It's said the elite put their plans into art first so it's a very real possibility. Interesting though that the movie adaptation of the Time Machine left out the nukes and instead used the moon breaking up as the cause of the depopulating event.
Also, the virus theory is a very real possibility if the elite truly do hide their plans in plain sight based on the collection of virus/quarantine movies since 2008. No fewer than 12 movies in less than 4 years where the plot revolves around a group of people becoming infected and having to be quarantined. It's being stuffed in our faces. Many of these movies show some of the characters attempting to flee the quarantine with fatal consequences. These scripts don't get green lit on a whim.
It could be a combination. Nuke some cities then take out the survivors with a virus. Sounds like a great Hollywood movie.
everything we learn changes that which we know to be true
Plot summary
The book's protagonist is an English scientist and gentleman inventor living in Richmond, Surrey, identified by a narrator simply as the Time Traveller. The narrator recounts the Traveller's lecture to his weekly dinner guests that time is simply a fourth dimension, and his demonstration of a tabletop model machine for travelling through it. He reveals that he has built a machine capable of carrying a person, and returns at dinner the following week to recount a remarkable tale, becoming the new narrator.
In the new narrative, the Time Traveller tests his device with a journey that takes him to 802,701 A.D., where he meets the Eloi, a society of small, elegant, childlike adults. They live in small communities within large and futuristic yet slowly deteriorating buildings, doing no work and having a frugivorous diet. His efforts to communicate with them are hampered by their lack of curiosity or discipline, and he speculates that they are a peaceful communist society, the result of humanity conquering nature with technology, and subsequently evolving to adapt to an environment in which strength and intellect are no longer advantageous to survival.
Returning to the site where he arrived, the Time Traveller finds his time machine missing, and eventually works out that it has been dragged by some unknown party into a nearby structure with heavy doors, locked from the inside, which resembles a Sphinx. Later in the dark, he is approached menacingly by the Morlocks, ape-like troglodytes who live in darkness underground and surface only at night. Within their dwellings he discovers the machinery and industry that makes the above-ground paradise possible. He alters his theory, speculating that the human race has evolved into two species: the leisured classes have become the ineffectual Eloi, and the downtrodden working classes have become the brutish light-fearing Morlocks. Deducing that the Morlocks have taken his time machine, he explores the Morlock tunnels, learning that they feed on the Eloi. His revised analysis is that their relationship is not one of lords and servants but of livestock and ranchers, and with no real challenges facing either species. They have both lost the intelligence and character of Man at its peak.
Meanwhile, he saves an Eloi named Weena from drowning as none of the other Eloi take any notice of her, and they develop an innocently affectionate relationship over the course of several days. He takes Weena with him on an expedition to a distant structure that turns out to be the remains of a museum, where he finds a fresh supply of matches and fashions a crude weapon against Morlocks, whom he fears he must fight to get back his machine. He plans to take Weena back to his own time. Because the long and tiring journey back to Weena's home is too much for them, they stop in the forest, and they are then overcome by Morlocks in the night, and Weena faints. The Traveller escapes only when a small fire he had left behind them to distract the Morlocks catches up to them as a forest fire; Weena is presumably lost in the fire, as are the Morlocks.
The Morlocks use the time machine as bait to ensnare the Traveller, not understanding that he will use it to escape. He travels further ahead to roughly 30 million years from his own time. There he sees some of the last living things on a dying Earth, menacing reddish crab-like creatures slowly wandering the blood-red beaches chasing butterflies in a world covered in simple vegetation. He continues to make short jumps through time, seeing Earth's rotation gradually cease and the sun grow dimmer, and the world falling silent and freezing as the last degenerate living things die out.
Overwhelmed, he returns to his laboratory, arriving just three hours after he originally left. Interrupting dinner, he relates his adventures to his disbelieving visitors, producing as evidence two strange flowers Weena had put in his pocket. The original narrator takes over and relates that he returned to the Time Traveller's house the next day, finding him in final preparations for another journey. The Traveller promises to return in half an hour, but three years later, the narrator despairs of ever learning what became of him
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Time_Machine
It's good to be the King!
"Things Yet To Come" by H.G. Wells sounds like a more accurate prediction of the future.
The film, written throughout 1934, is notable for predicting World War II, being only 16 months off by having it start on Christmas 1940, rather than 1 September 1939. Its graphic depiction of strategic bombing in the scenes in which Everytown is flattened by air attack and society collapses into barbarism, echo pre-war concerns about the threat of the bomber and the apocalyptic pronouncements of air power prophets. Wells was an air power prophet of sorts, having described aerial warfare in Anticipations (1901) and The War in the Air (1908).
The use of gas bombs is very much part of the film, from the poison gas used early in the war to the sleeping gas used by the airmen of Wings Over the World. In real life, in the build-up to the Second World War, there was much concern that the Germans would use poison gas, which was used by France, Germany and Great Britain during the Great War. Civilians were required to carry gas masks and were trained in their use. When war did break out, however, the Germans did not use gas for military purposes.
Wings Over the World is based in Basra, in southern Iraq, from where it begins a new civilisation. Southern Iraq was also the home of one of the world's first known civilisations, Sumer, which began about 6,000 B.C. and invented the wheel, among a host of other things.
The single world government having engineers, scientists and inventors as the rulers mimics the ideology of the concept of Technocracy where those of the greatest skill and intellect in various vocations would be the leaders.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Things_to_Come
It's good to be the King!
There already have let loose many different species of bioengineered bacterias that are currently ruining peoples lives.
Lyme disease, Fibromyalgia, Chronic Fatigue Syndrome, Multiple Sclerosis, lupus, early ALS, early Alzheimers Disease. The list goes on and on. All have these diseases have links with chronic bacterial and viral infections that are near impossible to get rid of...
There be fish in that there creek by'
The past is usually a good indicator of the future. TPTB love nukes, check out the depleted uranium scandal. Nuclear holocaust likely.
dys
Now as he walked by the sea of Galilee, he saw Simon and Andrew his brother casting a net into the sea: for they were fishers. <br />And Jesus said unto them, Come ye after me, and I will make you to become fishers of men.<br />Mark 16-17
Apparently, the elites think differently than I do. If I were master of the universe, I wouldn't be killing my subjects. Weaken them and make them easier to rule, yes. But don't kill them wholesale. Every ruler in the history of the world has tried to expand his empire, not shrink it. It's human nature, and I don't see it changing any time soon.
Maybe this whole business is misdirection. Maybe they want us so fixated on imminent population reduction that we miss a bunch of other stuff.
I'm not saying forget what you lost.
I suppose there's a purpose in pain.
What we make of ourselves has a cost,
and it's paid every time we take hold of the reins.
The chilling revelations are a good thing... I have them from time to time, it makes you mentally prepared to whatever they may throw at you... You have already lived through it in your mind, plotted counter measures etc...