The Will to Resist

Cures, Conspiracies, and Holy Gaslighting


"They call it paranoia. I call it paying attention."

We live in a world where asking questions makes you a “conspiracy theorist.” Where believing there might be more than the official script means you’re automatically crazy. But here’s the kicker: most “theories” aren’t theories—they’re patterns of behavior too obvious to ignore.

Take cures. Are they real? Of course. But cures don’t make shareholders rich. Treatments do. Cancer’s been a cash cow for decades, and the mere whisper of a natural cure gets treated like treason. Why? Because healing doesn’t require subscriptions.

Google the topic and watch how fast it links cancer to conspiracy theories—as if even mentioning it is taboo. This isn’t by accident. It’s narrative control.

I was born in 1982. It took losing my previous "well paying" job; burning the old version of myself, and stepping into a character like 'Boris Thuginski', to finally see the game: this isn’t about health—it’s about control and profit. And the louder you point it out, the quicker you get labeled crazy. Or worse.


Are cures common knowledge, or is it all conspiracy?

It’s not as black-and-white as people want to believe. Cures exist—but whether they’re made common knowledge? That’s where the game gets rigged. Healthcare is a trillion-dollar business built on treatment, not resolution. If curing something once means no recurring profit, guess where the money flows? Into symptom management, patented drugs, and endless refills.

Cancer gets linked to conspiracies for two reasons:

  1. It’s a massive revenue stream—chemo, radiation, meds, follow-ups, all of it.
  2. People sense patterns when they hear about promising treatments being buried, labs “mysteriously shutting down,” or scientists dying suddenly. Some of that is noise, but some of it… isn’t.

The “Conspiracy Theorist” label = social muzzle.

The term is used to gaslight anyone asking hard questions. You’re meant to think, “Oh, if I question this, I’m one of those people.” But being born in 1980s, you'll start to see decades of “official stories” crumble—from corporate corruption to political scandals. It’s not paranoia if the pattern keeps proving itself.


Bible vs. Conspiracy Theories

The verses I pulled from the Bible (Isaiah 8:12, Proverbs 14:15, etc.) aren’t saying “Don’t think”—they’re saying don’t get consumed by every wild narrative. Discernment is the key. Ephesians 6:12 hits it perfectly:

“Our struggle is not against flesh and blood, but against rulers, authorities, and the powers of this dark world.”

That’s not some abstract metaphor. That’s a warning: you’re not fighting your neighbor, you’re fighting the machine behind the curtain.


The real conspiracy isn’t believing too much—it’s living in a world where truth is buried because profit prefers you sick.


#BearBlog #BorissHotTake #HolyGaslighting #CuresOrCycles #PandaDoctrine