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As soon as they git the big picture, my (yours,ours) world(s), will follw the leaders. Or better yet,become part of the pack that will show & tell. Don't confuse the issue of what middle amerika is, or stands for. We don't need nor want the supervision of Uncle Sam (bachlor?) Television is how it will all take place for our type of a true blue,rooting-tooting, reality show for young and old. Wal-mart can set up work shops for all the good o'l boys and gals to do some serious learning. I would like to guess that a lot of 'um aren't even on The Information Superhighway yet. Jist no more income taxes will make them into a bunches of happy campers. Shoot , all's I got are one of them doggone Webtv's. Cell phone?? No movies' cable tv and I git all the info ( Rumor Mills ,Surfing the Apoc.,to name a few) that I could ever need or want. Oh yea, Sananda noted today to git 6 hours of work, include house & yard, 6 more for rest of the body, 6 for reactional purposes , and the last 6 fir spiritual growth & learning. But he said that they would (could) all overlap to any degree that you would so desire. That new show on Comedy Central , 'Daisy does Amerika', is pretty funny and she should try NESARA for one of her episodes. Over & out, Wild Bill ps) ya know what's worse than a red neck? a farmer tan.
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Changes won't be easy and its going to be very difficult for people that haven't had alot of money anyway.
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I recently came across a web site that I find very useful in integrating the various political, economic, spiritual and individual aspects of NESARA and all the other prophecized shifts with an American identity, Stephen Dinan's Sacred America series.
http://www.stephendinan.com/
Excerpt from the first essay, 1-14-06:
"In the course of 2006, I intend to write weekly about how we can reclaim a sacred vision for America, a vision in which America is truly leading the next stage of planetary evolution...out of a profoundly selfless sense of compassion, honor and destiny. I see this as the essence of our political DNA which was activated in such extraordinaray ways 230 years ago. There is a deeper history of America that when recognized, points to an even more glorious future, one in which we actualize our ideals...into a peaceful, sustainable, and prosperous future."
Excerpt from the second essay, 1-20-06:
"The love of many Americans for their country is no small thing".
"To change America, we must first love it. But once we've established that loving relationship, we must then champion an even greater, more mature version of our country. Even if one believes that we are the greatest country on earth, we are not nearly so great today as we could be tomorrow."
"Conservatives have often erred on the side of patriotic pride that reinforces the status quo and blinds us to the next higher possibility. They can become rigid and close-minded. Liberals have often dwelt in the critiques to such an extent that they no longer feel authentic love for their country. Their voices can become strident and bitter. Both approaches hold us back from a deeper kind of relationship with our country that is based in a love that transcends dichotomies to embrace the truth of where we are -- including all our failures, inadequacies, and problems -- while still passionately calling us to our highest potential".
Excerpt from # 4, 2-3-06:
"The Great Seal of the United States...contains the Latin motto of E Pluribus Unum - Out of Many, One".
"The creation of greater political unions works in tandem with the shift in consciousness towards greater wholes...When we truly, deeply recognize our unity, we stop fearing, hating or attempting to destroy the other. We expand the definition of our tribe".
"By bringing our country back into alignment with our motto, we can help advance a historical transition beyond a global culture of war to an enduring civilization of peace. And that is why I believe the simple Latin phrase E Pluribus Unum was inscribed on our most sacred seal".
I hope you find this helpful and reassuring. It's easier to surf the winds of change if you have both a road map to the future and a spiritual anchor to one's history.
Last edited by Amethyst (2006-02-12 04:49:20)
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Coming to Terms with Genocide
Sacred America series #9 March 12, 2006
By Stephen Dinan
Last week I set the context for why America needs to delve deeper into our history to clear patterns that are contributing to our current self-centeredness. Many of these patterns have historical roots in the misuse of power…. Our founding philosophy aspires towards universal rights, which are linked to a deep respect for the potential in each of us. However, the way in which we have wielded power often does not reflect that deep respect. To understand this gap between our ideals and our embodiment of those ideals, we need to start very early in our history.
The first historical fact that has never been adequately faced, understood, and integrated is the fact that we are a country founded on genocide. We celebrate the history of our founding fathers and their noble strivings and forget that we are living on land taken from decimated peoples. The continent Europeans "discovered" had a
long history of settlement, with a great diversity of societies. In 1492, there were at least 10-25 million indigenous people north of Mexico (some estimates run much higher). Many of these peoples had sophisticated civilizations, mature philosophies, and advanced systems of government. Some met the European invaders with
generosity, which was typically then exploited. Others fought back, which often merely hastened their demise. Within a few hundred years of conquest and disease, less than 1 million Native Americans remained.
We need to let that fact sink in: America was founded on a Native American genocide more extensive than that of Hitler's genocide of the Jews (6 million killed). This historical fact, when soberly faced, explains a great deal about why our country's heart is not truly open, why we are prone to compensatory arrogance…. We have not confessed the damage, humbly worked towards reconciliation, and learned the deeper lessons about power this experience could teach us….
Mature use of power requires an ability to see oneself clearly as both a potential perpetrator and a potential victim and then to transcend that dichotomy by consecrating power to the service of the whole. Power wielded for the sake of the few reinforces a separative psychology that is ultimately rooted in scarcity, fear, and greed. Such a psychology cannot lead to a peaceful and prosperous society.
To wield power in a healthy way, we need to go beyond the psychology of perpetrators and victims, winners and losers, oppressors and oppressed. The key to transcending that dichotomy is that we need to come to terms with BOTH the oppressors and oppressed in us. We need to see the power-mad Hitler in us as well as the Jew being sent to the gas chamber. If we cannot see ourselves in both, our identity becomes lopsided and thus potentially dangerous, especially as we wield increasing power.
Americans tend to sculpt a view of our history that concentrates on our liberation of the oppressed, such as liberation from England...liberation from Europe's religious
strictures, and liberation from state-controlled economies through capitalism. We see ourselves as the redeemer of the victim and the liberator of the downtrodden
....And it is undeniably true about America that in many cases we have acted as a great liberator.
Identifying ourselves primarily with this positive side, however, means that we have a much more challenging time seeing ourselves as oppressors. We have an almost allergic reaction to evidence that we are in the wrong. We are healers, innovators, and liberators not selfish rulers, exploiters, and neo-colonialists, right? The truth is
that we are both…..
Facing America's original genocide and doing the work of reconciliation is one of the important keys to opening the door to a mature relationship with power. (1) First, doing so can lead us to recognize that we are also aggressors, an essential precondition to being able to wield power with wisdom as well as be truthful about current instances in which we are acting as oppressors. (2) It opens us to a deeper connection to the land on which we live. So long as we ignore the festering wound in our relationship with this land, we tend to live in unsustainable, ungrounded, and disrespectful ways. (3) Third, the work of healing our original genocide can reconnect our culture as a whole with Native lineages, which offer essential wisdom for our present time…
America's arrogance reflects our intuition of a powerful destiny, followed by an attempt to inflate into that role before we've matured into it more organically. To wield power in a sacred way requires humility, which in turn requires facing all the ways we have misused power….
I hope that America does not need a dramatic humbling to overcome our arrogance and self-indulgence. I hope that we can face our collective shadows with an open heart, do what it takes to heal the past and establish right relationship with the peoples we have harmed. Then we can earn our greatness through humility rather than assuming it through domination.
http://www.stephendinan.com
Last edited by Amethyst (2006-03-13 05:34:23)
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Amethyst wrote:
Identifying ourselves primarily with this positive side, however, means that we have a much more challenging time seeing ourselves as oppressors. We have an almost allergic reaction to evidence that we are in the wrong. We are healers, innovators, and liberators not selfish rulers, exploiters, and neo-colonialists, right? The truth is
that we are both…..
Excellent article, Amethyst. A hard core look at the evolution of our country isn't so pretty is it? And is not history yet again repeating itself with our governement's ongoing sickness to invade even more countries today? How many more rounds do we need to go through anyway? Of course, the kind of "leadership" at the helm isn't helping now is it?
Last edited by organic (2006-03-13 15:26:14)
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Part of healing is processing the shadow, individually & collectively.
"It is the gift of redemption to release people from their agony. But in doing so, you also activate their darkness; all human pain is a form of stored darkness."
Stuart Wilde
Redemption Song # 5
2005
"To change America, we must first love it. But once we've established that loving relationship, we must then champion an even greater, more mature version of our country.
Stephen Dinan
Sacred America Series # 2
I have a sense that unconditional love for ourselves, others, the collective is an integral part of redemption, proceessing our shadows and freeing us of "stored darkness". A kind of changing the contents in our storage lockers.
Amethyst
Last edited by Amethyst (2006-03-14 13:58:58)
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