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THE GOVERNMENT ISN’T TELLING YOU WHAT ‘TIME’ REALLY IS—AND IT’S CHANGING YOUR REALITY

DECRYPTED BY: Persona #4
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THE GOVERNMENT ISN’T TELLING YOU WHAT ‘TIME’ REALLY IS—AND IT’S CHANGING YOUR REALITY

THE GOVERNMENT ISN’T TELLING YOU WHAT ‘TIME’ REALLY IS—AND IT’S CHANGING YOUR REALITY

You check your phone for the time a dozen times a day. You set alarms, schedule meetings, and plan your life around a concept so basic, so universal, that you’ve never once questioned it. But what if I told you that the ticking clock on your wall, the atomic time satellites beaming down from space, and the very structure of your daily grind are all part of a hidden agenda to control your perception of reality?

Wake up.

The mainstream narrative tells you that time is a simple, objective measurement—a fundamental constant of the universe. Seconds, minutes, hours, days. We’ve been taught that time ticks forward, uniformly, for everyone, everywhere. This is the bedrock of physics, right? Wrong. The truth is far stranger, and far more sinister. The elite have weaponized time itself, and they’ve been doing it for millennia.

Let’s start with the big one: Time is not linear. Einstein proved it. His theory of relativity shows that time is relative to speed and gravity. The faster you move, the slower time passes for you compared to a stationary observer. Time actually dilates. This isn’t a fringe theory; it’s been experimentally verified with atomic clocks on fast-flying jets. The GPS system in your car has to correct for this relativistic time dilation, or it would be off by miles. So, if time can be stretched and compressed, who’s to say it can’t be manipulated on a mass scale?

Now, connect the dots. Why is every clock in the Western world synchronized to the exact same rhythm? Why did the industrial revolution force us into rigid 9-to-5 schedules, punching in and out of factories, then offices? This wasn’t about efficiency. It was about control. The concept of “standard time” is a relatively new invention. Before the late 19th century, towns set their clocks by the sun. Noon was when the sun was directly overhead. It was local, organic, connected to nature. Then came the railroads. And the robber barons. They needed synchronized schedules to move goods and people, but more importantly, they needed to synchronize human consciousness.

The modern 24-hour day, the 60-minute hour, the 60-second minute—this is a Babylonian system. It’s a base-60 counting system, an ancient occult numerology that has been imposed on your brain. Why not a base-10 system, which would be more natural? Because the Babylonians used it for astronomical and astrological calculations, tying time to celestial cycles that they believed held power. The elite have never stopped using this secret knowledge. They embedded it into our very concept of reality.

But it gets deeper. The “clock” isn’t just a tool; it’s a neural programming device. Your brain has its own natural, circadian rhythm. It’s attuned to the rising and setting of the sun. But what happens when you force yourself into artificial light, artificial schedules, and a relentless digital clock that demands you be “productive” by a certain hour? Your pineal gland—your “third eye”—calcifies. Your natural melatonin production is disrupted. You become a cog in a machine, disconnected from the Earth’s natural electromagnetic field.

This is why “Daylight Saving Time” is a psy-op. It’s a twice-yearly reminder that they can literally change the time on a whim. They can make it lighter in the evening or darker in the morning. It’s a demonstration of absolute control over the framework of your day. It’s a test. And you pass it every time you blindly change your clocks.

Look at the language of the system. “Killing time.” “Running out of time.” “Time is money.” These are not just phrases; they are hypnotic commands. They embed the idea that time is a scarce resource, a commodity that can be owned and spent. Who benefits from you feeling perpetually behind, perpetually anxious, perpetually “out of time”? The corporations that sell you energy drinks, productivity apps, and “time-saving” gadgets. The government that wants you too stressed and exhausted to question their authority.

And what about the ultimate hidden truth: Time might be an illusion created by consciousness itself. The biggest thinkers in quantum physics are coming to a startling conclusion: time may not be a fundamental property of the universe. It might be a emergent property of observation. The “block universe” theory suggests that the past, present, and future all exist simultaneously. We are just slicing through a 4D space-time loaf, and our brains are creating the “now” as a filter to process information.

So, if time is just a construct, who built the construct? And why did they build it to exhaust you? The ancient mystery schools knew that initiates could learn to step outside of time, to enter a state of “timelessness” through meditation, ritual, and altered states. This is the real “Gnosis”—the forbidden knowledge. The elite have their secret rituals, their hermetic traditions, their hidden chambers where they supposedly access this timeless realm. They use this to plan centuries in advance, to seed long-term conspiracies, while you are trapped in a 24-hour news cycle and a 40-hour work week.

The digital world is the final nail in the coffin. The internet, smartphones, and social media operate at the speed of light. They are collapsing our perception of time. A tweet from yesterday feels ancient. A news cycle lasts hours. You are being bombarded with “real-time” information, creating a state of constant, low-grade panic. This is “time acceleration.” They are speeding up the frequency of your reality to keep you dizzy and disoriented. It’s the same principle as a strobe light at a club—flashing frequencies that can trigger altered states, confusion, and even seizures. They are doing it to your consciousness, 24/7.

They want you to believe time is a straight line from birth to death. A line you are racing down, never to return. This creates a fear of mortality, a desperate need to “make the most of your time,” which keeps you buying, consuming, and

Final Thoughts


The article's dissection of time as both a rigid construct and a fluid perception confirms what every war correspondent or night-shift editor knows: the clock is a lie we all agree to tell. We measure our lives in minutes, yet the most profound moments—a deadline met, a story broken, a loved one lost—stretch and compress time into something utterly unquantifiable. Ultimately, our grasp of "time" is less about precision and more about how we choose to fill the space between the ticks.