reSee.it - Related Video Feed

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
The speakers in the video discuss the capital city of Shin Chen and its citizens' dreams of a small pyramid. They mention Yuri the Third and his desire for the best capital city. The conversation repeats several times without providing additional information.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
The future being built for us by the ruling class is a sustainable one, represented by 15-minute city smart grid apartments. These small living spaces are designed to monitor citizens' every movement, similar to China's smart grid system. In China, citizens' actions are recorded to determine their social credit score. Those who misbehave or refuse to comply face social shaming and loss of access to public facilities. Even their friends on social media suffer consequences, as their social credit score is affected. This system aims to train humans to be obedient. Get ready for these smart cities, brought to you by Klaus Schwab, the World Economic Forum, and BlackRock.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
The WEF has introduced the concept of 15-minute cities, called C40 cities. In these cities, petrol and diesel cars will be banned in favor of electric vehicles. Residents will receive calorie-controlled food sent by text. Violating rules may result in frozen bank accounts. This plan, supported by the WEF and London's mayor, aims to be implemented worldwide. The speaker opposes this idea, calling it a form of lifelong confinement and criticizing its lack of public awareness.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
In this video, the speakers discuss the question of why we need so many humans in the 21st century. They suggest that keeping humans happy with drugs and computer games in a virtual world called the metaverse could be a solution. They also mention the possibility of a new useless class of humans. Speaker 1 talks about the world's population, which is currently around 6.8 billion and expected to reach 9 billion. They mention that improving healthcare and reproductive health services could potentially lower the population by 10 or 15 percent. Speaker 1 also emphasizes that government agencies are not involved in any conspiracy.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
The speaker claims the WEF created the "15-minute cities" concept through an organization called c40 cities. They urge listeners to research this and view related TikTok content. According to the speaker, the plan involves banning petrol and diesel cars, mandating electric vehicles, and implementing a calorie-controlled food system dictated via text message. Violations will result in frozen bank accounts. The speaker states that the WEF and the mayor of London, as chair, are promoting c40 to countries worldwide, with many considering adoption. The speaker intends to abolish it, characterizing it as an "open prison" akin to permanent COVID restrictions. They claim work will be restricted to within the 15-minute city, deeming the plan "diabolical" and alleging it is being hidden from the public.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
The speaker compares the concept of a 15-minute city to the situation in Gaza, highlighting the presence of AI machine guns, constant surveillance, lack of rights and prosperity, and limited access to food and water. They argue that this represents a worst-case scenario of a controlled existence and lack of freedom. The speaker suggests that globalism, which aims to eliminate war by removing nations, could lead to a similar situation worldwide, with continuous warfare against those who resist or refuse to submit to globalist powers. They conclude by urging people to recognize the parallels between Gaza and the potential future they envision.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
They are creating mini cities called districts with mixed-use buildings in Toronto. These buildings have residences, offices, and retail spaces but limited parking. The goal is for residents to live, work, and shop within the same building, resembling lockdown conditions during COVID. The concept, known as the 15-minute city, aims to keep people within a 5-kilometer radius of their homes if they do not have a car.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
The speaker discusses the concept of 15 minute cities, which are areas where everything you need is within a 15-minute walk. They claim that this idea is not about convenience or saving the planet, but rather a way for authorities to control and lock down people. They mention that some places have already passed legislation to impose climate lockdowns. The speaker suggests that in the future, people may only be allowed to leave their immediate area a few times a year, with wealthier individuals being able to buy passes to travel more freely. They also mention a city being built in Saudi Arabia that could potentially house millions of people and be used for control. The speaker concludes by stating that all of these measures will lead to the complete enslavement of the population.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
City administration is presenting its plan to accommodate a population of 2,000,000 people through 15-minute cities. The 50 new district plans and bylaws will replace 54 existing planning documents. The goal is to accommodate 600,000 new residents in redeveloped areas, with 50% of new home units added through infill. The plan calls for half of all future travel to be done by transit and for residents to access daily needs within 15 minutes. One resident believes this means staying within their district to meet city climate plan objectives and feels Edmontonians can't afford this experiment. Another speaker feels the district plan has been derailed by 15-minute city conspiracy theories and states that it is about land use.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
City administration presents a plan for 2 million people living in 15-minute cities, aiming to accommodate 600,000 new residents through infill development. The plan includes half of all new homes built through infill, half of travel by transit, and access to daily needs within 15 minutes. Some residents are concerned about staying within their district and the speed of the renovation. Others believe conspiracy theories are derailing the district plans, emphasizing the importance of land use.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
In this video, the speakers discuss the question of why we need so many humans in the future. They suggest that one solution could be to keep people happy with drugs and computer games in a virtual world called the metaverse. They also mention the possibility of a new useless class of humans. Speaker 1 talks about the current population of 6.8 billion people, which is expected to reach 9 billion. They mention that with advancements in healthcare and reproductive services, the population could potentially be lowered by 10 or 15 percent. Speaker 1 also emphasizes the importance of listening to government agencies and disregarding conspiracy theories.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
In this video, the speaker introduces the concept of a 15 minute community. They explain that residents in these communities have everything they need within a 15-minute radius. The speaker shows examples of a community where the residents are content and produce eggs. The houses in these communities are similar, and the residents are free to come and go but choose to stay. The speaker emphasizes that everything is provided for them, and there is only one boss who takes care of everything. Overall, the video portrays the 15 minute community as an ideal world where residents are happy and well-cared for.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
The transcript discusses the United Nations Habitat I Plan from the 1976 Vancouver Convention, which it says relocates people from farms and rural “wild lands” to cities or human settlements. The goal, it claims, is to concentrate populations in specific zones to reduce energy, water, and transportation usage, so people stay in their homes and may work there, minimizing car use, energy consumption, and water use. It asserts that the UN, being opposed to property rights, will first phase out single-family homes, pushing We the People into apartments and condos in mega cities near railroad tracks. The envisioned living would involve high-rise, “stack and pack” dwelling units built to UN-specified building codes, with guidance from Ickley, COGS, the ADA, and various NGOs aligned with sustainable development. The narrative contrasts this with “animals” roaming continental corridors, while humans live in transit villages and smart cities. Smart growth or new urbanism is described as ideology that questions the need for excess space, suggesting that a two-person couple in a three-bedroom house doesn’t need that extra space. The speakers claim there is a coordinated effort to make private transportation and home ownership as miserable as possible, portraying it as the duty of individuals to exist as global citizens with minimal private life. The plan is depicted as featuring high-rise, stacked living with smart meters and smart heating, enabling energy use to be tightly controlled. If energy use is high, “the energy police,” aided by neighbors and street surveillance, will intervene. A speaker emphasizes that concentrating people in a thousand-person buildings makes monitoring their behavior, location, and thoughts easier than in rural or suburban settings, with smart meters measuring all life activities via smart appliances. Water usage is targeted, with statements that those maintaining gardens or single-family homes—consuming more than a minimal daily water allowance—are unsustainable and should be removed from single-family residences. A participant argues that people with a couple of acres and their own water supply who can grow their own food are a threat to a collectivist society, implying that they will not rely on politicians for basic needs. The transcript ties these ideas to Agenda 21, claiming the plan aims to remove people from the country so corporations can grow all food, while simultaneously denying private living. It concludes by describing human settlements and food sheds as modern-day concentration camps, suggesting that with no cars or parking, all will walk and bike, becoming fit and healthy only insofar as the GM foods they are compelled to eat allow.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
In this video, the speaker introduces the concept of a 15 minute city, which is a community where everything residents need is within a 15-minute reach. The speaker uses an analogy of a group of chickens in a coop to illustrate this idea. The chickens are free to come and go but choose to stay because they have everything they need in their community. The speaker emphasizes how happy the chickens are by the number of eggs they produce. The speaker also mentions that the housing in a 15 minute community is similar for everyone. Overall, the video portrays the 15 minute city as an ideal world where everything is provided for the residents.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
In this video, the speaker talks about how things were made in the old world. They mention the beautiful pop up books that were made with craftsmanship and beauty. The speaker also mentions other examples of the old world's artistry, such as lifelike marble statues and architectural designs. They contrast this with the bland and ordinary world we live in today. The speaker encourages viewers to question everything.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
A fifteen-minute city is defined as a neighborhood where all necessities are within a fifteen-minute walk. The speaker claims that this concept could lead to total control via digital ID and a social credit system, restricting people to their immediate area. Pilot projects are allegedly underway in Bologna ("Bologna Wallet") and Vienna ("Vienna Token"). These programs are currently voluntary, offering incentives like discounted tickets. The speaker asserts that participation will eventually become mandatory, requiring a digital certificate or QR code to dictate permissible activities and locations.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Speaker 0 and 1 describe a 'fifteen minute community' where residents are not locked in but stay there. 'Everything they need in their life is right here in their fifteen minute community. A water bowl, a feed tray, they own nothing, but they are exceptionally happy.' They say they 'get to take all everything that they produce, and they just keep producing.' In a fifteen minute community, 'you don't get a lot variation in housing. They're all pretty much the same,' and production is collected. The outside world is 'scary for them out there' and 'they will never leave.' 'I don't have to put a fence around them.' There is 'one boss' who 'provides everything for them.' The conclusion: 'It's an ideal world.' 'I don't see anything wrong with it.' 'Everything is provided for them.' 'They're happy.' 'It's all convenient.'

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
The speaker claims the WEF created the "15-minute cities" concept through C40 Cities. They urge listeners to research it online and on TikTok. According to the speaker, the plan involves banning petrol and diesel cars, mandating electric vehicles, and implementing a calorie-controlled food system dictated via text message. Violations will result in frozen bank accounts. The speaker states that the WEF and the mayor of London have promoted C40 to countries worldwide, with many considering adoption. The speaker aims to abolish it, characterizing it as an "open prison" akin to perpetual COVID restrictions. They claim work will be restricted to within one's 15-minute city, deeming the plan "diabolical" and hidden from the public.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Speaker 0 presents a critical view of “fifteen minute cities,” arguing the goal is to corral people into an area where they can be easily surveilled and controlled. The speaker contends the central interest is how a small, ruling elite can govern the many forever without the many ever being able to complain or act. The result, they claim, is a global governance project that uses big tech and mass surveillance to create a new way of life and system of living, with a particular aim of reducing the share of wealth or resources held by the many—the 99 or so. The speaker connects these ideas to the COVID era, suggesting that groups like the World Economic Forum (WEF) popularized policies framed as sustainability but ultimately designed and implemented to limit ownership and control by individuals. Specifically, the speaker cites WEF proposals such as not owning cars—renting them instead—and the deployment of autonomous fleets to drive people around within a defined radius. They also note proposals around not owning homes but renting and sharing apartments when unoccupied. A concrete example given is the Columbus smart city initiative tied to the Columbus Partnership, which Wexner chaired for roughly twenty years (2001–2021). The speaker notes that Columbus received a large Department of Transportation grant and private funding, possibly from Wexner, to implement a system where private car ownership would disappear in favor of fleets of autonomous vehicles. In this system, the autonomous cars would determine where people go, with specific routes available for payment and use. The speaker references the National Security Commission on AI, chaired by Eric Schmidt of Google, which reportedly described, as part of a strategy to beat China in AI, the need to end private car ownership in the United States and replace it with autonomous fleets (Waymo-like) guided by AI to manage where people go and work, implying a nationwide shift toward centralized planning of mobility. Finally, the speaker connects these initiatives to the Technocracy Inc. model, noting influence from Taylorism and industrial-revolution-era thinking that prioritized efficiency and micromanagement. The implication is that the new systems aim to extract data and monetize daily life, elevating efficiency and control above individual autonomy.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
In this video, the speakers discuss the concept of a new world order in the context of COVID-19. They mention the distinction between vaccinated and unvaccinated individuals and how it affects their rights. They also touch on topics like outdoor gathering restrictions, contact tracing, and the need to build back better from the pandemic. One speaker talks about Agenda 21, a plan originating from the United Nations that aims to shift society towards collectivism and dependence on the state. They explain that this plan discourages private property ownership and promotes high-rise apartments provided by the state. The speakers emphasize the desire for people to be dependent on the government, while independent individuals with their own resources are seen as a threat to this vision.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
In this video, the speakers discuss the future role of humans in society. They question the necessity of having a large human population and suggest that keeping people content with drugs and computer games could be a solution. They mention the concept of the metaverse, where people can engage in various activities similar to the real world. The idea of a useless class is also brought up. The speakers briefly touch on population growth and the potential for reducing it through advancements in healthcare and reproductive services. Lastly, one speaker urges viewers to trust government agencies and get vaccinated.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
The speaker discusses a future being built by the ruling class, referred to as a sustainable future. They mention the concept of 15-minute city smart grid apartments, which are designed to confine humans. China is presented as a blueprint for this smart grid system, where citizens' every movement is recorded to monitor their social credit score. Those who misbehave or refuse to comply are socially shamed and denied access to public facilities. Additionally, their friends on social media also face consequences through a reduction in their social credit score. The speaker suggests that this is a method of training humans to behave, and implies that smart cities sponsored by Klaus Schwab, the World Economic Forum, and BlackRock are on the horizon.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Designing mini cities called districts with mixed-use buildings that have residences, offices, and retail spaces but limited parking. City of Toronto is rezoning these areas, resulting in identical buildings with minimal parking infrastructure. The concept is to encourage residents to live, work, and access amenities within the building, similar to COVID lockdown restrictions. The 15-minute city aims to limit travel distance to 5 kilometers, making it difficult for those without cars to venture beyond their immediate vicinity.

TED

The 15-minute city | Carlos Moreno
Guests: Carlos Moreno
reSee.it Podcast Summary
Cities have long forced residents to adapt to inefficient designs, leading to wasted time and degraded quality of life. Carlos Moreno proposes the "15-minute city," where essential services like work, housing, and leisure are accessible within a 15-minute walk or bike ride. This concept emphasizes ecology, proximity, solidarity, and citizen participation. Paris is the first city to adopt this model, focusing on decentralization, reduced traffic, and multifunctional spaces. The 15-minute city aims to align urban life with human needs, promoting a more pleasant and efficient living environment.

Philion

The Adult Baby Diaper Desert Cult..
reSee.it Podcast Summary
The episode follows an on-site investigation into a remote Nevada town where a group self-identifies as adult baby diaper lovers and baby furs have quietly acquired land, renovated structures, and created a camp-like community in the Mojave Desert. The host outlines how the residents have built a small, self-contained ecosystem, complete with a functioning fire truck and a makeshift town center, while navigating public perception and local politics. Throughout, the dialogue reveals a tension between personal freedom, community belonging, and the moral panic that accompanies unconventional lifestyles. The narrative shifts between descriptive observations and moments of personal discomfort as participants discuss the appeal of escaping adult responsibilities, the role of caretakers, and the ethics of public exposure. The piece emphasizes how the town operates amid controversy: some residents emphasize consensual adult participation and remote work, while critics argue that such environments test boundaries of social acceptability and governance. The host discusses funding attempts, community leadership, and the paradox of a place that claims to be about personal authenticity yet draws attention for appearing outside mainstream norms. The exploration is less a prosecutorial claim about harm and more an anatomy of a subculture negotiating visibility, economics, and identity in a rural setting. By juxtaposing interviews with residents, onlookers, and commentators, the episode paints a portrait of a fringe community that challenges conventional ideas of adulthood, productivity, and social order, inviting viewers to confront their own thresholds for acceptance and the complexities of living in a society that prizes both freedom and social cohesion.
View Full Interactive Feed