Historical: Overview

Civil War, USA – Image by WikiImages from Pixabay

One might assume I went off on a tangent weaving the esoteric with the historical, but I did this purposely to emphasize that the truth can be known and this false mantra of “you never really know” can be tossed into the recycle bin.  After experiencing some of my own past life regressions, it was logical to accept the reality of an evolving record of past lives for all individual souls.  Each lifetime is like a book; each individual soul compiles a library of books; each entity or Oversoul becomes a consortium of libraries.  From a historical perspective, some people appear to “get away with murder,” yet from an esoteric perspective, the individual soul is held accountable for all deaths, betrayals, abandonments, physical and sexual abuse, mind-fuck like MKULTRA, and a few others.  Two people can be opposed in their beliefs and debate back and forth without creating a karmic ribbon; when that “karmic line” is crossed, then a ribbon between souls is created.  Battling the injustices of the world can be a worthy cause for the activist or the lawyer; worshipping injustice and “hating on the perceived enemy” can be a detrimental detour.  Either way, all choices are valid as are the implications that arise from those choices.

The study of history for most people in 20th century Western culture began with books and the TV.  I remember watching the mini-series “Roots” and how it impacted me emotionally at nine years old.  It would be another decade before I delved deeper into this study finding reputable researchers, authors and historians to expand my view.  A few of the books I found in my twenties were on the founding fathers, on secret societies, on global agendas, on patriotism and activism, on how the “isms” were used to shape societies and cultures… capitalism, socialism, communism, fascism, and so on.  The late Jim Marrs wrote a book entitled Rule By Secrecy and David Icke wrote And the Truth Shall Set You Free; these books delve into the history of the global cabal with some unique twists, turns and perspectives.  Another book I came across was Conspirators Hierarchy:  The Story of the Committee of 300 by John Coleman.  When I read Cathy O’Brien’s Trance Formation of America I was appalled at the level of MK-Ultra mind-fuck and pedophilia that she exposed. 

Image by Gordon Johnson from Pixabay

More books came my way including Daniel Estulin’s The True Story of the Bilderberg Group and his more recent Tavistock Institute; the trilogy by Chalmers Johnson on the military-industrial complex is a college course in itself.  Thom Hartmann wrote books on the history of corporations and corporate dominance; author Chris Hedges added his knowledge and perspectives on this subject with over a dozen books himself.  I also enjoyed reading Irving Stone’s historical biographies as well as Anton Chaitkin’s books, Treason in America: From Aaron Burr to Averell Harriman and Who We Are: America’s Fight for Universal Progress, from Franklin to Kennedy, Volume I: 1750s to 1850s. If you would like a sample of Anton’s writing, read his essay on the Lincoln Revolution HERE. I found these three non-fiction books interesting because of their titles: The Untold History of the United States, The People’s History of the United States, and A Renegade History of the United States; each book is a unique study in American history and expands the student’s perspective on the historical.

In 2020, I discovered Matthew Ehret and his wife, Cynthia Chung and their nonprofit organization, the Rising Tide Foundation which is an excellent source for researching history and the classics. Their Digital Library of Alexandria is a comprehensive collection of authors and their writings. Matt is the author of a four volume series entitled, “Clash of the Two Americas” which he co-wrote with Cynthia. In 2022, she published her first book, “The Empire on Which the Black Sun Never Set: The Birth of International Fascism and Anglo-American Foreign Policy.”

Image by Dr StClaire from Pixabay

The AEA encourages individuals to study outside the box and explore historical anomalies that exist in our culture, to expand one’s knowledge and perspectives on history, and to see through the disinformation and various forms of propaganda that is labeled history.  There are several ways to approach this study and the key is a genuine curiosity to revisit the past both as an individual soul, as a society and as a planet.  The collective consciousness will gradually evolve; however, our individual thoughts and choices effects the collective; in this way we are creating a renaissance in consciousness that is rippling across the planet planting seeds for many generations into the future.

“…the most powerful single force in the world today is neither communism nor capitalism, neither the H-bomb nor the guided missile – it is man’s eternal desire to be free and independent. The great enemy of that tremendous force of freedom is called, for want of a more precise term, imperialism – and today that means Soviet imperialism and, whether we like it or not, and though they are not to be equated, Western imperialism. Thus the single most important test of American foreign policy today is how we meet the challenge of imperialism, what we do to further man’s desire to be free. On this test more than any other, this Nation shall be critically judged by the uncommitted millions in Asia and Africa, and anxiously watched by the still hopeful lovers of freedom behind the Iron Curtain. If we fail to meet the challenge of either Soviet or Western imperialism, then no amount of foreign aid, no aggrandizement of armaments, no new pacts or doctrines or high-level conferences can prevent further setbacks to our course and to our security.”

REMARKS OF SENATOR JOHN F. KENNEDY IN THE SENATE, WASHINGTON, D.C., JULY 2, 1957

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