Posts Tagged ‘news’


The Epstein list is no longer a conspiracy theory. So why does everything still feel so silent?


📚 The Facts — No Longer Fringe

Over 170 names have now been confirmed through the release of legal documents tied to Jeffrey Epstein’s sex trafficking network. These include billionaires, celebrities, politicians, and royalty. The details are out. The timeline is established. The cover-up is ongoing.


🔦 What Do We Do With the Truth?

We now know.

Not in theory. Not through whispers or redacted documents or vague rumors.

We know — because it’s confirmed.

There was, and likely still is, a global sex trafficking network facilitated by billionaires, royalty, scientists, politicians, and financiers. Children were exploited. Victims were silenced. Powerful names were protected.


So what does it say about us?


That these are our leaders.
That this is our system.
That this was allowed to exist.

What does it say about power?
About justice?
About what we tolerate?

What kind of society protects this?
What kind of humanity forgets it?


We have been taught that truth is powerful.


That exposure leads to change.
That sunlight is the best disinfectant.

But what happens when truth lands like a stone in the ocean?
When facts come out — and are absorbed into the machine of normalcy?

What happens when justice does not follow evidence?


This isn’t a left vs. right issue.


This isn’t partisan.
This is a reflection of power.

And maybe that’s the point.
Maybe we are not meant to act on this truth.
Maybe we are only meant to know it — and feel helpless.

But that’s not enough.

We should not be okay with knowing… and doing nothing.

We should not learn of atrocities… and scroll past.

We cannot pretend that this level of coordinated abuse — and cover-up — is just another passing headline.


Some truths shouldn’t fade.


They should haunt.
They should wake us up.
They should never be allowed to settle.


🕳️

If you’ve made it this far, sit with it.
Not to be consumed by despair — but to resist forgetting.
Because forgetting is how they win.


🎬 This article was reimagined as a visual essay — watch the reel below.

@anarchyroll_

The list is real The silence is louder This is the part where we don’t look away. We don’t stop asking. We don’t stop naming. 🕳️ 🎥 Visual essay from: anarchyjc.com @anarchyroll_ #EpsteinCoverup #EliteProtection #TruthOverTribalism #epstein #digitalart

♬ Deep – Courten

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Published by @anarchyroll via Anarchy Journal Constitutional


“We don’t need a truth squad. We need a First Amendment.” — Matt Taibbi, Congressional Testimony


Governments don’t need to pass laws to control speech.
They just need to pressure the platforms.


The Censorship-Industrial Complex is the unholy alliance of federal agencies, tech corporations, and pseudo-academic disinformation labs — working together to decide what ideas are safe enough for the public.

It starts with an email from DHS.
It ends with your post silently disappearing.

This isn’t a left vs. right issue.


Anti-war journalists, independent researchers, COVID policy critics — all have been flagged, suppressed, or algorithmically erased. Not because they were wrong. But because they were inconvenient.


“The people who are trying to censor speech are not protecting you. They’re protecting themselves — from accountability.” – Edward Snowden


This isn’t about protecting democracy.
It’s about protecting power.

The Twitter Files showed us the blueprint: FBI flagging accounts. NGOs vetting narratives. Platforms complying behind closed doors. But Twitter was just the tip — Facebook, Reddit, YouTube, even Microsoft were all in on it.

The architecture of censorship is modular now.
And no one is coming to dismantle it from the inside.

These aren’t isolated incidents. They’re rehearsals. The system keeps improving — not at identifying truth, but at engineering consent. Real-time surveillance of trending topics. Preemptive labeling of emerging narratives. Pressure campaigns behind the scenes. By the time the public hears a story, the terms of engagement have already been set.


“Censorship is never about stopping lies. It’s about stopping inconvenient truths from gaining traction.” – Glenn Greenwald


They call it safety.
We should call it by its name: control.

So we speak.
We write.
We resist.

Because the First Amendment isn’t a suggestion.
It’s a firewall.

anarchyjc.com | Anarchy Journal Constitutional

Wisdom is Resistance

🎬 This article was reimagined as a visual essay — watch the reel below.

@anarchyroll_

🚨 The Censorship-Industrial Complex isn’t a theory — it’s a pipeline. Government agencies NGOs Platforms All working to silence dissent. Not wrong. Just disruptive. 🔏 Truth over tribalism 📍 More at anarchyjc.com #freespeech #censorship #twitterfiles #surveillance #anarchyroll #independentmedia #mediawatch #truthseeker

♬ Void(Original ) – 崔洪喆

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“The smart way to keep people passive and obedient is to strictly limit the spectrum of acceptable opinion.”
Noam Chomsky

They marched under one banner—No Kings—across over two thousand U.S. cities. The chants echoed: Democracy, not dynasty. People over billionaires.

And for a moment, it felt like something real. Unity. Purpose. A mass of people moving as one.
That matters.

But here’s the thing: marches don’t dethrone kings—votes do. Not the kind fed to us by billionaire media or corporate-funded parties. But the kind we carve out ourselves, with calloused hands and clear eyes.

Because if the system crowns kings disguised as candidates—red tie or blue tie—then we haven’t abolished royalty. We’ve just rebranded it.

Let’s be clear: this isn’t about shaming the other half of the working class. The ones who didn’t show up. The ones who don’t trust any of it.


They aren’t the enemy. They’re the evidence.


Evidence of a rigged system that leaves most Americans disillusioned, exhausted, and priced out of participation.

“Transparency is for those who carry out public duties… Privacy is for everyone else.”
Glenn Greenwald

Then here’s the catch: protest is ignition, not the engine. Activism fades. If you’re not moving toward real political power, the system just waits you out.

“A system unable to stop this must be very sick indeed.”
Matt Taibbi

We’ve seen this before. In Occupy, in anti–Iraq War protests, in the George Floyd uprisings. They all said something important—but without sustained, organized follow-through, the system waited us out.

Protest is the ignition. Organization is the engine.

This moment is only a spark—unless we stop waiting for permission to lead ourselves.
No kings. No puppets. No more billionaires pulling the strings.


anarchyjc.com | Anarchy Journal Constitutional

Wisdom is Resistance

🎬 Scroll-Friendly Version
This article was reimagined as a visual essay — watch the reel below.

@anarchyroll_

Protesting is better than nothing. But it’s not enough. Not anymore. Real change doesn’t come from chants alone. It comes from organized labor, grassroots movements, and political power built outside a two-party system that’s fully captured by billionaires and the military-industrial complex. No kings. No puppets. No excuses. #NoKings #GeneralStrike #BeyondTheBallot #fyp #currentevents #ProtestArt

♬ realization – FutureVille

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What is the stock market? A central marketplace to buy and sell stock. The NYSE dates back to 1792. It was likely never explicitly stated that it’s a private club. Because of the term publicly traded company, many people probably assume the public interest is being served or that the stock exchange is a public place. It is not.

10% of the populated owns nearly 93% of the stock market. As the late, great George Carlin used to say “it’s a big club, and you ain’t in it”.

10% of the population…wow, and the government gave them how much bailout money in 2008?

I wonder how the public could have benefited from that money? Healthcare, pot hole repair, college debt forgiveness, homeless sheltering, food banks, community gardens, jobs programs, etc. But that’s going into fantasy land. A fantasy where the rich don’t get richer.

Is there a middle ground where the poor don’t have to get poorer?

It is something to see so much data and evidence pile up that America is living in a capitalist controlled oligarchy. The illusion of direct democracy fades for all but the heavily propagandized. Unfortunately the heavily propagandized is still the majority of the civilian population of America.

The evidence of that fact shows up every election season. Red vs blue, republicans vs democrats, neighbor vs neighbor. Tribalism weaponized to keep the unwashed masses fighting amongst themselves rather than looking upwards and their oppressors.

That third parties are still relegated to joke status because the duopoly has people convinced lock, stock, and barrel that they need to vote between the lesser of two evils OR ELSE, is also really something to behold every election season.

How many billions need to be spent on war and corporate welfare each year before something changes? Is there a number? Is there a flash point? Is there a turning point? Do we as a people have it in us?

It is easier to just get by. Take less and be lead. Settle on the sidelines and complain through small talk or comment sections.

However, it is also getting harder to deny reality. Even in a time of compounding misinformation and infinite propaganda, a study that shows that 10% own 93% of the stock market comes out. The same stock market that is used by every mainstream news source as the indicator of whether the economy is doing good or bad for the whole country.

So if 10% are doing good we’re all doing good? No. But every news anchor and every politician in America talks about how good or bad the economy is doing based on how the stock market is doing. So what does it mean if the stock market is doing good, 10% of the population are doing good, the media and politicians all in unison say we are doing good as a whole, but the vast majority are experiencing the toughest times of the past century?

“History is always written the winners” Dan Brown

It is in our nature to follow rather than lead. It is in our nature to believe rather than to question.

If it wasn’t, we wouldn’t be so easy to propagandize.

And in the modern world, humans are constantly propagandized.

Propagandized to buy, to believe, to escape, to be lead.

It is in our nature to believe we are the good guys. Individually we constantly tell ourselves in our own head that we are a good person. That our family, our tribe, our community, our country, our gender, are the good ones.

That bias is leveraged.

Smart phones have turned peer pressure into a propaganda atom bomb that never stops detonating.

What feels better than being right? Especially when life can make us feel so wrong sometimes.

So when a war is waged, of course we’re the good guys. What did the other side do? Why? War is the only answer?

Where does the money for war come from? What else could that money be used on? Who makes money during a war?

Money can be made during a war? Is that a good thing. Of course, because we’re the good guys.

But if we’re the good guys, descendants of the winners of all the previous wars, then these questions are moot, unpatriotic, and weak. And we can’t have that, what if our enemies found out?

Luckily for us, we’re the good guys.

It’s the good guys in charge.

It’s the good guys dropping bombs.

It’s the good guys selling weapons.

It’s the good guys controlling the media.

It’s the good guys running the economy.

Because if they’re not good, what does that mean about us?