Je suis vivant

Je suis vivant

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The 2020' are the age of the #GreatestDeception of all times ! Je suis vivant - #IamAlive & #JesusisReal #sico Silence is Consent

WATCH & PRAY !

What does this mean to me ? Living in Jesus in the world, but not of the world requires both intimacy in spiritual relationship as well as awareness of the affaird of this world and courage to speak against the evils of our time. There is a dark side to globalism and it thrives on ignorance and deception. THY KINGDOM COME ! Jesus never aspired to political office, but he spoke out on social and po

Photos from 89.9 TheLight's post 31/03/2026
31/03/2026

Thank you for continuing to show up 💛

31/03/2026

When you’re struggling, even answering “What do you need?” can feel like another task.

Trying to think of the 'right' way for someone to support you can add pressure you don’t have capacity for. Specific suggestions take the mental load off the person who’s already carrying enough. Support becomes easier to accept when it doesn’t require extra energy.

31/03/2026
31/03/2026

What if we checked in on those who don't seem themselves?

A conversation can change a life.

31/03/2026

Yes we are filling up someone’s car again this Friday. Please only nominate if the person owns the car. This is to protect us and you so it’s fair. Please only nominate if the person is needing abit of help. Please remember we are doing this off our own backs, we to are struggling with our diesel costs reaching over $1000 this past week. But we see the community hurting and want to make a few more people smile. Nominations are open now until 8am Friday ( yes we know it’s Good Friday ). Have an amazing week team.💜💜💜

31/03/2026
31/03/2026

Today broke us a little.

We stood there looking at a homeless man whose foot is so badly infected it clearly needs urgent medical attention it’s sinew, nothing left, the kind of condition that could cost him his life, not just his limb. And yet nothing could be done.
We called for help. We asked questions. We pushed.
And still, the answer was the same.
There is nothing we can do.
How is that okay?
How is it that someone can be standing right in front of us, visibly unwell, clearly deteriorating, and the system cannot step in to help them?
We are seeing more and more people every single day,
• People in wheelchairs with severe leg and foot conditions
• People living on the streets with untreated medical issues
• People battling mental health and addiction with no real support
And the reality is this, the system is full of gaps. Massive ones.
We’ve been navigating these systems ourselves over the past 12 months, and what we’ve seen is heartbreaking. When people hit crisis point, when they actually NEED help, there are barriers, technicalities, and limitations that stop intervention.
Not because people don’t care.
But because the system simply isn’t built to respond when it matters most.
And that is failing people.
This is not just frustrating, it is dangerous.
Because while we stand there being told “there’s nothing we can do,”
people are getting sicker.
People are slipping through the cracks.
People are dying.
How many more lives have to be lost?
How many more families have to suffer?
How many more people have to be left on the street, untreated and unheard?
Something has to change. And it has to change NOW.
We need a system that doesn’t wait until it’s too late.
We need laws that allow intervention BEFORE people are at breaking point.
We need real support for our most vulnerable, not red tape.
Because what we saw today should never, ever be acceptable.
And we will not stay quiet about it.
If you or you know someone falling between the gaps, know of a homeless person that needs help but isn’t receiving it, we would love to hear your story.

19/10/2024

Mike Benz and the US National Security State !

By JEAN CURTHOYS Jean Curthoys is a retired academic and feminist philosopher from The University of Sydney.

Who, really, is trying to control us? Mike Benz, a former employee of the US State Department and an authority on internet censorship, is attracting much attention on social media with his answer to that question.

Fast talking, intense, and convinced that control of the internet is the key to wider controls, he can overwhelm his audience with the vast knowledge he acquired by ploughing through the manuals, reports, and vision statements of a myriad of organisations. But what he has to say is shocking, so it is important that it is so well based. For Benz, the ultimate power re-shaping our lives is not, as so many believe, the World Economic Forum – this is a lesser player on his scenario. Rather, it is the US 'national security state', consisting of the CIA, the US Department of Defence and the State Department. In alliance with NATO, these bodies operate an extensive network of government institutions, NGOs, and public private foundations – a complex and opaque arrangement he calls 'the blob'. In essence, he told a stunned Tucker Carlson, he is talking about military rule. If that seems implausible, it becomes less so when we hear Benz out on the history of the internet and how this military establishment decided that controlling 'the narrative' was no longer a subsidiary aspect of war but a primary aim. Here, he makes much of the combined interests of the US military industrial complex and the multi-national US corporations, at times sounding, as one interviewer put it, like the Noam Chomsky of some decades ago.

The story begins in 1991, when democratic – movements 'from the people', wanting governments to work 'for the people'. This meant that presenting their repression in terms of defending democracy was a challenge. The challenge was met by an Orwellian change in language. Democracy no longer meant government 'by the people' but 'the defence of democratic institutions'. Understanding this makes sense of why so much mainstream commentary appears so self-righteous in demonising those who have lost confidence in their institutions as authoritarian, far right, extremists.
Redefining democracy, though, was not enough. Because it is unprecedented for a military defence establishment to target its own citizenry, its role had to be concealed. Benz' research reveals that the millions of dollars poured into developing censorship techniques are dispersed to universities, civil associations, the media, NGOs and other bodies. This was called a 'whole of society' approach, rendering invisible the central role of military intelligence while inducing the illusion that the move for so-called 'safety online' is from the 'bottom up', not, as it actually is, from the 'top down'. Even more pernicious is what is implied by this ‘whole of society' policy. For when a society has successfully coordinated all of its sectors to support the ruling agenda, it has moved from authoritarianism, even fascism, to full-blown totalitarianism. Or so Hannah Arendt argues in her definitive work, The Origins of Totalitarianism. Three features, she shows, define totalitarianism: rule by controlling the mind; the coordination of all sectors to the aims of the ruling body; and military and economic power working in unison.
Benz does not present his account of internet censorship in these terms, but it is effectively what it demonstrates. Jean’s academic publications include Feminist Amnesia (Routledge, 1997). the US military opened the internet – its own creation – to the public. Some may remember the euphoria of that time when the 'net', a place where ordinary citizens could publish, was seen as making free speech a concrete reality for all. This was the pre-history of internet censorship, but it laid the foundations of what was to come. What we didn't know then was that the military establishment backed internet freedom in these early years, but not for any commitment to free speech. Assisted by US intelligence agents posting pro-Western ideas, Facebook in particular had accelerated resistance to repressive regimes hostile to US interests – the 'colour revolutions' in Eastern Europe and the Arab spring being the notable instances. These 'Facebook revolutions' brought home the power of propaganda as an instrument of war for they succeeded 'without a shot being fired’. For the 'blob', however, the point was less the democratic aspirations of the resident populations than that the overthrow of a hostile regimes enabled US multi-nationals to move in and take over previously state-owned assets. From the outset, the internet was a creature of the combined interests of the US military industrial complex and the globalised multi-nationals – just as Chomsky used to say. In 2014, the 'blob' abandoned internet freedom, shocked by the 'loss' of the referendum in Crimea where the overwhelming majority voted to join Russia. It was now apparent that spreading proWestern ideas on the internet was no longer, on its own, sufficient to counter pro-Russian sentiment. Suppression of anti-Western ideas became equally imperative. So much so, that NATO not only established a whole apparatus for censoring the internet but enshrined it in a policy of 'hybrid warfare', a policy which made controlling 'the narrative' equally, if not more, important than naked military power. [NATO Secretary General] Stoltenberg summed it up as moving 'from tanks to tweets'. The internet was now literally a site of warfare.
Until 2016, the machinery of internet censorship was confined to Eastern Europe and parts of Germany. It was the dramatic events of that year – the election of Donald Trump, Brexit and the increasing electoral power of populist parties in Spain, Italy and Greece – which ushered in the Orwellian world we now inhabit. In the name of defeating populism (which spread largely via the internet) the 'blob' turned its methods of internet censorship inward, onto the populations of Western nations themselves. (Australia is directly involved as part of the intelligence sharing 'Five Eyes' alliance.) Readers of The Light Australia probably need no persuading about the existence of censorship and how the deletion or shadow banning of posts labelled mis-, dis-, and malinformation mostly targeted no such thing, but dissent itself. A lot more can be learned, especially about the alarming use of AI, by following Benz on X, YouTube or Rumble. Most useful to mention here are the aspects of his 'big picture' which can get lost in the detail of the 'blob's' octopus tentacles. First, though, why was the national security state so threatened by populism? Benz maintains that it is because these movements are about restoring the power of nation states to manage national economies in the interests of citizens. This places them in direct opposition to two requirements of multinational corporations: to be able to go where labour is cheapest and to expand internationally by taking over erstwhile state assets. Putting this another way, it could be said that Benz identifies the threat of populism in its opposition to neo-liberalism. Others have suggested as much. The new insights into Benz' account concern the way the attack on populism has been managed.
Populism is patently democratic – movements 'from the people', wanting governments to work 'for the people'. This meant that presenting their repression in terms of defending democracy was a challenge. The challenge was met by an Orwellian change in language. Democracy no longer meant government 'by the people' but 'the defence of democratic institutions'. Understanding this makes sense of why so much mainstream commentary appears so self-righteous in demonising those who have lost confidence in their institutions as authoritarian, far right, extremists. Redefining democracy, though, was not enough.
Because it is unprecedented for a military defence establishment to target its own citizenry, its role had to be concealed. Benz' research reveals that the millions of dollars poured into developing censorship techniques are dispersed to universities, civil associations, the media, NGOs and other bodies. This was called a 'whole of society' approach, rendering invisible the central role of military intelligence while inducing the illusion that the move for so-called 'safety online' is from the 'bottom up', not, as it actually is, from the 'top down'. Even more pernicious is what is implied by this ‘whole of society' policy. For when a society has successfully coordinated all of its sectors to support the ruling agenda, it has moved from authoritarianism, even fascism, to full-blown totalitarianism. Or so Hannah Arendt argues in her definitive work, The Origins of Totalitarianism. Three features, she shows, define totalitarianism: rule by controlling the mind; the coordination of all sectors to the aims of the ruling body; and military and economic power working in unison. Benz does not present his account of internet censorship in these terms, but it is effectively what it demonstrates.

Jean’s academic publications include Feminist Amnesia (Routledge, 1997).

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