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There’s a graveyard most people have forgotten.
It sits in the abandoned corners of the internet, overgrown with digital weeds, headstones bearing names that once dominated the online world.
Myspace. Seventy-five million users. The king of social networking. Then Facebook arrived, and within eighteen months, Myspace was a ghost town.
Vine. The platform that birthed internet celebrity culture as we know it. Creators built millions of followers. Then one day in 2016, Twitter (Vine’s owner) just... turned it off. Deleted. Gone. Millions of followers, evaporated overnight.
Google+. Backed by the most powerful tech company on Earth. Billions in investment. Forced integration with YouTube. Still died. Shut down in 2019.
Tumblr. Once valued at $1.1 billion when Yahoo acquired it. Then came the “content policy changes” in 2018. Mass exodus. Sold three years later for $3 million. That’s not a typo. Billion to million.
The pattern repeats. The names change. The outcome is always the same.
Platforms rise. Platforms promise freedom. Platforms get leverage. Platforms change the rules. Creators who built everything there lose everything.
And yet, right now, thousands of Christian content creators are building their entire ministries on platforms they don’t control, with audiences they don’t own, speaking messages that could be silenced tomorrow with a single policy update.
Most don’t see it coming until it’s too late.
But you’re reading this, which means you’re not most people.
So let me show you what’s actually happening and what the spiritually awake are building while everyone else is asleep at the wheel.
Here’s how it always works:
PHASE 1: THE HONEYMOON
Platform launches. “We’re different,” they say. “We believe in free speech. We won’t censor. Build your community here. We’re creator-friendly.”
Early adopters arrive. They build. They invest time, energy, content. Audiences grow. The platform grows with them.
Everything’s beautiful.
PHASE 2: THE GROWTH
Platform gains traction. Venture capital arrives. Billions in valuation. Media attention. Mainstream adoption.
“See?” creators say. “We were right to build here.”
Momentum feels unstoppable.
PHASE 3: THE PRESSURE
Now the platform has something to lose. Advertisers want brand safety. Payment processors want “clean content.” Governments want compliance. Media writes hit pieces: “Platform X is hosting extremists.”
Pressure mounts.
PHASE 4: THE COMPROMISE
“Community guidelines” get updated. Vague rules that can mean anything. “Hate speech” gets redefined. “Misinformation” policies appear.
“Don’t worry,” platform says. “This only affects the bad actors.”
Creators who’ve built everything there have no choice but to accept it. Where else would they go? They have 100,000 followers here. Starting over is unthinkable.
So they stay. And they comply.
PHASE 5: THE PURGE
The bans start. First, the obviously controversial voices. “See, we told you—just the bad actors.”
Then the definition expands. Political dissidents. Medical skeptics. Religious conservatives teaching biblical sexuality or gender.
By the time creators realize the rules are being weaponized, it’s too late. Their entire audience, their entire income, their entire platform—gone.
Appeals are denied. Accounts stay banned. “Sorry, terms of service violation.”
And the platform moves on, having successfully eliminated the voices that threatened advertiser relationships or government favor.
We’ve watched this cycle repeat for fifteen years.
YouTube demonetized Christian creators for “controversial content.”
Facebook suppressed Christian pages in algorithm changes.
Patreon banned creators for theological positions.
Twitter (pre-Musk) suspended accounts for quoting Scripture.
Every. Single. Time.
The creators who saw it coming survived.
The ones who didn’t? Digital obituaries in the platform graveyard.
Right now, Christian content on Substack is exploding.
Writers are fleeing YouTube censorship, Facebook algorithm suppression, and TikTok content removal. They’re discovering long-form writing, direct reader support, email list ownership.
And yes, some are fleeing Substack because they can’t handle ideological diversity, proving exactly why those of us building here need censorship-resistant backups. When they control the next platform, they’ll come for you too.
Substack feels like the promised land. Finally, freedom. Finally, no algorithmic manipulation. Finally, direct relationship with readers.
And it is good. For now.
But here’s what most creators aren’t asking:
“How long until Substack faces the same pressure every other platform faced?”
Because it’s not if. It’s when.
Substack is currently in Phase 2 (Growth) heading into Phase 3 (Pressure). The media is already writing articles: “Substack has a Nazi problem.” “Why does Substack allow anti-trans content?” “Platforming misinformation.”

The payment processors are watching. Stripe powers Substack’s payments. And Stripe has a history—they’ve cut off controversial sites before.
When the pressure comes (and it’s coming), Substack will face a choice:
Option A: Stand firm on free speech, lose payment processing and mainstream credibility, possibly die like Parler almost did.
Option B: Introduce “content moderation,” quietly purge controversial voices, survive but compromised.
Most platforms choose Option B.
Not because they’re evil. Because they’re businesses operating in Babylon’s economy. And Babylon doesn’t tolerate sustained dissent.
So the question isn’t “Will Substack deplatform controversial Christian voices?”
The question is: “When Substack deplatforms you, will you have built a lifeboat, or will you go down with the ship?”
Here’s the thing about Substack.
Right now, it’s the best option available. Email lists you own. Long-form content. Minimal algorithm manipulation. Actual relationship with readers.
It’s 80% of the way to being real infrastructure.
But that last 20%? That’s the difference between survival and the graveyard.
Because Substack still runs on Stripe. And Stripe is a chokepoint.
If Substack integrated Bitcoin and Monero payment rails, everything would change. Payment processors would lose their leverage overnight. Writers could monetize globally without permission. The platform would become actually censorship-resistant, not just “censorship-resistant for now.”
But they haven’t.
And I get why. Crypto is legally complex. It’s controversial. Investors might push back. Stripe might retaliate.
But every platform that depends on payment processors eventually faces the pressure. And when that pressure comes, platforms either capitulate or die.
Substack is currently walking the same path every platform before it walked.
The only question is whether they’ll integrate crypto before the pressure arrives, or scramble to build it while Stripe is threatening to cut them off.
I’m not waiting to find out.
I’m building as if Substack will eventually face the same choice Patreon faced, YouTube faced, and every other platform faced. Because history doesn’t care about your good intentions. It cares about your infrastructure.
If Substack adds crypto rails tomorrow, great, I’m already set up to use them.
If they don’t and eventually get squeezed, great, I already built the alternative.
Either way, I’m not chained to any one platform’s survival.
That’s the whole point.
Let me show you what this looks like in real-time.
Just this month. Japan. DLsite—a major digital content platform.

Visa and Mastercard suspended payment processing. Not because DLsite was hosting anything illegal. But because payment processors didn’t like the type of content (adult material, in this case).
DLsite tried to comply. Removed tags. Edited content. Changed labeling.
Nothing was enough.
Because the goal wasn’t compliance. The goal was control.
Eventually, DLsite had to build an entirely new payment infrastructure—Minna no Ginko Payment—completely independent of Visa and Mastercard.
Now, I know what you’re thinking: “That’s adult content. That’s different. That won’t happen to Christian creators.”
Oh, sweet summer child.
The infrastructure being built to censor pornography will be used to censor the gospel.
The same “brand safety” logic that kills adult content creators kills prophecy teachers next. The same payment processors that deplatform “offensive” material deplatform “hateful” theology after that.
Today it’s explicit content.
Tomorrow it’s “anti-LGBTQ hate speech” (also known as: biblical marriage teaching).
Next week it’s “dangerous conspiracy theories” (also known as: questioning CBDC rollouts or digital ID systems).
The weapon doesn’t care who it’s aimed at. The weapon just needs to exist.
And right now, payment processors have discovered they ARE the weapon.
Let’s pull the camera back and see the whole chessboard.
You think deplatforming is bad now? Wait until Central Bank Digital Currencies (CBDCs) become mandatory.
Here’s how CBDCs change the game:
Right now, if Stripe cuts you off, you can try PayPal. If PayPal bans you, you can try Square. If all payment processors ban you, you can accept checks or cash.
With CBDC, there’s no alternative.
CBDC is programmable money. The government doesn’t just see your transactions—they can control them.
“Your social credit score is too low. Transaction denied.”
“You’ve supported a flagged organization. Account restricted.”
“Content violation detected. Payment processing disabled.”
No appeal. No due process. Just code executing automatically.
Think I’m exaggerating?
China already does this. Their digital yuan tracks every transaction, integrates with social credit, and can be programmed with expiration dates, geographic restrictions, spending limits.
Canada did this. During the trucker convoy protests, Trudeau’s government froze bank accounts of protesters and donors. No trial. No charges. Just financial execution.
Nigeria is implementing it. Restricting cash withdrawals to force digital adoption. And we’ve already covered what’s happening to Nigerian Christians.
The pattern is global. The infrastructure is being built everywhere simultaneously.
And when CBDC becomes the only legal currency, “deplatforming” becomes automatic.
You teach theology the government deems “hateful”? Your money stops working.
You support a ministry flagged as “extremist”? Transaction blocked.
You publish content critical of the state? Income frozen.
No Stripe to switch from. No PayPal to fall back on. No cash to use instead.
Just compliance or starvation.
This is Revelation 13:17 going operational: “No one could buy or sell unless they had the mark.”
The mark isn’t necessarily a physical chip. It’s participation in a system that demands compliance to function.
And that system is being built right now.
But wait, it gets worse.
CBDCs don’t work alone. They need a partner: Digital ID.
Governments around the world are pushing digital identity systems. Biometric. Blockchain-based. “Convenient” and “secure.”
“Just scan your face to prove you’re you. So much easier than passwords!”
And if you think I’m exaggerating about the timeline, let me show you what just happened.
October 23, 2025. Three days ago.
UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer announced a mandatory national Digital ID system. Not a pilot. Not a proposal. A done deal, launching by year’s end.

“Make life easier for millions.”
“Cut red tape.”
“Put power back in people’s hands.”
The press release literally says: “Digitisation has transformed so many parts of our lives – from how we shop, travel and bank.”
They’re positioning it as convenience. As progress. As something you’d be foolish to resist.
“Every British citizen and legal resident will be entitled to a digital ID free of charge,” Starmer announced during a visit to a Barclays Bank branch. (Notice the location. Banks. Always banks.)
What the Digital ID will “help” you do:
Open a bank account (without one, you can’t)
Apply for a job (without one, you’re unemployable)
Rent a home (without one, you’re homeless)
“Protect against fraud” (by giving government total surveillance of your identity)
Read between the lines.
“Entitled to a digital ID free of charge” = It will become mandatory. “Free” things governments provide aren’t optional, they’re universal.
“Cutting the faff out of rummaging through drawers” = Physical documents will be phased out. You won’t be able to use a passport or driver’s license anymore. Digital only.
“Helping people get a bank account, apply for a job or access childcare” = Without it, you CAN’T do these things.
This isn’t conspiracy theory. This is UK government policy. Announced three days ago.
Once digital ID becomes mandatory (and it will—watch the timeline):
Your CBDC account links to your digital ID.
Your digital ID links to your health records (vaccination status, mental health flags, whatever they decide matters). Your health records link to your social credit score (yes, they’ll call it something else—”civic participation score” or “community trust rating”—but it’s the same thing).
Your social credit score determines your CBDC privileges (what you can buy, where you can go, who you can support).
And all of it links to your content creation.
Post something flagged as “misinformation”? Score drops.
Donate to a “problematic” ministry? Score drops.
Attend a church deemed “extremist”? Score drops.
Teach theology the government classifies as “hateful”? Score drops.
Score drops far enough? Your money stops working. Your ability to travel gets restricted. Your children’s school enrollment gets flagged. Your right to rent gets revoked.
The control grid is total. And it’s automated.
This isn’t dystopian fiction. This is infrastructure being deployed right now.
United Kingdom: National Digital ID (announced October 23, 2025—mandatory rollout by December 2025).
European Union: Digital Identity Wallet (2024).
United States: Multiple state digital ID pilots (accelerating).
Australia: Digital ID legislation passed.
India: Aadhaar system (already 1.3 billion people enrolled).
The train isn’t leaving the station. The train has LEFT.
And if you think this won’t connect to your ability to publish Christian content, you’re not paying attention.
The same government announcing mandatory Digital ID also has “online safety” laws that allow them to prosecute “harmful content.” The same infrastructure that makes banking “easier” makes dissent impossible.
When your identity, your money, and your speech are all on the same digital grid controlled by the state, “deplatforming” becomes automatic.
And Christian content creators posting on Substack, dependent on Stripe, with no backup infrastructure, are standing on the tracks wondering why they hear a rumbling sound.
So what do you do?
Roll over and accept digital serfdom? Delete your Substack and hide in the woods?
No.
You build a lifeboat while the ship is still floating.
Remember: The goal isn’t to abandon centralized platforms immediately. The goal is to never depend on them exclusively.
You operate in both worlds:
World 1: Babylon’s Marketplace (Substack, YouTube, etc.)
This is where the people are. Use it for discovery, for growth, for income—while it lasts.
World 2: The Remnant Infrastructure (Arweave, Crypto, Decentralized Systems)
This is where you BUILD. Permanent archives. Censorship-resistant payments. True ownership.
The hybrid strategy:
Every piece of content you publish on Substack? Simultaneously archive it on Arweave (permanent, uncensorable storage).
Every dollar you receive through Stripe? Offer crypto alternatives (Bitcoin, Monero—payment rails they can’t shut down).
Every email subscriber you gain? Keep that list independent (so when the platform dies, you still have your audience).
You’re not abandoning the ship. You’re just refusing to chain yourself to the mast.
Let me make this concrete.
SCENARIO A: The Creator Who Didn’t Prepare
Builds his entire ministry on Substack. Three years of work. 10,000 subscribers. $5,000/month income through Stripe.
Then she publishes a piece on biblical sexuality. Gets flagged. Substack removes it under “hate speech” policy (newly updated).
He appeals. Denied.
He keeps publishing other content. But two months later, a payment processor review flags his account. “Controversial content creator.” Stripe suspends processing.
Income: $0.
He tries to migrate to another platform. But his email list was managed through Substack. He doesn’t have the actual addresses.
Audience: Lost.
He starts over. New platform. New payment processor. No audience. No income. Three years of work—gone.
SCENARIO B: The Creator Who Prepared
Publishes on Substack but archives everything on Arweave simultaneously.
He accepts Stripe payments but also displays crypto wallet addresses. 20% of his income already comes through Bitcoin and Monero.
He keeps an independent email list through ConvertKit. When Substack publishes, ConvertKit sends too.
Same situation happens. Substack removes content. Stripe suspends.
He sends one email: “As expected, Substack caved to pressure. I’m still publishing. Find me here: [Arweave link]. Support here: [crypto addresses]. The mission continues.”
His core supporters (the real ones) follow. Income drops 30% temporarily but stabilizes because crypto payments still work.
He keeps publishing. Uncensored. Permanent. Sovereign.
The difference? Creator B built the lifeboat before the ship sank.
This isn’t the first time God’s people faced this.
Early Church (1st-3rd Century):
Couldn’t participate in Roman economy without emperor worship (burning incense to Caesar).
Their response? Underground economy. House churches. Secret symbols (ichthys fish). Coded communication.
They didn’t wait for Rome to give them permission. They built parallel systems.
Reformation (16th Century):
Catholic Church controlled all “official” biblical teaching. Printing press was the “platform.”
The Church tried to ban printing vernacular Bibles. “Dangerous. Heretical. Must be controlled.”
Reformers printed anyway. Distributed in secret. Built distribution networks Rome couldn’t stop.
The Word spread. The Reformation won. Because they didn’t depend on the enemy’s infrastructure.
Soviet Underground Church (20th Century):
Communist government banned Christian gatherings. Controlled all publishing. Monitored all communication.
The Church went underground. House fellowships. Smuggled Bibles. Samizdat (self-published) theological literature copied and passed hand-to-hand.
The USSR fell. The underground church survived. Because they never depended on the state’s platforms.
Same pattern. Every generation.
Babylon controls the official infrastructure. God’s people build parallel systems. Babylon eventually falls. The parallel systems become the foundation of what comes next.
We’re in that moment again.
The platforms are the new Roman marketplace. CBDC is the new emperor worship requirement. Digital ID is the new “mark” determining who can participate.
And the Remnant is building the new underground economy.
Not because we’re rebels. Because we’re free.
You’re reading this on a centralized platform right now. That’s fine. That’s strategic.
But the question is: Have you built the lifeboat?
Can you answer these questions:
If Substack deplatforms you tomorrow, where do your readers find you?
If Stripe freezes your account, how do you receive support?
If your content gets deleted, does a permanent archive exist?
If CBDCs become mandatory and your account gets restricted, can you still transact?
If the answer to any of these is “I don’t know” or “I haven’t thought about it”...
You’re standing on the Titanic, and you just felt the ship shudder.
Most people ignored it. “This ship is unsinkable,” they said.
The ones who survived were the ones who got to the lifeboats before everyone else realized the ship was going down.
I’m not going to give you a bullet-point checklist. You can find those anywhere.
What I’m going to give you is a posture:
Build with the assumption that every platform you’re on will eventually betray you.
Not because you’re paranoid. Because you’re historically informed.
This week, pick ONE action:
Maybe it’s setting up an Arweave account and archiving your best content there. Maybe it’s creating a crypto wallet and learning how it works (even if you don’t publicize it yet). Maybe it’s exporting your email list to an independent service.
One action. This week.
Next week, another action.
In six months, you’ll have infrastructure that survives anything Babylon throws at you.
Because here’s the truth:
The platform graveyard is coming for Substack too. Maybe not this year. Maybe not next. But it’s coming.
Digital ID is being implemented globally. CBDCs are being piloted everywhere. The control grid is being built whether you acknowledge it or not.
You can wait until the ship sinks and then panic.
Or you can build the lifeboat now and be ready.
The early church didn’t wait for Rome’s permission.
The Reformers didn’t wait for the Pope’s approval.
The Soviet underground didn’t wait for the Politburo to change its mind.
They built. While everyone else watched.
And when the storm came, they were ready.
There’s a reason Jesus told the parable of the wise and foolish builders.
One built on rock. One built on sand.
Same house. Same effort. Different foundation.
When the storm came, only one house survived.
You’re building a ministry. Pouring time, energy, heart into it.
The question isn’t whether you’re building.
The question is: What are you building on?
Substack? That’s sand.
Stripe? That’s sand.
Any platform you don’t control? Sand.
The rock is infrastructure you own:
Content you’ve archived permanently (Arweave).
Payments you control (crypto).
Relationships you maintain (independent email lists).
Networks you’ve built (coalition with other creators).
The storm is coming.
CBDC. Digital ID. Payment processor censorship. Platform purges.
Not someday. Soon.
The wise are building now.
The foolish are waiting to see what happens.
Which builder are you?
THE REMNANT DOESN’T ASK BABYLON FOR PERMISSION TO SPEAK TRUTH.
THE REMNANT BUILDS SYSTEMS BABYLON CAN’T CONTROL.
There’s a graveyard most people have forgotten.
It sits in the abandoned corners of the internet, overgrown with digital weeds, headstones bearing names that once dominated the online world.
Myspace. Seventy-five million users. The king of social networking. Then Facebook arrived, and within eighteen months, Myspace was a ghost town.
Vine. The platform that birthed internet celebrity culture as we know it. Creators built millions of followers. Then one day in 2016, Twitter (Vine’s owner) just... turned it off. Deleted. Gone. Millions of followers, evaporated overnight.
Google+. Backed by the most powerful tech company on Earth. Billions in investment. Forced integration with YouTube. Still died. Shut down in 2019.
Tumblr. Once valued at $1.1 billion when Yahoo acquired it. Then came the “content policy changes” in 2018. Mass exodus. Sold three years later for $3 million. That’s not a typo. Billion to million.
The pattern repeats. The names change. The outcome is always the same.
Platforms rise. Platforms promise freedom. Platforms get leverage. Platforms change the rules. Creators who built everything there lose everything.
And yet, right now, thousands of Christian content creators are building their entire ministries on platforms they don’t control, with audiences they don’t own, speaking messages that could be silenced tomorrow with a single policy update.
Most don’t see it coming until it’s too late.
But you’re reading this, which means you’re not most people.
So let me show you what’s actually happening and what the spiritually awake are building while everyone else is asleep at the wheel.
Here’s how it always works:
PHASE 1: THE HONEYMOON
Platform launches. “We’re different,” they say. “We believe in free speech. We won’t censor. Build your community here. We’re creator-friendly.”
Early adopters arrive. They build. They invest time, energy, content. Audiences grow. The platform grows with them.
Everything’s beautiful.
PHASE 2: THE GROWTH
Platform gains traction. Venture capital arrives. Billions in valuation. Media attention. Mainstream adoption.
“See?” creators say. “We were right to build here.”
Momentum feels unstoppable.
PHASE 3: THE PRESSURE
Now the platform has something to lose. Advertisers want brand safety. Payment processors want “clean content.” Governments want compliance. Media writes hit pieces: “Platform X is hosting extremists.”
Pressure mounts.
PHASE 4: THE COMPROMISE
“Community guidelines” get updated. Vague rules that can mean anything. “Hate speech” gets redefined. “Misinformation” policies appear.
“Don’t worry,” platform says. “This only affects the bad actors.”
Creators who’ve built everything there have no choice but to accept it. Where else would they go? They have 100,000 followers here. Starting over is unthinkable.
So they stay. And they comply.
PHASE 5: THE PURGE
The bans start. First, the obviously controversial voices. “See, we told you—just the bad actors.”
Then the definition expands. Political dissidents. Medical skeptics. Religious conservatives teaching biblical sexuality or gender.
By the time creators realize the rules are being weaponized, it’s too late. Their entire audience, their entire income, their entire platform—gone.
Appeals are denied. Accounts stay banned. “Sorry, terms of service violation.”
And the platform moves on, having successfully eliminated the voices that threatened advertiser relationships or government favor.
We’ve watched this cycle repeat for fifteen years.
YouTube demonetized Christian creators for “controversial content.”
Facebook suppressed Christian pages in algorithm changes.
Patreon banned creators for theological positions.
Twitter (pre-Musk) suspended accounts for quoting Scripture.
Every. Single. Time.
The creators who saw it coming survived.
The ones who didn’t? Digital obituaries in the platform graveyard.
Right now, Christian content on Substack is exploding.
Writers are fleeing YouTube censorship, Facebook algorithm suppression, and TikTok content removal. They’re discovering long-form writing, direct reader support, email list ownership.
And yes, some are fleeing Substack because they can’t handle ideological diversity, proving exactly why those of us building here need censorship-resistant backups. When they control the next platform, they’ll come for you too.
Substack feels like the promised land. Finally, freedom. Finally, no algorithmic manipulation. Finally, direct relationship with readers.
And it is good. For now.
But here’s what most creators aren’t asking:
“How long until Substack faces the same pressure every other platform faced?”
Because it’s not if. It’s when.
Substack is currently in Phase 2 (Growth) heading into Phase 3 (Pressure). The media is already writing articles: “Substack has a Nazi problem.” “Why does Substack allow anti-trans content?” “Platforming misinformation.”

The payment processors are watching. Stripe powers Substack’s payments. And Stripe has a history—they’ve cut off controversial sites before.
When the pressure comes (and it’s coming), Substack will face a choice:
Option A: Stand firm on free speech, lose payment processing and mainstream credibility, possibly die like Parler almost did.
Option B: Introduce “content moderation,” quietly purge controversial voices, survive but compromised.
Most platforms choose Option B.
Not because they’re evil. Because they’re businesses operating in Babylon’s economy. And Babylon doesn’t tolerate sustained dissent.
So the question isn’t “Will Substack deplatform controversial Christian voices?”
The question is: “When Substack deplatforms you, will you have built a lifeboat, or will you go down with the ship?”
Here’s the thing about Substack.
Right now, it’s the best option available. Email lists you own. Long-form content. Minimal algorithm manipulation. Actual relationship with readers.
It’s 80% of the way to being real infrastructure.
But that last 20%? That’s the difference between survival and the graveyard.
Because Substack still runs on Stripe. And Stripe is a chokepoint.
If Substack integrated Bitcoin and Monero payment rails, everything would change. Payment processors would lose their leverage overnight. Writers could monetize globally without permission. The platform would become actually censorship-resistant, not just “censorship-resistant for now.”
But they haven’t.
And I get why. Crypto is legally complex. It’s controversial. Investors might push back. Stripe might retaliate.
But every platform that depends on payment processors eventually faces the pressure. And when that pressure comes, platforms either capitulate or die.
Substack is currently walking the same path every platform before it walked.
The only question is whether they’ll integrate crypto before the pressure arrives, or scramble to build it while Stripe is threatening to cut them off.
I’m not waiting to find out.
I’m building as if Substack will eventually face the same choice Patreon faced, YouTube faced, and every other platform faced. Because history doesn’t care about your good intentions. It cares about your infrastructure.
If Substack adds crypto rails tomorrow, great, I’m already set up to use them.
If they don’t and eventually get squeezed, great, I already built the alternative.
Either way, I’m not chained to any one platform’s survival.
That’s the whole point.
Let me show you what this looks like in real-time.
Just this month. Japan. DLsite—a major digital content platform.

Visa and Mastercard suspended payment processing. Not because DLsite was hosting anything illegal. But because payment processors didn’t like the type of content (adult material, in this case).
DLsite tried to comply. Removed tags. Edited content. Changed labeling.
Nothing was enough.
Because the goal wasn’t compliance. The goal was control.
Eventually, DLsite had to build an entirely new payment infrastructure—Minna no Ginko Payment—completely independent of Visa and Mastercard.
Now, I know what you’re thinking: “That’s adult content. That’s different. That won’t happen to Christian creators.”
Oh, sweet summer child.
The infrastructure being built to censor pornography will be used to censor the gospel.
The same “brand safety” logic that kills adult content creators kills prophecy teachers next. The same payment processors that deplatform “offensive” material deplatform “hateful” theology after that.
Today it’s explicit content.
Tomorrow it’s “anti-LGBTQ hate speech” (also known as: biblical marriage teaching).
Next week it’s “dangerous conspiracy theories” (also known as: questioning CBDC rollouts or digital ID systems).
The weapon doesn’t care who it’s aimed at. The weapon just needs to exist.
And right now, payment processors have discovered they ARE the weapon.
Let’s pull the camera back and see the whole chessboard.
You think deplatforming is bad now? Wait until Central Bank Digital Currencies (CBDCs) become mandatory.
Here’s how CBDCs change the game:
Right now, if Stripe cuts you off, you can try PayPal. If PayPal bans you, you can try Square. If all payment processors ban you, you can accept checks or cash.
With CBDC, there’s no alternative.
CBDC is programmable money. The government doesn’t just see your transactions—they can control them.
“Your social credit score is too low. Transaction denied.”
“You’ve supported a flagged organization. Account restricted.”
“Content violation detected. Payment processing disabled.”
No appeal. No due process. Just code executing automatically.
Think I’m exaggerating?
China already does this. Their digital yuan tracks every transaction, integrates with social credit, and can be programmed with expiration dates, geographic restrictions, spending limits.
Canada did this. During the trucker convoy protests, Trudeau’s government froze bank accounts of protesters and donors. No trial. No charges. Just financial execution.
Nigeria is implementing it. Restricting cash withdrawals to force digital adoption. And we’ve already covered what’s happening to Nigerian Christians.
The pattern is global. The infrastructure is being built everywhere simultaneously.
And when CBDC becomes the only legal currency, “deplatforming” becomes automatic.
You teach theology the government deems “hateful”? Your money stops working.
You support a ministry flagged as “extremist”? Transaction blocked.
You publish content critical of the state? Income frozen.
No Stripe to switch from. No PayPal to fall back on. No cash to use instead.
Just compliance or starvation.
This is Revelation 13:17 going operational: “No one could buy or sell unless they had the mark.”
The mark isn’t necessarily a physical chip. It’s participation in a system that demands compliance to function.
And that system is being built right now.
But wait, it gets worse.
CBDCs don’t work alone. They need a partner: Digital ID.
Governments around the world are pushing digital identity systems. Biometric. Blockchain-based. “Convenient” and “secure.”
“Just scan your face to prove you’re you. So much easier than passwords!”
And if you think I’m exaggerating about the timeline, let me show you what just happened.
October 23, 2025. Three days ago.
UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer announced a mandatory national Digital ID system. Not a pilot. Not a proposal. A done deal, launching by year’s end.

“Make life easier for millions.”
“Cut red tape.”
“Put power back in people’s hands.”
The press release literally says: “Digitisation has transformed so many parts of our lives – from how we shop, travel and bank.”
They’re positioning it as convenience. As progress. As something you’d be foolish to resist.
“Every British citizen and legal resident will be entitled to a digital ID free of charge,” Starmer announced during a visit to a Barclays Bank branch. (Notice the location. Banks. Always banks.)
What the Digital ID will “help” you do:
Open a bank account (without one, you can’t)
Apply for a job (without one, you’re unemployable)
Rent a home (without one, you’re homeless)
“Protect against fraud” (by giving government total surveillance of your identity)
Read between the lines.
“Entitled to a digital ID free of charge” = It will become mandatory. “Free” things governments provide aren’t optional, they’re universal.
“Cutting the faff out of rummaging through drawers” = Physical documents will be phased out. You won’t be able to use a passport or driver’s license anymore. Digital only.
“Helping people get a bank account, apply for a job or access childcare” = Without it, you CAN’T do these things.
This isn’t conspiracy theory. This is UK government policy. Announced three days ago.
Once digital ID becomes mandatory (and it will—watch the timeline):
Your CBDC account links to your digital ID.
Your digital ID links to your health records (vaccination status, mental health flags, whatever they decide matters). Your health records link to your social credit score (yes, they’ll call it something else—”civic participation score” or “community trust rating”—but it’s the same thing).
Your social credit score determines your CBDC privileges (what you can buy, where you can go, who you can support).
And all of it links to your content creation.
Post something flagged as “misinformation”? Score drops.
Donate to a “problematic” ministry? Score drops.
Attend a church deemed “extremist”? Score drops.
Teach theology the government classifies as “hateful”? Score drops.
Score drops far enough? Your money stops working. Your ability to travel gets restricted. Your children’s school enrollment gets flagged. Your right to rent gets revoked.
The control grid is total. And it’s automated.
This isn’t dystopian fiction. This is infrastructure being deployed right now.
United Kingdom: National Digital ID (announced October 23, 2025—mandatory rollout by December 2025).
European Union: Digital Identity Wallet (2024).
United States: Multiple state digital ID pilots (accelerating).
Australia: Digital ID legislation passed.
India: Aadhaar system (already 1.3 billion people enrolled).
The train isn’t leaving the station. The train has LEFT.
And if you think this won’t connect to your ability to publish Christian content, you’re not paying attention.
The same government announcing mandatory Digital ID also has “online safety” laws that allow them to prosecute “harmful content.” The same infrastructure that makes banking “easier” makes dissent impossible.
When your identity, your money, and your speech are all on the same digital grid controlled by the state, “deplatforming” becomes automatic.
And Christian content creators posting on Substack, dependent on Stripe, with no backup infrastructure, are standing on the tracks wondering why they hear a rumbling sound.
So what do you do?
Roll over and accept digital serfdom? Delete your Substack and hide in the woods?
No.
You build a lifeboat while the ship is still floating.
Remember: The goal isn’t to abandon centralized platforms immediately. The goal is to never depend on them exclusively.
You operate in both worlds:
World 1: Babylon’s Marketplace (Substack, YouTube, etc.)
This is where the people are. Use it for discovery, for growth, for income—while it lasts.
World 2: The Remnant Infrastructure (Arweave, Crypto, Decentralized Systems)
This is where you BUILD. Permanent archives. Censorship-resistant payments. True ownership.
The hybrid strategy:
Every piece of content you publish on Substack? Simultaneously archive it on Arweave (permanent, uncensorable storage).
Every dollar you receive through Stripe? Offer crypto alternatives (Bitcoin, Monero—payment rails they can’t shut down).
Every email subscriber you gain? Keep that list independent (so when the platform dies, you still have your audience).
You’re not abandoning the ship. You’re just refusing to chain yourself to the mast.
Let me make this concrete.
SCENARIO A: The Creator Who Didn’t Prepare
Builds his entire ministry on Substack. Three years of work. 10,000 subscribers. $5,000/month income through Stripe.
Then she publishes a piece on biblical sexuality. Gets flagged. Substack removes it under “hate speech” policy (newly updated).
He appeals. Denied.
He keeps publishing other content. But two months later, a payment processor review flags his account. “Controversial content creator.” Stripe suspends processing.
Income: $0.
He tries to migrate to another platform. But his email list was managed through Substack. He doesn’t have the actual addresses.
Audience: Lost.
He starts over. New platform. New payment processor. No audience. No income. Three years of work—gone.
SCENARIO B: The Creator Who Prepared
Publishes on Substack but archives everything on Arweave simultaneously.
He accepts Stripe payments but also displays crypto wallet addresses. 20% of his income already comes through Bitcoin and Monero.
He keeps an independent email list through ConvertKit. When Substack publishes, ConvertKit sends too.
Same situation happens. Substack removes content. Stripe suspends.
He sends one email: “As expected, Substack caved to pressure. I’m still publishing. Find me here: [Arweave link]. Support here: [crypto addresses]. The mission continues.”
His core supporters (the real ones) follow. Income drops 30% temporarily but stabilizes because crypto payments still work.
He keeps publishing. Uncensored. Permanent. Sovereign.
The difference? Creator B built the lifeboat before the ship sank.
This isn’t the first time God’s people faced this.
Early Church (1st-3rd Century):
Couldn’t participate in Roman economy without emperor worship (burning incense to Caesar).
Their response? Underground economy. House churches. Secret symbols (ichthys fish). Coded communication.
They didn’t wait for Rome to give them permission. They built parallel systems.
Reformation (16th Century):
Catholic Church controlled all “official” biblical teaching. Printing press was the “platform.”
The Church tried to ban printing vernacular Bibles. “Dangerous. Heretical. Must be controlled.”
Reformers printed anyway. Distributed in secret. Built distribution networks Rome couldn’t stop.
The Word spread. The Reformation won. Because they didn’t depend on the enemy’s infrastructure.
Soviet Underground Church (20th Century):
Communist government banned Christian gatherings. Controlled all publishing. Monitored all communication.
The Church went underground. House fellowships. Smuggled Bibles. Samizdat (self-published) theological literature copied and passed hand-to-hand.
The USSR fell. The underground church survived. Because they never depended on the state’s platforms.
Same pattern. Every generation.
Babylon controls the official infrastructure. God’s people build parallel systems. Babylon eventually falls. The parallel systems become the foundation of what comes next.
We’re in that moment again.
The platforms are the new Roman marketplace. CBDC is the new emperor worship requirement. Digital ID is the new “mark” determining who can participate.
And the Remnant is building the new underground economy.
Not because we’re rebels. Because we’re free.
You’re reading this on a centralized platform right now. That’s fine. That’s strategic.
But the question is: Have you built the lifeboat?
Can you answer these questions:
If Substack deplatforms you tomorrow, where do your readers find you?
If Stripe freezes your account, how do you receive support?
If your content gets deleted, does a permanent archive exist?
If CBDCs become mandatory and your account gets restricted, can you still transact?
If the answer to any of these is “I don’t know” or “I haven’t thought about it”...
You’re standing on the Titanic, and you just felt the ship shudder.
Most people ignored it. “This ship is unsinkable,” they said.
The ones who survived were the ones who got to the lifeboats before everyone else realized the ship was going down.
I’m not going to give you a bullet-point checklist. You can find those anywhere.
What I’m going to give you is a posture:
Build with the assumption that every platform you’re on will eventually betray you.
Not because you’re paranoid. Because you’re historically informed.
This week, pick ONE action:
Maybe it’s setting up an Arweave account and archiving your best content there. Maybe it’s creating a crypto wallet and learning how it works (even if you don’t publicize it yet). Maybe it’s exporting your email list to an independent service.
One action. This week.
Next week, another action.
In six months, you’ll have infrastructure that survives anything Babylon throws at you.
Because here’s the truth:
The platform graveyard is coming for Substack too. Maybe not this year. Maybe not next. But it’s coming.
Digital ID is being implemented globally. CBDCs are being piloted everywhere. The control grid is being built whether you acknowledge it or not.
You can wait until the ship sinks and then panic.
Or you can build the lifeboat now and be ready.
The early church didn’t wait for Rome’s permission.
The Reformers didn’t wait for the Pope’s approval.
The Soviet underground didn’t wait for the Politburo to change its mind.
They built. While everyone else watched.
And when the storm came, they were ready.
There’s a reason Jesus told the parable of the wise and foolish builders.
One built on rock. One built on sand.
Same house. Same effort. Different foundation.
When the storm came, only one house survived.
You’re building a ministry. Pouring time, energy, heart into it.
The question isn’t whether you’re building.
The question is: What are you building on?
Substack? That’s sand.
Stripe? That’s sand.
Any platform you don’t control? Sand.
The rock is infrastructure you own:
Content you’ve archived permanently (Arweave).
Payments you control (crypto).
Relationships you maintain (independent email lists).
Networks you’ve built (coalition with other creators).
The storm is coming.
CBDC. Digital ID. Payment processor censorship. Platform purges.
Not someday. Soon.
The wise are building now.
The foolish are waiting to see what happens.
Which builder are you?
THE REMNANT DOESN’T ASK BABYLON FOR PERMISSION TO SPEAK TRUTH.
THE REMNANT BUILDS SYSTEMS BABYLON CAN’T CONTROL.
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