Last year, England arrested and jailed civilians for what they Tweeted! Not just for one or two days, either. Some were imprisoned for several years for simply TWEETING their
opinion!
Make no mistake about it. Every major government in the world is preparing to follow suite as soon as they can. That includes the USA, former land of the free. George Orwell was right after all. Thought Police are no-longer a mere fiction.
So that brings on the next question… what else in addition to Tweets might be used to put us in prison? Could we be imprisoned for what we type on our computer even as a private notation? Or perhaps for the articles we read?
Just in case you have been busy being impressed by the amazing way AI can assemble and organize Internet data and images, allow me to remind you that the same AI is being quietly loaded into our computers to function as spyware.
The primary motive behind the development of AI is not to provide a service to improve productivity, but as bait to lure us into clamoring for more. It’s a Trojan Horse that we are told is a gift of friendship and peace but actually is a weapon of war – the ultimate surveillance system for monitoring and controlling us all.
Those who reflexively trust authority and consensus will eagerly step into the trap, and we cannot help them but, fortunately, those in the Reality Zone have a choice.
That’s why I
asked my friend Glenn Meder to hold a special class on this issue. He's an expert on digital security and is well qualified to show how surprisingly simple it is to alter our computers so they can reject CoPilot or any other AI spyware. And you don't have to be a computer geek to do it.
His class is titled:
“How to Stop Your Computer from Spying on You.” You can sign up for it here.
The class is going live on Thursday, September 25th at 5 pm PT / 6pm MT / 7pm CT / and 8pm ET.
This is one of Glenn’s most-often requested classes so feel free to invite your friends. They will thank you for it.
Register here for Glenn’s free class on How to Stop Your Computer from Spying on You.
G. Edward Griffin