The systematic erasure of time and cultural heritage is occurring through an orchestrated technocratic agenda that threatens the very foundations of human society. As technological and demographic shifts accelerate, our connection to the past, present, and future is being deliberately severed.
Human communities naturally develop their distinct customs, beliefs, and relationships over generations. This cultural evolution requires time – specifically, lifetimes of immersion within a society. The equation is simple yet profound: when human beings interact over time, culture emerges. This process incorporates various influences including geography, available resources, climate, trade, conflicts, and technological developments.
Today’s technocrats are actively working to dismantle these temporal connections through multiple strategies. Information warfare targets common sense and generational wisdom, labeling traditional knowledge as “misinformation” or “hate speech.” Young people are particularly vulnerable to propaganda that encourages rejection of time-honored principles.
Government-led psychological operations create confusion and fear by placing people in unfamiliar territory, as demonstrated during the COVID-19 crisis. This detachment from historical context leaves populations dependent on authority figures for guidance and direction.
The culture of excessive safety precautions is another tool being employed. Traditional community celebrations and activities are increasingly canceled due to liability concerns and insurance costs. Meanwhile, our physical landscape is being transformed by dehumanizing architecture, with smart cities featuring endless high-rise
developments replacing historical buildings and community spaces.
The systematic transfer of wealth from individuals to elites, as proclaimed by the World Economic Forum’s “own nothing and be happy” motto, is eliminating generational inheritance. Simultaneously, mass migration is weakening social cohesion in host countries, creating populations without strong cultural roots or shared identity.
Perhaps most concerning is the rapid advancement of technology pushing humanity from physical reality into virtual spaces. This transition, coupled with transhumanist ambitions, poses an existential threat to human society as we know it.
While the United Nations defines genocide as the physical destruction of national, ethnic, racial, or religious groups, cultural genocide – the organized elimination of cultural heritage – can be equally devastating. The technocratic agenda appears to be implementing this cultural destruction without obvious violence, systematically erasing temporal connections that define human civilization.
This chronocide manifests through various mechanisms: the rejection of historical knowledge, the manipulation of current events, and the construction of an uncertain future. Traditional social bonds and customs, which typically resist radical change, are being methodically dissolved through sudden, dramatic transformations that overwhelm natural resistance.
The concept mirrors the “Year Zero” approach employed by totalitarian regimes like the Khmer Rouge, which sought to eliminate all traces of previous society to implement their vision of a new order. While modern methods are more subtle, the objective remains similar – to sever connections with the past and reshape society according to technocratic specifications.
As our physical and cultural landscapes transform, communities find themselves increasingly disconnected from their temporal anchors. Churches close, local businesses disappear, and traditional gathering places vanish, replaced by standardized, corporate spaces that lack historical context or cultural significance.
This deliberate erasure of time represents a fundamental attack on human society and culture. Without connections to our past or control over our future, populations become malleable subjects in a
post-temporal world designed by technocratic elites. This systematic destruction of cultural continuity constitutes a crime against humanity, even if it occurs without traditional weapons or violence.