Stupid Don’t Know
Just like dead people don’t know they’re dead or brainwashed people don’t know they’re brainwashed…
This Lone Wolf knows:
Consciousness is primary.
Parasite clowns can never change that fact.
Knowing comes only from direct, lived experience—period. Believing comes from a million different pipelines, maybe billions: pulpits, professors, politicians, priests, pharma ads, parasites whispering through glowing screens. Knowing burns into your bones; belief just sloshes around like cheap wine in a paper cup.
Remember Fredo in Godfather II? He was “smart too.” And where did that get him? Gone fishing, a couple of Hail Marys tossed into the wind, and then a long nap with the fishes. That’s belief without knowing—death row with a rosary.
Here’s the line no parasite wants you to hear: if you think you know because someone told you, you’re in the long queue of stupid don’t know. If you know because the thunderbolt rearranged your bones, welcome home. This essay is the map between the two.
“Never argue with stupid people, they will drag you down to their level and then beat you with experience.” - Mark Twain
1. Knowing Versus Believing
Belief is cheap. It’s a subscription you forgot to cancel. It comes dressed in uniforms, accreditation, slogans, and clickbait headlines. Belief is always imported—handed to you by someone with an agenda.
Knowing, on the other hand, is expensive. It costs sweat, scars, exile, sometimes your reputation. Knowing is direct contact with the Real—so sharp it slices away the excuses.
Belief is a menu.
Knowing is hunger.
Belief is a library card.
Knowing is fire in the chest.
You can say you “believe in courage” and still fold when the mob shows up. But when you know courage, it’s because you’ve stood alone with the wall at your back. That’s the razor line: belief is social plumbing; knowing is soul marrow.
2. The Thunderbolt
Call it illumination, awakening, Event Stream, flash of knowing. Whatever the name, the Thunderbolt is not metaphor. It is an ontological strike—pure current from Source that wipes your operating system.
When the flash of knowing hits, every rented belief collapses. The maps curl like paper in fire. Your body knows. Your bones know. Your excuses die.
It doesn’t arrive through lectures or conferences. It comes in silence, or grief, or joy so intense you think your ribs will split. It’s a reboot that cannot be faked.
The aftermath is brutal and liberating. You lose friends, jobs, status. You also lose the leash. Nobody owns your perception anymore. That’s why institutions fear it: the Thunderbolt makes their authority irrelevant.
True Story: A few years back I was talking with Bud — head honcho at a big municipal water plant near Denver. He already figured me for crazy, off-planet.
I said one word: fluoride. He cut me off, declared fluoride prevents cavities in kids. That was the gospel; I’d guess I never heard that, except a million times. A credibility gap opened between us. I shut up and walked away. Sad.
3. Parasite Programming
The parasites don’t usually come with fangs. They come with a smile, a grant, a seal of approval. Their trick is not force—it’s repetition.
Step one: make the lie plausible.
Step two: repeat until familiar.
Step three: normalize into habit.
Step four: reward habit as identity.
Soft persuasion is the velvet glove: education, entertainment, advertising, “trusted” experts. Hard lock is the iron fist: mandates, censorship, banking freezes, job loss. Together they form the cage.
The genius move? You enforce it yourself. You censor your own doubts. You mock your own awakenings. You edit your own soul for “responsibility.” The parasite laughs—they’ve outsourced the warden’s job to you.
4. The Dance of the Parasites
They don’t look like monsters. They look like CEOs, media anchors, think tank suits, philanthropists with toothy grins. Their choreography has four beats:
Ritual – headlines at six, medical checkups, performance reviews, elections, corporate holidays. All dressed as normal life but really sacraments to the system.
Narrative – the official story about who you are, who the enemy is, why compliance is survival.
Money – the glue. Buy the journalists, fund the experts, bankroll the “science.” Cash bends credibility.
Hubris – ego on steroids. “I know everything (not). You know nothing (not).” Loaded with “absolutely,” “for sure,” “you’re so right on MF.” They spray certainty like cologne, and the herd inhales it.
That’s the dance: ritual for rhythm, narrative for hypnosis, money for glue, hubris for flavor. A con choreographed as culture.
5. Brainwashing
Forget the Hollywood version. Brainwashing isn’t a single dramatic scene—it’s death by a thousand edits.
Repetition: Say it until resistance collapses.
Identity leverage: Tie the belief to family, job, or religion so dissent feels like betrayal.
Emotional conditioning: Reward obedience with belonging, punish doubt with shame.
The parasite doesn’t need to erase truth—just drown it under noise. Add algorithms that learn your triggers, and you get a custom brainwash bubble. Outrage + certainty = engagement = profit.
The end result? Stupid don’t know. Not because they’re dumb, but because their operating system has been rewritten in polite increments.
6. Stupid Don’t Know
It’s not about IQ. Some of the sharpest minds are the blindest. Denial is cheaper than truth.
Knowing can cost your job, your spouse, your community. Belief pays in comfort, likes, and pensions. The parasite makes sure the math is clear: comfort or exile. Most choose comfort.
That’s why stupid don’t know. Not because they can’t—but because they won’t.
7. How To Break Out
You don’t have to wait for lightning. You can prepare the ground.
Test beliefs. Don’t just Google—talk to real people who lived the opposite.
Shock the body. Fast. Take a cold plunge. Walk alone without a phone. Disrupt the comfort loop.
Read forbidden things. Step outside the mainstream script. Taste other archives.
Build circles of doubt. Find people who won’t flinch when you question the sacred.
Insulate financially. Parasites weaponize livelihoods. Diversify, hold some real money (metal, barter), and buy back your speech.
Make your own rituals. Silence, gratitude, nature, prayer without middlemen.
These aren’t enlightenment hacks—they’re resistance drills. Each one weakens the parasite’s grip. Each one makes you less programmable.
8. After The Thunderbolt
Knowing isn’t the end. It’s the beginning.
First, heal yourself. Parasites love wounded prophets. Then teach quietly—through example, not dogma. Build resilient nodes: gardens, barter circles, independent media, wolf packs of the awake.
And fight in the arena of story. The parasite rules narrative with sedation—your job is to crack it with clarity, humor, and awe. Don’t preach. Show. Don’t scold. Invite.
Most of all, keep wonder alive. Knowing doesn’t mean cynicism. It means clarity with reverence intact. The cosmos still sings, even in a world of fraud.
Conclusion
Truth multiplies freedom but subtracts comfort. Parasites sell comfort; the Thunderbolt sells freedom. Which do you want?
The stupid don’t know. But you can. Test. Risk. Live. Step outside the dance and watch the empire wobble. The parasites are brittle, their hubris a mask, their rituals an empty loop.
The Thunderbolt waits. It doesn’t ask for belief. It demands courage.
References
Clif High — Event Stream, narrative collapse, manifestation hacks.
Walter Russell — Illumination, radiant field cosmology.
Joseph Farrell / Paul Cudenec — parasite architecture, suppressed history.
Experiential testimony — illumination, NDE, gnosis, lived truth over parasite storylines.








Love this line “If you know because the thunderbolt rearranged your bones, welcome home.”
One of my favorite words is “ignorance” because it cuts to the heart of the matter. Its root word is “ignore”. The Oxford Dictionary claims its definition is “lack of knowledge, not knowing” and Oxford says it comes from an old French word that translates “not knowing”.
But I always point to the Latin root word: “ignorare” which means “not to know, not to notice, DISREGARD”
Meaning some individuals are ignorant not from lack of access to knowledge, but because they deliberately disregard the evidence set before them.
As they remove the ability to think critically from our education system, it becomes our duty to open doors and reach hearts and minds with patience and love. Stand strong in the face of their ignorance and be the example of truth.