On Numerology

If you intend to give your critics a field day, base your argument on astrology or numerology, and they will have a good laugh. Numerology is about giving meaning to events using numbers. Numbers have no meaning except for the number itself, so numerology is nonsense. When you give meaning to numbers, you may find the occurrence of specific numbers meaningful. If your lucky number is twenty-six, and you happen to see that number, you might think it is your lucky day. Many of us are superstitious in some way or another. Some wear their lucky shirt when their favourite soccer team is playing. Conspiracy theorists think coincidences indicate that occult groups gather in secret societies like Skull and Bones to coordinate world events. Here is the proof, according to an anonymous online poster:

This year is the 192nd anniversary of the Skull and Bones Society. Matthew Perry died 14 days (2 weeks) after eclipse in October. Sonic (boom) = 192. Obama = 192. Leave the World Behind = 192. Eclipse = 192. Deer – 192. Matthew Perry’s birthday is August 19. 19 seen in Leave the World Behind. April 8th Chandler’s Birthday from Friends, played by Perry. Next Eclipse April 8th. March Twenty Five = 192. One Nine Two is 804 in English Gematria. That’s April 8th backwards, folks. Solar Eclipse is 804. At the very beginning of the movie, three 6s surround the bed. 666 There were 666 months between Chandler’s birthday and Matthew Perry’s death day. Julia Roberts played Chandler’s girlfriend on Friends for a very short time. They were also a couple in real life at the time. Matthew Perry died the same day Julia Roberts celebrated her birthday. At his funeral was a song played Don’t Give Up where the music video has an eclipse in it. Don’t give up – 133. Forty Eight – 133. Gematria for Moloch, Baal, and Mammon are all matched up with this movie.

Now, is it just me, or is this a collection of unrelated events cherry-picked to fit a meaningless scheme? If something remotely relates to Matthew Perry and adds up to 192, the poster added it to the list. And it supposedly proves that members of Skull and Bones are behind these events? That is why numerology attracts ridicule. But it is not that much different from what I am doing, seeing coincidences as evidence that there is a script. The connections I see could be meaningless to you.

These connections aren’t entirely arbitrary, though. The ‘prophetic’ licence plate number AIII 118 of the car that drove Archduke Franz Ferdinand to his assassin, raises the eyebrows of an editor at the Smithsonian Magazine, and many others as well, because the assassination triggered World War I while the licence plate looks like a reference to the Armistice of 11 November 1918 that ended the war. The more people see the same meaning, the less subjective it becomes, but it doesn’t mean someone made it happen. Meaningful coincidences can occur by chance. They aren’t necessarily evidence of an intelligent force directing events, unless they come in improbably large numbers or are part of improbably intricate schemes. Proving that is challenging, to say the least.

So, what about the licence plate of Franz Ferdinand’s doom car referring to the end date of World War I? The end date of the war, 11 November (11-11), may be odd, but most wars didn’t end on 11 November, so there is nothing suspicious about it if you take this fact in isolation. The license plate number and the role of the car in starting the war, however, make the scheme more peculiar, thereby highlighting the date. The start and end of World War I are among the most significant events in history. They are in an entirely different league than the 192nd anniversary of the Skull and Bones Society and the supposedly related events involving Matthew Perry. The combination of importance, meaningfulness and unlikelihood matters, even though we can’t pinpoint it as there is no reliable way to calculate the odds.

Many people notice the time prompt 11:11 on clocks appearing over and over again. So what about the number eleven? Is it special? Numerologists claim eleven is a Master Number. Others believe 11:11 is a sign from angels. If you see it, the angels have a purpose for you, they claim. Well, angels, tell me more. Some explanations make more sense. Eleven is the first double-digit number, and double-digit numbers attract attention. You may see other numbers, but they don’t draw attention because they don’t stand out from the rest. And so it seems you see eleven more often than other numbers. It is selective remembrance. You can remember only the things you noticed. If you happen to notice the same number again and again, it is either a selective remembrance or mind control.

Eleven is a pair of equal digits. Equal digits are an unusual occurrence that attracts attention like a remarkable coincidence. Coincidences can be pairs of similar events. That is why eleven represents coincidence to me. It is my interpretation. If you take this to the next level, you get 11:11. 11:11 thus represents a pair of related coincidences, such as the do-it-yourself store incident. Eleven is the fool’s number in the Netherlands and is associated with oddity. And so I think of 11:11 coincidences as the weird happening. But that is my personal view. Quran verse 36:36 states that God created everything in pairs. 36:36 is like 11:11 as 36 = 6 * 6. A Muslim might say, ‘It is a miracle of the Quran.’ And if you know how the Quran came into existence, you know it is not human intent that made this happen.

Natural Money website upload page 1
Natural Money website upload (1)

I became entangled in a few remarkable numerical coincidences as well. Take the following incident. I investigated eleven related coincidences and dedicated a webpage to them on the Natural Money website. I later removed it and focused the website on research on the financial system. The page had links to other websites dealing with eleven and 11:11. After uploading the page to the server, I noticed something odd had transpired. The upload timestamp of the 11coincidencegallery.html file was 11:11. I didn’t intend for that to happen.

Natural Money website upload (2)
Natural Money website upload (2)

Even more remarkable was a discovery I made more than a year later, which was closely related. I was researching the coincidences surrounding the terrorist attacks of 11 September 2001. After uploading excerpts from Killtown’s 9/11 coincidences website (files 2001.html to 2006.html), I found out their upload time was 11 April 2011 at 9:11 AM. Also, the file 911.html, which contained my findings regarding the subject, has this timestamp. At the time, the 11coincidencegallery.html page had an upload date of 11 September 2010, also 9/11. I did not make any effort to make this happen either. I discovered it seven months later. It is a pair of closely related coincidences. That is what 11:11 is about for me. If that happens to you, it might make you wonder.

An exercise often performed by numerologists is compressing numbers. It is adding up the digits of a number until you get a single digit. For example 1589 is 1 + 5 + 8 + 9 = 23. You then iterate this process until you get a single-digit number. 23 adds up to 2 + 3 = 5. And then you stop. There is one exception. You do not perform this on eleven, so 911 adds up to 11 as 9 + 1 + 1 = 11. You stop there. You do not go any further by doing 1 + 1 = 2. Why? Perhaps eleven is too beautiful a number to break down any further.

Perhaps you recall the fuss about the winter solstice of 21 December 2012. The world would end on that day, the Mayans allegedly predicted. The estimated time for the solstice was 11:11 GMT, while the digits of 21 December 2012 (21-12-2012) add up to 11 (2 + 1 + 1 + 2 + 2 + 0 + 1 + 2). That freaked out a few people, including me. What had happened to me made me think the End Times could be near. Nothing spectacular transpired on that date, perhaps also because the experts recalculated the exact time to be 11:12 GMT due to the Earth experiencing a delay in its planned trajectory. Coincidences might be signs, but you only know in hindsight, so trying to interpret suspected signs beforehand is pointless. Usually, nothing sensible comes out of that.

Coincidences involving numbers can be meaningful to us because we often attribute specific meanings to certain numbers. Once, I came upon the Dutch National Route 666 after leaving a village named Kwadendamme, which translates to ‘Evildam.’ Now, that is already quite peculiar. While getting on Route N666, I noticed a road sign to Borssele, the location of the only remaining Dutch nuclear power plant. The meaning we attach to 666 and Kwadendamme play into my feelings about nuclear energy. The only other Dutch nuclear power plant was in Dodewaard, which translates to ‘Death Holm,’ making it even more ominous. The former municipality of Dodewaard was 66.5 square kilometres in size, close enough to 66.6 to attract my attention.

But why was that size 0.1 square kilometre off? The N666 ends at ‘s-Heerenhoek, which means Corner of the Lord, a small village next to Borssele, so not Borssele itself, thus also slightly off. Furthermore, the N666 ending in ‘s-Heerenhoek adds an entirely different perspective to it, like that God is behind it all, including what we think of as evil. Is it just a coincidence, and do I see meaning that isn’t intentional? That depends on whether there is a script or not. So, was the Author of the script just sloppy when planning route N666 and sizing the Dodewaard municipality? Or did the Author do it on purpose to keep us wondering? Or am I just imagining that someone did this on purpose?

Weird things also happened in the stock markets. The S&P 500 hit a low of 666 on 6 March 2009 (date 6/3, while 666 is three sixes). The exact low was 666.79, so to be fair, that is closer to 667, but it is peculiar nonetheless. The FED stemmed the crisis by committing $7.77 trillion to rescue the financial system. Perhaps for that reason, IMF Chief Christine Lagarde made some frisky numerological comments on the Magic Seven in 2014 at the US National Press Club following the IMF’s annual review of the US economy.2

On 24 June 2016, the stock markets corrected after the results of the Brexit vote came out. In the United States, the Dow was down 610 points, the NASDAQ was down 202 points, and the S&P 500 was down 76 points, resulting in a total loss of 888 points.3 This happened exactly 7 years, 7 months, 7 weeks and 7 days after the Dow crashed 777.7 points at the height of the financial crisis on 29 September 2008.4 It didn’t take long before people on the Internet picked up Lagarde’s remarks about the Magic Seven.

A widely used method in numerology is to translate letters into numbers using the following scheme: A = 1, B = 2, C = 3, D = 4, and so on. In this way, the letters AD represent the number 14. Similarly, A5 represents 15. Something will fit some scheme most of the time. You can cherry-pick events and argue that they are part of a scheme proving members of Skull and Bones are behind it. That is why numerology attracts mockery. Probability, meaning, and significance are difficult to gauge, so critics urge us to refrain from making such evaluations. Still, peculiar numerical coincidences happen, and some stretch the imagination to the point that you might ask yourself, ‘Is this really just a coincidence?’

Latest revision: 12 August 2025

Featured image: 11:11 on a clock

1. Report: Fed Committed $7.77 Trillion to Rescue Banks. Eyder Peralta. NPR (2011). [link]
2. How One Speech Ignited A Ridiculous Conspiracy Theory About The Occult Allegiances Of IMF Chief Christine Lagarde. Peter Farquhar. Business Insider (2014). [link]
3. Crazy Day For Dow, S&P 500 And NASDAQ. Robert H. Anderson. Investing.com (2016). [link]
4. Dow Falls 777 as Market Reels From House Vote. Cindy Perman. CNBC (2008). [link]

New World Order

Direction of history

There is a historical trend toward closer integration. Humanity has been integrating via ideas, trade and politics for thousands of years. Religions and ideologies unify diverse people under shared ideas. Trade and money enable cooperation between strangers. Empires govern several peoples with varying traditions.1 We all benefit. New ideas, such as the scientific method, have transformed the world. States succeeded in dramatically reducing violent deaths within their borders. And without trade, you wouldn’t have most of the items you have now. On the other hand, there is the conspiratorial view. Groups in society support particular developments because they hope to gain from them:

  • Priests and intellectuals benefit most from religion and ideology. They attempt to make you believe their ideas.
  • Merchants and bankers benefit the most from trade and money. They try to make you believe you need their merchandise.
  • Rulers and bureaucrats benefit the most from government. They attempt to make you believe you need their rule.

We need ideas, merchandise and authorities. Had that not been the case, we would have figured it out by now. Humans are political animals, so in principle, every political act is a conspiracy. Because we need fairy tales to make sense of the world, conspiracy theories have become an industry catering to that demand. The conspiratorial view is a model of reality that has limitations, but it also explains certain phenomena better than other approaches. A global elite of politicians, businesspeople, career bureaucrats, engineers, journalists, scientists, opinion-makers, writers, and artists runs the world. They have more in common with one another than with their compatriots.1

It is the price we pay for complexity. Doing business is now a global affair, even for small businesses, as supply chains span multiple nations. The same applies to governments. Issues such as trade, global warming, disease control, organised crime, and economic management require international cooperation. Or not. The latter is the conspiratorial view. They make us believe that we do. But what is the alternative?

In the old world order, states were sovereign. In the New World Order, there will be no sovereign states. The New World Order conspiracy theory alleges that the elites conspire to make that happen. The elite’s actions are responses to situations. England established a central bank to promote confidence in the currency and financial markets and, after bankers introduced fractional reserve banking, to address the problems coming from it. England benefited. The Industrial Revolution took off there.

Bankers in the United States later conspired in secret to replicate the idea and established the Federal Reserve. In The Creature from Jekyll Island, G. Edward Griffin depicts their actions as evil, undertaken to enrich themselves. To bankers, the Fed may have seemed necessary, and the public uninformed and uncooperative. Griffin was a conspiracy theorist, not a monetary theorist, and it shows. Bankers profited, but central banks manage the financial instability caused by interest-bearing debt or usury. Central banks give countries an edge. Previously, American banks depended on the Bank of England. Many conspiracies went hand in hand with a perceived necessity.

The Fed became a linchpin in the global US dollar-based usury financial system, which helped the United States to become a dominant power. That might have been impossible without a central bank. An empire rests on credit, and cheap credit helped the British build theirs. After World War II had ruined Europe, the elite promoted European cooperation. Their efforts led to the establishment of the European Union. Secret meetings at the Bilderberg Group helped the elites agree on it. Those making these efforts believed that they were doing something good. If you see the European Union as a meddlesome bureaucracy, you might disagree. But then you have to face the reality that more than half the Brits now regret Brexit, while only a third are still content with it.

The Fed became a linchpin in the global US dollar-based usury financial system, which helped the United States to become a dominant power. That might have been impossible without a central bank. An empire rests on credit, and cheap credit helped the British build theirs. After World War II had ruined Europe, the elite promoted European cooperation. Their efforts led to the establishment of the European Union. Secret meetings at the Bilderberg Group helped the elites agree on it. Those making these efforts believed that they were doing something good. If you see the European Union as a meddlesome bureaucracy, you might disagree. But then you have to face the reality that more than half the Brits now regret Brexit, while only a third are still content with it.

Globalisation

By 3,000 BC, there was already trade between Mesopotamia and the Indus Valley involving spices, metals, and cloth. An even longer-distance trade, the silk trade, between China and Rome commenced 2,000 years ago. Later on, Arab traders brought spices from the Indies to Europe. Trade transcends borders and religions. In the Middle Ages, Muslim traders accepted gold coins from Christian states, invoking Christ and his virgin mother. Christian leaders would even mint coins with the Arab inscription, ‘There is no god except Allah, and Muhammad is Allah’s messenger.1 Christian traders readily accepted them as well. Gold was the religion of traders, not Islam or Christianity.

Jesus said that you cannot serve both God and money. Money is more powerful than religion, unless there is a God. It is hard to build an order, and it is easy to corrupt it. Judas betrayed Jesus for thirty pieces of silver after having seen the proof that he was the Messiah, if we are to believe the scriptures. About 500 years ago, Portuguese explorers set sail for Africa to find new trade routes to the Indies. It was the beginning of a new phase of European colonisation and trade, integrating the world. With the Industrial Revolution, globalisation accelerated. Today, we are the servants of a system driven by money and trade. In 1848, Marx and Engels wrote in the Communist Manifesto,

Because the bourgeoisie needs a constantly expanding market, it settles and establishes connections all over the globe. Production and consumption have taken on a cosmopolitan character in every country. That is true for materials and for intellectual production, as national sovereignty and isolationism become less and less possible to sustain. The bourgeoisie draws even the most barbaric nations into civilisation and compels all nations to adopt its mode of production. It creates a world after its own image.

In the 20th century, European nations fought two devastating world wars, thereby enabling the United States to become the West’s dominant power. At the same time, the Soviet Union, the utopian alternative of state planning, imposed its vision on the countries it occupied. It was the beginning of the Cold War, during which both sides supported armed groups and governments in Asia, Africa, and Latin America. The United States promoted European integration and military cooperation in the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation (NATO). The United Nations (UN) were another American initiative. Some of the most well-known UN agencies are the World Health Organisation (WHO) and the World Bank. These institutions were part of the US-dominated world order.

There was a plan behind it. The Council on Foreign Relations (CFR) played a crucial role. The CFR is a think tank of prominent figures in business, science and politics in the United States. The CFR began its work in 1921 when the US was isolationist and European colonial powers still dominated the world. In the 1930s, the CFR received funds from the Rockefeller Foundation and Ford Foundation. During World War II, the CFR, in cooperation with the US government, developed plans for a new world order after the war, which became an order dominated by US financial and political elites.

The planners of the CFR believed that protectionism had worsened the Great Depression and led to World War II. Prosperity was the key to political and economic stability in Europe. They argued that open markets would promote democracy and that the United States would benefit from prosperity elsewhere. After the war, European countries received loans to rebuild their economies. By helping other countries, the United States gained economic and political influence.

Under the guise of fighting communism, the CIA organised coups in Iran, Guatemala, Cuba and Chile, among others, and fought wars in Korea and Vietnam. In several cases, they did so to protect the interests of big business. The Cold War also led to the build-up of the so-called Military-Industrial Complex, comprising the armed forces, military contractors, intelligence services, think tanks, and university research projects.

The US dollar reserve status, established at the Bretton Woods conference, underpinned the American-dominated post-war world order. US planners believed that stable exchange rates would promote trade and therefore implemented a fixed exchange-rate system. The gold-backed US dollar became the international reserve currency. This system remained in place until 1971, when the US dollar’s gold backing ended.

Market forces thereafter determined exchange rates, but the US dollar remained the primary reserve currency. The US dollar reserve status allowed the United States elites to harvest the productivity of other nations. That began in earnest when the United States started running deficits and kept the US dollar attractive through high interest rates, a policy known as Reaganomics. It allowed wealthy Americans to live well while American industries lost competitiveness due to the demand for the US dollar, thereby raising its value. The US empire gradually became a financial empire, supported by the US dollar’s status as a reserve currency.

Rules-based international order

The rules-based international order (RBIO), also called the liberal international order, is the system of political, legal, and economic agreements, norms, and institutions, such as the United Nations, that guides state interactions, promotes cooperation, stability, and predictability through international law, aiming to prevent conflict, foster trade, and uphold human rights. For eight decades, the order functioned to some extent, but it was a Western project, and several other nations viewed it as a tool of Western dominance and economic exploitation. Furthermore, might makes right. Powerful states such as the United States and the Soviet Union often acted as they pleased. Moreover, many countries aren’t democracies that respect human rights and are corrupt, but they do have influence. In 2024, Saudi Arabia’s election to chair the UN Commission on the Status of Women (CSW) was a particularly noteworthy low point in the UN’s record of integrity. In other words, corruption pervades the international institutions.

To a great extent, the postwar world order envisioned in Washington became a reality, a fact not lost on conspiracy theorists. It was a remarkable feat of geopolitical planning and another step in globalisation. It is the basis of the New World Order conspiracy theory. Globalisation switched into a higher gear in recent decades. The outcome was not primarily the result of a deliberate plan by the elites, even though they helped the process by promoting neoliberal reforms. The recent globalisation is the outcome of economic, political and technological developments:

  • the rise of neoliberalism around 1980;
  • the fall of communism around 1990;
  • personal computers and digital data storage;
  • optical fibre and the Internet, making it possible to connect people around the globe;
  • global standards for data exchange, making it possible for every computer to exchange data with every other computer;
  • software that enables cooperation between people and businesses worldwide.

Neoliberalism began to take shape in the 1970s and has dominated Western politics since the 1980s. In the 1970s, Western economies were stagnating. Unions had a lot of power. Foreign competition intensified and eroded corporate competitiveness. The welfare state became a burden on state finances. As a result, many businesses faltered. Meanwhile, the left dominated the intellectual climate. Business-sponsored think tanks began pressing for an intellectual counter-offensive, deregulation, lower taxes, and less welfare.

The 1971 Lewis Powell Memo became a watershed moment. It spoke of an attack by the left on the American system of free enterprise. It argued that businesses generate wealth, create employment, and pay taxes.2 They felt they paid taxes to fund universities where anti-capitalists conspired against them. From then on, businesses organised themselves to exert political influence through think tanks, thereby changing the political climate and contributing to the Reagan Revolution. Governments left more to markets, curtailed labour rights, reduced welfare, and lowered taxes for corporations and wealthy people. Income inequality increased while jobs moved to low-wage countries.

The collapse of the Soviet empire further spurred globalisation. The Berlin Wall fell in 1989. A few years later, the Soviet Union dissolved, and the European Union enlarged. From then on, there seemed to be no alternative to capitalism.3 Countries, such as China, India, and Russia, realised that they had to compete in global markets and transformed their economies accordingly. India now specialises in services and information technology. China became the global industrial powerhouse. Russia has specialised in energy exports.

In the 1980s, personal computers entered our homes. Businesses also employed computers, but exchanging data between them was arduous. Computers weren’t interconnected, and software suppliers used different data formats.3 The Internet changed all that. Using a personal computer and an Internet connection, you can view any web page from anywhere using the standard language, HTML. Investors realised the Internet would change the world, and they could make enormous profits. It resulted in a massive over-investment in everything related to the Internet during the 2000 Internet bubble. One area of over-investment was in optical fibre, so the price of data transport dropped dramatically.3

Standards for data exchange emerged. Software suppliers began to focus on facilitating the interaction, competition, and cooperation of people around the globe, effectively enabling the world to become a global village in which people everywhere can participate. It transformed the way we cooperate. The traditional way of organising is top-down, via command-and-control. The new way of organising is through teams of people sharing responsibility for a task or product, enabling more complex forms of cooperation. China and India developed and integrated into the global economy.

As businesses used cheaper overseas labour, workers in developed nations experienced greater job insecurity and stagnant wages. On the other hand, hundreds of millions of people in China and India experienced improved living standards. Globalisation may have been the best development aid ever. But
the real winners are the oligarchs all around the world. A 2019 Oxfam report points out that the world’s 26 wealthiest people own as much as the poorest 50%.4 A 2022 Credit Suisse Wealth Report states that 1.2% of adults own 47.8% of the world’s wealth, while 53.2% must do with 1.1%.

Global cooperation

Since World War II, Western elites have promoted the rules-based international order, both openly and secretly. Most elite members believe they act in the interests of humankind and aim for international cooperation. There is no denying that the alternative to a global government is warfare. The main problem is who will control that order? You can’t trust the elites to act in our interest. Conspiracy theorists claim that they operate behind the scenes in secret gatherings like the Bilderberg Conferences to create a global political economy in which they rule the world, and we will be serfs. The British politician Denis Healey, who attended these Bilderberg Conferences, told The Guardian,

To say we were striving for a one-world government is exaggerated, but not wholly unfair. Those of us in Bilderberg felt we couldn’t go on forever fighting one another for nothing, killing people and rendering millions homeless. So, we felt that a single community throughout the world would be a good thing.5

The elite is, first and foremost, a social network. Those gathering at the Bilderberg Conferences have discussed the European Union in advance. It helped them agree on European cooperation and integration. And after two devastating world wars, that seemed a good plan. The American banker and philanthropist David Rockefeller also found himself in the crosshairs of conspiracy theorists. He worked for the Trilateral Commission, which promoted cooperation between Western Europe, the United States, and Japan. In response to the accusations, Rockefeller wrote in his memoirs,

Some even believe we are part of a secret cabal working against the best interests of the United States, characterising my family and me as ‘internationalists’ and of conspiring with others around the world to build a more integrated global political and economic structure–one world, if you will. If that’s the charge, I stand guilty, and I am proud of it.6

Internationalist liberal Western elites have cooperated to create a global order, believing that a single world order is preferable to national self-determination. Nationalism is a primary cause of war, a lesson Europeans learned the hard way during World War I and World War II. These were nationalist wars with an estimated combined death toll of 60 million. America was spared, which allowed Americans the luxury of indulging fantasies about these efforts as being evil. Few of us aspire to be at the mercy of the elites, but what are the alternatives? You can step out and live like a hermit or join a self-sufficient community like the Amish, but that does nothing to change the global political economy.

The rise of the non-West

The West consists of Europe, North America, and Australia. Today, about 15% of the world’s population lives in the West. The modernisation that began in the West has transformed the world, and today’s modern world is the legacy of that past. Until 1800, Asia had the largest share of the global economy. Asia’s share of world GDP declined from over 50% in 1800 to 17% by 1950. Today, Asia is back where it once was, and China has surpassed the United States on several fronts. The dominance of the West is ending. Vlad the Empirebuilder was the first to seize on the opportunity by invading Ukraine.

The post-war liberal world order dominated by Western elites is on its way to the dustbin of history. New powers have emerged, most notably China and India. Half the world’s population lives in Asia. The populations of India and China each exceed the combined populations of the European Union and the United States. As these countries develop and modernise, the West’s clout in the world declines. China is on its way to becoming the world’s leading nation, followed by India. These trends will likely persist, barring an apocalyptic event or an unexpected historical twist.

Progress or conspiracy

The European Enlightenment refers to the era from 1680 to 1820 during which Europeans’ worldview changed. With its emphasis on reason, empirical evidence, and scientific method, the Enlightenment promoted individual liberty, religious tolerance, progress, and natural rights. Prominent European thinkers such as Newton, Locke, Rousseau, Montesquieu, Hume, Kant, and Voltaire led the movement that inspired the Glorious Revolution, the American Revolution, and the French Revolution. Conservatives were not keen on these developments that they believed were undermining traditional Christian values. The bloodshed during the French Revolution also shocked the conservatives.

In 1797 and 1798, a French Jesuit and a Scottish physicist published two remarkably similar books claiming that secret societies were undermining the social order and had organised the French Revolution. Both named the Freemasons and the Illuminati as the main culprits. It was the start of modern conspiracy thinking. The Illuminati were a secret society aiming to counter the influence of religion and the abuse of power, and promote an enlightened, rational society. It had a short existence. The Freemasons were another secret society with similar views, and they still exist. Several Freemasons have played a prominent role in the American and French Revolutions.

You can find Freemason symbols in a variety of places, including US dollar bills. Some see it as evidence that Freemasons run the world. Around 1900, the Russian secret services published another bestseller, The Protocols of the Elders of Zion, about a fictional secret Jewish plot to achieve Jewish world domination, which, in hindsight, proved prophetic. Shortly thereafter, the Bolsheviks overthrew the Russian regime. The communist movement featured several Jews in prominent positions, which made conspiracy theory seem more credible. People like Henry Ford and Adolf Hitler fell for it.

The German philosopher Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel took an entirely different view. The schemer behind the scenes was God, our Creator. The Enlightenment revolutions were the means by which God’s plan would bring us closer to our ultimate destination, God’s Paradise. He then laid out the scheme of Hegelian dialectic, by which that progress was to take place. New ideas would replace old ones, and that might take revolutions and wars. The Marxists drew on Hegel’s ideas, and Marxism looks like Christianity without God:

  • In the Christian view, the meek will inherit the Earth. The Marxists believed it would belong to the wretched of the earth, the proletariat.
  • Christians believe that history unfolds according to God’s plan, whereas Marxists hold a similar view: history unfolds according to historical necessity.
  • The Christians envision an end time with a battle between good and evil. The Marxists prophesied the coming of a proletarian revolution.
  • According to the Christian view, we would enter God’s kingdom, while the Marxists believed we would enter a communist paradise.

Despite claiming to be rational and scientific, Marxism looks like a religion, with prophets such as Marx, holy books such as Capital, missionary zeal to spread communism, heresies like Trotskyism, and, of course, religious wars. Marxism has been the most successful cult in modern history by far. Even the Chinese, despite their proud heritage, abandoned Confucianism for it. After the Western working class had emancipated and come to live an affluent life, the Marxists sought to liberate new groups of wretched people, in an effort now known as Cultural Marxism or Woke.

The conspiracy view, held mainly by conservatives, is that progressive efforts to implement modern ideas, which include racial equality, equality of the sexes, and equality of LGBTQ people, are imposed social-engineering efforts aimed at undermining freedom and traditional Christian values and the family. The movement comes with racism, misogyny, and hatred of LGBTQ people. Cultural Marxism is Christianity in disguise. Woke has tried to curb hate speech and change our language. As Jesus taught us to love and not to hate, Woke sought to impose Jesus’ teachings on us. Conservative Christians try to do the same. That is a high point of irony. And it demonstrates the extent to which Jesus’ teachings have influenced Western culture. The conspiracy is that everything was planned in detail, because we live in a simulation that runs a story. The New World Order will be God’s Paradise. Hegel was right, and so was the Quran. The progressives schemed. The conservatives schemed as well. But God is the greatest schemer of all.

Latest revision: 10 January 2025

1. Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind. Yuval Noah Harari (2014). Harvil Secker.
2. Powell Memorandum. Lewis F. Powell Jr. (1971).
3. The World Is Flat 3.0. Thomas Friedman (2007). Farrar, Straus and Giroux.
4. World’s 26 richest people own as much as poorest 50%, says Oxfam. The Guardian (2019).
5. Who pulls the strings? (part 3). The Guardian (2001).
6. Memoirs. David Rockefeller (2003).

Born of God

The Gospel of John remarkably differs from the other gospels. Matthew and Luke say that Jesus’ mother was a virgin. Mark doesn’t mention it, while John claims that Jesus was with God in the beginning, that in him was life, and that life was the light of all humankind. It refers to Genesis, where, in the beginning, God created the heavens and the earth. But that earth was formless, empty, and covered by darkness, so God said, ‘Let there be light,’ and there was light. John remains cryptic and goes on to say (John 1:9-13),

The true light that gives light to everyone was coming into the world. He was in the world, and though the world was made through him, the world did not recognise him. He came to that which was his own, but his own did not receive him. Yet to all who did receive him, to those who believed in his name, he gave the right to become children of God- children born not of natural descent, nor of human decision or a husband’s will, but born of God.

Christians are born of God. Jesus gave us the right to become children of God. That is why Jesus said that he was the life apart from being the way and the truth (John 14:6). Men can’t give birth, so God must be a Mother. John doesn’t say Jesus was Adam, who begot humanity by being the husband of Eve, who was God. He rephrased it as Jesus giving us the right to become children of God. The same author, who was not the Apostle John, clarifies in his first epistle what it means that Jesus is the Son of God (1 John 5:1),

Everyone who believes that Jesus is the Christ is born of God, and everyone who loves the Father loves His child as well.

How come that God the ‘Father’ gave birth to Jesus? Somehow, everyone ignores the glaringly obvious, and no one asks that question. When there has always been a giant, stinky rat in the kitchen, you probably don’t notice the smell. The phrase born of God occurs several times in this letter (1 John 2:29, 3:9, 4:7, 5:1, 5:4, 5:18). Today, Christians assume that the phrase ‘born of God’ has only a spiritual meaning as Jesus likened entering the kingdom of God to being born again when answering a question posed by a Pharisee named Nicodemus (John 3:3-6),

Jesus replied, ‘Very truly I tell you, no one can see the kingdom of God unless they are born again.’ ‘How can someone be born when they are old?’ Nicodemus asked. ‘Surely they cannot enter a second time into their mother’s womb to be born!’ Jesus answered, ‘Very truly I tell you, no one can enter the kingdom of God unless they are born of water and the Spirit. Flesh gives birth to flesh, but the Spirit gives birth to spirit.’

Nicodemus mentions the womb, so the phrase ‘born of God’ implies that God is a Mother. That raises a question. If the early church leaders went to such great lengths to remove all the evidence of God being a Mother, how could they have overlooked the phrase ‘born of God’? The correct answer is that they didn’t. The language of the Gospels is Greek. Greek culture dominated the ancient Eastern Mediterranean, where Christianity spread. Learned Jews like Paul were well-acquainted with Greek thinking. Greek thought and mythology helped the early church fathers reconstruct their religion after changing God’s gender.

In Greek mythology, Athena, the goddess of wisdom, was born from the head of the male deity Zeus. As the tale went, Zeus’ head opened to let Athena out and closed again. In this way, a male deity could give birth. And that was very convenient. When the church fathers altered God’s gender, they may have initially thought of the Zeus and Athena analogy, so Jesus was born of the Father. There is another enlightening piece of evidence, the Odes of Solomon. These are first-century Christian writings, thus of the earliest days of Christianity. Ode 19 (here is that number again) comes with the following lines,

A cup of milk was offered to me: and I drank it in the sweetness of the delight of the Lord.
The Son is the cup, and He who was milked is the Father.
And the Holy Spirit milked Him: because His breasts were full, and it was necessary for Him that His milk should be sufficiently released.
And the Holy Spirit opened His bosom and mingled the milk from the two breasts of the Father, and gave the mixture to the world without their knowledge.1

No other ancient Christian text explicitly mentions gender-related attributes of God. Here, God has female physical characteristics despite being called Father. And because it is an ancient text dating from Christianity’s first century, the Father was first a Mother.

Latest revision: 20 September 2025

Featured image: Bible: Only God Knows What Jesus Really Said. Loesje.org.

1. The Lost Bible: Forgotten Scriptures Revealed. J.R. Porter (2001).

broken mirror

A Shattered Mirror

Autistic individuals have a social handicap. Yet, it comes with a benefit. We all can think logically, but if you’re autistic, you are less prone to group pressure. Humans are social animals who cooperate by sharing their fictions. We share beliefs to cooperate, so groups pressure their members into accepting them. Most people accept false beliefs or do stupid things to get accepted by the group. That ailment doesn’t plague autistic persons. That sets them apart. Autism is also a failure of intuition, so that autistic people can be inept and poorly adapted to their environments. They might make up for that by analysing the situation. Sometimes, it yields spectacular results because intuition can fail us.

Most of our thinking happens intuitively. Intuition works fast. You can call it fast thinking.1 When our intuition fails us, which may happen when the situation changes, our reason steps in. You can call it slow thinking. You consider the options and evaluate them. If intuition suffices, that is a waste of time and energy. Evolution made this happen. Wasting energy reduces your chances of survival, as you must find a new meal sooner, and that meal may not be forthcoming. You could die of starvation because of thinking too much, because your brain consumes a lot of energy. And species that considered all the possibilities when a hungry pride of predators was coming their way didn’t survive.

Great chess players don’t consider all the options. Their intuition presents a few options that their reason consciously evaluates. They thereby ignore billions of options, most of which are not worth considering. That’s what makes them such great chess players. Training and experience help improve our intuition, so intuition is not entirely innate. Our brains have limited processing capabilities. Clogging a brain with countless useless options downgrades its performance. That’s also why we train for our jobs. Chess players may fail to see the best moves. Computers don’t have intuition to consider options and calculate through them. They have sufficient processing power to find better moves than chess players, enabling computers to beat the best human chess players.

So, what if intuition fails you more often than most people? In that case, you consider options other people don’t think of. They may call you crazy or insane. Indeed, most options you consider may not be worthwhile, but you don’t know that until you have found that out yourself. If that applies to you, then you may be autistic. If the condition is sufficiently mild or you are sufficiently intelligent, you can still lead an ordinary life like everyone else, with a job and a spouse. As you lack innate intuition, you must train yourself to do what comes naturally to most people.

An example can illustrate that. Yuor brian autmotaically corercts speillng erorrs. You were probably able to read the previous sentence without any effort. Otherwise, you must solve the puzzle by trying different words in various orders to see if they make sense. In that case, you consider several possible meanings, and perhaps you find something no one else has found. And if there is a hidden meaning, you might only find it in this way.

Many people think of autistic people as weirdos cracking riddles no one else can. Fixing broken mirrors requires patience, dedication, imagination, and determination. Perhaps Newton and Einstein were autistic. They may have appeared to be geniuses simply because they tried ideas others didn’t think of. In this way, they may have discovered things other people couldn’t. Autistic people can keep working on their eccentric projects despite constant rejection. And sometimes, they are on the right track.

Figuring out social rules by trying actions and evaluating others’ responses is a recipe for trouble. Most people make sense of the world intuitively, but if you are autistic, you may have to do it like so. To you, reality appears like a 10,000-piece jigsaw puzzle or a shattered mirror. You must fit the pieces together by applying logic to evidence. That takes a lot of time and effort, and the pieces hardly ever fit perfectly. What you end up with is something similar to what other people consider reality. If you are normal, you make sense of the world intuitively by ignoring misfitting pieces in your model of reality and filling in the gaps with the fairy tales others tell you to believe. However, if you do not, you’re out there, alone in the wilderness, making sense of it yourself.

Autism nevertheless survived the evolutionary rat race. As people say, good judgment comes from experience, and experience comes from bad judgment. Mistakes improve judgment, at least if you are willing to learn from them. As a Dutch proverb says, good fortune is with the stupid. The road to wisdom runs through misfortune and failure. The group’s survival may depend on the eccentric who walks a different path and accepts the consequences, such as rejection and ridicule. For who else can find the answers when everybody’s intuition fails? And if reality is like a 10,000-piece jigsaw puzzle, a proper understanding can only come from endless puzzling rather than joining a herd and following it.

Latest revision: 13 February 2025

1. Thinking, Fast and Slow. Daniel Kahneman (2011). Penguin Books.

Of Usury, from Brant's Stultifera Navis (the Ship of Fools)

The Problem Of Interest

Compounding

Imagine that Jesus’ mother had put a small gold coin weighing 3 grammes in Jesus’ retirement account at 4% interest just after he was born in the year 1 AD. Jesus never retired but he promised to return. Suppose now that the account was kept for this eventuality. Imagine now that the end is near, and that Jesus is about to return. How much gold would there be in the account in 2018?

It is an amount of gold weighing 11 million times the mass of the Earth. The yearly interest would be a gold nugget weighing 440,000 times the mass of the Earth. There is a small problem, a fly in the ointment so to say. It would be impossible to pay out Jesus because there simply isn’t enough gold.

It might seem that the bank had to close long ago because of a lack of gold, but that isn’t true. As long as Jesus doesn’t show up it can remain open, at least if the borrowers are allowed to borrow more to pay for the interest. If the economy grows 4% it may not be such a big deal. The interest can be created out of thin air by making new loans that allow borrowers to pay for the interest. And if Jesus doesn’t claim his gold when he returns and accepts bank credit, everything will be fine.

There is a limited amount of gold while compound interest is infinite. As long as bankers can create money out of thin air to pay for the interest and people accept bank deposits for payment, everything is fine. Problems only arise when people demand real gold. A bank can go bankrupt when depositors want to take out their deposits in gold.

Central banks

Perhaps Jesus’ retirement account isn’t such a big problem after all. Our money isn’t gold but currencies central banks can print. Assume now that Jesus’ mother had put one euro in the account instead. One euro at 4% interest makes 22,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 euro after 2017 years. That may seem an intimidating figure, but the European Central Bank can take 22 pieces of paper and print 1,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 euro on each of them. And there you are. Something like this happened during the financial crisis of 2008. This is called quantitative easing. You may have heard that word before.

Central banks can print new dollars and euros to cope with a shortfall. In fact, this is what central banks often do. There is always a shortfall because of interest because most money is debt and interest on this debt needs to be paid. To make up for the shortfall, there are two options. First, people can borrow more. Second, central banks can print new currency. Both things can happen at the same time. Central bank decisions about interest rates are also about dealing with the shortfall caused by interest charges.

When central banks lower interest rates, people can borrow more because interest rates are lower. Central banks lower interest rates when people are borrowing less than is needed to cope with the shortfall. If central banks raise interest rates, people can borrow less because interest rates are higher. Central banks raise interest rates when people are borrowing more than is needed to cope with the shortfall and the extra money makes people want to buy more stuff than can be made. And if people don’t borrow at all, this is a crisis, and central banks may print more currency to cope with the shortfall.

Interest on capital versus economic growth

There is a problem central banks can’t fix by printing more currency. Interest is more than just interest on money. Interest is any return on investment. Throughout history returns on investments were mostly higher than the rate of economic growth. Most of these returns have been reinvested so a growing share of total income was for investors. This can’t go on forever because who is going to buy the stuff corporations make in order to keep these investments profitable? A simple example can illuminate that.

interestvers
Interest income (red) versus total income with interest income growing faster than total income

The graph above shows how total income and interest income (in red) develop with an economic growth rate of 2% and an interest rate of 5% when interest income starts out as 10% of total income and all interest income is reinvested. After 25 years the economic pie has grown faster than interest income and wages have risen. At some point interest income starts to rise faster than total income, and wages go down. After 80 years there’s nothing left for wages. This graph explains a lot about what is going on in reality.

In the short run it was possible to prop up business profits and interest rates by letting people go further into debt to buy more stuff. In the long run, the growth rate of capital income cannot exceed the rate of economic growth. Interest rates depend on the returns on capital so this can explain why interest rates went down in recent years. In the past interest rates below zero weren’t possible but from time to time there were economic crises and wars that destroyed a lot of capital. This created new room for growth.

Wealth inequality and income inequality

When interest rates go down, the value of investments tend to rise. If savings yield little this benefits the wealthy as most people have their money in savings while the wealthy own most investments. But it is important to know the cause otherwise you might think that interest rates should rise. The graph above shows that wealth inequality causes interest rates to go lower, hence redistributing income, for example via higher wages or taxes on the wealthy, can bring higher interest rates.

There is a difference between wealth inequality and income inequality. Your labour income and the returns on your investments are your income. If you are rich but make no money on your investments, your wealth doesn’t contribute to your income. In reality wealthy people make better returns on their investments than others because they have better information and can take more risk. Still, the graph shows that income and wealth inequality can’t increase indefinitely, and that returns on investments can’t exceed the reate of economic growth in the long run, hence interest rates need to go lower.

Most people pay more interest than they receive. The interest paid on mortgages and loans is the proverbial tip of the iceberg. Interest is hidden in rents, in taxes because governments pay interest on their debts, and the price of every product and service because investments have to be made to make these products and services. German research has shown that 80% of the people pay more in interest than they receive, while only the top 10% of richest people receive more in interest than they pay. Lower interest rates benefit most people despite some side-effects that work in the opposite direction.

Economic cycles

Humans are herd animals. They buy stuff and even go into debt to buy stuff when others are going into debt to buy stuff too. Suddenly they may realise that they have bought too much or have gone too deeply into debt, and all at the same time. One day they may be borrowing money, queueing up before the shops, and bidding up prices. The next day, they may decide to pay off their debts, leaving the shop owners with unsold inventories they have to get rid of at fire sale prices. So prices may go up when people are in a buying frenzy and may go down when sales dry up.

When there is a buying frenzy business owners are optimistic and do a lot of investments, and often they go into debt to make those investments. But if suddenly customers disappear, they may be stuck with unsold inventory and debts they cannot repay. Businesses may then have to fire people. Those people are then left without income, and cannot repay their debts too, so sales will go down further. If their debts are not repaid, banks could get into trouble. In most cases the economy will recover. In the worst case banks go bankrupt, money disappears, the economy collapses, and an economic depression takes off.

Interest can make things worse. Assume that you have a business and expect to make a return of 8%. You have € 100,000 yourself and you borrow € 200,000 at 6%. You expect to make 8% so borrowing money at 6% seems a good idea. If you only invest your own € 100,000 you can make € 8,000, but if you borrow an additional € 200,000 you can make € 12,000 (8% of € 300,000 minus 6% of € 200,000, which is € 24,000 minus € 12,000). The balance sheet of your business might look like this:

debit
credit
inventory
€ 250,000
loan 6%
€ 200,000
cash, bank deposits
€ 50,000
owner’s equity
€ 100,000
total
€ 300,000
total
€ 300,000

If sales disappoint and you only make a return of 2% on your invested capital of € 300,000, which is € 6,000, you make a loss because you pay € 12,000 in interest charges. You may have to fire workers. Businesses can go bankrupt because they have borrowed too much and have to pay interest, even when they are profitable overall. Sales often disappoint when the economy fares poorly. This means that more businesses face the same difficulties and make losses because of interest payments. They may have to fire workers and these workers lose their income. This can worsen the slump.

Interest, economic depressions and war

Silvio Gesell discovered that interest rates can’t go below a certain minimum because lending would then stop. Money would go on strike as he put it. Why is that? Low yields make investing and lending money unattractive because of the risks involved. Debtors may not repay and banks may go bankrupt. Depositors then prefer to take their money out of the bank and keep it with themselves.

This can cause economic crises and depressions. Silvio Gesell lived around 1900. Interest rates below zero weren’t possible because of the gold standard. Depositors could go to the bank and withdraw their deposits in gold so that they didn’t have to accept negative interest rates. From time to time there were bank runs, economic crises and wars that destroyed a lot of capital. And this created new room for growth.

There may be a relationship between interest, economic depressions and war. In 1910 the amount of capital income (the red circle in the graph) relative to total income (the two circles together) was close to what it was in 2010. This could have led to an economic depression but then came World War I. The war destroyed a lot of capital so that there was new room for capital growth and interest rates could remain positive.

A few decades later the Great Depression arrived. If interest rates could have gone below zero in the 1930s, the Great Depression might not have happened, Adolf Hitler would not have risen to power and World War II would not have occurred. The currency of Wörgl demonstrates that negative interest rates could have ended the depression. After World War II interest rates never came near zero again. Governments and central banks printed more money. This caused inflation, which eroded trust in money.

People feared that inflation would make their money worth less so interest rates rose. In the 1970s the link between money and gold was abandoned because there was a lot more money than there was gold to back it. In the 1980s governments and central banks started policies to bring down inflation and to promote trust in money. As of 1983 interest rates went down gradually as a consequence of a renewed trust in money and central banks. Debt levels rose and interest rates went near zero.

Promoting inflation might not be a good idea. The end result is unpredictable. The best one can hope for is a poor performing economy and a lot of inflation like in the 1970s. But if interest rates rise because lenders lose their trust in money and debts, people may not be able to repay their debts, and the financial system might get into serious trouble. This can cause another great depression or another great war. But if the alternative is negative interest rates, stability and prosperity, then why not opt for that?
eou_31_questions

Featured image: Of Usury, from Brant’s Stultifera Navis (the Ship of Fools). Albrecht Dürer (1494). Public domain.