Nicole Shanahan, the ex-wife of Google co-founder Sergey Brin, is warning Americans about the dangers of the “tech wife mafia” – a powerful group of wealthy Silicon Valley women she says helped lay the groundwork for the globalist “Great Reset.” These women, often married to tech billionaires, push progressive causes while living in a bubble of privilege, unaware their work fuels a plan to control the world through digital tracking and censorship.
Shanahan’s eyes were opened after her young daughter was diagnosed with autism. She believes vaccines played a role, but says Google – her ex-husband’s company – silenced critics who questioned COVID shot safety. “There was a very deep centralized narrative,” she explains. “Google made sure that was ‘the truth.’” This censorship hit home as she fought to find answers for her child’s condition.
A near-death experience during a miscarriage last year brought Shanahan to Christianity. After losing her unborn child and nearly bleeding to death, she turned to Jesus. “I could feel the darkness,” she says, describing how prayer and baptism helped her see the “spiritual battle” between good and evil in politics and tech.
The “Great Reset” plan – backed by groups like the World Economic Forum – aims to track everyone through digital IDs linked to bank accounts and health records, Shanahan warns. She claims tech wives fund nonprofits that push this agenda, thinking they’re helping society when they’re really building a system of control. “Their money makes everything worse,” she says, describing how communities harmed by these programs sink deeper into poverty.
Many tech wives live miserable lives despite their wealth, Shanahan reveals. Stressed by family problems, antidepressants, and sick children, they seek purpose through “woke” charity work. But she says their efforts just feed a broken system: “They can’t break free from their small world.”
Shanahan’s political awakening came through vaccine debates and seeing friends abandon her during RFK Jr.’s presidential campaign. She watched former allies in liberal causes turn their backs when she questioned establishment narratives. “I saw evil up close,” she says of her time in politics.
Now a born-again Christian, Shanahan believes faith in Jesus is the answer to resisting globalist plans. “Demons are real,” she states bluntly, arguing that America’s spiritual decay lets evil spread through tech and government overreach. She urges others to seek God’s truth over “lies” pushed by elites.
Her story shows how the left’s control of Big Tech and media silences dissent. While tech wives think they’re “helping the oppressed,” Shanahan warns they’re really enabling tyrants to strip away freedoms. Her journey from Silicon Valley insider to Christian conservative offers hope that more Americans can wake up to these dangers.

