Alex Jones joins Russell Brand to continue their wide-ranging discussion about the influence of independent media and whether humanity is heading towards a singularity. Are you ready for round 2?
Here are some excerpts from part two of the Jones-Brand interview.
Russell brand: Do you think what needs to be proposed are new decentralized models that accept different cultural groups living differently, as we have probably done for a long time in previous incarnations of civilization, and I’m not talking about Atlantis-type things? I am saying that, as earlier in our human trajectory, we would have lived more tribal lives, unified but decentralized. Is that something we can offer to the world in terms of talking about solutions? Because in a sense, unlike Alex, we’re giving more and more esoteric and sometimes very brilliant and very vivid, lurid and wildly apocalyptic visions that still seem to convey a terrifying endgame event.
Alex Jones: Well, I want to be clear: by the end of an era, I don’t mean this is a new age thing, but I mean the fourth turning, all scientists, sociologists, political analysts and political scientists agree that we are at a mega -global realignment. We are headed for a mega twist. We are heading towards a singularity. And so everything is compressed. Everything speeds up. And thus we come to the end of the old order. This doesn’t mean the end of the world, but for the globalists they are threatening the end of the world if they don’t have control at the next level, because the life extension, the incredible super sciences, the free energy, they now want to shut down all energy and create a create a kind of feudal system in which only city-states are their model.
And they talk about that in Rollerball, which came out in the 1970s with James Caan, an excellent film, where there will be no more nations, just cities, like fifteen cities worldwide that have the resources. We see this in the Hunger Games. That’s actually a revelation of the method where they have super advanced technology, but the public doesn’t even have toilet paper or running water.