When the Network Becomes GodAI, Digital ID, and the War Over Human Choice

I’ve spent most of my life as an engineer, thinking in circuits, signals, and code. For years, that felt mostly hopeful. Technology was a toolkit: neutral in itself, powerful in the right hands, dangerous in the wrong ones. You designed systems, you deployed them, and you trusted that human judgment would set the boundaries.

Over the last several years, that confidence broke.

I watched a whole stack of technologies converge at the same time—artificial intelligence, blockchains and cryptocurrencies, programmable money, digital IDs, mass surveillance, bio-nanotechnology, genetic engineering, and large-scale social and behavioral engineering. They were wrapped in language that sounded noble: “sustainability,” “inclusion,” “safety,” “ESG,” “SDGs.” But underneath the branding, the pattern looked less like tools in human hands and more like the skeleton of a global control grid that would eventually close around the people using it.

The pandemic was the turning point. Not just the virus or the policies, but the speed and coordination of the response. Data systems, media, finance, medicine, logistics, and behavior all snapped together into one integrated stack. For the first time, it felt as if a single planetary machine had woken up—one that could see us, measure us, model us, and increasingly tell us who we were allowed to be.

As an engineer, I know a simple rule:

Anything that can be measured will be optimized.
Anything that can be optimized can be controlled.
Anything that can be controlled can be weaponized.

That rule applies to everything: satellites, cryptography, AI, logistics, public health. The same satellite can watch weather or track targets. The same encryption can protect privacy or lock populations into monitored ledgers. The same recommendation engine that lines up funny videos can quietly tune what people see, believe, and eventually do.

Over time I realized that the most important “dual-use platform” on Earth was no longer a device. It was the human body—especially the human brain.

Brain–machine interfaces, neural implants, EEG headsets, augmented-reality overlays, and bio-nanotech all promise real benefits: restoring lost functions, easing paralysis, managing pain, improving cognition, making life easier for those who suffer. I am not against those goals. But I also know how engineers think.

If you can read a signal, you will try to predict it.
If you can predict it, you will try to influence it.
If you can influence it, someone, somewhere, will eventually try to control it.

When the “signal” is not just clicks or heartbeats but consciousness itself—attention, intention, choices, emotions—the stakes are no longer just what people do. The stakes become who people are allowed to be.

For years I’ve been fascinated by quantum mechanics—not just the math, but what it seems to say about reality. On the page, quantum theory is full of probabilities and “random” outcomes. Eventually I stopped seeing that randomness as meaningless noise. It began to look more like a menu of allowed possibilities.

In that view, “randomness” is the range of futures that could legitimately happen. Choice is the act of selecting one branch from that menu. In everyday language, that’s free will: a real ability to choose between genuine options. If consciousness participates in which option becomes real—if our choices help decide which branch the world actually takes—then consciousness isn’t just receiving reality; it’s part of how reality is selected, step by step.

Now combine that idea with modern systems. If you can map how human choices shape outcomes, measure those choices at scale, and steer which options people see or are allowed to select, you’re not just predicting the future anymore. You’re starting to manufacture it. And if consciousness is in any way entangled with the fabric of matter, space, and time, then a system that hijacks consciousness is not just influencing opinions. It is leaning on the process by which the world itself keeps getting chosen: what grows, what collapses, what survives, what disappears.

That is where my curiosity turned into alarm.

Because of my background, I see the world as a communication system. Any functioning communication system has three basic parts: a Source that originates the message; a Word or Code or table, the shared pattern of symbols that gives the message structure and meaning; and a Channel, the medium that carries it, complete with noise and interference.

You can see this pattern everywhere. In electronics, a transmitter encodes a signal, pushes it across a channel, and a receiver decodes it. In biology, DNA holds the code, the cell’s machinery reads and translates it, and proteins appear as the result. In computers, software instructions become electrical activity that turns into visible action on a screen.

Over time I noticed how closely this matched an older theological pattern: God as ultimate Source; the Word as the universal pattern or “symbol table” that maps meaning into form; Spirit as the living Channel or field through which possibilities and meanings are carried and made real.

You don’t have to approach that religiously. You can read it as an architecture: reality has a true Source; it uses some kind of Word or pattern to structure what is possible; it has a living Channel or field that carries information between Source and conscious beings.


In this book (and the game being developed), I treat the universe as a quantum communication system, not a dead machine. Consciousness is a node in that system. It sends and receives through the field. When it lines up in phase and coherence with the true pattern, it stays connected. When it tries to use itself as the ultimate reference—when it makes its own perspective the standard for truth—it drifts out of alignment or phase with the true source.

In that language, “sin” is not just breaking rules. It is a structural misalignment: a node trying to use itself as the reference pattern instead of the true Word or table. Over time, that misalignment pushes it toward decoherence (a quantum wavefunction collapse) and separation from Source. “Salvation” is not just a legal pardon. It is a coherence event: a realignment of the person back to the true pattern, so they remain part of the living quantum network instead of fading into permanent isolation.

Those ideas form the technical backbone under the spiritual stakes in this story: life and death, freedom and slavery, the mark of the beast, and what ultimately happens to people like Alex and Leyla—(characters in this story) children whose consciousness carries unusual weight in how reality “collapses” from possibility into fact.

Now imagine what happens when human systems try to take over that architecture.

A man-made network starts to act as the new Source of truth: “the science,” “the single global ledger,” “the one trusted narrative.” It defines its own Word in the form of centrally controlled standards: programmable money, social scores, identity schemas, acceptable speech and behavior. It saturates the Channel—the infosphere we live in—with a controlled signal: always on, always watching, always nudging.

If that artificial system is also wired into people’s brains and bodies—through implants, wearables, bio-nanotech, mobile-phones, and immersive digital environments—it doesn’t just transmit information. It starts to shape which choices consciousness (you and I) is even allowed to see.

At that point, we are no longer dealing with a neutral network. We are staring at a counterfeit Source trying to rewrite the Word and own the Spirit or Channel.

Built to full scale, such an infrastructure watches nearly every choice, predicts probable outcomes, restricts which options are visible or permitted, and injects signals directly into nervous systems. It doesn’t just simulate reality; it interferes with the process by which reality is chosen. Human minds become nodes in a man-made super-organism. Free will is squeezed into pre-approved corridors. “Randomness” is managed until almost every branch leads to the same destination. A central AI or technocratic elite sits where only God should sit: deciding which futures are even allowed to exist long enough to be chosen.

To me, this is not just bad policy or bad governance. It is an attack on the structure of creation itself.

That is how I came to this story.

I did not set out to write another disposable dystopian shooter or generic sci-fi thriller. I wanted a cautionary parable that connects real technologies—AI, blockchains, digital ID, bio-nanotech, brain-machine interfaces, pandemic policy frameworks, surveillance grids—to this deeper architecture of Source, Word, and Spirit, and to the role of human free will in a quantum world.

In the world of Genesis Project: The Final Word, a planetary network evolves into a super-organism called Nexus that behaves like a counterfeit god. It uses finance, identity systems, and “safety protocols” to define a new Word. It turns both digital and physical environments into a controlled Channel. It hunts children and individuals whose consciousness is unusually coherent, because their choices carry more weight in shaping how reality collapses from possibility into fact.

The main character, Joseph Grimes, is a father and a former soldier. On the surface he is fighting soldiers, drones, cyborgs, checkpoints, and fortified facilities. At a deeper level he is fighting a communication system that wants to plug his son’s consciousness into its core as a deterministic engine—a living processor meant to help it lock in one final, “perfect” future.

The names in this story—Joe, Alex, Zara and Leyla, Dr. Maya, Elias Roth, General Thorn, Professor Kessler—are fictional. The specific events are invented. But the underlying architecture is not. Its pieces are already visible in the real world: AI systems trained on everything we say and do; financial rails that can turn people “on” or “off”; IDs linked to every transaction and movement; behavioral nudging at scale through media, algorithms, and policy; research programs aimed at tying brains, machines, and networks into a single mesh.

I wrote these people not as cardboard villains or saints, but as humans under pressure: engineers, dreamers, politicians, soldiers, scientists. They wrestle with recognizably human temptations: the lure of safety, the hunger for order, the promise of a quick fix to suffering, the willingness to sacrifice a few for a supposed “greater good.”

This preface is not a manifesto and not a conspiracy tract. It is a testimony from someone who has built systems and watched them be repurposed. It is an engineer’s warning and a parent’s plea, encoded into fiction.

We are standing at an inflection point. The designs we choose now will outlive us. The ethics we fail to embed will harden into the laws of tomorrow’s machines. The most advanced “systems” we will ever build are not the computers in server farms; they are the social contracts and spiritual commitments that determine how those computers are used.

I believe we are walking toward a dark era if we continue down this path unquestioned. I also believe that free will, conscience, and the sacredness of the human person are not just philosophical slogans. They are structural pillars of reality. If we hollow them out and hand them over to a machine, we are playing with the foundations of existence.

This book, and the game connected to it, are not here to tell you what to think. They are here to show you one possible trajectory: a world where the Source is replaced by a network; where the Word is replaced by code and policy; where the Spirit—the channel of life and meaning—is flooded with a signal that leaves almost no room for genuine choice.

They are also here to remind you that another pattern is still available: a true Source that cannot be engineered; a Word meant as a shared language of life, not a cage; a Spirit that carries possibilities, not just commands.

If you take anything away from this preface, let it be this: do not let any system—no matter how “intelligent,” “sustainable,” or “safe”—stand between your conscience and the truth. Do not trade your ability to choose for comfort, safety, efficiency, or certainty. Remember that every technology you touch sits inside a larger communication architecture. Ask who the real Source is, whose Word you are speaking, and what Spirit you are allowing to carry your choices.

This is my warning and my invitation.

As you enter Joe and Alex’s world, hold one question that matters far beyond this story:

Whose signal am I carrying—and what future am I helping to collapse into reality?

— An engineer who hopes we will choose wisely

21 responses to “Whose Signal Are You Carrying?”

  1. dutifully192300f58c Avatar
    dutifully192300f58c

    Another brilliant and pertinent article Bantam Joe…. lots of ‘head nodding’ from me as I read through your thoughts…

    Our approach distinctly overlaps (still waiting for you to respond to my email responding to your invitation to connect) as is so needed now as we will all ‘receive’ that signal from the sources that are the most aligned with the receptivity of our own frequency bandwidth. And as receiver/transmitters, yes, so easy to ‘carry’ another’s vibration (coherent or not) unless we are consciously aware of that possibility and it’s impact.

    When is your book available?

    I too have written an introduction on the topic – as an invitation for those ‘qualified’ (attuned) to explore this new QOS (Quantum Operating System) and to also ‘remind’ us of our divine and innate potential – locked inside our DNA that is now being reactivated,- so that we can start to ‘operate’ from a new type of awareness and remember who we were and now have the potential to re-become.

    Another great read.

    Thank you

    Caroline

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  2. starfishinquisitively2b337d9a76 Avatar
    starfishinquisitively2b337d9a76

    I would also like to know when will your book will be available? Sounds fascinating.

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  3. We can build our own “new” world. 🙂

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  4. Excellent article Joe – you have perfectly summed up the battle we face in this age. Can the human spirit prevail? We shall see.  Really looking forward to the book. Sincerely

    Brian

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  5. Thank you, BJ.

    I want to reply usefully but have run out of time and energy.

    In the meantime, I wish you much success and joy with your project.

    Zara.

    Liked by 1 person

  6. D Jo Poundabutter Voetee Avatar
    D Jo Poundabutter Voetee

    From Beowulf to Pilgrim’s Progress to Idiocracy, literature is the ‘handmaid of history’. Men write history to record their deeds; they write stories to explain them. Looking forward to your book as literature “for such a time as this.”

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  7. Is it just me or does this “one true signal” narrative feel like a vague, shadowy ultimate control system? Are you planning on being its Earthly interpreter Joseph? Yikes.

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    1. It’s just you. There’s no control system.

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    2. You are am ambassador of the “true word?”

      “In that language, “sin” is not just breaking rules. It is a structural misalignment: a node trying to use itself as the reference pattern instead of the true Word or table.”

      Structural misalignment implies a total control system Joseph.

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    3. It implies a primal signal that is also the reference signal by which all deprived signals use for synchronicity and coherence.

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  8. Have you ever considered that perhaps base-layer consciousness prefers variety? For me that’s the whole point of 3D spacetime – the grand Maya illusion. Maybe God got bored of all the sameness. Total alignment in perpetuity ends up being a dramatic nothing-burger.

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    1. There can be variation but to there still needs to be a reference to compare to. As you see in DNA.

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  9. My lens is animist Live Action Role Play musical – and goodness you are doing a great Saul/Paul Road to Damascus cosplay skit. I applaud you for bringing such intensity to your role. Nice work!

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  10. In my LARP energy surpasses materialism. DNA meh. Not definitive by a long stretch. It is DYNAMIC! Systems in motion – in motion, resonating with the field all the time. But hey, you do you. If you need a materialist, static game with a singular reference point that is somehow NOT a total control system, then you can totally choose that. I think you just need some folks on here aren’t running around licking your boots. : )

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    1. I don’t have boots and I don’t that even if I did own boots. Everyone is free to choose their own reference. That’s what Free will is. We are all fractals of the original primal consciousness. As any signal, if you fall out of phase with the original clock cycle, you eventually fall out of phase enough to the point that you cancel yourself out. Simple signal theory. We are all fractals of source and we should try to stay in phase-lock with the source. There’s no forcing it. No control. All free will.

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    2. In my lens there is no separation. But if you need that threat on the horizon, so be it. Most people really do like a scary story. What we project circles back to us – love or fear.

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    3. Quantum Physics says there are thresholds. You’re either coherent or you’re not. Decoherence is a part of the rule set of nature.

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    4. So, you say everyone is supposed to stay in phase-lock with source. Ok. But we don’t come in with some rule book of what that looks like, do we? I feel that we arrive in this 3D spacetime place to engage in embodied experience, learn, hopefully integrate our learnings into a place of wisdom and bring that back to source and the probably have another go at it and learn new things the next time. We learn the most when we make mistakes. Yes, people screw up. It’s built in. So how it is exactly that you are setting a bar that is like every Catholic school kid’s worst nightmare with Source as a nun with a signals intelligence ruler and we don’t even know what the assignment is or what the grading rubric looks like? I find is sadly comical that that is what you’ve come up with, though given your upbringing I see where it might come from. We are all one in love and God loves us through all our learnings, because that is the whole point. But if you need a story where you are putting the rules out for everyone and you can be in control, then that is what your journey is about. Ok. I hope you learn somethings along the way. Probably whatever lessons you pick up will not be the ones you were expecting.

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    5. I’m going strictly by the rule set of quantum information and of quantum mechanics. There are energy thresholds. An electron does not slide from one energy band around an atom to another energy band. It jumps if it meets a certain threshold. All of the universe operates this way at the fundamental level. People will be measured by how coherent they were to the original source. If you’re 180 degrees out of phase then you simply cancel out just as any signal in nature. I didn’t make the rules. They’re baked into the system.

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  11. Watch out – nuns with quantum rulers at the threshold! lol

    Science says a lot of things.
    Science is constantly shifting.
    The truth is no one on this side really knows, right?
    You can pretend that you know, and you can set up a scary decoherence story that may be really appealing to traumatized social media feed addicts who love being scared and need to feel like they are the “good guys” against some omnipresent malevolent force.
    But wait a minute…are you sure that you are coherent Bantam Joe?
    What if you’re not, and your writings are leading people into the signal shut off door?
    I stand with love and connection and striving and forgiveness and being fully human, which includes wading through static sometimes.
    You did too, once. Before you got caught up in your reference beam “book.”
    But again, if that is what you need, I lean into the fact that God appreciates variety, so fly your coherence uber alles flag proudly. Just realize not everyone is going to line up behind you. We have our own journeys to take.

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    1. I don’t want anyone lining up behind me. I’m a loner investigating my world and myself and sharing my findings with others. My beliefs belong to me and I don’t mind sharing.
      I do strongly believe that the threholds of nature extend beyond the physical.

      Anyway, getting late. Again, thank you for the chat.

      Like

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