Connect with us

Published

on

Something BIG is about to go down… multiple confirming signals point to cyber takedown of financial system

Brighteon.com/4b6b7214-4eb9-4a67-adaa-6c4a0cf145d2
Rumble.com/v3zx3cd-bbn-dec-5-2023-something-big-is-about-to-go-down….html
Bitchute.com/video/mjbnVG48IZ8I/
Banned.video/watch?id=65709bd211af0259c0d5afec
HealthRangerReport.com/brighteon-broadcast-news-dec-5-2023-something-big-is-about-to-go-down-multiple-confirming-signals-point-to-cyber-takedown-of-financial-system Auto-generated summary and highlights

Impending event with insider information. Mike Adams discusses emergency response organization SRP24.com and their cyber defense team, as well as elites stockpiling bunkers with food supplies. Adamsclaims that certain individuals in law enforcement, intelligence agencies, and the state department are taking actions that suggest they have inside knowledge of an impending event. There are signs of chatter in the intelligence community and military circles that something big is about to happen.

Potential economic collapse and CBDC implementation. Speaker warns of major cyber attack and potential banking collapse, with possible implementation of centralized financial control and enslavement through CBDCs. Adams agrees, highlighting potential riots, revolts, lawlessness, famine, disease, and kinetic violence in the aftermath.

Potential collapse of Western Europe’s energy supply and impact on society. Adams claims that hundreds of thousands of immigrants are being intentionally brought into the US to settle and take over the country. The UK Deputy Prime Minister Oliver Dowden warns of a potential power meltdown and urges people to prepare for an analog era. Speaker discusses the UK’s energy crisis and potential collapse, citing US actions as a cause. Gold prices are spiking due to concerns about currency collapse and potential disasters.

Bitcoin as a backup plan for US financial collapse. US Space Force Major Jason Lowry warns of financial collapse risk due to cyber attacks on banking infrastructure, advocates for backup monetary system using proof of work strategies. Adams expresses intrigue towards Space Launch Delta 45 and its connection to Trump, citing the group’s access to information that the mainstream media is not reporting. Adams highlights the surge in Bitcoin’s price and its potential as a backup plan to the collapse of the US banking system, along with gold and silver, and cryptocurrency.

Economic collapse, layoffs, and Chinese soldiers at the US border. Economic implosion underway, with layoffs and cost-cutting measures across industries. Elites stockpiling bunkers with up to 10 years of food supplies, while Chinese soldiers are crossing the border daily.

Impending invasion and occupation of the US. Speaker warns of impending “American Nakba” invasion and displacement of US population. Adams revealed that wealthy elite are building underground bunkers and stockpiling supplies for 3-10 years, with some having enough food for 10 years. Adams’ high-level contacts are taking these precautions due to unspecified “strange fires” in Maui and a sense of urgency from these powerful people.

Goldbacks and preparedness for unspecified future events. Adams: People in the know are preparing for a catastrophic event, but can’t reveal details. Adams: Scenarios include alien invasion, engineered global debt collapse, and world war three. Prepare for emergencies by stocking up on food, medical supplies, and backup communications. Adams discusses goldbacks, physical items with embedded gold, and provides evidence of laboratory testing through ICP-MS and acid stone tests. Adams offers a special report on seven bulletproof strategies for surviving a failing banking system verifiedgoldbacks.com.

Gold-backed currency testing and results. Adams shows off a stack of gold-backed bills, each containing 1/1000 of a troy ounce of gold. Lab testing reveals actual gold recovery ranges from 102% to 107% of claimed amount.

Melting gold coins and verifying purity. The speaker demonstrates the recovery of gold from 10, 25, and 50 goldbacks, with an average recovery rate of 102.89% using a crucible melting process. Adams explains how they can extract gold using a process involving melting and ICPMS testing to confirm purity. Adams shows the results of the ICPMS testing, which confirm that the gold is 99.99% pure, with trace amounts of other metals present. Adams conducted acid stone and dissolution tests on goldbacks from CWC Labs, showing that they contain 24 karat gold. The tests indicate that the company is manufacturing with real gold and has created an innovative, divisible product (VerifiedGoldbacks.com)

Gold backs as a novel investment format. Adams highlights the beauty and cultural significance of gold jewelry, emphasizing its appeal across genders and cultures. Adams compares goldbacks to raw gold, explaining that while goldbacks cost twice the price of raw gold, they offer the convenience of being able to use gold in trade and commerce with divisibility and utility. Adams discusses their experience with goldbacks, a decentralized system of exchange, and how it provides a fun and educational way to teach people about the value of gold. Adams highlights the difference between goldbacks and traditional currency, emphasizing that goldbacks contain physical gold with intrinsic value, while traditional currency is losing value over time. Adams discusses the value of gold, stating that it’s holding its value versus the dollar despite the dollar’s decline. Adams also mentions that the more wars there are, the more unpredictable world events become.

CDC’s gender policies and vaccine safety. CDC erased women, refers to pregnant people instead. Adams argues that the CDC is incompetent and untrustworthy, citing their claims that men can get pregnant and vaccines are safe and effective.

 

###

Watch each episode of my new show,Decentralize TV, which features top guests who teach pro-freedom decentralized living principles and skills, atwww.Decentralize.TV

Discover more interviews and podcasts each day at:

https://www.brighteon.com/channels/HRreport

Follow me on:

Brighteon.social:Brighteon.social/@HealthRanger(my breaking news gets posted here first)

Telegram:t.me/RealHealthRanger

Substack:HealthRanger.substack.com

Banned.video:Banned.video/channel/mike-adams

Truth Social:https://truthsocial.com/@healthranger

Twitter:https://twitter.com/HealthRanger

Bastyon:https://bastyon.com/healthranger

Gettr:GETTR.com/user/healthranger

Rumble:Rumble.com/c/HealthRangerReport

BitChute:Bitchute.com/channel/9EB8glubb0Ns/

Clouthub:app.clouthub.com/#/users/u/naturalnews/posts

Join the freeNaturalNews.com email newsletterto stay alerted about breaking news each day.

Download my current audio books — including Ghost World, Survival Nutrition, The Global Reset Survival Guide and The Contagious Mind — at:

https://Audiobooks.NaturalNews.com/

Download my new audio book, “Resilient Prepping” atResilientPrepping.com– it teaches you how to survive the total collapse of civilization and the loss of both the power grid and combustion engines.
Submit a correction >>

Continue Reading

Sports

If college football’s playoff system ain’t broke, why fix it?

Published

on

By

If college football's playoff system ain't broke, why fix it?

During college football’s Bowl Championship Series era, the sport’s opposition to an expanded, let alone expansive, playoff could be summarized in one colorful quote by then-Ohio State president E. Gordon Gee.

“They will wrench a playoff system out of my cold, dead hands,” Gee said in 2007.

We are happy to report that while college football does, indeed, have a playoff, Gee is still very much alive. The 81-year-old retired just this week after a second stint leading West Virginia University.

What is dead and buried, though, is college football’s staunch resistance to extending its postseason field. After decades of ignoring complaints and the promise of additional revenue to claim that just two teams was more than enough, plans to move from 12 participants to 16 were underway before last season’s inaugural 12-teamer even took place.

A once-static sport now moves at light speed, future implications be damned.

Fire. Ready. Aim.

So maybe the best bit of current news is that college football’s two ruling parties — the SEC and Big Ten — can’t agree on how the new 16-team field would be selected. It has led to a pause on playoff expansion.

Maybe, just maybe, it means no expansion will occur by 2026, as first planned, and college football can let the 12-team model cook a little to accurately assess what changes — if any — are even needed.

“We have a 12-team playoff, five conference champions,” SEC commissioner Greg Sankey said this week. “That could stay if we can’t agree.”

Good. After all, what’s the rush?

The 2025 season will play out with a 12-team format featuring automatic bids for five conference champions and seven at-large spots. Gone is last year’s clunky requirement that the top four seeds could go only to conference champs — elevating Boise State and Arizona State and unbalancing the field.

That alone was progress built on real-world experience. It should be instructive.

The SEC wants a 16-team model but with, as is currently the case, automatic bids going to the champions in the ACC, Big 12, Big Ten, SEC and the best of the so-called Group of 6. The rest of the field would be at-large selections.

The Big Ten says it will not back such a proposal until the SEC agrees to play nine conference games (up from its current eight). Instead, it wants a 16-team system that gives four automatic bids apiece to the Big Ten and SEC, two each to the ACC and Big 12, one to the Group of 6 and then three at-large spots.

It’s been dubbed the “4-4-2-2-1-3” because college athletic leaders love ridiculous parlances almost as much as they love money.

While the ACC, Big 12 and others have offered opinions — mostly siding with the SEC — legislatively, the decision rests with the sport’s two big-dog conferences.

Right now, neither side is budging. A compromise might still be made, of course. The supposed deadline to set the 2026 system is Nov. 30. And Sankey actually says he prefers the nine-game SEC schedule, even if his coaches oppose it.

However, the possibility of the status quo standing for a bit longer remains.

What the Big Ten has proposed is a dramatic shift for a sport that has been bombarded with dramatic shifts — conference realignment, the transfer portal, NIL, revenue sharing, etc.

The league wants to stage multiple “play-in” games on conference championship weekend. The top two teams in the league would meet for the league title (as is currently the case), but the third- and fourth-place teams would play the fifth- and sixth-place teams to determine the other automatic bids.

Extend this out among all the conferences and you have up to a 26-team College Football Playoff (with 22 teams in a play-in situation). This would dramatically change the way the sport works — devaluing the stakes for nonconference games, for example. And some mediocre teams would essentially get a playoff bid — in the Big Ten’s case, the sixth seed last year was an Iowa team that finished 8-5.

Each conference would have more high-value inventory to sell to broadcast partners, but it’s not some enormous windfall. Likewise, four more first-round playoff games would need to find television slots and relevance.

Is anyone sure this is necessary? Do we need 16 at all, let alone with multibids?

In the 12-team format, the first round wasn’t particularly competitive — with a 19.3-point average margin of victory. It’s much like the first round of the NFL playoffs, designed mostly to make sure no true contender is left out.

Perhaps last year was an outlier. And maybe future games will be close. Or maybe they’ll be even more lopsided. Wouldn’t it be prudent to find out?

While there were complaints about the selection committee picking SMU and/or Indiana over Alabama, it wasn’t some egregious slight. Arguments will happen no matter how big the field. Besides, the Crimson Tide lost to two 6-6 teams last year. Expansion means a team with a similar résumé can cruise in.

Is that a good thing?

Whatever the decision, it is being made with little to no real-world data — pro or con. Letting a few 12-team fields play out, providing context and potentially unexpected consequences, sure wouldn’t hurt.

You don’t have to be Gordon Gee circa 2007 to favor letting this simmer and be studied before leaping toward another round of expansion.

Continue Reading

Sports

Arch to victory? Texas preseason pick to win SEC

Published

on

By

Arch to victory? Texas preseason pick to win SEC

Texas, with Heisman Trophy candidate Arch Manning set to take over as starting quarterback, is the preseason pick to win the Southeastern Conference championship.

The Longhorns received 96 of the 204 votes cast from media members covering the SEC media days this week to be crowned SEC champion on Dec. 6 in Atlanta at Mercedes-Benz Stadium. Georgia, with 44 votes, received the second-most votes.

If that scenario plays out, it would mean a rematch of the 2024 SEC championship game, which Georgia won in an overtime thriller. The SEC championship game pits the two teams with the best regular-season conference record against one another.

Alabama was third with 29 votes, while LSU got 20. South Carolina was next with five, while Oklahoma received three and Vanderbilt and Florida each got two votes. Tennessee, Ole Miss and Auburn each received one vote.

Since 1992, only 10 times has the predicted champion in the preseason poll gone on to win the SEC championship.

The 2024 SEC title game averaged 16.6 million viewers across ABC and ESPN, the fourth-largest audience on record for the game. The overtime win for Georgia, which peaked with 19.7 million viewers, delivered the largest audience of the college football season.

Continue Reading

World

Every shop and home burned or ransacked: The Syrian city engulfed in tribal violence

Published

on

By

Every shop and home burned or ransacked: The Syrian city engulfed in tribal violence

The Syrian presidency has announced it’s assembling a special taskforce to try to stop nearly a week of sectarian clashes in the southern Druze city of Sweida.

The presidency called for restraint on all sides and said it is making strenuous efforts to “stop the fighting and curb the violations that threaten the security of the citizens and the safety of society”.

By early Saturday morning, a ceasefire had been confirmed by the US special envoy for Syria, Tom Barrack, who posted on X that Syrian President Ahmed al Sharaa and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu had agreed to a ceasefire supported by US secretary of state Marco Rubio.

The post went on to state that this agreement had the support of “Turkey, Jordan and its neighbours” and called upon the Druze, Bedouins, and Sunni factions to put down their arms.

Sky News special correspondent Alex Crawford reports from the road leading to Sweida, the city that has become the epicentre of Syria’s sectarian violence.

For the past 24 hours, we’ve watched as Syria‘s multiple Arab tribes began mobilising in the Sweida province to help defend their Bedouin brethren.

A fighter aims a gun
A body is wrapped in a blanket

Thousands travelled from multiple different Syrian areas and had reached the edge of Sweida city by Friday nightfall after a day of almost non-stop violent clashes and killings.

More on Syria

“We have come to protect the [Arab] Bedouin women and children who are being terrorised by the Druze,” they told us.

A fighter in Syria
Image:
Arab fighters said they had come to protect the Bedouin women and children

Fighters at a gas station
Image:
Fighters at a petrol station

Every shop and every home in the streets leading up to Sweida city has been burned or ransacked, the contents destroyed or looted.

We saw tribal fighters loading the back of pickup trucks and driving away from the city with vehicles packed with looted goods from Druze homes.

A burning building
Image:
Shops and homes leading up to Sweida city have been burned or ransacked

A burned out car

Several videos posted online showed violence against the Druze, including one where tribal fighters force three men to throw themselves off a high-rise balcony and are seen being shot as they do so.

Doctors at the nearby community hospital in Buser al Harir said there had been a constant stream of casualties being brought in. As we watched, another dead fighter was carried out of an ambulance.

The medics estimated there had been more than 600 dead in their area alone. “The youngest child who was killed was a one-and-a-half-year-old baby,” one doctor told us.

A doctor talks to Sky's Alex Crawford
Image:
Doctors said there had been a constant stream of casualties due to violence

The violence is the most dangerous outbreak of sectarian clashes since the fall of the Bashar al Assad regime last December – and the most serious challenge for the new leader to navigate.

The newly brokered deal is aimed at ending the sectarian killings and restoring some sort of stability in a country which is emerging from more than a decade of civil war.

Continue Reading

Trending