Do you really know what happened in HISTORY?
Money gets us what we want when we want it, if we
have it. Its power seems unquestionable, dominating, and
to a degree, subject to the laws of physics. It can move at the
speed of electrons and in the form of waves. Cell phone
technology seems destined to eliminate the friction from its
transactional pathways. The economic value created through
these energy fields, which we measure in money, has been
compromised by the desire
to accumulate. In the stories we tell about money,
net worth or wealth is a
metric of success that fails
to indicate money’s ethical
basis—one that ignores the
process of how the accumulation happened and what
it produced along the way.
Storing money has
trumped using it as an end
in itself, and wealth accrues
to the individual without
regard to the commonwealth.
It seems absurd to
accept as valid the idea of
accumulating that which is
inherently circulatory in
nature: currency. But
money, like physics, is
subject to the dominant materialist world view. Despite this,
a different view is emerging. Just as physicists push the
boundaries of science to the metaphysical, so do we need to
reframe the boundaries of economic life to include the values
of spirit. Just as the stories of good that wealth has done tend
to be told in the warmth of human interest and responsibility,
we need a new economic story that invites and assumes
the presence of our spirit, our capacity for ethical action, in
our work with money and with each other—as individuals,
as groups, as organizations, as communities.
I have been struggling to understand the state of ethical
standards played out by those who apparently created
financial instruments designed to fail, sold them to clients who
bought them in good faith,
then “won” big bets on the
instruments failing through
derivatives and hedging.
Only a market economy
that operates devoid of
human values other than
winning and greed could
produce such an endeavor.
This is only one of many
such examples from current
financial practices frequently in the news and in
our lives. One good result
of the unfolding saga of
financial misdealings is an
awakening sense that there
is something wrong in the
system, something deeper
and more flawed than
policy, something so off
human equilibrium that it
surfaces as flagrant inequity
History is not as well understood as you think
It is up to us, each of us as individuals to weigh the truth or fallacy of any set of opinions or facts
we are presented with. In order for our collective here to be effective moving forward I am going
to continue to urge you to detox off of this sort of misinformation-disinformation culture which
seeks to capitalize on confirmation bias and preconceptions.
While yes there is a deep state, yes there is human trafficking, etc., there are not tunnels full of
children in New York City. Yet that was an extremely popular set of disinformation prior to the
election that multiple huge voices were talking about with literally no basis in fact whatsoever.
These things become narrative reinforcement and they are very unhealthy on your mind, your
general psyche and your well-being and they are unhealthy in terms of how you go about
differentiating what is real and what is not. If you continuously train yourself to accept
information that is fantastical in nature that does not have the burden of proof behind it,
eventually you will have utterly confused your own mind’s ability to pinpoint a fallacy. Then you
will genuinely be lost and you will have to, as I keep urging you to, completely detoxify off of
that environment and its difficult to do. It becomes an addiction to people.
I urge you instead of looking for trusted sources, instead of living in confirmation bias for one
manufactured side or the other, consider everyone’s opinions equally, look at all the facts that
you have available, weigh them carefully, compare narratives to one another and then
formulate well-rounded opinion. Use the mind God gave you. He gave it to you for the reason. I
urge you, all of you, be the people I know you can be. Be slow with what you believe and weigh
your information carefully. Be analytical. Be scientific in your approach to what you believe.
Here’s an example of confirmation bias. My neighbor,
my friend, my relative told me ‘look at this’. When we begin to believe because we are a social
species that naturally believes what other people believe to be true, right. If a group believes
something there must be credence to it. But that is not always the case. Which is why I keep
urging people to be analytical in the way they look at things. Look at who wrote it, why did they
write it, what audience is he catering to, is it based in any sort of fact, where did the story
originate from. Questions like this where we spend just a little bit of time - it doesn’t take as
much time as people think - can really save us from being ill-informed in general and they can
train us to spot the telltale signs of misinformation and disinformation. Eventually you become
analytically minded and it becomes habitual and that’s really what you want to do is foster that
sort of habit when you are looking into information
More hidden history
https://www.youtube.com/c/ProjectKnowledge/videos
This is Sylivie Ivanova's channel
https://www.youtube.com/c/newearthancienthistory/videos
Complete garbage website
Nobody has ever been charged with the Sherman murders.
Highly unlikely that a puppet would be involved in this since P employs professional hitmen for wetworks.
P = Pharmaceutical oligarchs who now rule the world
The end game revealed in all its glory
We All Rise Up
We each do our part working as a team
We stop cheerleading from the sidelines and find a task that we can do to help
We all put some skin in the game
Because…
This is not a game
We are fighting for our lives and freedoms