Post Apocalyptic Reset
The Georgia Guidestones
The Reset vs. The Collapse: Lessons from the Georgia Guidestones
Many of you are already familiar with my YouTube channel, Human Impossible. Today, I posted a Short about the Georgia Guidestones, and the reaction was immediate. Within an hour, my inbox was flooded with emotional responses.
There is something uniquely visceral about discussing a mystery that unfolded during our own lifetimes. Most of my content focuses on ancient sites where we have to rely on fragmented data—information often tainted by bias or the agendas of those funding the research. But the Guidestones? They were right here, in Elberton, Georgia.
A Monument Shrouded in Shadow
Even with modern records, the stones remain an enigma. We know a man using the pseudonym R.C. Christian commissioned the 119-ton granite monument, but beyond that, the trail goes cold. Even the explosion that eventually brought them down remains shrouded in mystery.
The controversy, I believe, lies in their post-apocalyptic tone. The text, etched in multiple languages, suggests a world where roughly 94% of the human population has been wiped out. That is a chilling thought for anyone to process.
From Skepticism to Stark Reality
I’ll be honest: when I first encountered the Guidestones 15 years ago, they made me deeply uncomfortable. A shadowy figure erecting a monument in the middle of nowhere, calling for population reduction and “controlled reproduction”? At first glance, it screamed of a supremacist, eugenics-driven elite initiating “Phase One.”
However, as I revisited the 10-step plan, a different perspective began to emerge. It dawned on me that in many of my own writings here on SubStack, I am sounding the same alarms. If we fail to find self-discipline, if we cannot unite to protect our home, we are staring down the barrel of another “reset.”
While my work often focuses on the coming collapse, the Guidestones represent the post-collapse plan.
The 10 Guidelines: A Blueprint for a New World?
Maintain humanity under 500,000,000 in perpetual balance with nature.
The “Reset” Rule: This is the most infamous point. Since the global population is currently around 8 billion, this implies a 94% reduction.
Guide reproduction wisely — improving fitness and diversity.
The Eugenics Rule: Critics argue this sounds like state-mandated breeding; supporters see it as a way to prevent genetic bottlenecks in a small post-collapse population.
Unite humanity with a living new language.
The Tower of Babel Rule: This suggests a single global tongue to eliminate the “friction” caused by cultural and linguistic barriers.
Rule passion — faith — tradition — and all things with tempered reason.
The Enlightenment Rule: This calls for the suppression of “irrational” emotions or religious dogma in favor of logic.
Protect people and nations with fair laws and just courts.
The Judicial Rule: Establishing a framework for order in the vacuum of a collapsed society.
Let all nations rule internally and resolve external disputes in a world court.
The One-World Rule: A blueprint for a global governing body that supersedes national sovereignty in international matters.
Avoid petty laws and useless officials.
The Efficiency Rule: A critique of modern bureaucracy, suggesting a lean, functional government.
Balance personal rights with social duties.
The Collectivist Rule: It suggests that in a post-apocalyptic world, the needs of the “community” or “nature” might outweigh individual liberty.
Prize truth — beauty — love — seeking harmony with the infinite.
The Spiritual Rule: A move away from organized religion toward a more deistic or pantheistic worldview.
Be not a cancer on the earth — Leave room for nature — Leave room for nature.
The Ecological Rule: The only point repeated twice (for emphasis). It demands that humans remain a secondary priority to the planet’s ecosystem.
What do you think? Are these stones a sinister roadmap for globalists, or a pragmatic survival guide for a species that has pushed its planet to the brink?
Let’s discuss in the comments.



