Reclaiming our Humanity
Our society has become grossly fragmented, as pointed out by American virologist and immunologist Dr Robert Malone, through social media, electronic appliances, and the stress of what we have experienced in the last few years. We need to heal ourselves and come together. We have to recreate our social bonds and community where integrity and human dignity are of the utmost importance. “That’s how we get out of this”, he says, spot on. “I don’t know how we’re going to get out of it, but it’s got to start with us, all of us, finding common ground.”
Journalist and former PR manager of international (including Hollywood) celebrities, Corinna Busch, says the “magnifying glass” corona is bringing to light the poor mental state lots of people are in. In her work as a coach she noticed how so many people don’t really know themselves. She emphasised the need for us to develop empathy, first for ourselves, then we can also be empathetic to others. Decision makers, she says, be it in politics or in large corporations, have one thing in common: they totally lack empathy, or else they wouldn’t be in those positions. While the lawyer Dr Reiner Fuellmich, who has been very active in trying to bring those responsible for the lockdowns and all the atrocities to justice, points out that spirituality is something “they” don’t have, and neither reckon with. Showing empathy for them and their actions is certainly not an easy feat, but it’s very powerful. This is about humanity against inhumanity. They can only feign feelings and don’t have any empathy whatsoever. They have no access to spirit. And Dr Naomi Wolf (author of The End of America) reminds us that keeping publicly quiet about spiritual questions wasn’t always the case for Western intellectuals. Is it Time for Intellectuals to Talk about God? she asks. “It was not until after World War Two and then the rise of Existentialism – the glorification of a world view in which the true intellectual showed his or her mettle by facing the absence of God and our essential aloneness – that smart people were expected to shut up in public about God.”
And transhumanists are taking the glorification of this world view to an unprecedented extreme. There seems to be a relentless drive to overcome the human as “they yearn to reach intellectual heights as far above any current human genius as humans are above other primates; to be resistant to disease and impervious to ageing; to have unlimited youth and vigor; to exercise control over their own desires, moods, and mental states; to be able to avoid feeling tired, hateful, or irritated about petty things; to have an increased capacity for pleasure, love, artistic appreciation, and serenity; to experience novel states of consciousness that current human brains cannot access.” There is a longing for transcendence that has very strong spiritual-religious connotations. Except that they don’t believe in anything spiritual. And this longing to surrender to something higher, which can no longer be fulfilled by old religions, has created a void. But since “nothing stays empty in this world”, it is now machines that need to fill this void, and technology is used as a substitute for an inner spiritual path.
Independent journalist and cultural anthropologist Aya Velázquez (China and the “Great Reset”) has experienced transhumanists on a personal level and explained that they deeply loathe human weaknesses and imperfections. Qualities such as humility are seen as humiliating and don’t have a place in their concept of the superhuman. Yet, even a genius like Goethe (author of Faust) wasn’t spared the experience of feeling small and insignificance. As a teenager, realising how much it takes to join the ranks of great men, he wrote a poem in which he compares himself to a worm that tries to soar like an eagle, striving upwards, yet squirming and tensing all nerves, while remaining in the dust; when, all of a sudden, a wind arises, lifting both dust and worm in whirls, the worm deems himself as great as the eagle. But when the wind just as suddenly draws in its breath, the worm sinks down with the dust and continues to crawl as before.
A befitting illustration of transhumanists who see themselves as the new invincible gods who can “improve” and “perfect” Creation as never before, the “wind” in their case being technology, which begs the question: Do the Gateses, Schwabs and Soroses of this world ever doubt themselves and their motivations? What makes them “great” is the insane amount of money they possess, which is what gives them their power over us. But are they happy and content with all their super-abundant affluence? Why would they need to control and subjugate the whole world? They are nothing but petty shells on the way to becoming a creation in the very image of their own conceptions, of soulless machines, or what little that’s left of anything still resembling a soul. I would not want to be in their shoes (let alone their skins). What can their money buy them other than illusions? Money itself being the greatest illusion of all – worthless pieces of paper, or numbers on a computer screen, a purely abstract idea with no spiritual counterpart, making the world go round, not because it is an innate force of nature, but because we have given it that power. Just as snow melts into oblivion when the sun regains its power, the mists of deception dissolve into irrelevance when truth prevails.
What will they, the rulers of this world, bring with them when they have crossed the threshold we all have to cross one day (despite their frantic efforts to continue their lives forever), apart from their insatiable greed for money and power? Making others feel miserable gives the miserable a (false) sense of gratification, and in their most pitiable misery they feel the urge to drag everyone else down with them.
US National Intelligence Analyst David Martin in Mikki Willis’ documentary Plandemic: “Every decision that is being made today, by any of the conspiring parties, … has led to devastation, because they lost touch with their fellow humanity. But that’s an invitation for each one of us to examine how we are living, and how not a single decision we make, not one, in any moment, is without consequence. This is our moment to reclaim our humanity.” Our humanity and sanity.
https://odysee.com/@YoungCoconutMusic:a/reiner-fuellmich-nuremberg-20:5
https://whatistranshumanism.org/
https://odysee.com/@UNCENSORED:c/PLANDEMIC2:1