I found the video excruciatingly sad and like you, his repetition of the "winner" and "loser" narrative spoke volumes. To admit one has been monumentally duped is a step in the direction towards being more honest with oneself, I feel. We are all on a spectrum of that process of realisation, however, as what is unfolding is much much bigg…
I found the video excruciatingly sad and like you, his repetition of the "winner" and "loser" narrative spoke volumes. To admit one has been monumentally duped is a step in the direction towards being more honest with oneself, I feel. We are all on a spectrum of that process of realisation, however, as what is unfolding is much much bigger than the debate about the so-called vaccine, which is the tip of an equally monumental iceberg of revelations about how we've allowed ourselves to be played and enslaved to faceless entities and the "powers-that-should-not-be". The worm, so to speak, is turning.
Just to add that the perpetuation of the "divide and rule/conquer" programme is exemplified in the video. Something important is required of all those he perceives as being "right" which is to be magnanimous and compassionate. However, I've encountered people who are wedded to of their rightness and with it comes righteousness and indignation. I find that particularly those who feel they have been mistreated, vilified, gas-lit, ostracised etc., are also in what Charles Eisenstein describes as the story of separation. I get it. People have lost livelihoods, friends, loved ones, their perceived freedoms. How, though, can a corrupt, harmful system be exposed and crumble without some of us being "duped"? Without some of us choosing to "take the shot"? Without some of us accepting everything the MSM and Govern-ment says? What this has done, I feel, is to show each of us where we too might reject and covertly wish ill on others in our own obsession with being "right". Maybe what is needed right now is to applaud each other's courage in the roles we chose to play, after all we need to work together to rise together.
I found the video excruciatingly sad and like you, his repetition of the "winner" and "loser" narrative spoke volumes. To admit one has been monumentally duped is a step in the direction towards being more honest with oneself, I feel. We are all on a spectrum of that process of realisation, however, as what is unfolding is much much bigger than the debate about the so-called vaccine, which is the tip of an equally monumental iceberg of revelations about how we've allowed ourselves to be played and enslaved to faceless entities and the "powers-that-should-not-be". The worm, so to speak, is turning.
Just to add that the perpetuation of the "divide and rule/conquer" programme is exemplified in the video. Something important is required of all those he perceives as being "right" which is to be magnanimous and compassionate. However, I've encountered people who are wedded to of their rightness and with it comes righteousness and indignation. I find that particularly those who feel they have been mistreated, vilified, gas-lit, ostracised etc., are also in what Charles Eisenstein describes as the story of separation. I get it. People have lost livelihoods, friends, loved ones, their perceived freedoms. How, though, can a corrupt, harmful system be exposed and crumble without some of us being "duped"? Without some of us choosing to "take the shot"? Without some of us accepting everything the MSM and Govern-ment says? What this has done, I feel, is to show each of us where we too might reject and covertly wish ill on others in our own obsession with being "right". Maybe what is needed right now is to applaud each other's courage in the roles we chose to play, after all we need to work together to rise together.