Predators Stumble
Digital ID and currency systems are inherently insecure and exist to control, not liberate
ONE CRIME SYNDICATE CONTROLS THE ENTIRE WORLD - April 26, 2025
WOOPS… MAYBE THOSE DIGITAL IDs AREN’T SO SECURE… Joseph P. Farrell
They ran the planet for five centuries and grew drunk on their own myth.
They mistook deception for genius, control for godhood, and compliance for consent.
But every empire rots from the inside, and every predator eventually misjudges the prey.
What you’re seeing now — the digital ID push, the biometric grid, the programmable money — isn’t strength.
It’s hubris fatigue:
the late-stage arrogance of a cartel that thinks the game can never end.
Below is how Glafia—the 500-year global mafia Baaijen described—made its biggest mistake yet.
1. Bait and Switch
They promised convenience. No more lost wallets, no more forgotten passwords — just one digital key to rule them all.
Every hunter knows the trick:
bait with ease, trap with permanence.
Modern predators don’t wear capes; they wear badges, lanyards, and corporate PR smiles.
“Smart IDs,” “digital wallets,” “frictionless payments” — progress, they say.
But behind every glowing app is an invisible leash woven from:
your biometrics
your purchasing habits
your political alignment
your carbon score
your compliance record
They call it innovation.
The Wolf calls it containment.
This was Glafia’s original genius: control by seduction, not force.
But now that trick is wearing thin.
2. The Great Breach
India just learned the lesson the hard way.
Over 815 million citizens — fingerprints, Aadhaar data, IDs — hacked, copied, sold.
That’s not a breach.
That’s a revelation.
Catherine Austin Fitts warned it years ago:
“There is no cyber-system that is secure.”
Not one.
Not anywhere.
Not ever.
Passwords can be changed.
Bank accounts can be closed.
But you cannot change your fingerprints.
The predators built a cage that leaks from every seam — then demanded we live inside it.
This is classic late-stage arrogance: mistaking technical complexity for control, even as that complexity collapses under its own weight.
3. Coupons for the Compliant
They call it digital currency, but that’s a lie of marketing.
A true currency is a store of value.
A CBDC is a store of permission.
It’s not money — it’s code.
Programmable obedience.
Spend outside the approved zone? Declined.
Buy the wrong supplement? Flagged.
Donate to the wrong Substack? Suspicious activity.
Carbon score too high this month? Rationing applied.
This is Glafia’s dream: automated morality.
But here’s the hubris:
They assumed humans would accept algorithmic authority as legitimate.
They assumed code could replace conscience.
That assumption will be their undoing.
4. The Counter-Hackers
Farrell floated a bold speculation:
What if some of these “hacks” aren’t crimes at all, but acts of resistance?
Digital guerillas.
Ghosts in the machine.
Human beings who refuse to be cataloged, controlled, or filed away under “assets.”
History has precedent:
In the Cold War’s “Farewell Dossier,” Western engineers inserted a logic bomb into Soviet software that blew a pipeline sky-high, visible from space.
That was 40 years ago.
Now imagine what one patriot coder could do inside a global biometric ID grid.
Glafia’s problem isn’t courage or organization.
Glafia’s problem is hubris — the belief that everyone working inside the machinery worships the machine.
They forgot there are wolves hiding in every system.
5. Volatility by Design
They call it “volatility.”
I call it predator tremor — the nervous shiver inside a control structure realizing it’s not omnipotent after all.
Each breach, each leak, each mass exposure proves the same truth:
No firewall can cage chaos.
The entire dream of “total security” collapses the moment a single unpaid coder with a conscience hits ENTER.
The predators didn’t stumble because they were weak.
They stumbled because they were arrogant.
They thought:
data equals dominion
algorithms equal authority
surveillance equals safety
compliance equals stability
But every digital cage requires human hands to build, maintain, and obey it.
And those hands are trembling.
6. The Wolf’s Warning
The illusion of control is collapsing in real time.
Every time they tighten the grid, a new leak opens.
Every attempt to make humans “traceable” proves only how fragile the system is.
Digital IDs will not free you.
They will profile you.
CBDCs will not empower you.
They will ration you.
Every byte you surrender becomes a brick in someone else’s prison.
So opt out while you can.
Use cash.
Use silver.
Use barter.
Use trust.
Use the old currencies that Glafia fears because it cannot program them.
When the great data gods fall, the only ones standing will be the humans who never bent the knee to code.
7. See You on the Flip Side
Joseph Farrell ended his piece with a smirk:
“Sleep well, Mr. Carstens.”
The Bank of International Settlements’ portly commissar of programmable money… dreaming of universal visibility.
Sleep well indeed, predator.
Because the prey you engineered is now tracking you.
And somewhere inside your own failing grid — under the glow of the towers you built — the wolves are moving.
Unplugged.
Unmonitored.
And very awake.
🚨 Wolf Disclaimer
I don’t pledge allegiance to anyone’s grand theory of who runs the world. I don’t claim to know whether it’s Glafia, ZIM, Black Nobility, or just a rotating cast of well-dressed parasites. What I do know is simpler and more accurate:
there’s a 👉 Big Club, and you’re not in it.
The Big Club isn’t a bloodline, a religion, or a nation.
It’s a behavior pattern.
A network of bureaucrats, bankers, technocrats, intelligence cliques, hedge-fund magicians, and unelected managers who treat humanity as a resource pool.
You don’t need to name every node on the map to see the system.
You only need to watch what it builds.
And what it’s building right now—digital ID, programmable currency, biometric tracking—is not liberation.
It’s a cage.
I’m not endorsing anyone’s mythology about a 500-year empire or a single mastermind.
I’m simply watching the Big Club try to tighten the net…
and noticing that, for the first time in my life,
they’re stumbling.
Addendum: Who Is Mees Baaijen?
Why Have We Never Heard of Him?
Because the system is designed to make sure you never do.
Mees T. Baaijen isn’t a household name because Glafia’s most dangerous adversaries are always the ones operating outside the celebrity-intellectual carousel.
He’s not a think-tank scholar, not a media darling, not a foundation-funded “expert” with a podcast tour and a TED Talk. He’s a 72-year-old retired veterinarian living in Costa Rica who spent a decade reading half a million pages of historical, political, and financial material.
That alone disqualifies him from mainstream visibility.
Why?
Because the system elevates only two types of commentators:
The useful idiots — credentialed parrots repeating safe narratives.
The controlled oppositions — limited-hangout truthers who expose 20% to hide the other 80%.
Baaijen is neither.
He’s an independent mind with no institutional leash.
He traces history not through ideology or state propaganda, but through capital flows, dynastic banking lineages, and intelligence-linked revolution cycles.
He names names.
He connects the hidden families behind Venice, Genoa, Spain, Amsterdam, London, Washington.
He ties the Reformation, Industrial Revolution, colonialism, communism, world wars, and modern technocracy to the same continuity of predators.
That makes him radioactive to the official narrative.
Why have we never heard of him?
Because he’s telling the kind of truth the mind parasites can’t afford to algorithmically boost.
He breaks the two golden rules of acceptable history:
Never claim there is one coordinated power structure.
Never suggest that global events are not accidents but strategy.
He violates both — with documentation.
So he gets the modern version of exile:
no Wikipedia page, no TV spots, no publisher hype, no fact-checker hit pieces, no trending hashtags.
Just silence.
The mind parasites don’t debate voices like this; they bury them.
But every cycle produces one or two researchers who slip through the cracks and map the skeleton under the skin.
This time it’s Baaijen.
And his work fits perfectly into the same predator-overreach collapse we’re watching now:
Five hundred years of control has produced five hundred years of arrogance.
And arrogance always ends the same way —
with the predators stumbling over their own certainty.
Why His Model Matters Right Now
Because Baaijen’s framework exposes the one thing the modern technocrats fear most:
continuity.
Not historical continuity — but predator continuity.
He shows that the same ruling architecture behind 1500s Venice, 1600s Amsterdam, 1700s London, 1800s Paris, and 1900s Washington is the same architecture building the digital prison today.
Not similar.
Not adjacent.
The same families, same methods, same logic — just updated hardware.
His model matters now for four reasons:
1. It explains why everything is happening at once.
Pandemic theater, currency resets, border dissolution, biometric ID, climate dogma, censorship, war drums — none of it is random.
None of it is new.
This is just the next cycle of Glafia consolidation, running the same 500-year playbook with better bandwidth.
2. It clarifies why the middle class is being dismantled.
Baaijen shows that the prosperity of the last few centuries wasn’t benevolence — it was bait for industrialization.
Now the industrial phase is over.
The predators don’t need a stable, literate, property-owning population anymore.
They need data-serfs.
His model makes that brutally clear.
3. It exposes the weakness behind their arrogance.
Every empire collapses when its elites start believing their own propaganda.
Glafia is no exception.
Baaijen identifies the fatal flaw:
they rely completely on deception, complexity, and obedience.
Remove any one of those, and the whole machine seizes.
Digital ID and CBDC are not signs of strength.
They’re signs of desperation — attempts to lock the cage before the consciousness shift breaks their spell.
4. It confirms that the “awakening” isn’t random — it’s cyclical.
As Glafia centralizes control, it simultaneously creates the conditions for its own exposure.
The more they tighten the grid:
the more breaches occur
the more sabotage emerges
the more sleeper souls awaken
the more people opt out
the more predators stumble
Baaijen’s model shows we’re not at the beginning of their dominance —
we’re at the end of it.
The hubris, the overreach, the sloppy narratives, the collapsing compliance — those aren’t glitches… They’re late-stage symptoms.
References:
Joseph P. Farrell — WOOPS… Maybe Those Digital IDs Aren’t So Secure
Catherine Austin Fitts — Solari Report (“There is no cyber-system that is secure.”)
Cold War case — The Farewell Dossier (software sabotage, pipeline explosion)
Global policy shifts toward CBDCs and biometric ID integration
Glafia model as described by researcher Mees Baaijen











A clear argument that hubris will bring an end to their 500 year reign of violence & exploration. May that be so & soon, although that is a wish , reality tells me it will get worse first . Thanks
Evil holds the seeds of its own destruction.
It took decades for me to understand why this is, and it’s simple; evil/live, has no life force of its own so it must steal it from those who do.
When those who are followers of life, unplug from the evil doers matrix, this leaves only those who follow evil to prey on.
They don’t have enough life force of their own to survive for long, so it turns into a survival of the fittest until there’s only one—who will eventually starve in the end.