The following video is only made possible by people who believe in Messianic END TIMES nothingness. The strange part about this manifest mental illness is that the whole “get down” surrounding it, Messianic religion, revolves around destroying and exterminating everything and everybody, “VIOLENTLY,” so that they will have “their peace.” It’s convoluted and twisted, but not considered such by the people who believe in “that.” The people who believe in such have no limits in their delusion, even the deliberate destruction of women and children.
This was done to our people too. American Indian women and children were wholesale exterminated and trafficked by people who also claimed a Messianic faith. It appears to be a pattern with this so called, “Religion.” It’s not a religion, but the people believe it is because they are under a Babylonian, witchcraft, electronic, spell. If not, the following statement would have realm wide outrage. It doesn’t, manifestly. Not only does the statement not invoke outrage, it is actually “cheered on,” and the people who make these type of depraved babblings are “EXTREMELY CONFORTABLE SAYING IT ON VIDEO.”
Think about that? “Comfortable, without fear of consequences,” openly calling for ethnic cleansing, exterminating children, and continuing the genocide in Gaza. That is a lot of gall. A lot of evil. A lot of arrogance and a lot of Hellfire for him.
None of the whole Messianic religious thing is real. NONE OF IT. It’s all made up fables, fairy tales and myths. I covered that here:
The Rapture of Nothingness
I know, I know, I know, people are going to be “feeling some type of way” about this musing of nothingness. I know that people “emotionally ensnared” within the “religious paradigm” are going to take offense, however as a student on a quest for knowledge, I cannot let offensive things narrow my mind. I have to uptake the information before making a judg…
In previous musings of nothingness I alluded to a shift in this substack. See, nobody really knows all of the reasons why I have compiled this vault of information, but one specific reason is, “I wanted to learn.” People who don’t know me personally probably wrongfully believe that I position myself as some sort of teacher, when in reality I view myself as a student. I have never had a desire for social media, and this substack has taught me exactly why. I read EVERYTHING. As a child reading was a coping mechanism, an escape, from a extremely violent, manifestly mentally ill realm that I until this day do not fully comprehend.
I read everything and the people online in different comment sections are not very nice; and very racist/childish on some platforms. That’s fine for them, but “I don’t like it” and that’s why as far as “social media” is concerned, “Naw, I’m good.” Keep that. It’s beneath me.
Reading everything, for coping reasons or otherwise, afforded me insight and information, however, it did not afford me Peace of mind. Quite the opposite, it stole what little joy I had. “Knowledge will steal your joy,” says me. That is the only thing that can happen, especially if you are an American Indian on this land.
With that in mind, I believe it best, based upon my own experience, to condense information and knowledge in a way that is more informative and less “weighty.” People have lives, and time is very precious, especially right now. So I have decided to move in a direction that will be easier to digest with citations and references.
Now, the last time I stated this I got a “nastygram” from someone rebuking me for “not writing,” and “I’m not…such and such.” That is fine however, anyone who has been here for an extended period and truly studied the information presented is ready to progress forward, in the same way that I am. I have sat in the same seats as everyone else and “the lessons are getting dry.” I have to move forward or I will fold this up.
With all of that in mind… What I have been doing is utilizing my mind to interrogate sundry A.I. systems for abstract information and other things. See, what people don’t grasp is this, “If you don’t know sh*t, you don’t know what questions to ask.” This is why information and assiduous study is so important from childhood thru adulthood. This forms the basis for forming questions. Questions that those of “lower lumens” can’t even form a thought to ask.
I have interrogated these machines in various ways of entrapment, like a chess game, and after a month or so of “grinding” I have figured out the best way forward for myself and anyone who wants to unravel “this thing.” I mean, think about it? What exactly are most people reading for? I read to unravel the destruction of my people. I read to unravel the mystery and most of all I read to generally learn.
This is the direction forward, to wit, “Learning.” Not just regular learning, but condensed, concise reading with citations and references. Straight and to the point. I, nor my family, to whom I write for, have any time to be lollygagging around, “We are trying to figure it out so we can win.”
I have figured out how to make A.I. create the “interrogations” into “academic papers.” I utilized A.I. to aggregate the information based upon my line of questioning and compile it in a report. That report is here:
End Times Fascism: Messianic Roots and Societal Risks
Executive Summary
"End Times Fascism" refers to the convergence of apocalyptic religious ideology and far-right authoritarianism. It is driven by messianic expectations, often originating in religious prophecy, and channeled into radical political movements that reject democratic norms, glorify collapse, and seek to accelerate social breakdown to usher in a purifying new order. This report explores the theological roots, political transformations, and real-world expressions of End Times Fascism, highlighting its threat to liberal democracies and social stability.
1. Messianic Foundations of End Times Ideology
1.1 Religious Origins
End Times thinking originates in the apocalyptic traditions of the Abrahamic religions:
Christianity: The Book of Revelation, Daniel, and apocalyptic Gospels describe cosmic battles, Antichrist rule, tribulation, and Christ’s return.
Judaism: Messianic prophecies envision a future redeemer who restores Israel and defeats its enemies.
Islam: Shi'a and Sunni eschatology anticipate the appearance of the Mahdi and the return of Isa (Jesus).
These narratives create a dualistic worldview where history is a moral battleground, culminating in divine judgment and rebirth.
Citation:
Gorenberg, Gershom. The End of Days: Fundamentalism and the Struggle for the Temple Mount. Oxford University Press, 2002.
1.2 The Messiah as Political Savior
Modern messianic movements often transfer divine authority to political leaders. These figures are seen as “chosen” to lead the righteous through a period of trial.
Example: U.S. evangelical support for Donald Trump as a modern-day Cyrus, fulfilling divine prophecy despite moral flaws.
Citation:
Du Mez, Kristin Kobes. Jesus and John Wayne. Liveright, 2020.
2. Political Appropriations and Radicalization
2.1 The Apocalyptic Political Frame
Apocalyptic thinking fuels a rejection of liberal democracy, which is seen as morally bankrupt or satanic. Political opponents become existential enemies, not fellow citizens.
Democracy becomes a tool of the Antichrist.
Globalism is reframed as a sign of prophetic Babylon.
Citation:
Stanley, Jason. How Fascism Works: The Politics of Us and Them. Random House, 2018.
2.2 Far-Right and Fascist Adaptations
Far-right movements reinterpret End Times frameworks in secular or ethnonationalist terms:
"Great Replacement" theory: Cultural apocalypse and white genocide.
Eco-fascism: Environmental collapse as necessary cleansing.
QAnon: A hybrid messianic-conspiratorial cult predicting a purge of satanic elites.
Case Study: QAnon
QAnon followers believe a cabal of elites commits evil until a messianic figure (Trump) leads the “Storm,” a prophesied reckoning.
The movement blends Christian prophecy with internet conspiracy, gaining traction after 2017.
Citation:
Rothschild, Mike. The Storm Is Upon Us: How QAnon Became a Movement, Cult, and Conspiracy Theory. Melville House, 2021.
3. Accelerationist Tactics and Violent Expressions
3.1 Accelerationism Defined
Accelerationism is the belief that societal collapse should be hastened to rebuild a purer world. In End Times fascism, this includes spiritual or racial purification.
3.2 Tactics
Delegitimizing elections and governance
Spreading conspiracy theories
Terror attacks intended to incite civil war or collapse
Case Study: Christchurch Shooting (2019)
Perpetrator Brenton Tarrant cited white genocide fears and sought to spark a race war.
His manifesto invokes apocalyptic and accelerationist themes.
Citation:
Belew, Kathleen. Bring the War Home: The White Power Movement and Paramilitary America. Harvard University Press, 2018.
4. Societal Consequences
4.1 Erosion of Democratic Institutions
Apocalyptic thinking undermines trust in law, elections, and civil society.
It justifies authoritarianism as moral duty.
4.2 Cult-Like Political Behavior
Leaders are treated as messiahs.
Followers reject facts, compromise, or shared truth.
4.3 Violence and Dehumanization
Targets (immigrants, LGBTQ+ people, Muslims, liberals) are cast as demonic.
Violence is seen as righteous or cleansing.
Citation:
Snyder, Timothy. On Tyranny: Twenty Lessons from the Twentieth Century. Crown, 2017.
Conclusion
End Times Fascism fuses ancient messianic prophecy with modern authoritarianism and extremist politics. While rooted in religious eschatology, it now appears in secular, conspiratorial, and nationalist forms. Its dualistic worldview, glorification of collapse, and rejection of pluralism make it profoundly dangerous. It warrants urgent attention from scholars, policymakers, and civil society.
Selected Bibliography
Gorenberg, Gershom. The End of Days. Oxford University Press, 2002.
Du Mez, Kristin Kobes. Jesus and John Wayne. Liveright, 2020.
Stanley, Jason. How Fascism Works. Random House, 2018.
Belew, Kathleen. Bring the War Home. Harvard University Press, 2018.
Rothschild, Mike. The Storm Is Upon Us. Melville House, 2021.
Snyder, Timothy. On Tyranny. Crown, 2017. (finis)
Occasionally I will still write, however this is the first in a series of “reports,” supported by evidence that all of “this” religious “tomfoolery,” is just that.
Lord have Mercy
You are an intellectual.
You write about the playbook of evil - it takes similar forms around the world; variations on a theme.
I empathise with your psyche and upbringing and have great respect for your tenacity and courage.
Power to you, brother.