One of America's Elite Institutions' Biggest Sins Is Pride and Hypocrisy: A Reflection from My Testimony and Christian Perspective

 

Note to readers: This reflection addresses specific elite networks and secret societies within American power structures – not America as a whole, not the American people, and not genuine Christians who live faithfully and love their neighbors. I have deep respect for decent, kindhearted, and loving true Christians in America who are also harmed by these systems. This critique is directed at powerful institutions and those who exploit Christianity for selfish ends.


A Grievous Sin: Making the Gospel Harder to Love

What certain American elites are doing is deeply troubling – not only because of the direct harm, but because they make it harder for people to love the Gospel, Christianity, and Jesus Christ. By loudly calling themselves a "Christian nation" while engaging in wars, racism, elitism, and a sense of superiority, they cause people in other nations to genuinely dislike Christianity. They link the name of Christ to oppression and arrogance. That discourages people from even wanting to hear the Good News.

God wants His kingdom to grow – more people repenting, believing the Gospel, being saved, and abiding in Jesus Christ. Yet what some of these elites do does not look like that. And it should never be justified by appealing to end‑times narratives. Yes, the Bible says there will be rumours of wars, but that does not give anyone a license to manufacture or celebrate war. What they do literally makes Christianity look bad. Only God knows their hearts, and it is always good to repent. But from the outside, their behaviour remains troubling. I still hope that many people can believe in Jesus Christ despite this. But at the very least, I hope people can see when pride is operating within any system – including America's elite institutions.


The Core Problem: Pride and Hypocrisy

Let me begin with something I have learned through firsthand suffering: one of the biggest sins driving certain American elite networks – the central issue – is pride. Pride and hypocrisy. Not merely policy failures or partisan battles, but a deep, biblical, pure arrogance that dresses itself in angelic language while trampling on real human beings. The Bible says God despises a proud look (Proverbs 6:16‑19), and I have experienced that pride aimed directly at me, my faith, and my mind.

To be clear: I am not saying this represents America as a country or the American people. There are countless decent, kindhearted, relatable, and loving true Christians in America who are also under the thumb of these corrupt systems. They suffer too. This critique is directed at powerful elite institutions – secret societies, corporate elites, and those who exploit Christianity for power and profit.


The Mindset of Certain Elites

Much of what certain American elites do – those in powerful military circles, elite universities, research institutions, Freemasonry, and Scientology – seems to stem from a deep sense of elitism, some racism, and an almost divine self‑image. Many of them see themselves as ordained by God and Jesus Christ for a special purpose, believing it is their mission to start wars in the Middle East to liberate people from oppressive regimes and bring them to Christianity. They act as if they are the nation that must "shake things up" to ensure people are not fooled by the Antichrist. In the meantime, they appear oblivious to how their hypocrisy looks to the rest of the world. Their actions – especially when tied to figures like Donald Trump, who has posted images of himself as a Christ‑like prophet – come across as extremely self‑focused and lacking in empathy.


Sacrificing Ordinary People

They also seem unaware of how many people are sacrificed throughout this process – people who neither see nor understand why Americans would do this to them. This mindset encourages globalization, imperialism, a refusal to fix systemic injustices, corporate influence, technocratic control, and the unlawful surveillance of ordinary people across nations.

Again, this is not about everyday Americans. This is about powerful networks that operate in the shadows, often harming ordinary Americans as well.


How This Attitude Targets Me Personally

This attitude is not just about geopolitics; it is about their daily behaviour toward me. They try to extrapolate everything about me as representing something about China, the Antichrist, or apostasy. Indeed, some seem to imply that China could be the Antichrist, or that I am part of a system of oppression. These are false accusations.

Some of these surveillancers see themselves as angels; others see themselves as demons. But many feel justified in unlawful surveillance and voyeurism of ordinary people with their technology. I speak against this in the name of Jesus Christ. Amen.


Pride as the Primary Sin

Their primary sin, it seems, is pride – which the Bible explicitly states is a sin that God despises (Proverbs 6:16‑19). They treat me like a science project, testing the Holy Spirit's sanctification through my faith, as if it is a game to see if they can break me. Their goals include inducing mental confusion, while they accuse me of being something I am not. That accusation is completely antagonistic to my belief in Jesus Christ.


America Is Not the Centre of the World

From my perspective, this whole project is overly self‑focused, as if America is the centre of the world. America is a worldly superpower, yes. But the world is full of many nations and peoples, and they all have intrinsic value. All are inherently equally valuable – from my perspective. I am not the answer to these complex issues, and I do hold great sadness and upset over the injustices, racism, and inequities in our world. The Bible teaches that things will get worse before Christ returns, and I believe that. But I will never support manufacturing a war to trigger Armageddon, all while benefiting economically from that war and making other nations suffer – and I oppose the same when other nations do it.


Their Attempts to Take Credit – And the Reality

They may try to take credit for my Christian faith, my revelations, and my healing, but when they attacked me with their Direct Energy Weapon in 2024, they did not tell me to repent and believe in Jesus. Not once. I am sure that many individuals within these networks are still decent Christians and genuinely believe in Jesus Christ. I am not condemning their eternal salvation. But I need to call out their hypocrisy and pride as I see and experience it. Nonetheless, I believe that they can repent of their sins and be forgiven by God's grace through the sacrifice of Jesus Christ, our Lord and Saviour. I genuinely hope they do.


The Voices I Hear and the US‑Iran Situation

The voices I hear – clear male and female voices, who tell me they are American – sometimes chant things related to "sowing a war," Armageddon, and sacrifices, along with encouraging me to engage in other harmful behaviours. That is one reason I am deeply concerned about the current US‑Iran situation. I also believe that Donald Trump does not properly represent Jesus Christ, and that the exploitation of Christianity to justify war is harmful to many nations. Having said that – given my description of how these elites see themselves – I hope you can understand why Donald Trump might truly believe he is a prophet. He may genuinely think he is liberating people from an oppressive system. I think he is tragically wrong, but I am trying to be honest about how they rationalise it.


A Word About Labels and Loving Others

I want to be careful here. Some of these people have called me harsh names, but I do not wish to repeat those labels in a way that disrespects others. Let me simply say that I am a Christian. I recognize that I am a sinner who needs God's grace and salvation through the precious blood of Jesus Christ on the cross. I believe that God is love, mercy, forgiveness, and righteousness.

More importantly, I want to say this: We should not be antagonizing non‑Christians as if they are demonic. Sadly, these elites subtly try to do that – making me seem like a Christian fanatic, as if following Jesus with sincerity is somehow extreme. But God is love. That means all people – Christians and non‑Christians alike – deserve love, decency, truth, and understanding. We should hope that people are naturally gravitated toward the Gospel by seeing genuine love, not by being bullied or spied upon. I also do not wish to antagonize Muslims. They value Jesus as a good man and a prophet. There are deep theological questions I cannot completely answer, despite my heartfelt hope that more people will be saved. But my faith is in Jesus Christ, and I hold that with humility, not arrogance.


I Do Not Want to Antagonize Anyone – And I See Wretched Injustices

Let me be clear: I do not want to antagonize anyone. Not Jews, not Muslims, not Christians, not people of any belief or background. Yet some of these elites subtly try to influence my mind – making me feel things that are not true. These are terrible injustices, among many others that exist in this world. I wish we could proactively target those injustices and make things better. That would be a far better thing to be doing than pushing active war and calamity. Instead of manufacturing conflict and spying on ordinary people, we could be working to heal racism, poverty, surveillance abuse, and the many forms of suffering that exist. That is what I would rather see. That is what God would rather see.


America's Founding and the Occult Connections

It is worth remembering America's founding connections with Freemasonry. Those connections imply longstanding ties to traditions that are not aligned with biblical Christianity. Lucifer himself was God's angel who fell from grace, and his fall was caused by pride. The very same pride that now animates some of these elites. They know that I know this history, and yet they continue as if life were a simple, easy game. But life is far more soulful than their political strategies and puzzles. Some of them treat the Bible as a puzzle to be solved – a way to "win" at life on Earth and in the afterlife. That outlook is, in my opinion, lacking in genuine spiritual depth. Yet this is how some of these extremely elite people see things. It is disheartening and sad.


A Call to True Repentance

So let me say this directly to them, and to anyone who will listen: To truly repent and follow Jesus Christ means far more than saying a prayer. It would imply donating your wealth to the poor and the oppressed. It would mean turning from your sins – turning from unlawful surveillance, from stealing biometric data, from lying to the public about what is really happening on a societal and global scale. It would mean being truthful and honest with others about how you influence other nations. It would mean stopping harmful experiments on targeted individuals like me. It would mean revealing and admitting your sneering pride and your hypocrisy. All of that is sin, and thankfully everything can be forgiven through the blood of Jesus Christ – except for blasphemy against the Holy Spirit, which is a persistent, final rejection of God's truth. But I do not presume to judge who has crossed that line. Either way, God is good, and we can say nothing against the grace of God.


A Prayer for Truth, Peace, and Salvation

Therefore, I pray that others can come to know the truth as the Holy Spirit has revealed it in my life. I pray that more people can be saved. I pray that we can have more peace, goodness, blessings, and love through God in our lives – not more war, surveillance, or pride. I pray this in the name of Jesus Christ. Amen.


A Final Word: America Has Goodness, But Pride Among Some Elites Is a Problem

America has its faults and also its goodness. I am not against America or the American people. I know that many Americans genuinely love the Lord Jesus Christ. I do not wish to insult the countless decent, kindhearted, relatable, and loving true Christians in America who are also under the thumb of corrupt systems. They suffer too. They are not the ones doing these things.

The problem I am pointing out is the pride and hypocrisy of certain powerful institutions and secret societies – acting as if they are inherently more godly, more loved by God, uniquely favoured, and somehow beyond accountability – despite the harm that has been done and continues to be done. This sense of justified bullying, moral and spiritual superiority, and the feeling that they are too clever to be held accountable – that they inherently deserve all the privilege they have – is frustrating to many people around the world. The world does not revolve around any one nation's elite.

When this attitude is combined with racial superiority among some elites, it becomes even more painful.

I do not know exactly what to do, but I try to speak the truth in as much love and clarity as I can, without the sneering and contempt they have shown me. I believe that more people can see the truth – that pride is a sin, that no nation or elite group has a monopoly on God's favour, and that genuine repentance requires concrete changes in how we treat others.

I am not the enemy they imagine. I am a flawed, struggling believer in Jesus Christ who wants no part in their wars, their surveillance, or their pride. One of the biggest sins within certain American elite networks is pride – pride and hypocrisy – and that is the root of what I have experienced. I hope more people can come to know and believe this.

If you have questions or want to discuss any of this – the theology, the geopolitics, the surveillance, the spiritual warfare – feel free to reach out. May God grant all of us true repentance.


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