No One's Forcing You to Move!
What tactics might the globalists use to get people to move into their 15 minute cities?
We need to focus on this new tendency of returning to the earth, in which the majority of the population returns to the agricultural practice. We need to promote, help and support the exodus from big cities—that’s very important.1
— Alexander Dugin, The Great Awakening vs the Great Reset
These people, the Globalists, are evil, but they’re not stupid.
The vaccine plan, the slow-kill bioweapon as some have called it, is killing and maiming people slowly, slowly enough that people can write off their friend’s turbo cancer to “everyone gets cancer at some point,” their daughter’s miscarriage to “Well, I had a miscarriage before the vaccines,” their friend’s sudden death in his sleep to “Well, there’s a lot of that going around lately…I mean he was in his sixties” or “Young athletes have always died suddenly, we just hear about it more now.”
The illnesses caused by foods that have been slowly poisoning people for decades help finance hospitals, pharma companies and doctors, while anything that looks like it might possibly cure cancer or alzheimer’s is suppressed and ridiculed. The calculating evil bastards behind it all may rightfully be called devils.
They’ve figured out how to kill people, how to use them as cash cows, but how are they planning to get everyone to move into their 15 minute cities where they can be corralled like the cattle they consider regular people to be?
We live on five acres here in Southern California. It’s beautiful out here: quieter, hills and trees to look at, birds singing, rabbits scampering around and us with space to roam on our own property. It’s not ideal, we’re closer to the San Diego metropolitan area than I’d like, but still, it’s great.
We live on this property in the house my father-in-law built and he lives in the house his parents lived in when my wife’s family moved to California in 1973. A few months ago he informed us that two years ago the house insurance he has almost doubled. This year it did double. He has a house in San Diego worth about the same as this property. The in town house is about a $1,000 per year, the insurance out here went up to almost $8,000 a year.
Two years in row the insurance doubled. Think about that.
He’s fortunate to own the property free and clear, so if this keeps escalating he’ll just drop the insurance and we’ll all make sure not to use candles.
But what if you have a mortgage that requires insurance and what if you don’t have a lot of equity and these rates keep going up? What if they start doubling the property tax? I read a lot of people who say we need to listen to the globalist bastards. Listen to what they say. They’re telling us what they want to do: 2030 is the Great Reset. How are they going to get there if we don’t stop them?
We are fighting back with the election of Trump, but the globalists are not going to brush the dust off after losing this battle and simply ride off into the sunset. They’ll keep pushing just as they did during Trump’s first presidency.
Along with illegal immigration, the so-called vaccines, fires (like Lahina) and hurricanes, rain and flooding (that they’ll just ignore like in North Carolina) the globalists will also use mundane, boring, but effective bureaucracy to get people to move. People will have to move out of their rural areas on their own because living there will not only be too expensive, but it will be prohibitively expensive.
“We’re not forcing anyone to move! And we didn’t force anyone to take the vaccines either!”
They’ll have to sell their homes and hopefully get enough to pay off their mortgages when people considering buying will know that insurance alone may cost them $20,000 plus a year. Forgive me…we know who will be buying these homes: BlackRock and Bill Gates. Eventually the insurance, property tax and mandatory improvements will make it impossible for any regular person to afford an Edenic existence in rural America.
We all know the culprit, right? Climate Change. More fires, more hurricanes, more storms, melting ice caps, summer temperatures during the summer (when’s the last time that happened?!)…this is what’s driving costs up. Yup, you’re to blame because you didn’t recycle enough empty ketchup bottles and eating red meat made you fart an enormous amount on your hikes in the woods, probably more than cows…the biggest farting culprits, plus cows eat grass and crickets need a lot of grass particularly if everyone starts sprinkling them on their fake burgers. I’m thinking they’ll be a great addition to a big plate of naturally flavored tofu.
Below are some articles chronicling why we’re all to blame for these higher insurance rates. If we had any sense at all, we’d just kill ourselves to save the planet and let the crickets have all the grass they want.
Why did your homeowners insurance go up? (Updated May 2024)
Website: Policy Genius
Date: May 9, 2024
As climate change continues to alter weather patterns all over the country, certain areas that insurers used to consider to be low risk are now viewed as the opposite, and homeowners in these areas may suddenly be seeing steep premium hikes as a result.[emphasis mine]
'Everything is rising at a scary rate': Why car and home insurance costs are surging
Website: NPR
Date: March 3, 2024
Last week, the Treasury Department hosted a roundtable with consumer and environmental groups to discuss the ways climate change is rattling insurance markets. The department also plans to host a meeting on the topic with insurance industry stakeholders.[emphasis mine]
Rising home insurance rates predicted in 2024
Website: Insurance Business
Date: April 2, 2024
Still, the price increases aren’t showing signs of letting up. Analysis by the online insurance marketplace predicts a 6% jump in premiums this year. Worsening weather conditions brought by climate change can push up the rates even higher next year.[emphasis mine]
Among the states on the list, Arkansas, Florida, Louisiana, Mississippi, and Texas are situated along the path of many destructive hurricanes. Kansas, Nebraska, Oklahoma, and Texas, meanwhile, are in the Tornado Alley. Nebraska and Texas, along with Colorado, also face growing wildfire risk.
With climate change increasing the severity of these weather conditions, home premiums in these states are likely to soar even higher in the next few years.[emphasis mine]
As Insurers Around the U.S. Bleed Cash From Climate Shocks, Homeowners Lose
Website: New York Times
Date: May 13, 2024
Insurance is where many people are feeling the economic impacts of climate change first,” said Carolyn Kousky, associate vice president for economics and policy at the Environmental Defense Fund. “That is going to spill over into housing markets, mortgage markets, and local economies.[emphasis mine]
The Average Cost of Homeowners Insurance in June 2024
Website: Market Watch Guides
Due to a variety of local risk factors, the average in your state could be very different from the national average. Whether affected by an elevated crime rate, high risk for extreme weather events or an unusually cheap cost of living, state averages range from $782 to $6,325 in annual premiums.
Notes
Dugin, Alexander, The Great Awakening vs the Great Reset, Arktos, London, 2021, Constantin von Hoffmeister, editor. p. 55. Note: page numbers are from the digital version read on Apple "Books"
«It’s estimated that over 79% of US population growth happened in coastal states from 2000-2016, putting more strain on insurance companies.» — https://matic.com/blog/mid-year-home-insurance-trends-2024/
I'm not finding any data on market concentration right now, but it seems competition has gone down, too.
Arkansas is pretty far into the canter of the country. To have it on the hurricane list instead of the tornado list is inaccurate. We actually DO get tornadoes, here. A lot of our weather is whatever Oklahoma just had, just a bit less severe by the time it gets to us.