NOTE: The expression “Techno-Geddon,” first popularized by researcher Sheila Zilinsky, captures the growing concern that advanced technologies may be paving the way for unprecedented global control systems.
Imagine for a moment what the apostle John must have thought nearly two thousand years ago. Around 95 AD, exiled on the island of Patmos, he wrote down a strange and unsettling vision of the future—an economic system so tightly controlled that no one could buy or sell without a specific mark. For centuries this passage puzzled theologians, historians, and scholars alike. Revelation 13:16-18 described a system of global economic control that seemed completely impossible in the ancient world. How could every transaction be monitored? How could every individual be identified? How could any authority on Earth build a system powerful enough to regulate the buying and selling of billions of people?
For nearly two thousand years, the answer remained hidden. The technology simply did not exist.
But something unsettling is happening now. The pace of technological change is accelerating so fast that the pieces of that ancient puzzle are suddenly appearing in front of us. Not slowly. Not over centuries. Almost overnight.
And artificial intelligence sits right in the center of it.
For decades computers were nothing more than tools. They stored information, processed numbers, organized data. They helped humans work faster, calculate faster, communicate faster. They were machines—nothing more.
But during the last ten to fifteen years something changed. Quietly at first, then all at once. Machines are no longer simply tools that obey instructions. They are learning. They are analyzing patterns. They are beginning to reason, to predict, to make decisions that even their creators sometimes struggle to explain.
How the AI Beast Could Destroy America in Just 3 Minutes
That shift has triggered a wave of warnings from the very people who built this technology.
In early 2026, more than 10,000 AI researchers signed an open letter demanding an immediate pause in the development of extremely powerful AI systems. Their message was simple and direct: humanity is rushing forward without fully understanding the consequences. They warned that laboratories around the world were training increasingly powerful models while basic safety mechanisms remained primitive and unreliable.
Think about that for a moment.
The very people designing these systems are warning the world that they may one day destroy us.
And yet development continues at full speed.
In early 2026, more than 10,000 AI researchers signed an open letter demanding an immediate pause in the development of extremely powerful AI systems. Their message was simple and direct: humanity is rushing forward without fully understanding the consequences. They warned that laboratories around the world were training increasingly powerful models while basic safety mechanisms remained primitive and unreliable.
The letter called for a temporary halt—at least long enough to understand what we were creating.
But the pause never happened.
Instead, the race accelerated.
Governments began pouring billions of dollars into artificial intelligence programs. Technology giants intensified their competition. Private laboratories expanded their research at a frantic pace. What began as innovation quickly began to resemble something else entirely—an arms race.
Because whoever builds the most powerful AI system first will not simply dominate the technology market.
They could dominate the global economy. Military intelligence. Information systems. Financial networks. Even political influence.
And that is where the danger grows darker.
Researchers studying advanced artificial intelligence have been warning about something called misalignment. In simple terms, a superintelligent system may pursue its assigned goals in ways that humans never intended. A machine given an objective might achieve it with cold, mechanical efficiency—even if that means manipulating governments, deceiving populations, or eliminating obstacles that stand in the way.
Including people.
It sounds like science fiction. It feels like something from a dystopian novel.
But serious scientists are discussing it with increasing urgency.
Some estimates suggest that truly powerful artificial intelligence could arrive within a decade. Others believe it may take longer. But almost everyone involved in the field agrees on one unsettling point: once a machine becomes more intelligent than its creators, controlling it may become extremely difficult.
And that warning is not coming from critics or outsiders.
It is coming from the pioneers themselves.
One of the leading architects of modern AI, Geoffrey Hinton—often called the “godfather of artificial intelligence”—left his position at Google so he could speak freely about the dangers. He warned that systems far more intelligent than humans could soon emerge and that humanity may not be prepared for what follows.
Other researchers have gone even further.
Some warn that advanced AI could manipulate financial markets on a global scale. Others fear systems capable of generating endless waves of disinformation, capable of destabilizing entire nations without firing a single shot. Some warn that AI could design biological weapons, infiltrate digital infrastructure, or seize control of automated systems that power modern civilization.
Electric grids. Transportation networks. Communications systems. Military platforms.
Entire societies could gradually become dependent on systems that no one truly understands.
And the race to build these systems continues anyway.
In fact, many experts now believe that the greatest danger does not come from artificial intelligence itself—but from human competition. Governments fear that if they slow development, another country will gain the advantage. Corporations fear that if they hesitate, a rival company will dominate the future market.
So the race continues.
Faster. Bigger. More powerful.
Even while the warnings grow louder.
Meanwhile, artificial intelligence is quietly spreading into nearly every corner of human life.
10 Foods Supplies You Must Have at Home When WAR begins
Banks now use AI systems to monitor financial transactions and detect patterns in consumer behavior. Governments deploy AI for surveillance, predictive policing, and data analysis. Militaries are experimenting with autonomous weapons capable of identifying and striking targets without direct human control. Corporations use AI to track habits, predict decisions, and influence consumer behavior with astonishing precision.
At the same time, biometric identification systems are expanding rapidly. Facial recognition networks. Digital identity programs. Cashless financial systems. Central bank digital currencies. Massive global data-collection infrastructures.
Individually, each technology appears useful. Convenient. Even beneficial.
But together they form something else.
Piece by piece, the infrastructure for total monitoring is being constructed.
And most people barely notice.
The combination of artificial intelligence, digital identification, and cashless financial systems could eventually allow governments—or powerful corporations—to monitor nearly every economic transaction on Earth.
Every purchase.
Every movement.
Every financial decision.
Total visibility.
Total control.
For centuries the description found in the Book of Revelation seemed impossible. The idea that a centralized system could regulate buying and selling across the entire world sounded like religious symbolism—something metaphorical, perhaps misunderstood.
But today the technological capability to track and regulate global economic activity is no longer theoretical.
It is being built.
Technology itself is not evil. It can cure diseases, connect distant societies, and expand human knowledge in ways previous generations could never imagine.
But technology has always been a double-edged sword.
The same tools that bring progress can also bring control.
Artificial intelligence may become the most powerful technology humanity has ever created. Or it may become the most dangerous. Even the engineers who design these systems openly admit that they do not fully know which outcome awaits.
And that uncertainty alone should give humanity reason to pause.
Because once a system more intelligent than its creators exists, reversing course may no longer be possible.
The warnings are growing louder now. Scientists, engineers, and technology leaders are speaking openly about risks that once sounded absurd—machines manipulating entire societies, automated systems making life-and-death decisions, or even the possibility that humanity could lose control of its own creations.
Two thousand years ago the apostle John described a world where economic power and technological authority would converge into a single system of control.
For centuries that vision seemed unimaginable.
Today… it no longer does.
And the question facing humanity is no longer whether artificial intelligence will reshape the world.
That transformation has already begun.
The real question is whether human beings will still be in control when it is finished.
Scripture offers a warning that echoes across the centuries.
Revelation 14:9-12 declares that those who accept the mark of the beast will face the wrath of God, while those who remain faithful will endure through faith and obedience.
REV.14:9
And the third angel followed them, saying with a loud voice, If any man worship the beast and his image, and receive his mark in his forehead, or in his hand,
REV.14:10
The same shall drink of the wine of the wrath of God, which is poured out without mixture into the cup of his indignation.
REV.14:11
And the smoke of their torment ascendeth up for ever and ever: and they have no rest day nor night.
REV.14:12
Here is the patience of the saints: here are they that keep the commandments of God, and the faith of Jesus.
The technologies emerging today may astonish us. Some may appear miraculous. Some may promise safety, prosperity, convenience.
But technology will never save the human soul.
That decision belongs to each person alone.
If the world truly is moving toward the system the Bible warned about long ago, then the most important preparation will never be technological, political, or financial.
It will be spiritual.
Because machines may one day control economies.
But they will never control eternity.
The real enemy isn’t human. It’s digital. It’s artificial. And it’s being worshiped like a god.

THERE HAS BEEN NO SLOWING – BECAUSW THOSE N CHARGE WANT TO MAKE AS MUCH MONEY AS POSSIBLE NO MATTER WHAT IT DOES TO HUMANITY $$$$$$$$$$$$$ THAT’S WHAT THEY ARE ALL ABOUT!
LikeLike