
The Eye
Egypt's all-seeing symbol and the surveillance system it still runs
The Eye of Providence on your dollar didn't start in 1776. It started in Egyptian stone — as the Eye of Horus, paired with a ledger that weighed your heart against a feather. This volume traces the symbol from the temple wall to the surveillance economy, and shows you the proto social-credit system the priesthood ran four thousand years before the word existed.
- Where the Eye of Providence actually comes from — the documented descent from the Eye of Horus, named and dated
- The Weighing of the Heart and the forty-two confessions: the ancient ledger that scored a soul
- How a census stopped being a count and became population control
- THE BRIDGE: the eye over the unfinished pyramid on the one-dollar bill, decoded line by line
- The watching system, then and now — what the symbol promises, and who it serves
- A back-of-book source list, so you can check every claim yourself


