108. The third eye: Chapter 7 - The manipulated ignorance
Although the One and Only is the unified whole, reality, truth, love, freedom, order, and Christianity form one unity, in different historical periods it has been presented to us in various ways. Some people even shaped the One in their own image, anthropomorphizing it, negotiating and conversing with it, giving it a name, or depicting it as an old man with a beard. This appropriation, distortion, and deviation led to the One becoming many, thus losing its sacredness. We know that when we imagine something, we do so according to our own consciousness or ignorance. As a result, the outcomes vary. For instance, the images of God created by humans have changed over different historical periods. The main issue often arose from the confusion of God with the images of God. In destroying the unity of non-religious Christian humanity, in their despair, various manipulative tools were used across different historical periods, such as:
1. Using the
concepts of people, nations, and races: These were used to incite
competition and conflict between the cultures created by different groups of
people.
2. Through politics: For
centuries, the oppositions and hatred between peoples and nations were
sustained, which can be considered a form of political prostitution.
3. Through
religions: The differences between religions were
emphasized, leading to conflicts and the assertion of the superiority of
certain religions, such as the concept of "self-selection", allowing
for the organization to separate communities. The clergy's task was to organize
these separatist communities, emphasize differences and exert control. Later,
material religions built upon this model, with the distinction and superiority
no longer needed, as the singular goal became: the acquisition of religious power
through profit.
4. Science: Instead
of being based on authentic and factual knowledge, science was driven by the
result which money was given for and continues to be given. This money, in
turn, came from those in power, who used science to serve their own interests
and justify the necessity of their power. This is how science validated
capitalism, then the proletarian dictatorship (communism), and today the
necessity of global markets, exploitation, modern slavery and the omnipotence
of profit, often through economic sciences. Moreover, many
sciences today, more accurately termed, scientism, talk about a society
dominated by machines and the obsolescence of humanity, which aligns with the
objectives of the manipulative religious powers behind the scenes.
5. Social order: It
was presented as necessary. What was not said, is that there are no healthy,
unified human societies, because people do not unite based on common interests,
but according to their individual interests or personal fears. Since society is
never unified, it lacks true order. It only has systems created from human
ignorance, most often for the purpose of manipulation and opinion formation.
These systems, of course, include religions, cultures, philosophies,
worldviews, etc., all of which are tools with which human life can be reshaped.
This continuous change and transformation can be called the social system.
Systems come and go, but the order of unity remains.
6. Equality: In reality, equality does not exist. Just as
there are no two equal people, there are no two equal human communities,
societies, or nations. Each one has its own unique historical tradition,
culture and origin. Equality was always needed for the exercise of religious
power, to implement the "divide and execute power" principle that was
designed for ignorant people. Since ignorant people did not understand their
unity with the One, they invented the concept of equality, which is nothing
more than multitude, quantity, division, or mass. A person is not equal to
others, but is equal to themselves, and creates a dual unity with the One.
When we analyse the manipulated communities
dogmatic systems, which did not exist without a mass base, directed and
changing throughout different historical periods, we often refer to the events
of the last approximately 500 years. The social, economic, political, and
religious characteristics of this period are best described by the societies
organized according to artificially created, hierarchically-free ideologies as:
1) The capitalist model: In capitalist societies, the priority of
capital means that profit must be generated at all costs, even if the resources
used—such as light, air, land, and water—are polluted and exhausted, leaving
nothing for future generations, and labour is consumed. The well-known
capitalist slogan, "the business of the business is the business," is
nothing more than legalized theft, or as it is commonly accepted, a "free
market economy". Today, we see that the "free market" has led to
the loss of human freedom, resulting in enslavement. In the book entitled An
Enquiry into The Nature and Causes of the Wealth of
Nations, published in 1776, Adam Smith discusses the
necessity of the free market, free trade (demand and supply),
productivity-based division of labour, the inalienability of private property and the contractual functioning of societies. Many of the ideals lay out in
this book and similar economic theories did not fulfil the hopes attached to
them. These and other idealistic economic principles led to the 21st century's
domination by capital and private property, which control most of the Earth's
natural resources, and in some poorer or moderately developed countries, they
are also the owners. There are numerous multinational private companies, like
BlackRock and Vanguard that have more wealth than entire countries, such as
Germany.
2) The communist model: The communist society is the twin of the
capitalist society, where the priority is the common wealth and the community
of property. The creation of this younger sibling was necessary for the
non-pagan powers, because on one hand, in order to validate profit and the
creation of new markets, contradictions, mutual hatred, and the "divide
and execute power" principle had to be enforced. On the other hand, since
capitalism had evolved over several centuries, a rapid version was needed, a
communism based on centrally planned economies, funded by American capitalists.
The planned economy would have been the tool by which the United States could
have considered Russia as its colony. The theoretical roots of communism can be
found in the Communist Manifesto written by Karl Marx in 1848 and developed in
London with Engels' help, as well as in the thesis of Darwinism. The
realization of communism led to the first and second world wars. Note:
Utopian communal wealth systems already existed 2,000 years ago, such as among
the Essenes. What could not be achieved through the totalitarian communist
dogma in the 20th century, as in the first Bolshevik communism and the
proletarian dictatorship, is now being planned in the "democratic"
framework of today's financial institutions' dictatorship in the second
Bolshevism, or demonocracy.
Comments
Post a Comment