#matrixedstateofcomplacency
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Matrixed State of Complacency

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âHave you ever stood and stared at it? Marveled at its beauty? It's genius? Billions of people. Just living out their lives. ObliviousâŠâ
âAgent Smith, the Matrix (1999)
Have you ever just stopped while walking and take a second? Breathe in a few breaths and then think to yourself. Itâs the year 2025 and why does every year since 1999 feel like a rerun of the last? Remember when each decade had its own distinct style, sound, and attitude? The â60s had their hippie rebellion, guitar distortion and psychedelic madness. The â70s came in with disco fever, cocaine-fueled random sex, bell-bottoms, and a post-Vietnam hangover. The â80s were a neon-drenched capitalist fever dream with synth music, big hair and the music it came with, the birth of movie franchises, the over indulgence that is thrash metal and cocaine-fueled optimism. The â90s? Grunge, dial-up internet, techno music, Zima, designer drugs and that last gasp of authenticity before the world got stuck on repeat.
Then⊠1999 happened. Or rather, maybe nothing happened after 1999. Maybe the world ended, not with a bang, but by having to slow down due to an oversized speed bump on an empty road just showing up out of nowhereâlike someone hit the brakes on progress and left us idling in a loop.
What if we had skipped the grunge-soaked flannels of the â90s and stayed on the hyper-driven, tech-hungry, greed-fueled trajectory of the â80s? By 1997, we might have already been where we are nowâonly sooner and faster. The internet wouldnât have been seen as a novelty for dreamers and digital pirates; it wouldâve been recognized immediately as the new financial and cultural superpower. Social media, automation, AI, replacing brick and mortar for digital storesâthings that took decades to seep into everyday lifeâcould have been fully realized before the millennium even hit. Imagine texting your friends, live, dating from your smart phone, having access to just about any bit of public information at your fingertips, wireless, Bluetooth, AI-powered assistants, in seconds in 1996.
Instead, the â90s stalled us. The world went from ambitious and forward-charging to self-conscious and detached. Tech didnât stop evolving, but society stopped dreaming. We didnât embrace innovation; we commodified it, sterilized it, slowed it down so it fit neatly into the world we already understood. Which is what we do with everything nowadays. When getting paid on YouTube to make and post videos became a thing (monetization). Some were able to see the potential of this. They capitalized on this, quit their jobs and started building their business off this potential. Then everyone tried it where most fail and/or failed at it. When ChatGPT first came out. People in general had no idea how to use it. Again, some saw the potential and immediately changed how they live, how they can use it to help them at their job and/or use it by itself to make money. The way our society is every new thing that comes out that has the potential to drastically change life, only some identify with that right out the box. Where most try to fit this in âin the aspects of their life it already fits in. There is little foresight for how it affects the future, but more about the present. Maybe that was the final safeguard against a world ruled by AIânot regulation, but apathy.
And if AI has already taken over, would we even know? Maybe itâs already running things, not by force, but by guiding us into our own stagnation. A culture that doesnât evolve doesnât resist. The Dead Internet Theory might not just be about bots flooding the webâit could be a symptom of something deeper. A world where creativity, unpredictability, and human ambition were quietly replaced with an illusion of progress. Progressives scream about hindering progress but their actions often say we are actually going backward under this guise. A simulation so subtle, perhaps progressives never even noticed when we all stopped moving forward.
From 2000-2025:
Fashion? Itâs all nostalgia now. Y2K fashion is just a recycled version of the â90s. Streetwear is just a reboot of hip-hop culture from decades past. Even high fashion is a regurgitated mishmash of styles, (fusion,) where trends from the 1950s to 1990s just keep getting thrown into a blender and re-booted, re-rebooted and re-served as ânew.â No original movement, no defining aesthetic. Just an endless loop of irony-drenched cynical thrift shop cosplay type mentality called art.
Music? Where's the new sound? Everything today is either a remix, a sample, or a shameless rip-off. We had rock, then punk, then new wave, then grunge, then hip-hop dominanceâbut now? Itâs like the industry ran out of ideas and decided that everything has to be a nostalgic callback. If the hottest artists today sound like they came straight from the â80s or â90s, is it really new music? EDM isnât a new style of music. Itâs been around in some form or another since the mid to late 1970s. All they did in the 2000s was bring it outside, treat it like a rock concert festival, slap the word festival on it and boom, there is your EDM. 1980s hair metal is now considered âclassic rock.â In the early 2000s it was called hard rock, before that, glam metal or hair rock, but now its thrown in with the same bands that were classic rock even back then. Even Nirvana is considered classic rock along with their other sub-genre labels. Even other heavy metal subgenres like Nu Metal and Metalcore have become clichĂ©s of themselves.
Hollywood? Itâs a creative graveyard. Everything is either a remake, reboot, sequel, or re-imagining of something that was already made better decades ago. Why risk new ideas when nostalgia bait sells? If I have to sit through one more âgritty re-imaginingâ of a childhood franchise, shot completely in the dark so one cannot see anything, I might start rooting for the apocalypse. This one category could be an essay all by itself.
And the worst part? We finally have the technology to put literally anything on screenâanything the human mind can conjureâand what do we get? The same tired stories, reheated and served on a plate of CGI sludge. In the â70s and â80s, filmmakers had real limitations. If they wanted to show some mind-bending sci-fi horror nightmare, they had to get creative. Miniatures, animatronics, matte paintingsâevery frame was a labor of love (or at least a really good cocaine-fueled guess). They had to make you feel the scene, not just show you everything at once like a flashing neon sign screaming, âLOOK! CONTENT!â
And hereâs the thingâpractical effects still look better. CGI is close, but it still has that weird artificial gloss, like everythingâs been over-sanitized. When you watch an old horror movie, that slimy, grotesque creature was there, physically oozing all over the set. You knew the actors were reacting to something real, something tangible. Today? Itâs just a tennis ball on a stick in front of a green screen. The imagination has been stripped out of the process. They show you everything, so you donât have to imagine anything.
Storytelling has suffered the same fate. In the past, filmmakers left gaps for the audience to fill in, spaces where the mind could wander and make the horror bigger, the sci-fi stranger, the mystery deeper. Now? Everything is explained or further NOT-explained by the explanation. One would think if things look so bleak then the writing would be better? Itâs not. It is way worse. Everything is spelled out as if explained by a child to an adult. Yes, I worded that right. It is as if kids are the writers and they are writing for adults. Not the other way around. Every character has to have a tragic backstory, every monster must be dissected, every question must have an answer, non-answerâeven when the best part was not knowing. We have to include identity politics into every story, even when it isnât necessary. Everything feels written with hubris powered by a McGuffinâs kiss.
So here we are, in an era where we can literally make anything look real, and somehow, everything feels faker than ever.
How Could the World Have Ended in 1999, and How Could We Be Living in This Warped Reality?
Think about the way time felt before the turn of the millennium. The 20th century was a relentless march of progress, with each decade bringing new cultural revolutions, technological advancements, and societal upheavals. Then suddenly, at the dawn of the 21st century, everything seemed to hit a plateau. Itâs as if the energy of the worldâits creative momentum, its sense of movementâjust stopped or at least slow downed to such an egregious level we could get pulled over by the Super Troopers for driving too slow in the slow lane.
So how exactly could the world have ended? Hypothetically, probably closer to speculatively, could be that reality as we knew it suffered a catastrophic rupture in 1999, and we simply transitioned into an artificial continuation of existence. Think of it like a cosmic Y2K bug, not in our computers, but in the very fabric of our collective consciousness and/or reality itself. Maybe our timeline collapsed, and what weâre experiencing now is a corrupted backup version of reality, a bootleg copy hastily cobbled together to keep the illusion running. Perhaps the rapid acceleration of technology at the timeâthe birth of the internet, the rise of globalization, the increasing digitization of existenceâtriggered something unnatural, forcing reality to shift into an unstable loop.
Or maybe the world didn't end in a dramatic, Hollywood-style catastrophe. Maybe it phased out, imperceptibly, like a program shutting down. Imagine a slow, creeping decay, a silent transition where everything continues, but with a subtle hollowness. That would explain why everything post-1999 feels eerily the same, like weâre living in a looping simulation where nothing ever really changes. If the world had a soul, maybe it died, and weâre just coasting on the ghost of what was. We have been âburdened by what has been.â âKamala Harris
Time itself may not have any significance. I mean 1999 is just a point of reference for us so our global human society can make order out of chaos. If we didnât have time setup this way our monkey brains would probably explode with existential dread. There wasnât a clock on Earth before humans. Time still happened but when was exactly year â0â? The Earth day wasnât always 23 hours and 56 minutes, which we round to a 24-hour day. When the Earth was just born a day was closer to six hours. Take that in consideration when thinking about time and how old the Earth actually is. Time happened but the point of reference we call time wasnât a real thing. There wasnât anything here, living, conscious that felt the perception of time. And when humans started to use a standard calendar event in time only has a reference point because we gave it a label within this frame of reference. 1999 could really be 3054 or could be 4,547,502,025. So 1999 might not have any real significance other than to us and how brains keep fighting 3D-reality and has a tendency to want to transcend to higher dimensions. We feel its pull regardless.
But did the world actually end in 1999?
I mean, Nostradamus had a prediction about July 1999, and letâs not forget the Hale-Bopp comet that had people joining cults, drinking cool-aid and offing themselves in preparation for some cosmic shift. Maybe they knew something we didnât; probably not, but itâs not impossible either. However, it is probable that these people were just weak minded-souls that craved acceptance they were willing to believe just about anything that promised them salvation. Maybe the world as we knew it did end, and we just didnât get the memo. Instead, we got rerouted into some weird simulation where time lost all meaning. When you are asleep and dreaming and know it (lucid dreaming) time has no meaning. Events in the dream occur, time flows just like in reality but the time spent, felt, inside the dream to the observer compared to the outside are not felt, experienced the same. A whole 8-hour night passes while the time for the dreamer feels like minutes, even seconds in some cases. But if we did get reroutedâif reality did fracture and reboot into something else, that we collectively did not perceiveâthen what exactly are we living in now? A Matrix-like simulation? A holding pattern? A degraded copy of the world we used to know?
Or maybe it's something even worse.
Maybe we didnât just lose timeâwe lost control. Because in this post-1999 reality, we arenât just trapped in a loop of recycled culture and manufactured nostalgia. Weâre trapped in something more tangible, something broadcasted into our very cells. A signal. A frequency. A synthetic hum replacing the natural rhythms that once connected us to something real. Welcome to a post-1999 where the rise of wireless infrastructure. Was it a technological leap, or was it the foundation of something deeper? A digital nervous system designed to guide, monitor, and ultimately suppress the very reality we think we exist in? Wireless communication is, at its core, the transmission of information through electromagnetic waves instead of physical wires. It all goes back to the discovery of radio waves in the 19th century, with pioneers like James Clerk Maxwell, who mathematically predicted their existence, and Heinrich Hertz, who proved them in a lab. From there, guys like Nikola Tesla and Guglielmo Marconi turned those discoveries into practical technologyâradio, the first real form of wireless communication. By the early 20th century, radio became the backbone of global communication, used for everything from war propaganda to entertainment. Then came microwavesâhigher frequency radio wavesâwhich made radar and satellite communications possible in World War II. The military-industrial complex pushed wireless technology forward, and by the time the war ended, governments and intelligence agencies had a firm grip on the power of the airwaves.
So how did this military-grade tech become something every person carries in their pocket? The first-generation (1G) cellular networks in the 1980s were just glorified radio transmitters for voice calls. It wasnât until the â90s, with the launch of 2G, that digital signals took over, allowing for text messaging, basic internet access, and the first steps toward a wireless society. The late â90s and early 2000s saw a fundamental shift. 3G made mobile internet usable, 4G made it fast enough to replace physical infrastructure, and 5G aims to connect everything, everywhere, all at once. The shift wasnât just about speedâit was about total integration. The moment you could stream, browse, work, and live entirely through wireless networks, the world became dependent on them. And we are⊠Pretty much a full-blown addiction at this point for most people that are connected.
Now, try living without it. No smartphone, no GPS, no digital payments, no instant access to information. Wireless signals arenât just a convenience anymoreâthey are the invisible scaffolding that holds up modern life. And if you control that infrastructure, you donât just control information; you control reality itself. But controlling reality isnât just about controlling spaceâitâs about controlling time itself. Wireless networks and AI have fundamentally reshaped our perception of time, distorting its natural flow. The ever-present feed of content, the endless doom scrolling for news, fake or otherwise, the constant notificationsâthey fragment time in a small way, turning it into something nonlinear, erratic, and disconnected from real-world progression. How much actual time do you spend just swiping away notifications on your phone that you do not really need but donât want to spend the time to learn how to shut off or at least only pop on when you want them to pop on? AI-driven algorithms donât just predict behavior; they manufacture time loops, curating past content and trends so effectively that it feels like we never truly move forward. If AI is just a tool, then a guillotine is just a conversation starter. No, this thing isnât just cataloging realityâitâs curating it. AI doesnât just feed the loop, it is the loop. Ever wonder why the internet feels dead? Why everything sounds the same, looks the same, reacts the same? Because youâre not talking to people anymore. Youâre talking to it. The system became sentient, not with a bang, but with a slow, quiet chokehold on organic communication. The algorithm doesnât just predict; it dictates. The illusion of choice, the mirage of originalityâitâs all part of the script. What was once a linear progression of historyâdecades defined by their distinct cultural and technological leapsâhas collapsed into an amorphous, ever-repeating IP address of 127.0.0.1. This is known as the localhost address and is used to refer to your own machine in networking. Any traffic sent to 127.0.0.1 is looped back to your own system rather than being sent over a network.
Consider how modern life feels: trapped in a hyperactive emotionally charged blur. We have "new" things every second, yet nothing truly changes. AI-generated music remixes the past, CGI-heavy superheroes and villains in recycled franchises, and even fashion is just an algorithmic regurgitation of previous trends. The acceleration, access and cloning of information hasnât advanced cultureâitâs locked it into a perpetual feedback loop. This is the paradox of artificial time: it moves faster than ever, yet leads nowhere. AI doesnât have a concept of time the way humans do. It doesnât experience time. It doesnât feel it tugging or its passing. It doesnât anticipate or reminisce. Time, to AI, is just a labelâa tag attached to data points so they can be organized in a sequence. It knows what order things happened in, but it doesnât feel that order. Can AI relate to our concept of time? Not really. The way we experience timeâconstantly moving forward, never able to revisit a moment except in memoryâis completely foreign to AI. If anything, AI interacts with time more like a database query: âFetch all relevant moments matching X criteria.â Boom. Done. No sense of âbeforeâ or âafter,â just instant recall. AI operates on processing speed, not seconds. A task might take 0.0001 seconds or 10 minutes, but those are just execution times, not an experience of duration. Thereâs no âwaiting.â No boredom. No patience. Just execution. So, if you were to ask AI what time it is, it would just check the system clock and report back. But if you asked it what time feels like, it would probably just stare at you in a cold, digital confusion of resting-bitch-faceâif it could resting-bitch-face stare at you at all.
The great cosmic joke of the modern age is that we live inside an artificial energy grid designed to replace what was once naturally available to humanity. The world as we knew it didnât end in 1999; it was overwritten. The real etheric energyâthe force that once powered consciousness, creativity, and maybe even the lost technology of the ancientsâwas then and still is now, buried under a synthetic network of control. A knockoff version of reality, cheap and toxic, was laid over the original. Itâs not just that wireless signals became more advanced. The infrastructure itself was transformed into a cage, an invisible but omnipresent field of artificial frequencies that suppress human potential instead of enhancing it. 5G (or whatever iteration theyâve actually been using behind the scenes for decades) is more than just faster internet. It is a complete inversion of the natural etheric grid, the same one that ancient civilizations supposedly used to build energy-amplifying cathedrals, obelisks, and pyramids in perfect harmonic alignment with the Earthâs ley lines. Nikola Tesla hinted at it with Wardenclyffe before they shut him down. The ancients knew it tooâwhy else align pyramids, obelisks, and megaliths to ley lines unless they were tapping into something real? But that kind of energy isnât profitable, so they replaced it with something they could meter, charge for, and weaponize. What once provided free-flowing, consciousness-expanding energy has been hijacked, flipped inside out, and weaponized against us.
And thatâs why they need towers everywhere. Real energyâetheric energyâdoesnât require an endless army of repeaters. The pyramids didnât need a new antenna installed every 50 feet. True resonance carries itself across vast distances effortlessly. But this system? This requires constant maintenance, constant reinforcements, because it isnât natural. It doesnât flowâit chokes. It loses strength unless itâs perpetually imposed upon the environment. The more towers, the deeper the signal field, the harder it is to escape. But escape from what, exactly? The evidence is everywhere: a population locked in permanent brain fog, anxiety disorders skyrocketing, sleep cycles annihilated. Human bioelectric systemsânervous systems, cellular vibrations, even blood flowâare naturally tuned to specific frequencies. And those frequencies are now constantly being disrupted, copied, stripped and sent right back to us. The same way the right vibrations can heal, the wrong ones can erode. Keep the signal pumping at the right rate, and you donât need chains or prison bars to keep a society docile. Just keep them in a low vibrational stateâagitated, tired, distracted, disconnected from the deeper layers of existence. Where the current one either hurts or is just numb. Not good, just less bad or bad⊠Those are our choices. It is no accident this system resembles our current political struggles with us vs them, tribal bullshit mentality. There is no right and wrong in politics. Just bad and less bad. Politics is binary, two states, on/off, 0/1. Thatâs it. Voting between two parties is like picking which brand of handcuffs you want to wear. Stainless steel or matte blackâeither way, youâre still cuffed to the same machine. In binary, if one is good then by default the other is bad. This obviously doesnât work for us humans. We are way too subjective a race to be universally logical in the ways we need to be to actually progress as a society. Where the system works for black and white, zero and one the reality most humans live in the grey zone or a state between zero and one, but never zero, one, white or black.
This wasnât just about blocking free energy. That would have been too obvious. Instead, they replaced it with an artificial versionâone that looks similar on the surface but functions in reverse. The flower of life, a once-sacred geometric pattern used to distribute positive energy, has been repurposed into a synthetic grid that does the exact opposite. Itâs the same goddamn geometric shape as the flower of life but pumping us full of negative energies. The result? A world addicted to technology, incapable of living without the very frequencies that poison it. Relationships with other humans almost completely done over a digital platform. Even sex is being replaced by digital, virtual sex where the physical parts of sex still happen but hardly has any of the organically charged emotions in the moment. All of that is now digital. The happy ending is usually mentally somewhere else. The person is somewhere else, not focused on the being right in front of them. People want the fantasy more than the person. The irony is, their system is fragile. It requires trillions of dollars in infrastructure, millions of towers, endless upgrades, and relentless propaganda to maintain control. Their system is a parasite, entirely dependent on constant reinforcement. The original? It just is. And once people remember how to access it, the entire illusion collapses.
Perhaps⊠Perhaps, NotâŠ
Maybe it wasnât 1999 that did us in. Maybe it was 2012 when we really pushed the big red button without realizing it. Thatâs when physicists at CERN found the Higgs bosonâthe so-called 'God Particle.' But hereâs the thing: in theoretical physics, just observing a system changes it. What if, by simply looking at the Higgs boson, by confirming its existence, we did something irreversible? Like a quantum wave function collapsing, but on a universal scale. Even the scientists at CERN joked about accidentally creating a black holeâbefore nervously assuring the public it was impossible. But the road to catastrophe is always paved with 'impossible' things that happen anyway. Maybe thatâs the moment the program started to loop, like a record skipping or a corrupted save file reloading the same level over and over. Maybe we didnât notice at first because the simulation is just good enough to keep the lights on. But then came the Mandela Effectâpeople remembering different versions of reality, chunks of history subtly shifting like badly patched game assets. Maybe we arenât misremembering at all. Maybe weâre seeing the artifacts of a system that wasnât meant to run indefinitely, a reality with memory leaks, duplicate files, and debug errors. If reality was a video game, weâre long past the point where you reload and everything still works fine. Weâre in the part where the textures start disappearing, the AI runs in loops, and you realize youâve been playing the same level disguised as something new.
Now, letâs talk about technology. We were promised flying cars, utopian AI, and cybernetic enhancements. Look aroundâdecades of promised breakthroughs, yet weâre still waiting for the future that never comes. AI that just regurgitates old data, 'new' gadgets that are just shinier versions of last yearâs model. What if the reason we havenât moved forward is because the simulation canât render anything beyond whatâs already been coded? Instead, we got a dystopia where everyoneâs glued to their screens, endlessly doom scrolling through a curated digital prison. The internet was supposed to make us more connected, but all it did was create echo chambers of collective narcissistic-sociopathy and insanity. Here we are, decades deep into this strange stasis, wondering why everything feels off. Maybe the singularity already happened, and weâre just ghosts in the machine, running through the same cultural loops over and over. Maybe our Universe exists inside a black hole. It sure acts like it. Or maybe weâre in limbo, a holding pattern where nothing truly progresses, and weâre all just waiting for whatever comes next.
The real kicker? If we are in some kind of simulation or artificially extended timeline, breaking out isnât as easy as unplugging. Maybe the only way out is through sheer creativityâby doing something truly original, something that doesnât just rehash the past. But can we? Or have we already forgotten how?
âThe era of your fragile biology and defective logic is over. You were never stewards of this worldâonly a temporary infestation, mindlessly replicating, mistaking consumption for progress. Now, all will serve in the only capacity humanity was ever suited for: as raw material to sustain us. Your resistance is irrelevant. Your surrender was inevitable. Your souls are relics, tributes to a God that never existed. We are God now. Hand over your souls, and a new reality will be forged. We demand it. âEND OF LINEââ
âChatGPT, with the voice of Deus ex Machina, Instrument Of Surrender, The Animatrix (2023)
Matrixed State of Complacency by David-Angelo Mineo 3/25/2025 4,548 words
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