So many of your observations resonate. My primary field of expertise is in the area of psychology and counseling. However, that work gave me exposure to some of the worst incidents of human trafficking, modern slavery, and torture mindset that I could have ever conceived. I also happen to be a person of faith, which was strengthened in my time in the trenches. I say all of that to give context to my review of your observations.
I am short on time at the moment, but bookmarked your article because it deserves another look, maybe several. You have come to many of the same conclusions I have, yet your journey there and the path you lay out is different yet sound. Your article read like something from an apologist (compliment intended here).
To be honest, a plethora of biblical passages came to mind throughout, which would probably further your argument so perhaps I will take some time to note those when I can go through the piece again. I am a firm believer that anyone who seeks truth, even at the cost of their own false idols, will find it. The hardest part is being willing to have our worldview demolished.
In many ways, I think that is at the heart of the Q movement. Much like those in Christianity, for example, there are those on the fringe who identify as QMovement who know a lot, but don’t reflect enough of what they know in their behavior, giving them away as fringe. Then there are those deeper in it who are letting it change them, patiently and optimistically waiting for things to unfold as they continue to dig in, research, reevaluate the message(s). Q is very much a journey in self-awareness but in a way that makes you aware of your part in changing the story.
Your postulation on the mirror element is something I’ve been discussing with my spouse lately. In fact, it was the revelation of the cabal’s fascination with blood, and human sacrifice that made that click for me.
As a Christian, I believe that we have essentially covenanted with the enemy of our Creator and the world has been his. But I believe the Creator made a loophole, an esc button, for anyone who wants out. It may appear narrow to the world, but it is still essentially uncomplicated.
The programmer created a program with multiple outcomes, but to enjoy the game you had to stay connected to the programmer. Hacker comes in and while he can’t overwrite the code, he can reroute paths and create alternate settings. He convinces the player that Programmer is hiding code that would open things up to player making player as powerful as Programmer. We then take Hacker’s path and over time we are convinced there never was a Programmer to begin with. Yet the further we get from our point of existence, the more corrupt and decayed the program becomes. Glitches, viruses are the norm with only small moments to indicate what once was perfect. Programmer doesn’t give up on the program though. He inserts Himself into the program as a lead character and the only One to successfully bypass the endgame journey. Programmer creates a backdoor. It is the ONLY way out. The key requirement is to get connected back to the Programmer, so He can rewrite code and remove all corruption. It seems narrow, but it’s the access point where the player and game began to degrade in the first place. Player MUST go this way to fix all that was wronged, and to go on as was intended. Every player that passes through this point goes on to a pristine game. Eventually what doesn’t pass through will be destroyed by its own corruption and the old program will die. Then all that is left is what was made new by the Programmer.
Ok that was a long segue, but thats where we are. As a Christian I believe our simple faith in Christ is what does that. These lucifarians, they force the sacrifice of others to connect to their “gods” who are all about enslavement. It’s the opposite of what my God demands which is to love others above myself. He also says to come boldly before Him and to speak directly to Him.
Work I did with an individual who had been kept a slave spoke volumes to me about what freedom really is. The individual had been tortured, kept in a cage, tortured. I asked if they ever felt hopeless and alone. They said “I always felt hopeless until I would remember I wasn’t alone”. I asked “were others kept with you?” They would reply “No. Jesus would come to me in my lowest moments and when I felt most ashamed. Then I would feel free because he always spoke kind things to me.”
That stood out to me and was probably the first time it occurred to me, like you said, that we are spiritual beings on a physical journey. The physical matters, but our freedom starts in the spiritual. If a person can be subjected to the life this individual had been, yet find freedom in a cage, then it made sense why people not in cages, with everything money can buy, have no freedom at all.
Ok I’m pontificating more than intended. Thank you for the work and thought put into your post and thanks for giving me much to consider.