Completely silenced by the mainstream. Can you help this blog?

Major web searches and social media completely ignore my website. I write about shadow politics, the real rulers – Big Banks, super-rich families, multinational companies and obscure secret organizations. Unlike some chaotic conspiracy websites, I offer rational structure when explaining. and provide huge evidence that these groups do exist. I offer documentary evidence with bulletproof logic.

And if you want to have an audience, where can you reach them?

I used to have one stupid question. Does Google penalize me because of my controversial content? Don’t get me wrong. There are mainstream conspiracy theorists who avoid everything important and establishment cherishes them.

Some of the “real conspiratorial theorists” told in a discussion. “And have you seen any globalist stuff on Google?”

The goal of establishment (and I completely admit you will oppose) is to get the right “conspiracy theories” out of way and promote senseless conspiracies which people believe (just to name few examples: Sandy Hook shooting, Clintons assassinations, UFO, J. F. Kennedy assassination). Around 99 % of conspiracy theories are very implausible, made either by people or the secret services themselves. Why the secret services? Because the more conspiracy theories there are, and the more stupid they appear the given conspiracy theories appear the more unlikely they are being supported.

I used to have a discussion with some SEO expert who has told me that Google had been indexing all of the stuff – even mine. The issue is that I provide content which is non-conspiratorial and readers come back. But the content isn’t indexed.

It took some time before X (Twitter) realized that my posts are toxic and they remain elusive now. I used to have a lot of likes and retweets.

If I have traffic from Google what I get from Yandex, I would be content

My calculation

From my calculation, if Google redirected to my website to the same degree Yandex does, I would have 2400 people coming from Google. You may object Google prefers not to redirect in order for you to buy advertising and you are right. But such a low number means something different.

Despite all of this, I have small regular readers base. People come back, even though only a few, meanwhile I think this blog – if not ignored – would have huge outreach.

I may let this blog die.

List of Google penalties

Google refers to this as part of its “Search Quality Evaluator Guidelines” and algorithmic systems, though they never officially say they penalize non-mainstream content outright. However, the most relevant terms Google uses are:

1. Your Money or Your Life (YMYL)

If your content touches on topics related to health, finance, politics, or safety, it falls under YMYL. Google applies stricter scrutiny here. Non-mainstream views—especially if they contradict mainstream science, medicine, or consensus facts—often rank lower because they’re seen as potentially harmful.

2. E-E-A-T (Experience, Expertise, Authoritativeness, Trustworthiness)

Pages lacking E-E-A-T are devalued, especially in sensitive areas. Even if the content is accurate or thought-provoking, if it’s from a small site, an unknown author, or goes against consensus, it often fails the trust test and is pushed down in rankings.

3. Manual Actions or Algorithmic Demotions

If a site consistently publishes controversial or non-mainstream material, it can be:

  • Algorithmically demoted (not a penalty, but lowered visibility)
  • Subject to a manual action, especially if it’s considered misinformation or lacks “trust signals”

4. Site Reputation and Topic Authority

Google also evaluates the site’s overall reputation and authority on a given topic. If your site isn’t considered a trusted authority, and it touches sensitive topics (e.g., anti-establishment, medical critique, war crimes), Google’s systems may suppress it even if it’s well-written.

5. Google’s euphemism: “Unreliable Sources” or “Low-Quality Pages”

This is how they officially describe content that doesn’t align with their criteria, even if it’s well-researched or intellectually valid.

Post a link

I am excluded from major search engines, posting a link is always beneficial.

Follow me on X

Even if you skip my posts, it gives me strength to be visible. Following me would be really great.
X – link

Each article has social media buttons below the content. It is not a nuclear science to click on it.

Where you can popularize my stuff

Reddit – discussion-based platform where niche communities (subreddits) engage deeply; ideal for analytical or controversial topics.

Twitter (X) – fast-paced, real-time discourse; great for hot takes, quotes, and viral sharing. – FOLLOW ME HERE

Meta (Facebook) – still broad reach, especially among older demographics; good for group sharing and page posts.

Pinterest – visual pinboard; use infographics or article-inspired visuals to drive clicks.

Tumblr – creative microblogging; suitable for philosophical, artistic, or subcultural content.

Messenger – personal sharing through Facebook’s chat app; less scalable but intimate.

Mail – classic direct sharing; especially useful for loyal readers and newsletter fans.

WhatsApp – highly used for article sharing in private groups or chats.

Telegram – encrypted, large-group sharing; great for politically sensitive or intellectual content.

Signal – privacy-first messaging; low virality but high trust among users.

Instagram – visual storytelling; images, quote cards, or reels can attract engagement.

Snapchat – short-lived, casual visuals; not ideal for deep content but may tease it.

Threads – Meta’s text-based network; designed for Twitter-like conversation and discovery.

Mastodon – decentralized microblogging; valued by those seeking algorithm-free platforms.

Bluesky – Twitter-style network started by Twitter’s co-founder; still niche but growing.

Quora – Q&A site; ideal for deep, thoughtful responses and linking back to your article.

Medium – polished blogging platform; perfect for re-publishing in essay form.

YouTube – turn your article into a narrated video, visual breakdown, or opinion piece.

TikTok – short, dynamic videos; use for micro-summaries or teasing complex topics.

VK (VKontakte) – Facebook-style Russian network; useful for Eastern European audience.

Line – dominant in Japan and Southeast Asia; limited in global reach.

WeChat – all-in-one Chinese platform; powerful but highly regulated and closed.

Flipboard – magazine-style app for curating and distributing articles.

Pocket – save-for-later tool; integrates with communities and reading circles.

Disqus – embedded comment system with social and community features.

Slack – real-time chat for interest groups; useful for niche audience engagement.

Substack – newsletter platform with built-in social sharing and reader engagement.

Would you like these formatted for publishing or used in a strategy outline?

New ideas? Hit me

If you have any new ideas, please share them, or you can contribute yourself. You will be credited.

Tell a friend

If you know any friends who might like my blog or books, please tell them.

Seeking a pen friend (donor)

My mental state has been deteriorating since 2006 and there is a huge chance I will spend the rest of my life in a filthy mental asylum. I would like to spend the rest of my life in a better facility. I would also like to someone who would take care of my blog when I prematurely die (mentally ill people have a drastically lowered lifespan). This is why I need a rich pen friend (donor).

I have just two requirements. First, I am looking for someone who is intelligent in a broader sense (yes, this correlates with IQ) and, second, who is really rich.

Wanting the second may sound arrogant and immodest, but I will explain. I don’t want to uplift my living standards in terms of eating out at restaurants and so on. Due to my illnesses, I can’t travel, go on vacation, do sport, cook, enjoy shopping, garden, play video games, go to a zoo or an amusement park, play chess, do crosswords, volunteer, watch TV or movies, or play a musical instrument. You may not believe it, but I am a pretty modest creature in terms of spending money, I’m kind of a skinflint. I don’t need to be rich (or to have more money than someone else).

Yes, it really depends on if you like my writings or my personality.

Contact me here.