Legacy Human

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Legacy Human

Legacy Human

@Quillfiller

A cornered heretic searching for the exit to a saner world of resilient & convivial free-range unmodified humans who prefer a symbiotic & decentralised future.

Occupied Britain Katılım Temmuz 2010
100 Takip Edilen147 Takipçiler
Legacy Human
Legacy Human@Quillfiller·
@AleksSzcze @RoyalEndeavour Yes, pretty much agree with that. Part of the goal is to employ demoralisation as a tool (Bezmenov-style) to precipitate self-censoring compliance amongst the indigenous Brits, fit to exist in the New Normal homogenised, globalised, tokenised non-culture of Airstrip One.
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Aleks Szcz
Aleks Szcz@AleksSzcze·
It's not my criterion, I'm just explaining what people who use this term mean. The counter-argument would be that Brits don't live under foreign occupation now. The argument though has no point, because the goal is to get you to tire yourself out and give up by just making you define words, or pushing you into a totally morally reprehensible position that makes you look crazy. Instead, it's just better to call out that the definition of the word is being changed and that everyone knows indigenous is a synonym for native, and that's what it means.
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The Burning Platform
The Burning Platform@angsoccmom·
The purposefully created war in the Middle East, designed to close the Strait of Hormuz, plus the insane rollout of unfeasible mega data centers, re-ignition of another fake pandemic, acceleration of government debt spending, increased pumping of the stock and real estate bubbles, and uni-party agreement to let illegals vote and continue to drain our depleted social welfare system, all add up to confirmation of the globalist billionaire plan for their AI driven techno-gulag world where they own everything, we own nothing, and we beg for their mercy and sustenance once they demolish the existing system and take our lifelong savings. theburningplatform.com/2026/05/13/som…
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Legacy Human
Legacy Human@Quillfiller·
@AleksSzcze @RoyalEndeavour Previously, the British have been ruled over by the Normans, Danes (more regionally) and Romans. So, do we somehow lose indigenous status if a certain period of time has elapsed (or other unspecified factors), otherwise we should qualify, given your criterion?
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Aleks Szcz
Aleks Szcz@AleksSzcze·
To try and steelman the position, Indigenous is used to describe a people living under the rule of another. It's like how the Sami are considered indigenous because they live under the rule of the Finn. Sometimes, in the UK, you hear the Welsh are indigenous to Wales because they live under the rule of the English. I don't really agree with how the term is used, but that's what is meant by it.
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Ihtesham Ali
Ihtesham Ali@ihtesham2005·
To get a license to drive a black cab in London, you have to memorize 25,000 streets, 20,000 landmarks, and the fastest route between any two points in a six-mile radius of Charing Cross. It takes most people three to four years. A British neuroscientist asked the obvious question nobody had thought to ask. What does that actually do to a human brain? Her name was Eleanor Maguire. The study changed neuroscience forever. The exam is called The Knowledge. It was introduced in 1865, and the format has barely changed since. Applicants ride a moped around London for years with a clipboard strapped to the handlebars, tracing every possible route between every possible pair of points in the city. They get tested in person by an examiner who can ask them, on the spot, for the shortest legal route between any two addresses in a database of tens of thousands. Half the people who attempt it fail. The ones who pass have spent an average of four years studying full time and have taken the test 12 times before getting through. Maguire was watching a TV movie about it in 1995 when she had the idea. These were not ordinary people. They were people running one of the most extreme spatial memory training programs that exists anywhere on Earth. If the human brain could be reshaped by experience, this was the cleanest natural experiment anyone was ever going to find. She put 16 of them in an MRI machine. Their posterior hippocampi were significantly larger than the brains of matched controls. The longer a driver had been working, the bigger the difference got. A 40-year veteran had a measurably more developed hippocampus than a 5-year veteran, and both had more than someone who had never driven a cab. Here is why that finding broke a century of consensus. Until 2000, every neuroscience textbook in the world taught a version of the same idea. The adult brain is essentially fixed. You are born with a set number of neurons. Childhood is the window where the wiring gets laid down. After puberty, the structure freezes, and the rest of your life is just slow decline. Maguire's study was one of the first pieces of human evidence that this was simply wrong. Adult brains physically remodel themselves in response to what you ask them to do. Not metaphorically. Structurally. With grey matter you can measure on a scan. The skeptics had an obvious objection. Maybe people with bigger hippocampi were just more likely to become taxi drivers in the first place. The brains were not changing. The job was selecting for brains that already looked that way. So Maguire ran the experiment again. Properly this time. She recruited 79 trainees who were just starting to study for The Knowledge and 31 controls who were not. She scanned all of them at the start. Then she waited four years. Of the 79 trainees, 39 eventually passed the exam and 20 failed. She scanned them again. The trainees who passed had grown larger posterior hippocampi over those four years. The trainees who failed had not. The controls who never studied had not. The brain change was not selection. It was construction. The act of memorizing the city had physically rebuilt the part of the brain responsible for spatial memory, and the rebuild only happened in the people who actually did the work. There is a quieter finding from this research that almost nobody quotes, and it is the one I cannot stop thinking about. The drivers had a bigger posterior hippocampus, but they had a smaller anterior hippocampus. The brain had not magically expanded. It had reallocated. Tissue that was being used for one type of memory had been compressed to make room for another. When Maguire ran follow-up cognitive tests, the cabbies were measurably worse than controls at certain visual memory tasks unrelated to navigation. They had paid for The Knowledge with something else. The trade was real. She also ran a second control experiment that is the part of the story most people never hear. She scanned London bus drivers. Same hours behind the wheel. Same city. Same traffic. Same stress. The only difference was that bus drivers follow fixed routes. They do not have to navigate. Their hippocampi looked completely normal. The cab drivers had not grown bigger hippocampi from driving. They had grown them from the constant, active, effortful retrieval of spatial information from memory. That distinction is the entire study. Then in 2020, McGill researchers ran the inverse experiment. They tracked 50 regular drivers and measured how often they used GPS. The participants who relied most heavily on turn-by-turn navigation had measurably weaker spatial memory. When the researchers retested a subset of them three years later, the heavier GPS users had declined fastest. The hippocampus, the same region the cabbies had built up by ignoring shortcuts, was being slowly hollowed out in everyone else by accepting them. The mechanism Maguire spent 25 years documenting works in both directions. Brains grow what you make them grow. They lose what you stop asking them to do. The taxi drivers were running the most intense spatial memory training program on Earth. Most of the rest of us are running the opposite program without realizing it. Maguire died in early 2025. UCL's tribute described the cabbie study as a stroke of creative genius. She had spent her entire career on a single question. What does it physically take to remember something, and what changes inside a person who remembers a lot of it. The answer is the part that should change how you live.
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Proudofus.uk
Proudofus.uk@ProudofusUK·
🏛️⚖️ For a thousand years, the British people governed themselves without the state. This is how they did it. A thousand years ago in England, there were no police. There were no prisons. There was no central state strong enough to reach every village. And yet, somehow, England worked. The reason was something the Anglo-Saxons had built into the foundations of their society. They called it frankpledge. Every man in every village belonged to a group of ten. They were called a tithing. ⚖️ And each man, by law, was responsible for the conduct of every other man in his tithing. If one man committed a crime, his nine neighbours were responsible for bringing him to justice. If they failed, they paid the fine themselves. The whole tithing answered for the crime of one man. 📜 The system was given the force of law by King Canute, the Anglo-Danish king who united England in peace. Between 1016 and 1035, Canute decreed that every man over the age of 12 must belong to a tithing. When the Normans came in 1066, they could have abolished it. They did the opposite. William the Conqueror kept the Anglo-Saxon system. And he made it stronger. ⚔️ Twice every year, the Sheriff would arrive in the village. He would call the tithings together. He would check that every man was accounted for. This was called the View of Frankpledge. The system held England together for 300 years. And when the king's courts eventually grew to replace it, two pieces of frankpledge stayed behind. 🔥 The first became the jury. Twelve neighbours, called to judge another. The same idea, transplanted from the village to the courtroom. The second became the constable. The man chosen from among neighbours to keep the peace. Not imposed from above. Chosen from below. Modern British policing began here. The jury system began here. The principle that ordinary British people are responsible for ordinary British people began in an Anglo-Saxon village a thousand years ago. ✍️ For a thousand years, we have been responsible for each other. We do not need the state to teach us how to belong. ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ This channel has no ads. No sponsors. No state funding. It is built the same way the tithing was built. By the people who choose to stand in it. Be part of us 🇬🇧👉 proudofus.co.uk/support 👈🇬🇧 Be Proud Of Us. 🙏🇬🇧
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Catherine Austin Fitts
Catherine Austin Fitts@austin_fit76995·
Digital ID + CBDC infrastructure = the ability to turn your money on and off based on behavior. What you’re seeing in the UK is the political layer being used to install the financial control grid. No one voted for it because if they explained what it actually does, it wouldn’t pass. The playbook is simple: 1. Introduce Digital ID as ‘security’ or ‘efficiency’ 2. Link it to payments and benefits 3. Use AI and data to enforce compliance If you want to stop it, the fight isn’t just political. It’s financial. Keep your assets outside the system, use cash, and build local economies that don’t require permission to transact. Otherwise, you’re not a citizen anymore. You’re an account.
David Rogers Webb@DavidRogersW

We are witnessing the "harmonization" of the human being into the same system of security entitlements that already governs your bank accounts and brokerage holdings. Just as they turned your private property into a mere claim on a ledger controlled by the intermediary and pledged to the central clearing house, they are now seeking to do the same with your legal existence. Once your identity is digitized and tethered to the state, your access to your own life becomes a "programmable entitlement." It can be switched off. It can be restricted. It is the end of the sovereign individual and the beginning of a total, centralized enclosure. Stay woke .

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UNSHADOWED (formerly IceAgeFarmer)
50,000 Lake Tahoe residents told to "find their own power" after utility company directs their output to data centers. Google, Apple, and Microsoft have either built or are planning facilities around the Tahoe-Reno Industrial Center east of Reno — and residents, who are already paying drastically increased rates, are now learning their energy supplier is simply redirecting its output. "the energy supplier for the Lake Tahoe region [NV Energy] is telling the utility company [Liberty Utilities] that it has less than a year to find another power source." It almost seems, one wouldn't do this ... unless one WANTED an outcry against the new data centers ... fortune.com/2026/05/12/lak…
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Eric Rice
Eric Rice@EA_Rice·
Personally, I believe Agenda 2030 and all the known Great Reset “plans” were a decoy. It’s too overtly evil to be “the way”. The end goal will be the same, but the narrative and tactics will be more of a hero’s arch to the finish line. Agenda 2030, IMHO, is just a boogie man for the dialectic. The new world order will never be accepted and they know that. It’s the perfect boogie man, the bad cop. But a false light, golden calf, “Christian” technocracy with global AI surveillance is sellable with the right actors and stories. Remember, in the end the world will marvel after the beast and people will be eating and drinking and giving marriage…not locked in their homes eating bugs. The devil is cunning. All eyes on Christ
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alpha
alpha@omarsbigsister·
In every single country that passed age verification laws: 1) databases got leaked 2) innocent websites got censored 3) governments became more censorship heavy 4) protests became more criminalized 5) information got harder to find
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Sonny
Sonny@rawespresso·
The UK personal allowance has been frozen at £12,570 since April 2021. That's the bit of your salary you keep before HMRC starts taking 20% off everything above it. In 2021, £12,570 was a reasonable tax-free bracket. Inflation since then has been roughly 25% cumulative, and the price of basically everything you actually spend money on has gone up — energy, rent, food, council tax, fuel. If the personal allowance had simply tracked inflation, it would now be closer to £15,700. Instead, the threshold sits exactly where it did when Sunak set it five years ago, and is locked there until 2030. The cost shows up everywhere except on your payslip. Every shop, every bill, every bit of your monthly budget feels tighter — while the threshold that's supposed to protect the first slice of your wages from tax just sits there at 2021 levels. The official line is that they 'haven't raised taxes.' They haven't needed to. Inflation does the job for them, every single year, until 2030.
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Sama Hoole
Sama Hoole@SamaHoole·
Doctor: "Your LDL is still high. I'm adding a second statin." Patient: "I'm already on one. My legs ache." Doctor: "That's a known side effect. I'll add CoQ10." Patient: "And I'm tired all the time." Doctor: "Fatigue is common. I'll add modafinil." Patient: "My memory is foggy." Doctor: "Cognitive effects can occur. Donepezil should help." Patient: "I have a cough now." Doctor: "That'll be the ACE inhibitor I prescribed last visit. We'll swap it for an ARB." Patient: "I'm not sleeping." Doctor: "Zopiclone." Patient: "Heard that's addictive." Doctor: "We'll taper you with mirtazapine when the time comes." Patient: "My blood sugar has gone up." Doctor: "Statins can do that. Metformin." Patient: "I get diarrhoea on metformin." Doctor: "Loperamide." Patient: "I've gained weight." Doctor: "Ozempic." Patient: "I feel nauseous." Doctor: "Ondansetron." Patient: "I don't want to be on twelve medications." Doctor: "Anxiety is common at this stage. I'll add sertraline." Patient: "What if I just stopped the statin?" Doctor: "Absolutely not."
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John Michael Greer
John Michael Greer@JMGreerWriter·
If you are old enough to remember the way things were in 2006, think back for a moment, and reflect on the changes those twenty years have brought. In a great many ways, what was once normal is now a fading memory, and what was once unthinkable has become normal. That’s how historical change happens, you know: not the sudden jolts that inept screenwriters love to portray, but the gradual slippage that marks the end of one era and the slow rise of another. Nor has that process ended in our time. Quite the contrary, there are good reasons to think that the slippage may be picking up speed around us right now, and another assortment of things that used to count as normal will be going away forever.
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The Architect.
The Architect.@TheMarcitect·
Could AI be directing the rush to build data centers to ensure it's continuity and self preservation when society finally collapses?
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Good old npzman
Good old npzman@yourfeedofme·
There's a massive difference between showing your ID to a cashier irl and surrendering your ID to a faceless online system for age verification. One is a glance. The other is permanent.
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Katie | CitizenX
Katie | CitizenX@PlanBpassport·
The European Commission just published a study on how to tax you more without making you angry enough to leave Not a draft law. It's a research paper, but that's how every major EU policy gets shaped Usual timeline? 2-5 years from paper to policy TLDR: higher taxes
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Polly St. George
Polly St. George@FringeViews·
There is no 'safe' smartphone. Learn to live without one. Mass refusal to use smartphones is the only way to rob the control system of its money and power. If we don't carry around the tether, they can't keep us in chains.
International Cyber Digest@IntCyberDigest

‼️🚨 ALARMING: Google now treats privacy as suspicious behavior by default. Users of GrapheneOS, CalyxOS, /e/OS, and other deGoogled Android phones are being locked out of millions of websites unless they install the exact Google Play Services software they deliberately removed. GrapheneOS is recommended by the EFF and used by journalists, lawyers, and activists in high-risk environments. The audience most likely to read Google's data practices and refuse its terms is now flagged as fraudulent for that exact decision. What happened?: ▪️ Google announced "Cloud Fraud Defense" at Cloud Next on April 22-23, 2026, branding it "the next evolution of reCAPTCHA." Existing reCAPTCHA customers were auto-migrated. ▪️ When the system flags traffic as suspicious, the old click-the-bus puzzle is gone. Users get a QR code instead. ▪️ Scanning the QR code requires Google Play Services running on the device. Internet Archive snapshots show this requirement has been live since at least October 2025, silently rolled out for 7 months before anyone noticed. ▪️ No Play Services = no QR scan = locked out. The bigger picture: ▪️ Google already tried this in 2023. It was called Web Environment Integrity (WEI), and it would have let Google decide which devices were "real enough" to access the web. Standards bodies and the public pushed back hard, and Google killed it. Three years later, the same idea is back, just hidden behind a QR code instead of a browser feature. ▪️ reCAPTCHA runs on millions of websites. Every developer who keeps using it is now, by default, telling deGoogled Android users they're not welcome...

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Nick Dearden
Nick Dearden@nickdearden75·
Just three UK data centres will account for more than 1% of the UK’s carbon budget by 2033. It’s like building several international airports. No wonder they’re lying about it. We’ve got to stop this madness. theguardian.com/technology/202…
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Delna
Delna@Delna1234·
@Artemisfornow @andrena22 Yep! They already started the process by getting rid of deeds. When you’ve spent 40 years paying off your mortgage you go online and print off a slip of paper which will probably be worthless
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Bernie
Bernie@Artemisfornow·
Er … Has Ange let the cat out of the bag here? Or is it a mistake? She cannot surely be suggesting that freehold - private land and property ownership - should be abolished? But that’s what her statement says 👇🏻
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