Present and Future

What does the future hold?  It is hard to tell.  The masses have accepted all sorts of abuse from their governments with little too no protest.  At some level they even seem to like it.  Most people have no critical reasoning ability and are thus defenseless against the whole Covid Hoax.

Carl Jung wrote a book called Present and Future, later renamed as the Undiscovered Self when it was translated into English.  Even though the book was written in the 50s, it was very prophetic to our current age.  Jung saw back then, as did those other wise souls like George Orwell, that a very totalitarian future was planned for humanity.  Jung believed that the only defense was that any given country had a stratum of population that was intelligent and moral enough to stand against the totalitarians.  Jung did not give an exact estimate of what percentage was needed but stated that it could be as high as 40% of the population or it could likely be much less.  I think today we now know that it is indeed much less.  That the level of the population that is both intelligent and contain moral courage is low and is especially low in all positions of power in government to include the local and state level.  There is hardly anybody that is willing to stand against tyranny and thus so few see the truth of the hell that is now embracing them.

I have great trouble understanding what the normie thinks because the average normie is usually overweight and fat people have smaller and more damaged brains. I can’t relate to that but something in the normie makes them exceedingly passive and trusting of even the most evil liars and the most obvious lies.  Their seems to be no level of discernment at all.  It is hard to say exactly what is the cause of the normies slavish impulses but whatever the reason the normie seems to be almost completely ruled by the TV and in the modern age social media as well.  What is worse, is that normie thinks he is very important and very intelligent as he repeats all the stupid ideas that he heard on TV or read on Facebook.  To be perfectly honest, these people are really horrible and I despise being around them.  You can literally tell them anything and as long as the TV said it, they will believe it.  On the other hand, somebody like me has no ability to influence the normie at all because I am not on TV and I am not a celebrity.  This is really the worst part about democracy, this idea that everybody is important and everybody’s opinion matters.  At least in the middle ages the peasants knew their opinions didn’t matter but the modern mass man, who has a life that is much worse than the medieval peasant by most measures thinks he is a far superior being.  It almost makes you understand why the globalists want to cull the herd.  I joke of course, just cause people are idiots does not mean that I want to kill them.  They just need strong leaders that care for their welfare.  Well, we are a long way from that with the satanic occupation of the American Government.

Despite all the major set backs for liberty, there is also great cause for hope.  This is the final push by the globalists to create their New World Order.  They hope to have it complete in ten years.  Everybody is to be chipped, tracked, and enslaved to the system by 2030.  That is the goal of the globalists.  To achieve this goal the totalitarian mask has to come off.  They will try to blame a virus or some kind of “cyber pandemic” but it will be harder and harder to conceal their control system.  The debt economies of the West are about to implode.  When this happens, it will be one of the greatest economic disasters of human history.  Most likely it will be by far the greatest.  Everything up to this point will pale in comparison to the financial and economic catastrophe ahead. Though this my sound scary, it actually offers great hope.  The system as we have it now can not last.  The present system is what is enslaving us.  This system has been enslaving us long before there ever was a “pandemic”.  The scamdemic was merely a way that the globalists tried to get out ahead of the economic house of cards that they created and was destined to fail. This will be both a time of great opportunity and great danger.  The fate of the world will be on a knife edge.  This will also be a time for great deeds and heroes.  A return to man’s primal nature.  This is where free humanity will stand and face evil or it will perish and be enslaved. I for one welcome such an opportunity.  It is the grey dullness of this current world that the globalists have created that is soul crushing.  Alternatively, the time that is coming will give every soul a chance to LIVE.

41,030 thoughts on “Present and Future

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  2. The fish collectors hoping to save rare species from extinction
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    In the rural town of Petersham, Massachusetts, 78-year-old Peter George keeps 1,000 fish in his basement.

    “Baseball, sex, fish,” he says, listing his life’s great loves. “My single greatest attribute is that I am passionate about things. That sort of defines me.”

    All of George’s fish are endangered Rift Lake cichlids: colorful, freshwater fish native to the Great Lakes of East Africa. Inside his 42 tanks, expertly squeezed into a single subterranean room, the fish shimmer under artificial lights, knowing nothing of the expansive waters in which their ancestors once swam, thousands of miles away.

    Due to pollution, climate change and overfishing, freshwater fish are thought to be the second most endangered vertebrates in the world. In Lake Victoria, a giant lake shared between Kenya, Uganda and Tanzania, over a quarter of endemic species, including countless cichlids, are either critically endangered or extinct.

    But for some species, there is still hope. A community of rare fish enthusiasts collect endangered species of freshwater fish from the lakes and springs of East Africa, Mexico and elsewhere, and preserve them in their personal fish tanks in the hope that they might one day be reintroduced in the wild.

    “I’m a hard ass,” George says. “There is hope.”
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    George has been collecting fish since 1948 when, as a four-year-old in the Bronx, he would look after his grandmother’s rainbow fish. He soon developed “multiple tank syndrome” – a colloquial term used by fish collectors to denote the spiral commonly experienced after acquiring one’s first tank, which involves the sufferer buying many more tanks within a short space of time. He has not stopped collecting since.

    Now, George sees himself as a conservationist; his tanks contain what is known as “insurance populations” – populations of endangered fish that are likely to go extinct in their natural habitats. He believes that when the time is right, they can be taken from his collection and returned to their homes. “I would never accept the fact that they couldn’t be reintroduced,” he says.

  3. The world’s largest architectural model captures New York City in the ’90s
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    The Empire State building stands approximately 15 inches tall, whereas the Statue of Liberty measures at just under two inches without its base. At this scale, even ants would be too big to represent people in the streets below.

    These lifelike miniatures of iconic landmarks can be found on the Panorama — which, at 9,335 square feet, is the largest model of New York City, meticulously hand-built at a scale of 1:1,200. The sprawling model sits in its own room at the Queens Museum, where it was first installed in the 1960s, softly rotating between day and night lighting as visitors on glass walkways are given a bird’s eye view of all five boroughs of the city.

    To mark the model’s 60th anniversary, which was celebrated last year, the museum has published a new book offering a behind-the-scenes look at how the Panorama was made. Original footage of the last major update to the model, completed in 1992, has also gone on show at the museum as part of a 12-minute video that features interviews with some of the renovators.

    The Queens Museum’s assistant director of archives and collections, Lynn Maliszewski, who took CNN on a visit of the Panorama in early March, said she hopes the book and video will help to draw more visitors and attention to the copious amount of labor — over 100 full-time workers, from July 1961 to April 1964 — that went into building the model.

    “Sometimes when I walk in here, I get goosebumps, because this is so representative of dreams and hopes and family and struggle and despair and excitement… every piece of the spectrum of human emotion is here (in New York) happening at the same time,” said Maliszewski. “It shows us things that you can’t get when you’re on the ground.”
    Original purpose
    The Panorama was originally built for the 1964 New York World’s Fair, then the largest international exhibition in the US, aimed at spotlighting the city’s innovation. The fair was overseen by Robert Moses, the influential and notorious urban planner whose highway projects displaced hundreds of thousands New Yorkers. When Moses commissioned the Panorama, which had parts that could be removed and redesigned to determine new traffic patterns and neighborhood designs, he saw an opportunity to use it as a city planning tool.

    Originally built and revised with a margin of error under 1%, the model was updated multiple times before the 1990s, though it is now frozen in time. According to Maliszewski, it cost over $672,000 to make in 1964 ($6.8 million in today’s money) and nearly $2 million (about $4.5 million today) was spent when it was last revised in 1992.

  4. A librarian ran off with a yacht captain in the summer of 1968. It was the start of an incredible love story
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    The first time Beverly Carriveau saw Bob Parsons, she felt like a “thunderbolt” passed between them.

    “This man stepped out of a taxi, and we both just stared at each other,” Beverly tells CNN Travel today. “You have to remember, this is the ‘60s. Girls didn’t stare at men. But it was a thunderbolt.”

    It was June 1968. Beverly was a 23-year-old Canadian university librarian on vacation in Mazatlan, Mexico, with a good friend in tow.

    Beverly had arrived in Mazatlan that morning. She’d been blown away by the Pacific Ocean views, the colorful 19th-century buildings, the palm trees.

    Now, Beverly was browsing the hotel gift store, admiring a pair of earrings, when she looked up and spotted the man getting out of the taxi. The gift shop was facing the parking lot, and there he was.

    “I was riveted,” says Beverly. “He was tall, handsome…”

    Eventually, Beverly tore away her gaze, bought the earrings and dashed out of the store.

    “We locked eyes so long, I was embarrassed,” she says.

    No words had passed between them. They hadn’t even smiled at each other. But Beverly felt like she’d revealed something of herself. She felt like something had happened, but she couldn’t describe it.
    Beverly rushed to meet her friend, still feeling flustered. Over dinner in the hotel restaurant, Beverly confided in her friend about the “thunderbolt” moment.

    “I told my girlfriend, ‘Something just happened to me. I stared at this man, and I couldn’t help myself.’”

    Then, the server approached Beverly’s table.

    “He said, ‘I have some wine for you, from a man over there.’”

    The waiter was holding a bottle of white wine, indicating at the bar, which was packed with people.

    As a rule, Beverly avoided accepting drinks from men in bars. She never felt especially comfortable with the power dynamic — plus, she had a long-term partner back in Canada.

    “I had a serious boyfriend at home and thought my life was on course,” she says.

  5. Within the ebook Luxurious Fever, Robert H. Frank argues that satisfaction with levels of earnings is way more strongly affected by how somebody’s revenue compares with others than its absolute degree.

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