The Radiant Mission

163. Rockefeller, Pharmakeia & the Rise of Modern Medicine: How Deception Shaped Healthcare

Rebecca Twomey

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What if the modern medical system didn’t just evolve—it was engineered? We follow the money from oil refineries to lecture halls to see how Rockefeller-era funding, petrochemicals, and media campaigns reshaped Western medicine into a streamlined business. Along the way, we connect the serpent-and-staff imagery to a larger theme: commerce entwined with care, profits guiding the path from medical school curricula to the ads filling our screens.

We unpack the Flexner Report and how it standardized education around allopathic methods while sidelining diet, herbs, and holistic approaches that once had significant footing in the United States. That shift didn’t happen in a vacuum; it coincided with synthetic vitamins, lab-made compounds, and a patent model that rewarded drugs and procedures over prevention. We get candid about cancer care guardrails, why “a pill for an ill” became cultural default, and how direct-to-consumer advertising built markets by turning symptoms into sales funnels. The result: world-leading costs, middling outcomes, and a persistent cycle of side effects that demand more prescriptions.

This is also a conversation about agency and faith. We share practical reflections on stepping back from routine medications when safe and appropriate, working with practitioners who understand nutrition and root-cause healing, and asking better questions at the point of care. The goal isn’t to reject emergency medicine or lifesaving treatments—it’s to reclaim a vision of health that restores, not just suppresses. If you’re ready to examine the incentives beneath the white coat and pursue a more integrated path to healing, press play and join the mission.

If this sparked new questions or gave you clarity, subscribe, share with a friend, and leave a review with your biggest takeaway. Your voice helps more listeners find thoughtful, faith-forward conversations on health and truth.

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Rebecca Twomey:

Hello, and welcome to the Radiant Mission Podcast. My name is Rebecca Twomey, and I'm here with my awesome co-host and sister, Rachel Smith. Hey everyone. We are on a mission to encourage and inspire you as you're navigating through this life and with your relationship with Christ. We are currently in a super fun and exciting series on Pharmachia. And we have been talking about the history of Pharmacia, aka medicine. And today we are taking a little bit of a turn, or I guess a really a turn, but more of a you know, get getting getting to a point. Yeah. Because in the first part, we were really focused on the word, the roots of the word, pharmacia. And then in the last part, we really focused on the symbolism that began with the ancients, the Greeks, and mythology. Quote mythology, aka likely Nephilim. And what we want to talk about today is where we are with medicine today. And you know, we did connect that symbolism that it started with the catechis back in all the way back in, you know, the mythology mythological times where there is the serpent that's coiled around a staff, and that is still the image used in medicine today. And then there was also the cup that is used to symbolize the cup of pharmacy that is still used today. So there are still those images, but what does that have to do with modern medicine aside from just the imagery and the word? The fact that nothing has really changed. Uh, that the it's still called the same thing and they still use the same images. Besides that, what else is there? So we actually wanted to dive into connecting this to Rockefeller and how Western medicine became what it is today, because it honestly didn't happen that long ago, but at the same time, it did. It happened long enough ago that none of us would have been alive and we wouldn't remember. But we have some different historical accounts. Now, it's not necessarily it's e both easy and hard to find certain information about the history of Western medicine. I mean, you could literally Google or YouTube Rockefeller, and you'll see we were laughing about this right before this, a ton of videos on you know, the power, Rockefeller power, and the history, dark history exposed, and you know, you can find a lot of stuff about this. So this is another topic. Again, do your own digging, right? But also be cautious that there is a lot that is suppressed and hidden, as you're going to hear in some of this story that I'm sharing with you today. So I actually found a really there's a lot of articles out there that I found in my own research, but my favorite one that I I want to plug a little bit came from a website called Meridian Health Clinic. And they are more of the natural approach to health type of folks. Now I could reference a hundred different people, but there were just a couple of things that were standout that I wanted to focus on. They wrote a great article that is called basically Rockefeller and how he created the business of Western medicine, because that's what this is. Western medicine is a business.

Rachel Smith:

He's like the Hermes of modern medicine.

Rebecca Twomey:

Thank you for making the connection. So if you remember last episode, we talked about Hermes, who was Apollo's Zeus's brother.

Rachel Smith:

I think he was Apollo's brother. Apollo's brother. And then Apollo's son was Ecclepius.

Rebecca Twomey:

That's right. And Hermes was the quote, I would say quote because I hate that they're called gods, but he was the quote god, little J God of commerce, and he is where the catechist symbol comes from. So it's pretty ironic that there is a tie between commerce and quote health care. So that was a it's a good connection to make between the last episode and this one. And in this article, the author really dug in, and maybe I should call the author's name's Eric, so I'll just say Eric. So you guys know what I'm talking about. He he he gave a lot of details, but I'll give you guys a couple of things. John D. Rockefeller, he was born in 1839, he died in 1937.

Rachel Smith:

So almost a hundred years old?

Rebecca Twomey:

Yeah. Wow. 98 years old. Old, old man. Not a lot of people live to be that old. If you look at pictures of him and the last years, yeah, it's like he was already dead.

unknown:

Yeah.

Rebecca Twomey:

He reminds me of um, what is that guy in Star Wars? That's like the baddest evil one of them all. Emperor Palpatine. Maybe, yeah.

Rachel Smith:

That's like you know, dead and gone and like a hologram or whatever. Oh, oh, that's the in the newer Star Wars movies. Yeah, yeah. I see I see the connection you're making there. He's real like creepy, real creepy, yeah.

Rebecca Twomey:

That's what it he reminds me of. And and honestly, what he's done with medicine makes him even more sad and creepy, but so he is considered the wealthiest American of all time and the richest person in modern history. He is most famous for securing a monopoly in America's oil market, and that's what everybody hears about. That's the focus usually when you hear about Rockefeller, it's all about oil. Because by the 20th, the turn of the 20th century, he controlled 90% of all petroleum refineries in America. And the company, the corporation he had was called Standard Oil Corporation, and that was later split up into the goodies we know today: mobile, chevron, Exxon, all that good stuff.

Rachel Smith:

It was so we have him to thank for still being on gas cars, yeah. Sure, we can thank the fact that we are in the first place.

Rebecca Twomey:

He didn't invent it, he no, but he funded it. He is the one who figured out how to monopolize it and make the most money off of it.

Rachel Smith:

Yes, so yeah, because wouldn't this same time have been when Edison was making his inventions and also Nikola Tesla?

Rebecca Twomey:

Yes, this was during this was during literally during the exact same time, Thomas Edison. He lived from 1847 to 1931. Okay, they were literally like the same-ish age, yeah.

Rachel Smith:

And then Nikola Tesla was a a rival to Edison, and one of the reasons that Tesla was run out of town is because he discovered and was creating inventions for free energy so that could power entire cities and our whole country on almost nothing that would cost us anything. Whereas Edison and I'm sure Rockefeller funding scientists like that were like, no, no, we need we need to we need to stick with a resource that will make us a ton of money, not free energy.

Rebecca Twomey:

And I think perhaps because Nikola Tesla was a little younger.

Rachel Smith:

Um he worked for Edison at one point, like he was his like apprentice or something.

Rebecca Twomey:

Well, Rockefeller was born in 1839, and Nikola Tesla was born in 1856. So he had a good 20 years on him, yeah. That he was already in, he already knew a lot more about business, and so it was like he knew how to squash, squash out the the little guys.

Rachel Smith:

I think that was I I have studied Nikola Tesla a bit, and I've actually even been to a museum that had a really good exhibit on him, and they really made Edison seem like a bad guy. Like all the children were like booing Edison. That's pretty funny. But um I think that was one Nikola Tesla being coming a little bit later, being a little bit younger. He I think that was not only was one of his disadvantages, but also, like you just said, about him not being as much of a businessman. Like, I mean, I think there's many reasons that he his inventions did not were not, you know, used at that time, but he literally was run out of town and then painted as a um like a crazy person, essentially, and he died penniless when he was a genius.

Rebecca Twomey:

And that's the story of the day with Rockefeller and why one of that's literally his MO. He is man, what is um what is that book I always refer or I always mention to you? Um The Merchants of Doubt. Thank you. Yeah, you knew what I was thinking. Merchants of Doubt, everybody should read that book for for sure. It's it's actually starts by talking about the cigarette campaign and how that's kind of one I'll I'll back up. The idea of merchants of doubt is if you can create enough doubt about something that people question it, then you can use that lever to leverage and corner a market.

Rachel Smith:

Yeah.

Rebecca Twomey:

And Rockefeller is the king of merchants of doubt, in my opinion, after all that I've read about this.

Rachel Smith:

And we're gonna talk about what that has to do with medicine and well, you don't become the richest American of all time doing nothing. So let's hear more about this.

Rebecca Twomey:

Yeah, yeah. So guy. So, right at the same time that all this stuff with oil was happening with you know, petroleum, the scientific world was getting excited about these petrochemicals, the new newness of the day, you know, and the ability to create a variety of new compounds from oils. So, of course, the the most exciting being that beautiful plastic. Oh, geez, and now it's like destroying our planet. Yeah, good old plastic. But organic chemists, they knew that oil was bigger, gonna be bigger than just like plastic junk, you know, plastic toys. So scientists at the same time, as you know, people were were figuring out okay, oil, we can use this for vehicles, oil, we can use it to create new compounds, we can create plastic, we can create all kinds of different products. But then the scientific world was also figuring stuff out about the basic mechanics of life and human health. And this was when they discovered really how essential vitamins work, like B1, B2, biotin, vitamins A, C, D, so on. So it at that time it did help them to take a step forward with people that were suffering from a lot of vitamin deficiencies that lived in really terrible situations. You know, it was there was still a lot of unsanitary uh living going on. So people had things like scurvy and rickets and stuff, and that helped with those people. And this is really what was leading or led to the science of recreating vitamins in labs. And I found it interesting because Rockefeller died in 1937, but two years before he died was when they made the first vitamin, vitamin C was the first vitamin to be artificially synthesized in Switzerland. But uh, you know, so it was different things were happening at the same time. This was the industrial revolution, you know, this was big things happening in in the world, so to speak. But what does this have to do with Rockefeller? You know, we're let's back up 20 years before this vitamin C thing, he was smart enough to see what was going on as a and see it as a business opportunity, especially as it related to petroleum, because he saw how petroleum and chemicals and the medical world could all work together for him to make some money, right? Cachet out of the sachet.

unknown:

Yeah.

Rebecca Twomey:

So Eric states in this article, and I'm just gonna quote him because I couldn't say it or explain this any better than he just says it. So I'm just gonna read it.

unknown:

Okay.

Rebecca Twomey:

There was a big problem with Rockefeller's plan. Natural and herbal medicines were very popular in America during the 1900s. Almost one half the medical colleges and doctors in America were practicing holistic medicine using extensive knowledge from Europe and Native American traditions. Rockefeller knew that to get total control of the medical industry, he would have to expunge the competition. Rockefeller's first move was to use his vast wealth from oil to purchase part of the German pharmaceutical company IG Farben, look up Farben's involvement with World War II. Now that he controlled a drug manufacturing company, he could move forward with his plan to eliminate the competition. In the early 1900s, there were a variety of doctors and healing modalities in America. Some of the medical specialties included chiropractic, natural pathy, homeopathy, holistic medicine, and herbal medicine. To eliminate the competition, Rockefeller hired a contractor named Abraham Flexner to submit a report to Congress in 1910. This report concluded that there were too many doctors and medical schools in America and that all the natural healing modalities which had existed for hundreds of years were unscientific quackery. The report called for the standardization of medical education, whereby only the AMA, which was another monopoly, would be allowed to grant medical school licensures in the U.S. Certainly Flexner's report did have some valid points, but unfortunately, the motives for the report were entirely driven by Rockefeller's desire for complete control of the medical system. Based on the report, Congress acted upon Flexner's recommendations and changed laws related to medical practice. Incredibly, allopathic medicine became the standard modality, even though at the time its main treatment methods were bloodletting, surgery, which was quite barbaric at the time, and the injections of toxic heavy metals like lead and mercury to supposedly quote displace the disease. With the new laws in place, Rockefeller teamed up with Andrew Carnegie and started funding medical schools all over America on the strict condition that they only taught allopathic medicine. Through the power of their huge grants, this powerful team systematically dismantled the previous curricula of these medical schools, removing any mention of healing, the healing power of herbs or natural treatments. Teachings on diet and other natural or non-drug treatments were also completely removed from medical programs. After removing traditional medicine from medical schools, Rockefeller made sure to secure his monopoly by launching a targeted smear campaign against his competitors. Homeopathy and natural medicines were discredited and demonized through the newspapers and other media of the time. Some doctors were even jailed for using natural medicine treatments, including treatments that had been safely and effectively used for decades before. In a very short time, medical colleges were all homologized, and all the students were taught the same olopathic system, and medicine was now defined as a process of prescribing patients drugs. Quote, a pill for an ill became the mindset of American medicine. One shocking fact that this author, Eric, found when he was researching was that Rockefeller didn't stop at the U.S. borders. He actually went to China to spread Western medicine. Upon hearing this, I actually got chills down my spine. Rockefeller wasn't content with just wiping out traditional medicine in America. He saw a bigger market on the other side of the world and wanted to remove traditional Chinese medicine from China. Luckily, his venture in China mostly failed, and the practice of traditional Chinese medicine was preserved for centuries to come. To quickly summarize what happened in China, the China Medical Board, CMB, was created in 1914 by Rockefeller Foundation, RF, and provided with a $12 million grant. The RF's goal was to modernize medical education and to improve the practice of medicine in China. They started by building a hospital in Beijing, which is the Peking Union Medical College. It opened in 1919, but they were unable to expand to other locations as planned due to mounting expenses. So, in short, the diligent work of Rockefeller and Carnegie was a smashing success. They crushed the underfunded grassroots competition. They created our current medical system today. This system continues wherein big pharma makes large donations to medical schools in exchange for teaching the medical students to use their patented drugs. As part of this system, many alternative treatments are criminalized, for example, by law. It is illegal to treat cancer with any modality except chemotherapy, surgery, or radiation. It is actually a criminal felony for a medical practitioner to treat cancer with anything but those three modalities. Why is this the case? Follow the money. The average cost of a cancer treatment is $150,000. So clearly, Rockefeller and his precedents were keen to keep the monopoly on this one. And of course, the American Cancer Society was founded by none other than John D. Rockefeller in 1913.

Rachel Smith:

Wow.

Rebecca Twomey:

Hopefully, this post will shed a bit of light on the history of the current medical system. At the very least, we can all be less surprised when patients are treated like customers and when medications cost thousands of dollars per month. We should also not be surprised when we are faced with the fact that the cost of medical care in America are rated number one, yet the quality of our medicine care is rated at number 37, just below Costa Rica. Unfortunately, these are the natural effects that occur when our medicine system is run like a mega corporation instead of a service to the people. Wow. I love your face at the end of this.

Rachel Smith:

But is the Monopoly Man based on John D. Rockefeller? Is that who he's based on? Like that's what they that's what they game is based on him. Because it really yeah, Google if Monopoly Man is based on Rockefeller.

Rebecca Twomey:

He he really is a big roller though, although Monopoly is really more about the is more about real estate than anything. Yeah, it is okay. So the original Monopoly game was published 88 years ago in 1935. 1935. Wow, that's right before he died.

Rachel Smith:

Oh no, nine, yeah, but he died in 1937.

Rebecca Twomey:

Yes. So patent for it came out in 1904.

Rachel Smith:

And I weren't I wonder if it was like a cartoonist. You know how like there's political cartoonists who have always kind of so here's the early history.

Rebecca Twomey:

The history of monopoly can be traced back to 1903 when American anti-monopolist Lizzie Maggie created a game that she hoped would explain the single tax theory of Henry George. It was intended as an educational tool to illustrate the negative aspects of concentrating land in private monopolies. She took out a patent in 1904, her game, The Landlord's Game, was self-published beginning in 1906. Maggie created two sets of rules: an anti-monopolist set in which all were rewarded when wealth was created, and a monopolist set in which the goal was to create monopolies to crush the opponents. Several variant boards based on her concept were developed from 1906 through the 1930s. And then they both involved the process of buying land for its development and sale. So not necessarily about Rockefeller.

Rachel Smith:

Not about Rockefeller, but that's who I kept picturing that white top hat. The monocle. Yeah, that's your just reading all of this stuff about Rockefeller. I just pictured the monocle.

Rebecca Twomey:

So if that's crazy, though the story of Rockefeller is not a story of deception, then I don't know what is.

Rachel Smith:

Yeah.

Rebecca Twomey:

Just as the serpent, going back to the serpent, he deceived Eve in the garden. I'm seeing here, so the Nephilim continued the deception. The story is continuing today. If anyone is a sorcerer, it's Rockefeller.

Rachel Smith:

Well, yeah, and then think about that verse that you read last week from Revelation that that the nations will be deceived by Pharmakia. And it's like the core at all of this is deception.

Rebecca Twomey:

Definitely. I I want to point to something else, which was of mention, and this is the goes back to commerce and the relation to commerce and pharmacia slash modern medicine. I came across an article called Selling Side Effects, Big Pharma's Marketing Machine, on a website called drugwatch.com of all things. But listen to this. Convincing people they're sick and need a drug is a multi-billion dollar industry. In 2015, Big Pharma dropped a record-breaking $5.4 billion on direct-to-consumer ads. And it paid off big time for Big Pharma. The same year, Americans spent a record $457 billion on prescription drugs. The US and New Zealand are the only countries where direct-to-consumer advertising is illegal. Americans also pay more for drugs and devices than any other country. The bulk of these ads appear on TV at the rate of 80 ads per hour of programming. Programming. So much so that then I for the first couple of times I did open the magazines and I would take pictures of the ads because I wanted to see what it is that they're trying to push on people. And the number one ad, the number one condition that is advertised for is eczema. And it's all different drugs. There's like different ones, but every single magazine you open it, it's eczema, it's eczema, it's eczema, it's eczema. And we know that our there are a number of things that can cause uh eczema, but the biggest thing being this toxic world that we live in, a lot of the quote drugs or injections that we are given cause eczema.

Rachel Smith:

Right. So it's it's just one of those things that's a side effect of something that we're given as a drug. You know what I mean?

Rebecca Twomey:

If you take the eczema medication and the list of side effects that's in the magazine, like you would think that they would put it in smaller print, but they they can't put it in small enough print, even still for not to not be three pages long. Yeah, it's like so that's the thing is these drugs that were created and are funded and are a part of this Rockefeller Rockefeller mission were created with the intent to make medicine a business. It is a business. They give you a there's a monopoly, there's a monopoly on it. They're using funds to continue this monopoly. They've infiltrated the medical system. They only teach people about using drugs, not about you actually healing the body.

Rachel Smith:

Right.

Rebecca Twomey:

And then you're in the cycle of the system because you take something that creates another problem, and then you have to, you're you're in that constant thing, you're not actually solving the root cause issue of your ailment. You know, they mentioned cancer in that article.

Rachel Smith:

Yeah.

Rebecca Twomey:

And it made me really like it really hit me in a certain way because um they say that one in every two people is going to have cancer in their lifetime, and that people get cancer, don't know they have cancer, and don't, you know, people not everybody dies from cancer. It's not a it's not a death sentence. But we've been taught that it's a death sentence and that you need to have radiation, which literally destroys the cells inside your body. You're literally destroying your your cells. And there actually is a woman at my church who shared her testimony about um she was diagnosed with cancer and she went through treatment, and she has so many now ramifications from that, and it was so heartbreaking to hear her story because now, knowing what I know, the the doctor couldn't have. Prescribed her something else unless they said it in secret out in the parking lot. Like, hey, go to go talk to the natural doctor who can tell you how to eat the right thing so that you can shrink this cancer and and let it go. Like they can't actually tell you that because as the article mentioned, it is a felony, which is pretty crazy to think about.

Rachel Smith:

Yeah, it really is.

Rebecca Twomey:

So just some things to mull over. You know, I I don't want to um again like tell anybody what to do, yeah, or lead anybody in any sort of way, and this isn't medical advice, but you know, take what you will of it, but prey on it. Right. Yeah, absolutely. It is possible to get off of pharmaceuticals, and not that I was on anything crazy, but I myself was in the cycle of antihistamines, I was in the cycle of always taking allergy stuff. I had all these allergy problems all the time, and I was constantly like I was in that whole bit, and I was able to get off of I don't take an antihistamine. Now, that's not to say if I had an allergic reaction that was anaphylactic, then I would be like, Don't give me the epipen, let me die. And that's the thing that we have to make these decisions for our own bodies and our own cells to say where is the line, what what is helpful and what is not, you know, what is for me and what is hurting me. And again, um we're gonna be having a really incredible naturopath. I mentioned Dr. Vaughn, and he's also an iridologist on the show. And he's gonna be sharing more about how to get off a pharmaceutical so he can tell you because he knows how to do it. I don't. And really about partnering with God when it comes to our health and our healing, because his goal is to help people to actually heal, not to continue to suppress their problems. So keep listening. There's so much more to come on this topic. And I know that Rachel and I just really we just pray that you ask for discernment from the Lord and also peace as you become awakened to what is happening to the world that we live in, because I know that when it first starts happening, you may be deeper down this hole, and that's why you're like really interested in listening to this episode, or maybe this is new for you. It can be really easy to feel stressed out and anxious and worried when you first wake up to this stuff. And I just want to encourage you to ask the Lord for peace because He doesn't promise us anything when it comes to this earth. You know, he doesn't promise that we're gonna live forever or that we're gonna live to 80 or 100 or to 60 or healthfully. He doesn't the Lord doesn't make those promises to us, but he does promise to be beside us and with us and to guide us. And that is really all we can do is ask for him to teach us.

Rachel Smith:

Yeah, definitely, absolutely thanks, Rachel.

Rebecca Twomey:

Any other villains we want to talk about today? No, but it's a modern day uh sorcerers and villains, but maybe we'll have to do that at another time.

Rachel Smith:

Totally not even a doctor. Um, but well, neither is Rockefeller, so maybe there's a connection there.

Rebecca Twomey:

Oh, yeah, great points that you're making here. Um, really and as we're talking about the medical system and the fact that they were not created by anyone who even really has the first sense about right, yeah.

Rachel Smith:

Really wealthy businessmen who have weaseled their way into the medical system and come across as these altruistic heroes when they're actually making billions of dollars off of human lives. And you know, one other thing about Rockefeller that we don't even need to get into, though, is that he also funded the modern school system.

Rebecca Twomey:

Oh, you mean the way that schools that those kids have to go to? Yes, Rockefeller funded that as well. So he had to do an episode on programming because it just goes right in an indoctrination, it just goes right along.

Rachel Smith:

Yeah, he he you know, I heard it said, so you you kind of mentioned like all of these, you know, big names in the industrial revolution, and that's you know, Rockefeller's up and coming, and he ends up being, you know, one of the wealthiest people in all of history during this time. You know, it's his amount of money back then is equivalent to you know more than anyone has today. But I've heard it, and I'm not making any definitive statement here, but I've heard it said before that there was something spiritually that's been going on the past few hundred years. Because you think, yeah. I mean, if if you think about it for thousands of years, things all of time things have been going on spiritually. I mean, look at exactly look at you know, the days that Yeshua was walking the earth and after, and what you know the early church had to go through. Yeah, but to go from horse and buggy to airplanes flying in the sky within you know 150 years or something. And this is all in this time period of the industrial revolution when Rockefeller lived. I'm just throwing out there the possibility that I've heard before that the uh part of the spiritual drive is Nephilim coming back. And they're the spirit of the Antichrist that they are part, you know, partnered with influencing some of this stuff. So yeah, so it's like a lot of people could look on and say, Oh, we live in the greatest time ever with modern medicine, and you know, that's God's hand in it, but then look at how much deception and evilness and scheming and money has you know been made. Oh, and that reminds me of one other thing. You know how we were talking about the symbolism last week for pharmaceuticals. The what was it called? The staff with the snake catechist, yeah, the catechist, yeah. Do you remember years ago when I sent you that symbol for the money sign, which it showed the S as a snake with the the lines well?

Rebecca Twomey:

That makes sense that money would be related to the serpent because it's the root of all evil, right?

Rachel Smith:

Yeah, yeah. And and and the Bible says that you can't serve two masters, either your master will be God or money. So anyway, connection, yeah. Yeah, I'm just kind of free-flowing a bunch of random thoughts here.

Rebecca Twomey:

We're here at the end. Well, I have one more to add to yours, and this is probably gonna make people mad and that I'll probably get eaten for this because people love this man. But I would like you all to think about the one Rachel mentioned, Nikola Tesla, and who is the man who picked up profited off of his ideas and now has his own vehicle line and is now trying to bring AI to life and has implants inside of pigs to give them thoughts and control their minds, and I could keep going on.

Rachel Smith:

You guys know who I'm talking about, and he wants to do that to people, yeah.

Rebecca Twomey:

So it is yeah, the same get the creepiest vibes from him, and I it's it's very it's very funny. Rachel knows this, but when Mike and I first got together, my husband Mike was like literally Elon Musk's biggest fanboy, he was so obsessed, and he watched everything that this guy ever said. He it was honestly at the time, like looking back on it, it was like complete idolatry of how much he looked up to him and followed him and wanted to be him. That so much to the point that it like raised red flags for me. I'm like, what is up with this? What is up with this? And as time has gone on, he's now on the opposite end of the spectrum and also sees that he sees the evil in what is happening, but he's presented as this like such a nice guy, except now the truth is really starting to come out because he is having children with all these witches, yeah, literal witches, look it up and has all these things that are like written on his clothes that are demonic.

Rachel Smith:

Wasn't recently at the Met Gala his coat said like it was like Satan's night or something, something like that, yeah.

Rebecca Twomey:

Yeah, so it's getting more obvious, which is good, but it's kind of sad that it takes it getting him needing to like literally be seen in public with like Satan's daughter, in order for people to be like, Oh, some well, maybe something's up here. Or the fact that he is trying to spread his seed by any means possible, and says he wants to have like a you know, dozens of children spread out there, spreading the serpent seed. You heard it here first.

Rachel Smith:

So creepy. Yeah, I think it just goes to like say kind of the thought that I was getting at that this there's there's some evil spirit that's been yes, a part of empowering evil humans since the industrial revolution, and it's happening even more so today. So just mull on that for a little bit, let that keep you up at night.

Rebecca Twomey:

Um, I looked it up to see what it said, and his coat, yeah, yeah. Elon, well, it actually wasn't his coat, it's something else, but he wore a satanic Halloween costume.

Rachel Smith:

Oh, that's what it was, yeah.

Rebecca Twomey:

That but his coat did have something to say on it. It was a red and black outfit that has a baffament carved into the chest plate, which is even more blatant and obvious. Yes, and the costume was called the Devil's Champion. Oh, Baffament with an upside-down cross on it. Even better. He sounds like a real, real good guy. Sounds like somebody, somebody we want to be following and getting his chips implanted into our brains with yeah.

Rachel Smith:

You wanna see creepy too. Like just look up his mom. She's also, yeah.

Rebecca Twomey:

But that's the the roots go deep. That's its whole, that's a whole hole you could go down. Um, yeah, just the jacket you're talking about, it says novus ordo seclorium, which means new world order.

Rachel Smith:

Oh, right. I'm mixing the two outfits up, yes, yeah. And and just think about it's interesting. Isn't Elon Musk known as I think it kind of changes year to year, but the richest man on earth today? Yep. And that Rockefeller was money's the root of all evil, evil sis. Yes, absolutely, yeah. And and I think that that Elon has been trying to kind of prop himself up as some kind of like free speech, you know, devil's champion. So like it gets a lot of a lot of people backing him that maybe would have not, and just it's all deception. So just yes, be aware, be awake, carefully idolize, that's for sure.

Rebecca Twomey:

Yeah, for sure. And don't sweep it under the rug either. I mean, if somebody shows up in a Halloween costume, calls themselves the devil's champion and has a bath of it on it. I I think it's pretty obvious what's uh what they're into. So just saying.

Rachel Smith:

Seriously.

Rebecca Twomey:

Well, thank you guys for tuning in. I hope this has been not too terrifying for you and that you don't have nightmares tonight about what's going on in the medical world today. But again, we have some guests that are going to be coming on that are gonna really help us re-center this on the Lord and his design for our bodies, not the world's design. The world's design is to make money off of us and keep us sick and keep us suppressed and keep us separated from the Lord. Because the truth is it's not easy to worship when you are oppressed, when you are sick, yeah, you know, but when you are free from illness and things of that nature, like you, you know, you're able to reconnect with the Lord in a positive way. So keep listening, yeah, for tuning in and for being on this journey with us. And as always, if you'd like to follow along outside the podcast, you can join the mission on Instagram, Facebook, or YouTube at the Radiant Mission. And if you're loving the show or you found this episode to be particularly interesting, I was gonna say fun, but it wasn't that fun. Well, I mean, it was fun for us, but I don't know if fun is the way I would describe talking about the evil villains of our time. Right. Share it with a friend so that they can hear the truth too.

Rachel Smith:

But they can have fun too.

Rebecca Twomey:

They can have fun too. Getting dragged into this this uh whole this darkness and deception. Anyway, today we're gonna close with a Bible verse from Rachel's favorite book of the Bible, Revelation 18.

Rachel Smith:

Because I love to have a good time.

Rebecca Twomey:

I'll let you read it.

Rachel Smith:

Okay, and the light of a lamp will shine in you no more, and the voice of the bridegroom and bride will be heard in you no more, for your merchants were the great ones of the earth, and all nations were deceived by your sorcery. And with that note, we are wishing you a radiant week. See you next time. Bye.