Fundamentally Flawed
By challenging the accepted authorities we have an opportunity to reset the course of humanity by addressing those questions the experts have failed to answer.
Culturally, we are taught to be suspicious of simplicity. We are encouraged to cede our authority to the experts. Those experts are more than happy to perpetuate a system which excludes and separates using the twin tools of ridicule and complexity. After all complexity is good for business.
Anyone encountering double entry accounts for the first time will know what I mean. Things that should be simple or are intuitively obvious become shrouded in mystery, often leading us to question our own sense of knowing. As I stare blankly at my accountant, confused as to how the amount of money I have isn't actually how much money I have, he grins with a subtle superiority, "it's not as simple as that".
Complexity is a favourite tool in financial markets, as portrayed beautifully in the film The Big Short. Make people feel stupid enough and they will override their own sense of there being something wrong. This creates a beautiful breeding ground for fraud where even sophisticated and intelligent minds are either brought into the scam or mocked for stating the obvious.
It is often said that the best questions are the ones most are too embarrassed to ask. Our fear of appearing stupid leaves many of the most fundamental flaws in our societal models unchallenged. Scientists, doctors, teachers, priests and politicians obscure their own ignorance with complexity. It is their inability to answer the simple questions which requires the creation of an environment in which those questions will not be asked. Ridicule is commonly used. The dismissive use of the phrase conspiracy theory is often enough to divert inquiry. But most often it is complexity which excludes.
My recent immersion in the physics presented by Mehran Keshe really brought this home to me. Keshe's first challenge to the established physics is the very nature of the elementary or fundamental particles. Keshe considers the fundamental particles such as quarks and gluons are in fact the result of the interaction of magnetic fields and so are not fundamental at all. Building a model from limited foundations has inevitably lead us to a version of reality which though not necessarily wrong (reality is subjective after all) but certainly is incomplete. The resulting limitations and anomalies require plenty of complexity to fill the gaps.
How many of us intuitively feel that "there has to be more to life than this" and feel something beyond their supposed material reality? The questions the curious raise do not sit comfortably with the experts and are accordingly excluded from the debate.
Once again how do you exclude 99% of the population from accessing the fundamental nature of their reality? Simple. Make it complex. The exclusion of so many from the conversation has inevitably created an even narrower version of realty.
Our dogged insistence on focusing on just the material reality means we are ignoring the most potent forces available to us and has inevitably lead us to a world in which we destroy in an attempt to create. Although evolving, our energy systems are largely based on changing one form of energy to another and feeding off the scraps, which is the inevitable consequence of the current paradigm's misunderstanding of the foundational principles of matter.
It's as if we have been following directions from London to New York but starting in Sydney. We will end up somewhere but it's not New York. However, if we know nothing of the world we will assume where ever we end up to be New York. What if our we are living a reality we perceive to be human but is in fact a faint shadow of the reality of being human?
My sense is that Keshe's work, and he is a long way form being alone in this awakening, gives us not just the directions but the correct starting point. By challenging the accepted authorities we have an opportunity to reset the course of humanity by addressing those questions the experts have failed to answer.
This does require reclaiming our sovereignty.
It's time to own who we really are.
LOVE
Bill