Introduction to the Supreme System
The text presents a worldview structured around a hidden "Supreme System," based on the laws of human nature, whose knowledge is the prerogative of a select few who benefit from it, while the ignorant majority is destined for submission and loss. A critical analysis of this narrative reveals several internal tensions and significant logical leaps.
First, the text's internal consistency falters in defining the roles of the main actors. Gabriele Cripezzi claims to come from "organizations at the top of the world's hierarchical pyramid" and to be an "expert on the Supreme System," the only one willing to teach it. At the same time, he identifies Ultra High Net-Worth Individuals (UHNWIs) as the "highest knowers" of the truth and those who "hold a position of greater importance and responsibility within the same Supreme System." However, immediately afterwards, he exonerates them from the responsibility of being the "deceivers" who have kept the truth hidden for centuries. This distinction is logically weak: if UHNWIs are the highest knowers of the Supreme System – a "truth that has been kept hidden from the masses... by people who did not want people to be free, so that they could exploit them better" – and hold positions of greater importance within it, it is difficult to reconcile their position with the statement that "they are not the deceivers."
The narrative attempts to separate a "good elite" (those who know about the SS) from a "bad elite" (criminals and profiteers), but the description of how the Supreme System works, which generates inequality and well-being for few at the expense of many, makes this separation problematic. If UHNWIs are the ultimate beneficiaries and holders of power within a system that is inherently "criminal and enslaving" and based on "the suffering of the masses," their non-involvement as "deceivers" or "beneficiaries of people's misery" appears contradictory.
The text bases much of its argument on absolute and unverified claims. The "Supreme System" and the "laws of human nature" are presented as all-encompassing mechanisms that govern the world, but their specific nature and functioning remain undefined, making the entire theory largely falsifiable. Success or failure is attributed exclusively to knowledge or ignorance of this system, oversimplifying the complexity of socio-economic dynamics.
The interpretation of events and concepts is highly selective and geared towards supporting the thesis of a global conspiracy. For example, COVID-19 containment measures between 2020 and 2022 are cited as evidence of the "slave majority" condition and prelude to the "Great Reset."
This plan, coordinated by the UN, is described as an initiative to "eliminate" entities "too needy," where "eliminate" is redefined as "exclusion from social fabric," equated to the loss of the soul and transformation into "plants." This is a strong rhetorical escalation that, while avoiding the word "kill," paints a picture of existential annihilation, using the number 666 (interpreted as the atomic number of carbon) to confer an aura of mystery and fatalism. The association of a scientific data (carbon) with an esoteric symbol (the beast's number) to support a narrative of loss of soul is an example of symbolic syncretism rather than logical analysis.
The redefinition of fundamental concepts such as "rights" and "human value" is another critical point. "Rights" are dismissed as "fairy tales invented by the cunning man to keep the masses small and weak." The idea of an "intrinsic value" of man, on which concepts of dignity and care are based, is defined as a "lie" to induce people to work. Instead, it is stated that human value is "calculated and measured" and serves as counter-value for the creation of money, a "truth" known to very few.
These statements represent a radical deconstruction of widely accepted ethical and social principles, presenting them as lies functional to control, without providing any proof or explanation on how this "calculated value" is determined or by whom.
The "death of small and medium-sized enterprises" from the mid-1990s is cited as a "direct consequence of people's ignorance of the Supreme System," which translates into "entrepreneurial incompetence." This interpretation attributes a single, internal cause (ignorance of the SS) to a complex economic phenomenon, ignoring macroeconomic, technological, regulatory or market factors. The reference to "creative destruction à la Schumpeter" is a distorted application of a legitimate economic concept, transforming it from a market dynamic into a deliberate plan of "elimination" of "zombie" companies by world leaders.
Finally, the proposal for "salvation" consists in learning the Supreme System, which requires "interest, indeed passion, towards humanistic and philosophical subjects." Philosophy is presented as the "key to success" and of "salvation from the Great Reset and the New World Order." This conclusion, while valuing critical thinking and knowledge, does so within a narrative framework that relies on unproven premises, internal contradictions and a paranoid interpretation of reality.
The figure of Gabriele Cripezzi, as the "only" holder and disseminator of this "hidden truth," fits into a narrative archetype common to many theories that promise revelation and salvation through exclusive knowledge.
