Five and One-half Billion Innocents to be Exterminated?

Mysterious Monuments reveals who is behind the incredible, modern-day monuments and temples built worldwide at "sacred sites" and on so-called energy "ley lines."
You will be taken, eyes wide open, on a fascinating tour of occult buildings, stonehenges, and "killing fields" across America. You will discover the strange secrets of the Georgia Guidestones, with its cryptic message in English and also in Babylonian cuneiform, calling for the extermination of five and one-half billion people to create a "sustainable earth."


"Let These Be Guidestones to an Age of Reason"

Proclaiming as their motto, "Let These Be Guidestones to an Age of Reason", Masonic builders in Eberton, Georgia have erected the curious Georgia Guidestones. Made of granite, the Guidestones have a central stone oriented astrologically to the sun, alingned with the rising and setting of the fiery orb in its cycle of 186 years (translated numerologically as 666-6). An Illuminist message of ten precepts are inscribed in eight different Languages on the stones, including English, Chinese, and Babylonian Cuneiform.

The first of the 10 precepts declares, "MAINTAIN HUMANITY UNDER 500,000,000 IN PERPETUAL BALANCE WITH NATURE". Of course, if the population were reduced by this number, a genocidal extermination of the huge majority of the world's population of 6.5 billion would have to ensue. That would entail a significant bloodletting.


Explanation by quoting person:
The reduced population and the world population after reducing in the main text and sub text do not coincide with the world population before reducing. But, the reduced population changes with the natural population increase and the Illuminist has the target under 5 billion after reducing, so that the reduced population is determined by the world population at that time.


Reference
Texe Marrs, Mysterious MONUMENTS - Encyclopedia of Secret Illuminati Designs, Masonic Architecture, and Occult Places (Texas, RiverCrest Publishing, 2008), pp.20-21.