Year-End Message

We live in an era of abundant information, but of poor understanding. The problem is not the lack of data, but the lack of context—that framework of reference that allows us to correctly interpret reality. Without context, facts become manipulable tools, and the masses become unwitting pawns in a larger game.

What is context really?

Context is not just "context" in a general sense. It is the map of the hidden mechanisms that determine how the world works at a systemic level. They are the operating principles that govern the economy, politics, human relationships, and even individual freedom. These mechanisms are known only to a small minority—less than 10% of the global population—while the remaining 90% navigate blindly, believing they are acting in their own best interest.

"Truth has the power to give wings to man, but it also has the power to ruin the lives of most people."

Why this asymmetry of knowledge? Because there are categories of people who directly benefit from the ignorance of the masses. They are not "the masters of the world" in an abstract sense, but the masters of the people: those who prosper thanks to the suffering of others, maintaining a system that generates unwitting slaves.

The three human categories in the current system

Analyzing the social structure through the lens of context, three distinct groups emerge:

The Free (less than 10%): those who know the mechanisms of the system and use them to prosper in complete freedom, contributing to socio-economic development. 2. The Deceived (a small caste): divided between criminals (who actively worsen people's conditions) and profiteers (who offer temporary solutions to problems that they themselves help create). 3. The Duped (over 90%): the mass that lives in a modern slavery, convinced of being free while progressively losing rights, resources, and autonomy.

This is not conspiracy—it's systemic analysis. The data shows a growing gap between concentrated wealth and widespread impoverishment, between nominal rights and actual freedom. The question we should ask ourselves is: how much of this inequality is accidental, and how much is designed?

The Principle of Reciprocity: the Heart of the Context

The most important—and most hidden—mechanism is the principle of reciprocity. Humans are social entities: their well-being depends on the ability to create value for themselves simultaneously with creating the conditions for others to do the same.

This principle is not utopia; it is the operating basis on which true fortunes and true freedoms are built.

Entrepreneurs who understand this principle—not bureaucratic company owners, but those who know how to grow organizations in tune with the needs of the System—are the greatest contributors to progress. They are also the freest among the free. Yet, how many entrepreneurs today operate with this awareness? Most are trapped in the logic of immediate profit, losing sight of the broader context.

The Ark of Neo: a shipwrecked project

The "Ark of Neo" project that I tried to launch with some partners was an attempt to translate context into practical action: preparing people to become great contributors, capable of navigating the incoming systemic "flood". It wasn't about saving dying companies—a short-sighted and doomed approach—but about forming individuals who could regenerate the system from within.

My former partners completely misunderstood the mission. They preferred to look for shortcuts, demonstrating that arrogance and egoism which are the clearest symptom of the lack of context. Their failure is not personal—it is systemic.

We are victims of the same ignorance that afflicts the masses, even though we believe ourselves to be above it.

System Change is Inevitable

The "flood" I speak of is not an apocalyptic metaphor, but the systemic crisis that emerges when the lie upon which the current world order is built reaches its breaking point. We are entering a phase of global institutional change that will be remembered as the crisis of the century. The majority will live through hell, losing not only material resources, but fundamental rights.

In this scenario, context becomes a tool for survival—and rebirth. Those who understand the real mechanisms will have the opportunity to redefine the rules of the game. The others will suffer the consequences of decades of cultivated ignorance.

Questions We Should Ask Ourselves

I don't have all the answers. But I have documentation, firsthand experience in the circles of business and government elites, and the determination to share what I know. To those who try to stop me, I say: you are acting against your own interests. To those who have remained listening: truth always prevails over lies, but only for those who have the courage to look it in the face.

Context is not studied in textbooks.

It is acquired by observing the mechanisms that others hide, connecting points that seem distant, and above all—questioning everything that has been taught to us as "normal". The final question is: on which side of history do you want to be when the flood arrives?