The human being has largely become a domesticated animal, and it’s imperative going forward that we become undomesticated.
Will take a few generations, but the work starts now.
A domesticated creature will not crave freedom and wouldn’t even know how to handle it if it did.
That’s where we’re at as a species, and as conscious creatures it’s up to us to remove this conditioning and embrace the expansive experiences we’ve discarded. Reject pod life.
Personally, I am a very domesticated creature, mainly due to how I grew up and the culture that raised me. But I’m disgusted by the extent of this domesticity and am working on moving in the opposite direction.
Modern human society wants us all to be bees in a hive, but our nature is to be a wolf. Humans will never thrive or be fulfilled as bees. We will be wolves once again.
• • •
Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to
force a refresh
Short thread about @untappedgrowth and some of the difficulties he has recently encountered with some bad actors. Joel first came to my attention over a year ago, before the cattle co-op and before anyone reading this knew who he was.
He reached out to me, as so many other people do, but there was something different about this guy and it was apparent to me right away. There was this passion you rarely see in people and I immediately felt a need to help him in whatever way I could. We became friendly.
As the months rolled on, we continued to talk over twitter and along with that obvious passion, I began to see deep integrity and vision. And then he went public with his cattle co-op idea. To say I was inspired would be an understatement.
We teach our kids to question everything, including us as parents.
I like it when they ask me why I told them to do something. There should be a reason and I should be able to explain it clearly and understandably.
Our oldest understands that we are in a position of authority over him and I have explained to him why that is. He understands and can explain it back to me. This way he isn’t taught to blindly accept authority. He’s 5 and he understands.
Think about where this leads and why it’s not taught.
So papa, why does the state have authority over me?
One of the people is the infamous Richard Stengel @stengel, who publicly advocated for U.S. government propaganda aimed at its own people.
Here's the relevant clip.
According to The Hill, "Stengel will be on the agency for global media." An admitted propagandist on the agency for global media. Of course, this is deliberate.
One of the other people moving to Biden admin from MSNBC is Rahm Emmanuel's brother, Ezekiel Emanuel. All good.
The same people who spent four years delegitimizing an election are the ones sternly lecturing others about delegitimizing an election now. It’s the most predictable and shameless thing. It’s also why Russiagate was extremely reckless, it was always going to lead to this.
Then again, this is what intelligence agencies who want to tear a country apart do, and that’s exactly what U.S. intelligence agencies have done.
This is elementary. If one side refuses to accept an election result, the other side will do the same the next time.
If I wanted to destroy America on purpose I would have launched Russiagate. So we must ask, did U.S. intelligence agencies tear apart the country intentionally?
Here's the big takeaway from the 2020 election. All the trends I've been expecting have been solidified and reinforced. A total and growing distrust in once revered institutions, especially media and pompous always wrong blue checks.
A feeling that faux "elites," oligarchs and the national security state are constantly lying and manipulating the public for ends that go against the public interest. Also more of an understanding you can't fundamentally change the system via voting for president.
Sanders, Trump supporters and non-voters will all increasingly feel this way in the coming years under a Biden/Harris administration. Both sides that lean populist, even if superficially, will now discount change via voting during these circuses.