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Just when you thought you'd heard it all, this resurfaced interview with Professor Francis Boyle—the man who literally WROTE the Biological Weapons Anti-Terrorism Act of 1989—will leave you speechless.
Just days after Professor Francis Boyle agreed to testify against Bill Gates and Albert Bourla regarding the deadly mRNA COVID vaccines... He was FOUND DEAD.
Boyle authored the “Bioweapons Act” in the US and called mRNA injections ‘Bioweapons & Franken-Shots’.
Where does the Pentagon fit into all this?...
He officially states that both SARS-CoV-2 and mRNA injections were offensive biological weapons programs funded by DARPA from the beginning. Gain of function? That was the cover story.
According to Boyle, the real goal has always been population reduction technology “with lethal vaccines.”
He goes further—he defines the rules as “synthetic biological weapons of mass destruction” because they trigger prion-like autoimmune reactions and turbo tumors.
Boyle filed lawsuits, pleaded with Congress, and warned the world. Just 20 days after agreeing to testify for the prosecution, he was found dead. The same pattern we've seen with dozens of doctors and whistleblowers since 2020.
The most chilling part? Boyle predicted exactly what we are seeing now: myocarditis, strokes, infertility, and tumors exploding in the injected systems.
He said the spike protein itself is the weapon and that the lipid nanoparticles were engineered to cross the blood-brain barrier. It was not a mistake. It was a military-grade killing agent disguised as “public health.”
Plebeians like you and I are real. Our suffering is real. Every
hour we slave, every risk we take, every loss we endure contributes to
something tangible: the wealth, power, and influence of the upper crust.
But do you really think the people creating these circumstances care
about any of us? Not a bit. They designed it this way. They profit from
it, they insulate themselves from it, and they call it order while we
call it life. Money decides who moves. War decides who lives or dies.
Medicine decides who must comply. Control is the result. This is not
accidental. It is the architecture of power itself.
From
the late Middle Ages into the Tudor period, Britain and other European
states discovered that brute force alone cannot endure. Armies burn,
rebellions flare, empires crumble. Violence alone is unstable. To
maintain dominion, power had to be engineered, systematic, and
relentless. Permanent war demanded permanent financing. Permanent
financing demanded permanent infrastructure. Permanent infrastructure
demanded populations that could be counted, classified, managed, and
when necessary, sacrificed. Banking funded armies. Armies expanded
states. States enforced order. Medicine rose as both shield and sword, a
tool to manage bodies at scale. Not to heal out of kindness, but to
maintain efficiency, reliability, and obedience. Sick soldiers and sick
workers threatened the system. Healthy bodies reinforced it.
Religion
has always been part of the machinery. It sanctifies obedience,
legitimizes authority, and gives suffering a narrative. It blesses wars,
funds institutions, and keeps plebeians working, dying, and complying.
Just like medicine, just like money, just like military rank, it becomes
another instrument to reward compliance, extend influence, and make the
system seem natural. Pray, fight, or obey, it doesn’t matter. The
outcome is always the same: the upper crust thrives while we fight their
wars with our lives.
When the United States emerged, the old
aristocracy did not vanish. They transformed. Boston Brahmins,
industrial dynasties, financiers, and social elites did not need titles.
They did not need uniforms to assert power. They needed institutions.
Universities, hospitals, research foundations, boards, and regulatory
bodies. These were the instruments through which power was centralized
and legitimized.
Titles, Rank, and the Management of Death
The
myth is that elites went to war alongside everyone else. The reality is
that they positioned themselves above it. Take John Jacob Astor IV.
Often referred to as Lieutenant Colonel Astor, his title suggests combat
leadership, but in truth, his role during the Spanish American War was
largely staff-based. He served on the headquarters staff of General
William Shafter in Cuba, overseeing logistics, inspections, and
coordination. He did not lead infantry charges. He did not march through
jungle fire with enlisted men. His proximity to danger was incidental,
not structural.
Astor also personally financed an artillery unit,
the Astor Battery, which was deployed to the Philippines. Funding a unit
conferred status, access, and rank. It also ensured distance. Others
commanded. Others fought. Others died. Astor gained legitimacy,
prestige, and the enduring social title of Colonel without absorbing the
physical cost of war.
This pattern was common. Elite military
titles functioned as a bridge between wealth and authority. Rank did not
have to mean battlefield exposure. It meant administrative control,
symbolic legitimacy, and proximity to decision making. These men were
not expendable assets. They were managers of expendable assets.
Other
figures illustrate the same logic. Cornelius Vanderbilt III raised and
commanded a volunteer cavalry regiment, yet his risk was structured. He
entered as an officer, not as cannon fodder. Theodore Roosevelt rode
with the Rough Riders and saw combat, but his service elevated him
politically and socially, a trajectory not shared by the enlisted men
who fought and died around him. Even professional staff officers like
Peyton C. March commanded resources and logistics with minimal direct
exposure to battlefield danger. National Guard officers and volunteer
colonels often never left the United States, their roles symbolic or
administrative while ordinary soldiers bore the brunt of disease, heat,
and artillery.
The Spanish American War delivered precisely what
elites needed: prestige, territorial expansion, and profit. Puerto Rico,
Guam, the Philippines, and Cuba came under U.S. influence. Trade routes
expanded. Naval power grew. Military contracts multiplied. Shipping and
insurance boomed. Wealth was protected, capital extended, influence
secured. The war was brief. The benefits were enduring.
War as Lever and Medicine as Governance
War
accelerates elite influence. Every conflict justified emergency
measures. Emergency measures concentrated authority. Concentrated
authority rewarded obedience and punished resistance. Medicine became
their perfect partner. It speaks in absolutes, demands trust, enforces
compliance. Trauma care, logistics, epidemiology, surveillance, all
scaled through military and state needs. Each innovation reinforced
authority. Each emergency expanded power (and continues to do so).
Profit
intertwined with purpose, and the system became self-sustaining.
Illness became a market. Crisis became a revenue stream. Compliance
became measurable. Poisoned environments, neglected prevention,
controlled outbreaks, all became part of the machinery. Those at the top
insulated themselves from harm. Those at the bottom absorbed it. That
asymmetry is not flaw. It is design.
Plebeians like you and I are
real. Our suffering is real. Every forced march, every risk, every
exhaustion adds to the fortunes of the upper crust. Science seems real
too. Reports, charts, experiments, official protocols, laboratories with
white coats, all of it looks like knowledge. But is it really about
understanding anything, or is it just another way to enforce obedience,
measure compliance, and convince the rest of us to keep running in
circles while the elite keep scoring points?
Today, the names have
changed. The uniforms are still there for the enlisted, but the upper
mucks wear suits. They meet at summer camps in Idaho, sit in Bilderberg
rooms, attend WEF forums, and gather at UN and WHO meetings to plan
strategy, manage narratives, and protect their interests. Foundations,
agencies, contractors, public-private partnerships, revolving doors, all
operate under the same logic. War is continuous, emergency normalized,
health securitized. Money funds force. Force expands authority. Medicine
legitimizes control.
Bodies are real. Suffering is real.
Authority is real. Everything else is theater. This is the pattern
across centuries. Different faces, different tools, same outcome. Money,
war, medicine, control. One continuous thread linking empires, nations,
crises, and institutions. Once you see it, the question stops being
whether the system is broken. The question becomes for whom it is built
and at whose expense it endures. Everything else is noise.