by Todd Hayen
If a government's decision helps anyone it is always an after effect... or an afterthought or a collateral unintended benefit.
Anyone (which turns out to be most everyone) who supports this and thinks their government, or their nation, is operating in the people's interest is signing their own death warrant.
Oh my yes, there are:
But that is not what I am writing about right now.
I am writing about the thing, and group of things, that will wipe all of that good stuff off the face of the earth. Sure, sure, sure, it won't be forever. Good will prevail, but it could be a million years before it all comes back if we let it go now.
And I think it is worth
the fight to preserve what we've got.
Societies were close knit:
And considering how different things were back then, there probably was not as much incentive to be selfish, power hungry, wampum hungry, or weird in other ways.
I also would guess this
complacent sort of culture, if there ever was such a thing, did not
last very long.
Being the Grand Poobah of many people had to have the same allure it has today.
Things were a lot worse back in history than today in a lot of ways.
But things along these lines did actually get better, in my humble opinion, during a brief period in the West.
I don't think anything like it, on that particular scale, had been attempted in the human experience post antiquity (which we, regardless of what we have been told, know very little about).
It indeed was a grand experiment:
The new fledgling country created a Constitution that was truly inspiring at the time.
The checks and balances incorporated in that government was also inspiring, and did hold itself together fairly well for quite some time. Of course there are always problems, as there would be with anything brave and novel.
But it all hung together
fairly well for a bit of time.
Even if you disagree that the new United States of America was an exciting bit of work, you probably can agree that putting one man, or woman, in charge of a lot of people, has never gone all that well.
Before the presidency of the United States, there were of course Kings and Queens. Even the US was concerned about having a single person at the head of the executive branch of government, lest it be too much like a monarchy.
Some continue (many
actually) to believe that the US form of government is still the
best, and if certain things are readjusted, the US will continue to
be the greatest country in the world.
Why...? That would take a book, or several, to address.
Point here is that we can no longer trust this system to be objective, compassionate, fair, benevolent, and not self-serving and destructive.
In fact, it seems that
the system itself is selling out to foreign interests, and the
actual sovereignty of the nation is threatened, and this threat is
largely coming from within.
What we see is much like
watching a Sci-Fi motion picture where the bad guys are stripping a
nation of everything that makes it the "representation of the
people" into a personal self-serving slave to unelected powers.
Well, when you really think about it, there is no way this sort of global take over could ever be in the best interests of other human beings living on the planet.
Even if you could have a benevolent world power (which is an oxymoron, in my opinion) you would, just by its nature, have to rule in very broad strokes, i.e., everything you implemented would have to be implemented for the good of the majority.
That leaves quite a few people out.
What does this sound like?
But any world leader(s) will have to focus on the destruction of humanity before they can accomplish any sort of world control over its inhabitants.
That is simply the nature of the beast.
I'll say it again:
Right now (and this will
probably change) most of
the psyop is accomplished either through
the carrot enticement and then ruling with the stick, or through
fear (stick first, carrot as a reward for compliance.)
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