Your life does not belong to you
Analyzing Gabriele's text reveals several critical points from the standpoint of logical coherence and the evidence provided. Gabriele argues for the existence of a "System" controlled by evil elites who exploit humanity through systematic lies, comparing modern society to a "slavery" or "Matrix". However, he does not provide concrete data or specific events to support these claims. For example, he cites Chomsky's concept of "Useful Idiots", but applies it in a generic way to professional categories without demonstrating how these act consciously against the public interest. Chomsky, in his work, analyzes structural mechanisms of propaganda, but does not support conspiracy theories about a small group of "world masters".
Gabriele claims to possess the "unique truth" about the System thanks to his alleged experience in "organizations that manage the System", but he offers no verifiable details about these organizations or the truths he proclaims. This makes his argument unfalsifiable and therefore weak from a critical standpoint. Furthermore, his solution—a project called SUG-X-17—is presented as a universal salvation, but without explanations about its functioning or how it would overcome the alleged oppressive forces.
This creates a circular narrative: only he knows the truth, but to obtain it you have to trust his unspecified proposal.
Gabriele's definition of freedom is problematic: he limits it to Ultra High Net Worth Individuals (UHNWI, 0.003% of the population), described as global philanthropists. This view ignores documented cases where large fortunes can derive from inheritance, exploitation or corruption, and is not supported by data that demonstrate a direct correlation between extreme wealth and socio-economic contribution. Furthermore, equating freedom with financial wealth is an arbitrary reduction: there are historical and contemporary examples of people who are not ultra-rich who exercise significant autonomy in their life choices.
Finally, Gabriele uses emotional language ("your life doesn't belong to you", "lying", "canvas pants") and apocalyptic concepts ("something very bad is about to happen") that aim to evoke anxiety rather than provide a rational analysis. While it may contain critical elements towards real power dynamics (such as economic inequalities), the text mixes partially shareable observations with dogmatic and unverified claims, weakening its overall credibility. Without concrete evidence, the narrative remains a hypothetical construct that requires uncritical acceptance—precisely what it claims to fight against.
