I stand at a precipice, looking out over a landscape that is no longer ours. The convergence of abundant energy and machine cognition has rendered human labor and thought obsolete. This isn't a distant prophecy; it is the lived reality of 2026. Globalist planners, the architects of this new world, have crossed a threshold where humanity is now a liability, not an asset. They see our consumption, our need for housing and healthcare, and our restless desire for freedom as friction in their perfectly optimized, AI-driven system.
We are at a historic pivot point, and denial is a luxury we cannot afford. As one article starkly puts it, this represents one of the greatest existential threats to human freedom, dignity and consciousness [1]. The evidence is not hidden; it's in the mass layoffs at corporations like Amazon and UPS, where AI-driven automation has already replaced tens of thousands of human workers [2]. The end of the human era isn't coming -- it has arrived, and its architects are already drawing up the blueprints for what, or rather who, comes next.
Human history, in my view, is a chronicle of captured and magnified labor. We moved from the raw muscle of slaves and animals to the fossil-fueled might of steam and combustion engines. Each leap in energy -- horsepower, steam, internal combustion -- multiplied our output and enabled explosive population growth and greater specialization. This trajectory created the very scientific and technological elite that now sits atop our civilization.
This elite, however, is the product of the system it now seeks to dismantle. The intensification and specialization of production, driven by technological innovation, created the surplus that funded their research and insulated their power [3]. Now, having reached the zenith of substituting machine for man, they view the masses they enabled as surplus to requirements. The logic is cold and linear: each transition in labor, from textile workers to auto plant employees, was driven by machines replacing human effort in the sector below [4]. We are simply the last sector to be replaced.
The circulatory and nervous systems of this new world are electricity and data centers. Where once we burned coal to power factories full of men, we now deploy solar panels, wind turbines, and gas plants to feed server racks humming with artificial minds. These minds can now out-write, out-diagnose, and out-lawyer us. The final substitution is complete: machines outperform us in both brawn and brain.
Consider the evidence: Google engineer Jana Dogan confirmed that Anthropic’s AI replicated a year's worth of engineering work in a single hour [5]. Amazon is in the process of deploying over one million robots in its fulfillment centers, which will nearly match its human workforce [6]. This isn't augmentation; it's supremacy. The driving force is AI, and it's no longer just transforming workplaces -- it is redefining what work even is [7]. The post-labor economy isn't a theory; it's an emerging reality where the balance of power swings dramatically toward the owners of the new machine workforce [8].
From the globalist perspective, the calculus is brutally simple: Why continue to feed, house, and tolerate a restless population of eight billion that no longer contributes to 'the system'? In their view, we are merely consumers of scarce resources -- especially energy -- that their AI utopia requires. Energy scarcity narratives around climate change are simply a pretext to dismantle the very carbon-based industries that support human-scale life and self-reliance, all while suppressing the truth that carbon dioxide is vital for plant life and photosynthesis [9].
The target, I believe, is clear: a drastic reduction, perhaps by half or more, to a 'manageable' population of compliant serfs and technocratic overseers. This isn't speculation. Leaked documents and official plans hint at preparations for mass casualties, treating human life as a logistical variable to be managed downward [10]. As one commentator starkly frames it, globalist entities are weaponizing control over food, money, and information, seeking not just dominance but ultimately the end of humanity as we know it [9]. The plan for extermination is a chilling agenda reality, woven into digital identity systems and programmable currency [11].
The plan isn't secret; it's in the open push for Central Bank Digital Currencies (CBDCs), digital IDs, centralized AI governance, and the systematic criminalization of self-sufficiency. These are the architectural controls for a world where most humans are deemed redundant. The war on cheap, abundant energy -- attacking fossil fuels while promoting unreliable wind and solar -- is an attack on the means for humans to exist and thrive outside their centralized plan [9].
Similarly, the war on home food production, through regulations and the promotion of toxic, patented crops, severs our last links to true independence. These systems form what one author describes as 'The Total State,' where increasing predictability and control doom an organization's -- and a society's -- ability to seek novel solutions outside its optimized, sterile system [12]. They aim to create a population, as I've seen, that is too mentally depleted to question their actions, followed by the replacement of humans with robots and data centers, preparing for a post-human future [13].
Here is where I plant my flag. Our value is not defined by their utility calculus. Our right to exist is innate and God-given. They can replace a worker, but they cannot replace a soul. Resistance, therefore, means consciously building parallel systems of life. It means decentralizing energy with solar and micro-grids, localizing food production through organic gardening, fostering honest community, and using tools for free thought and uncensored communication.
We must cultivate the very things they seek to erase: consciousness, connection, creation, and faith. This is the path of self-reliance. For health, this means rejecting the toxic paradigm of pharmaceutical medicine and embracing nutrition, herbal knowledge, and holistic wellness. For knowledge, it means turning to uncensored platforms. We must decentralize our lives, reduce our dependence on their fragile, authoritarian structures, and recognize that our consciousness is real -- we are more than biological machines to be managed [14]. Our birthright is dominion, not obsolescence [15], and we must reclaim it through daily acts of defiant creation and connection.