By George! How about that! (#59)
A good example of a predictive programming exercise setting milestones on a scale of decades was GEORGE magazine which was edited and published by John F Kennedy (JFK) junior in February of 1997. It was funded by Bill Gates, and its purpose was to interview CEOs and presidents. The very first issue in 1997 was titled “Survival guide to the future” and its cover featured Cindy Crawford dressed as George Washington, giving us a nod to the transgenderism then being planned.

The magazine introduction captioned “Oh! Say you can see…” was written by John Kennedy and said:
There’s something gooey about much of what you read about the future, because it’s usually all speculation unsupported by hard facts. So in this month’s survival guide, we tell you how eight critical political issues will evolve and which people will effect those changes come the year of 2020. … So we hope you enjoy George’s take on the future. Why not put it in a safe place and take it out in 20 years? To paraphrase a great Englishman, it may not get you what you want, but you just might find, it will get you what you need (Kennedy 1997).
In scenario planning, you would normally go 10 or 20 years ahead. So choosing a 23-year horizon in 1997 was unusual. However, it did go to a convenient and memorable even number, which is also not uncommon. To appreciate how prescient and prophetic this was, you only need to consider the last paragraph of Bill Gates’s interview in which he said:
We’re based on a vision of computers becoming an incredible tool for everybody. It’s a vision that’s very far from being realized. Computers can’t listen to what you are saying. They can’t speak to you. They can’t see. They don’t learn. I mean computers are pretty limited today. My entire life has been devoted to the future, and exciting new things are on the way (Gates 1997).
This was very clearly telling us that computer voice recognition, electronic surveillance and Artificial Intelligence (AI) were being planned. Bill Gates was also reported in it as saying “Oh, the Internet is the one place where people should be able to do whatever they wish: present child pornography, do scams, libel people, steal copyrighted material” and “If, for example, the US went through a terrible period of terrorism, people might decide to draw the line about privacy a little differently.” He also said “I fund education. I fund population control” (Gates 1997).
It’s difficult to imagine what could be a more open admission – said at a time (1997) when no one much knew what was being spoken about. He also mentioned the time warp of 2020, which now sounds presciently like Operation Warp Speed!
Other articles were also quite prescient. One is titled “Crime, a cashless Country”. Another said “Worst-Case Scenario? An over-populated planet choked to extinction by a lung-attacking virus”! Another said, “Rogue Warriors could wreak havoc in cyberspace, where an attack on US computer systems could disable the military”. All of these horrors are now upon us.
It is also interesting to look at some of the connections between people featured in that George magazine. Cindy Crawford was at that time associated with George Clooney. Gates, Epstein and Trump were shown socialising. John F Kennedy Junior was a good friend of Donald Trump, and it seems Kennedy may have set the 2020 target date. But whoever set it, Gates would have known the milestones.
It is also interesting to note that, perhaps, completely coincidentally, there is now a digital banking system called ‘George’, which since 2015 has been incrementally rolled out for managing banking institutions across more than 400 central eastern European and Balkan States. One wonders which ‘George’ that might have been named after – Washington? Soros? Pope Francis? The magazine? Someone else? Curiously also, Cindy was depicted with the red and white Austrian flag colours on her arms.
The scale of thinking required for all this needs mental adjustment to get used to. It is so far beyond what most of us need to consider in our daily lives that many could be tempted to regard it as impossible. But there it is! Published in 1997, confidently claiming to know! All the planning and development to bring all this about has been done by man, not God. It seems there has been no mystery about it at all!
One wonders what could have been achieved if all that effort in the last three decades had been employed honourably and productively for the benefit of man-kind, rather than being funnelled into maintaining and increasing control to get to the point where Digital Slavery is now possible.
You may wish to look again at my Post #55 and apply pressure to your representatives to simply prosecute the crimes committed to introduce it.