Royalty/the Ruling Class/the Elite/the Cabal/the .01%

Alternate title: Does the King get Norovirus?

We’ve all been there. That moment when brutal sensations that we forget our body is capable of unleashing upon us, rip through our system until we start to lose contact with our held sense of normalcy. A creeping realization sets in, that we must surrender to this turn of events, that there will be no willing it away. Where all our worldly comforts dissolve into an abyss of abstraction, our humility lowered beyond known limits. We consider the refuge in hugging the toilet, then that the bathtub might be necessary. We stop praying to our god for salvation. For a brief moment, we might pray instead for annihilation. Such is the mighty path of the stomach bug.

It seems to be part of our shared humanity, this fragility. That our body can dictate our reality, and that we are able to transcend it only but so far, attached as we are to it. It seems to always find ways to humble us. So, are all who inhabit a human shape basically the same? Are kings tempted to tap out on life after a cursed breakfast buffet? If they are, what separates them from us? Why did we hand our power over to them? I mean, way back when…back, back in time. Before it was a conditioned pattern of fatalistic inertia, “this is just how it is.” How did some individuals make the cut to be worshiped?

Right now I am considering two main frameworks to understand the nature of the ruling class and the evil that seems to ensue from their dominion over our Earth and us commoners.

The first is the viewpoint of the courageous David Icke, who shares ideas that include Gnostic philosophies, multiple dimensions of existence, infinite consciousness and perceptual guardrails (our five senses). In this view, we humans are in a contained reality that is useful to, and operated upon by entities that can access dimensions and energies outside of the range of our physical senses. These entities have the ability to shift at will into being perceived by us as human in form.

The second viewpoint is one I have recently encountered from the dynamic professor and ‘Predictive History’ YouTube channel creator Jiang Xuequin, a Yale educated teacher who uses game theory, pattern recognition and the study of hierarchies throughout history to explain our current reality. He posits that humans can become absolutely corrupt in the path to attainment of power. This power is consolidated by birthright and leveraged privilege, wealth, interpersonal networks and access to resources. But they are just regular humans. I do not like this viewpoint.

I agree with so much of what Mr. Xuequin says, regarding the history of our world’s global power structures, the strategic corruption of religion, and evidence of bloodthirsty practices stretching back to the beginning of time. From his experience in Ivy League education, he explores the idea that the “elites” have a specific type of cognitive and emotional operating systems, one that that sets them apart from us normies. When they protect one another and solidify power structurally, they have near absolute security. There is nothing left for them to do but seek novelty and excitement in the form of cruelty and subversion of those facets of human experience that are generally considered most essential: love, connection, growth and wisdom.

So in rejecting a set of ideas that make sense, I have to ask why? Of course, I have resistance to considering that a part of myself is secretly a bloodthirsty maniac. I also have to ask if it is scalable, is it efficient and optimal for humans to access true evil? It is certainly possible (see psychopathic personality, which is understood to be organic wiring more than any other factor). But is it only this type of human nature alone that has scaled to societal level? Or is something outside human nature pushing the outcomes in this direction?

In imagining a human experience with no prior programming about “original sin”, Cain killing Abel for a perceived ego slight, wars, ruler dominance, worship of non-visible beings, factory farming, subjective territorial boundaries, personal property, exploitation of nature, etc., what would arise naturally in us? At what point does evil inevitably enter the picture? What forces conspire to turn us against each other? I can imagine that violence could ensue only when resources are so scarce that survival of the child is in imminent peril and another is a direct threat to its continued existence. This would be a tragic impasse. My fellow unconditioned humans might feel the same and come together to brainstorm the least devastating options. Why have humans, with ever increasing means of access to resources, continued to turn against each other? Why has access to basic necessities been commercialized? Why are those at the top of the pyramid who reap the benefits of all the power, monetization and safety of resources, the very worst of “us”?

So I like David Icke’s theory. We are divine sparks of consciousness, down here, having a human experience, so limited in our perception that we can’t even conceptualize an infinity of options. We are trapped here in a perceptual prison, our bodies hardware that interact with the frequency field to run programs automatically (breathing, digestion), our divine mind software corrupted with their virus (eat or be eaten), with the pain of these seemingly ‘out of our control’ systems being harvested in the form of energy to sustain those who we cannot perceive. What explains the overtly anti-human nature of our current systems? What explains the ongoing human experience of low-grade fear, hopelessness and self-hatred? Are we really supposed to be here, experiencing all this? Did ‘we’ really choose this path? And why, even in moments of bliss, do we sense an undefinable longing, a sense of being lost and homesick?

What are your thoughts? Join and comment on the theory that speaks to your knowledge and experience, or the one that just keeps you sane enough to function.

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