Shirkey Farewell Warns Of 'One World Control'

12/08/22 11:11 AM - By Team MIRS

(Source: MIRS.news, Published 12/07/22) Outgoing Senate Majority Leader Mike Shirkey (R-Clarklake) warned colleagues in his farewell speech that the Central Bank, agricultural humanization, "trans-whatever-we-can-concoct" and other items as incoming "little G-gods" attempting to achieve "one world governance."

  

Shirkey told MIRS after the speech that his concern is over a new world order concocted by the growing power of the World Economic Forum (WEF), of which Lt. Gov. Garlin Gilchrist II is an active participant. The conspiracy theory being advanced is that the international organization of global elites will use a common currency, a common government structure and artificial intelligence to restrict liberties.

  

"COVID was a test. These next challenges will be much more than a test. When humans combine control and reason without wisdom, they can easily become godlike in their own minds," Shirkey said. "Their cause or causes often translate into the worship of what I call the 'G-gods,' and these are the next threats that will make COVID an elementary memory."

  

Shirkey also listed off Environmental, Social and Governance (ESG); climate change, gun control, child sacrifice and critical race theory as "little G-gods."

  

The outgoing Senate majority leader said the intent behind the aforementioned "little G-gods" is to "achieve one world government, one world religion, one world healthcare, one world currency and one world control," eliminating sovereignty.

  

He said the World Economic Forum (WEF) – an international non-governmental and lobbying organization financed majorly by 1,000 member companies and recognized for its five-day annual meeting in the Eastern Alps – was pointed to by Shirkey as the most "alarmingly transparent organization driving these efforts."

  

Shirkey's farewell speech set in motion a walkout from Sen. Jeremy Moss (D-Southfield), who later Tweeted out "well that was weird." When it was over, several Democrats awkwardly gave what can best be described as less-than-a-courtesy clap.

  

Other tales mentioned in Shirkey's farewell speech included how he visited former President Donald Trump in the Oval Office, with six other lawmakers, during the then-President's push to overturn the 2020 election results.

  

After noticing a red button positioned on top of a finely crafted, wooden box on the president's desk, Shirkey discovered the button was used to summon a "young man with a platter and a Diet Coke." After Trump requested Diet Cokes for the visitors, Shirkey said he believes the past president got a kick out of him denying the beverage and asking for a regular Coke instead.

  

Shirkey said the most interesting part of the experience was when Trump put former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani, his personal lawyer at the time, on a conference call. Giuliani apparently tried a filibuster by talking non-stop about, presumably, alleged fraud in Michigan's election.

  

Shirkey tried to interrupt him a couple times before shouting out, “RUDY.”

  

"Rudy, when are you going to file a lawsuit in Michigan?" he said he told Trump's attorney.

  

"Because he was not going to do that, he's just talking crap. He got paused (for) about 10 seconds, and then started talking. He never missed a beat from that point in time – in other words, he never answered the question," Shrikey said. "I doubt that anybody has acted that directly in the Oval Office that's not part of the staff."

  

Before describing his White House trip, Shirkey also talked about the time he moved into the Binsfeld Office Building, which holds the majority of Senate office spaces. He said he needed to use the restroom during his first day in the building, and while walking back he thought to himself "Boy, it's awful warm in that restroom."

  

"The third time I did it. I figured it out," Shirkey said. “It was the toilet, and so I put my hand in it, and it was hot water. I went back to the office and said “Please get a hold of the maintenance staff around here and ask them why (the) taxpayers are paying for hot water in our toilets.”

  

When they asked him how he knew there was hot water in the toilets, Shirkey said, “Well, I put my hand in it.”

  

Near the end of his goodbye remarks, Shirkey said his time in the Legislature, kicking off in 2011 as a state representative and beginning in the Senate during 2015, required him to relearn something from his teenage years.

  

"Just because you can, doesn't mean you should. Just because it might feel good, doesn't mean it is good, and I think that should be the fundamental guiding principle for all lawmakers," Shirkey said.

Team MIRS