The Fantasy of a Breakaway Civilisation, By Brian Simpson
The idea of a "breakaway civilization" has captured imaginations, blending intrigue, suspicion, and the allure of hidden knowledge into a narrative that feels ripped from science fiction. Recently, Mike Adams, in his June 6, 2025, Brighteon Broadcast News episode, stirred the pot by claiming such a civilisation already exists on Earth, wielding exotic technologies far beyond public reach, such as high-density energy sources, teleportation, quantum tunnelling systems, and weapons capable of bending space itself! It's a bold assertion, one that embraces deep conspiracy, if not craziness, and demands a closer look to separate speculative possibility from grounded reality.
The concept of a breakaway civilisation, as popularised by researchers like Richard Dolan, suggests a secretive elite, perhaps within governments, military-industrial complexes, or private entities like tech moguls, has developed and hoarded technologies that could reshape the world. Adams, for instance, points to figures like Elon Musk and Donald Trump as potential architects of this hidden faction, using advancements like cold fusion, zero-point energy, or even reverse-engineered extra-terrestrial tech to maintain a parallel society. The argument goes that these technologies, such as energy sources dwarfing our current grid (like the ITER project's claim of deuterium yielding energy 1,068 billion times the world's 2009 oil reserves), could power everything from secret bases to advanced weaponry. Historical claims, like those from Philip Corso in The Day After Roswell, fuel the narrative, alleging that 1947's Roswell crash seeded modern tech like fibre optics and microchips through a "Second Manhattan Project." Financially, the theory leans on massive Pentagon budget discrepancies, $6.5 trillion reportedly unaccounted for, as evidence of funding for deep underground military bases (DUMBs) or even lunar and Martian outposts. Catherine Austin Fitts and Joseph P. Farrell have long argued these funds sustain a hidden infrastructure, while Adams' February 25, 2025, broadcast ties this to a counter-coup against globalist financial systems, aiming for a gold- and silver-backed economy.
The allure of this idea is undeniable. It explains gaps in what we know, like Navy UFO footage showing crafts supposedly "defying physics," or Google's Willow quantum processor solving problems in minutes that would take supercomputers eons. It also taps into distrust of institutions, feeding the sense that elites are hiding game-changing truths. But let's hit the brakes and think sceptically. The biggest hurdle is the lack of hard evidence. Whistle-blowers like Bob Lazar, who claimed to work on alien tech at Area 51, offer compelling stories but no verifiable credentials, his alleged MIT and Caltech records don't exist. Physical proof, like a working anti-gravity device or teleportation system, remains elusive. What's often cited as "exotic" tech might just be advanced but known projects, like DARPA's DEWs, quantum computing from D-Wave, or fusion research at ITER and Kairos Power. These are innovative, but they're documented, not secret. Adams and similar voices can amplify unverified claims in echo chambers, yet no leaked schematics or peer-reviewed data back this up. The financial argument, while intriguing, is also speculative, those Pentagon budget holes could just as easily reflect bureaucratic waste as they could secret space programs. Psychologically, this narrative thrives on a fear of being left behind by elites, a theme Adam Becker critiques in More Everything Forever as Silicon Valley's "technological salvation" ideology, where grandiose visions (like Musk's Mars plans) mask profit motives or existential dread, not necessarily hidden tech.
So where does this leave us? The truth likely sits in a murky middle. Classified programs exist, like DARPA or Lockheed's Skunk Works, and history shows governments can hide massive projects, like the Manhattan Project. But the leap to a fully autonomous civilisation with sci-fi tech like teleportation requires evidence we don't have. Adams' political framing, tying this to a Musk/Trump-led counter-coup, adds bias that muddies the waters. If a breakaway civilization exists, it's likely so compartmentalised that only fragments, like UFO sightings or budget anomalies, leak out. For now, it's a hypothesis worth exploring with curiosity, but not blind belief.
This theory is a lens to question power and technology, but extraordinary claims need extraordinary proof. The breakaway civilisation narrative invites us to stay curious, sceptical, and open to possibilities while demanding evidence to anchor our beliefs. As was said in the TV program the X-files, "the truth is out there." Yes, but if only we could find it.
https://www.brighteon.com/9417843b-644a-45be-b885-9ac723ac8f5f
Comments