)  That treaty doesn't really have all that much to do with the hoax aspect of the climate change agenda.  Sure, it has provisions for changing the emissions levels of the participating countries, but it isn't really all that much of a change.  Most of the participating countries are already doing enough (or were already planning to) to pass the requirements of that treaty.

What people didn't notice about the treaty is the underlying wording, the hidden meaning behind it.  It wasn't an exaggeration when the UN Secretary General said it would usher in a new era!

Hidden in the treaty was a requirement for all signing countries to participate in the new banking system.  It literally required them to ditch their fiat currencies and convert to asset-backed ones instead.

This, in turn, opened the flood gates for the GCR (Global Currency Reset), allowing it to be implemented world-wide.


No, there were no blaring trumpets, no press reports, nothing about the world changing forever... But that is what happened.  The world will never be the same after that.