Google Prepares for ‘The Event’

When you look at the WEF preparing for disease X with a global response under the new WHO treaty ammendments, billionaires rushing to build their luxury bunkers, and now Google changing advertiser’s terms of service for a “sensitive event”, just perhaps the Rapture, extraction of the church, is inbound. Of course, we have a major economic collapse coming, possibly a major cyberattack which they’ve prepped with the Obama propaganda movie, of which the WEF has warned us about incessantly. But it definitely looks like something is in the works, and the ridiculous alien hearings and government released military videos also might suggest Project Blue Beam is a go (below). And a former new age occultist who came to Christ and turned pastor has a wonderful interview about how evolution and aliens are lined up to explain away the Rapture of the church and finally get rid of that pesky Christianity making way for the New World Religion. Maranatha!


Project Blue Beam

Serge Monast (1945 – 5 or 6 December 1996[1][2]) was a Canadian investigative journalist, poet, essayist and conspiracy theorist. He is known to English-speaking readers mainly for the originating the conspiracy theory Project Blue Beam, which concerns an alleged plot to facilitate a totalitarian world government by destroying traditional religions and replacing them with a new-age belief system using NASA technology.[3][unreliable source?]

Biography

In the 1970s and 1980s, Monast was a journalist, poet and essayist. He was an active member of the Social Credit Party of Canada.[citation needed]

In the early 1990s, he started writing on the theme of the New World Order and conspiracies hatched by secret societies, being particularly inspired by the works of William Guy Carr.[citation needed]

In 1994, he published Project Blue Beam (NASA), in which he detailed his claim that NASA, with the help of the United Nations, was attempting to implement a New Age religion with the Antichrist at its head and start a New World Order, via a technologically simulated Second Coming of Christ.[citation needed] He also gave talks on this topic.[4][better source needed] Cartoonist Christopher Knowles noted[5] the similarity of Project Blue Beam to the plots of Gene Roddenberry‘s unreleased 1975 Star Trek movie treatment The God Thing and the 1991 Star Trek: The Next Generation episode Devil’s Due.

In 1995, he published his most detailed work, Les Protocoles de Toronto (6.6.6), modelled upon The Protocols of the Elders of Zion, wherein he said a Masonic group called “6.6.6” had, for twenty years, been gathering the world’s powerful to establish the New World Order and control the minds of individuals.[citation needed]

He died of a heart attack in his home in December 1996,[1][2] at age 51.

Copies of his works still circulate on the Internet, and have influenced such later conspiracy theorists as American evangelical preacher Texe Marrs.[3] Some of his later works have been reissued by French publisher and conspiracy theorist Jacques Delacroix, along with others writing on the themes of Monast’s conspiracy related work.[6]

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Serge_Monast