# Why an Information Super Highway? The next question that arises to a discerning mind is why the internet came to the public when it did. When you factor in the Luciferic CERN crap the matter becomes less opaque. If you bought a computer in the 90's, what was it running? Odds are, you bought a Microsoft machine from the less than illustrious Bill Gates. As it should be obvious by now, Gates is Mr. Bio engineering cheerleader supreme. Oh yeah, he's also a globalist. The Clintons, of course, were also globalists. Remember that whole *It Takes a Village* schlock? Yeah, that village was being envisioned as a globalist one and not your local downtown. The global village, of course, can take care of your children—and so it has—with the assistance of these boxes that jack everyone in to the information superhighway that all schools will virtually mandate to complete any homework assignment. In other words, the information revolution was planned to be a civilization-wide pivot moving local to some other very un-local place. ## Before Highways Before Information Superhighways, the local infrastructure of the community was more robust. The reason for this is easy to surmise. You tend to pay for stuff closer to you so you can get it faster. Getting stuff from far away takes more time. Therefore, it benefits a community to get stuff within a community to the extent it can. If you have ever needed a computer cable of one kind or another, you know exactly what this means. If you aren't living in a big city, you had to wait and find the nearest Office Depot or Best Buy. On the other hand, if you wanted some kind of pipe for plumbing, the local hardware store made the most sense even if it cost a little more to source what you needed there. After the internet, though, the local hardware store is competing with some other hardware store in Laos and it just so happens you no longer need to leave your house to receive your item. The cost in terms of local movement is less, although the time is still slightly more. If the cost is lower and it is not an immediate need, it is usually better to order online. The same thing was true for libraries in a more immediate sense. Not having to go to a physical library meant that you did not have overdue books or book sales from the library that might make additional revenue. Slowly but surely, the cultural erosion was commencing. ## Why This Is Important If you have a global identity, it is the same thing as saying you have no identity at all. Therefore, all the one world government garbage can come in, and you will be more likely to take financial marks to participate in an economy that otherwise will exclude you. (Ya know, the mark of the beast) Technology is a great way to get this to be a more likely outcome since people that use technology generally like to think of themselves as smarter than people who do not. Indeed, technology can allow one to become smarter—at least in some ways. It can only allow a true type of intellect to shine through, though, when it isn't being controlled and groomed to bring about certain agendas. It should be clear, with the above analysis presented, what those ends are for at least some of the technology folks who like to think of themselves as innovators. Of course, those people alone don't get to decide if that is the true future of technology. People have to make up their minds whether that is the direction they also wish to go—they could for instance decide to make the Gemini protocol and displace the modern web with it. It might be hard, or it might prove quite easy. It all depends on where the values of the collective lie. Why an Information Super Highway? was published on 2025-12-11