How comfortable would people be in a public library if they knew that, after each book or article they browsed, librarians called different government agencies and reported their search activities?

Dr. John Reizer

Imagine going inside a public library when you were growing up, knowing that every book you touched or browsed through was being meticulously recorded by the library staff members and called into the Office of Homeland Security, the FBI, CIA, NSA, DARPA, and others that aren’t even acknowledged publicly by our government.

What books did you look at today, John?

Would you feel comfortable knowing whatever you ran your fingers over on various bookshelves was being directly reported to Big Brother?

I think most of us would have been horrified by such a thought just a decade or so ago, and maybe still to this day.

Look, I am just a small-time writer from South Carolina, and not particularly important to the powers that be, because my influence and outreach to the public are minuscule in the grand scheme of things. But the dastardly Illuminati still want to see what you, I, and everyone else are doing at all times. This is how life in the Electrified Aetheric Realm-wide Terrestrial Habitat or Matrix works.

Truth be told, being spied on in a library setting is precisely what’s happening when we’re on the Internet. Every search we make, every website we visit, and every keystroke we enter is being recorded and sent to the government—and perhaps to even scarier places than that.

I’ll Be Watching You!

We’ve become desensitized to the constant surveillance and monitoring of our communications and personal research, because the Internet remains largely invisible. At the same time we do our thing, the web is taking notes on everything we look at. There’s absolutely no privacy, regardless of whether you’re in incognito mode or using an alleged private search engine.

If you believe our controllers, those watching us, and the ones who re-released the Internet to our civilization set after the last reset occurred can’t see what you’re doing online at all times, they’ve got you right where they want you.

Our controllers want us to believe that our civilization is the most modern and technologically advanced one to ever exist on Earth, and that all the modern technologies we have today were nonexistent before they were invented by intelligent humans who lived recently.

If you believe the aforementioned official narrative, you’d be well advised to read our book below. And if you cannot afford a copy, I’ll send you one for free, as I am not doing anything here on this platform for monetary gain. 😎


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If you’re genuinely financially challenged and can’t afford our book, please get in touch with me, and I will send you a complimentary copy.

-Dr. Reizer

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8 thoughts on “How comfortable would people be in a public library if they knew that, after each book or article they browsed, librarians called different government agencies and reported their search activities?

  1. NoFakeNews's avatar NoFakeNews October 17, 2025 / 1:45 am

    That’s a good question, Kenneth!

  2. NoFakeNews's avatar NoFakeNews October 17, 2025 / 1:43 am

    Yes, I’ve used that song in a post or two.

  3. Kenneth T.'s avatar Kenneth T. October 17, 2025 / 1:35 am

    The “Eye In The Sky”, by the Alan Parsons Project, isnt to far off either.

  4. Kenneth T.'s avatar Kenneth T. October 17, 2025 / 1:27 am

    If I used the dewie decimal system to locate the books, would I then be able to read them?

  5. NoFakeNews's avatar NoFakeNews October 16, 2025 / 9:47 am

    Thanks for sharing your thoughts, Lisa! 👍🙂

    I was going to use that other song in the post. 🤣

    But, you’re spot on with your analysis of the situation; they’re constantly surveilling us because, at the end of each day, what people believe or don’t believe about the Matrix is what gives them power and control over the game and us.

    They’ve got all this technology in place to measure and track the thoughts and thinking, or the lack thereof, of avatars everywhere.

    John

  6. lhakes12's avatar lhakes12 October 16, 2025 / 9:39 am

    We truly are being surveillanced aren’t we? We’re like rats in a cage to be observed. And technology gives them the power to do so. Whether it’s mere browsing online, shopping or the books we read.

    And if it’s in a computer they know every appointment we make, and the results of every test we take.

    Also, our carrying along our cell phones everywhere we go is like a tracking device.

    John, the song “With every breath you take I am watching you” by Police is perfect.

    Although another song that comes to my mind is “Somebody’s Watching Me” by Rockwell. It has a creepy vibe. And all this spying on us is certainly creepy! 😂

    Lisa

    A couple of verses:

    “I’m just an average man with an average life

    I work from nine to five, hey, hell, I pay the price

    All I want is to be left alone in my average home

    But why do I always feel like I’m in The Twilight Zone?

    I always feel like somebody’s watchin’ me

    And I have no privacy

    I always feel like somebody’s watchin’ me

    Tell me, is it just a dream?”

  7. NoFakeNews's avatar NoFakeNews October 16, 2025 / 8:46 am

    Fantastic information, Ashley! Thanks so much for sharing it all. It has reached a point where everything we do is being scrutinized by the few who control the many.

    John

  8. Unknown's avatar Anonymous October 16, 2025 / 5:34 am

    This was great information, John. And I am certain over 90% of the people using libraries have no idea their every move, every book considered and put back, every book borrowed, and, of course, everything they do on the library’s computers is not only watched, but all the data related thereto is collected, and sold. (Microsoft’s donating their software to all libraries was certainly not because they were feeling generous!)

    As if that weren’t enough, are you familiar with the the program AllOfUs, a partnership between US public libraries and the National Institute for Health to build “one of the largest biomedical data resources of its kind?”: https://allofus.nih.gov/article/all-us-research-program-protocol (“When you join the All of Us Research Program, you join a historic movement to speed up research that may improve health for generations to come.”)

    The National Institutes of Health’s (NIH’s) All of Us Research Program is building one of the largest biomedical data resources of its kind with health data from a diverse group of participants across the United States, including people and communities who have been left out of medical research in the past. Data include biological factors and social determinants of health on a large, inclusive scale that tracks participants as they move, age, and grow (longitudinal study design).

    Data sources include:

    Electronic Health Records (EHR) standardized using the Observational Medical Outcomes Partnership (OMOP) Common Data Model (CDM)
    Biosamples and bioassays from blood, saliva, and/or urine samples
    Survey responses on identities and backgrounds, overall health, lifestyles, medical histories, healthcare access, experiences with COVID-19, and more
    Physical measurements when joining program
    Heart rate, physical activity, and sleep as tracked by wearable devices

    The diverse database, which is a part of the Precision Medicine Initiative, is intended to inform studies on a multitude of heath conditions. See more here: https://libguides.library.ncat.edu/allofus

    There are three tiers of data they collect:

    The Public Tier

    The Public Tier data contain only aggregate data with identifiers removed and are available using Data Snapshots and the Data Browser. This tier is available regardless of registration status.

    The Registered Tier

    The Registered Tier data contain individual level data from EHRs, wearables, and surveys, as well as physical measurements taken at the time of participant enrollment.

    The Controlled Tier

    In addition to the data in the Registered Tier, the Controlled Tier dataset contains genomic data in the form of whole genome sequencing (WGS) and genotyping arrays, previously suppressed demographic data fields from EHRs and surveys, and unshifted dates of events.

    The All of Us genome centers will generate genomic data from biosamples contributed by participants. Some of the centers will also analyze the data for genetic results to be returned responsibly to participants.

    Here’s their FAQ link: https://allofus.nih.gov/about/faq. Here, you’ll discover that the NIH, in partnership with members of local libraries, currently have over 869,000 participants and have collected over 611,000 biosamples.

    And they increased their data “available for research” earlier this year by convincing an additional 60,000 to allow themselves to be tracked 24/7 with a FitBit:
    https://allofus.nih.gov/article/announcement-all-of-us-adds-data-from-50-more-participants-in-largest-data-expansion-to-date.

    Remember when going to the library meant going to GET information?

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