The Lie Of Scarcity
“If you tell a lie big enough and keep repeating it, people will eventually come to believe it. The lie can be maintained only for such time as the State can shield the people from the political, economic and/or military consequences of the lie. It thus becomes vitally important for the State to use all of its powers to repress dissent, for the truth is the mortal enemy of the lie, and thus by extension, the truth is the greatest enemy of the State.” Joseph Goebbels.
Civilization rests on a foundation of lies. Almost everything you think you know about the world is probably a lie. Right as the big lie was being introduced to the world I smelled a rat. I figure I have about 400 hours into researching every aspect I could dig up on the Covid lie. This included historical manifestations of what we call pandemics and their possible causes. Eventually, if you look into this stuff far enough you will come across the debate over germ theory. Is the theory that germs cause disease correct? It doesn’t take long, if you are earnestly looking, to discover that our understanding of the causes of disease has been manipulated, mostly by one man seeking profit. But, that couldn’t have been possible if the medical establishment hadn’t gone along with it. I’m convinced our present understanding of the role of micro-organisms in causing disease is, at the very least, flawed.
But, the debate over germ theory isn’t what this article is about. It’s about the lie of scarcity. At its core, the Covid lie is based on the notion of scarcity. It claims there is a limit to the ability of the body to heal itself. When that limit is reached, the necessity of medical intervention to aid the body in its attempts to heal itself is accepted as established truth. We have been told that sometimes we need help. In cases of catastrophic trauma, like the loss of a limb, etc., this is true. But, for most other ailments our bodies are quite capable of healing themselves. I’m not convinced we can’t heal even severe trauma. We have been told this is hogwash and we believe it. We get what we believe.
The idea of scarcity permeates our very understanding of reality.
We’ve been told water is scarce. We’ve been told petroleum is scarce. We’ve been told the Earth is finite. All lies. Lies told to control people and to convince them that mankind is much less than it really is. We are remarkable beings. Those who wish to control us can’t allow us to recognize our divine origin. Lately, the story is being told that we are the result of genetic manipulations by “the aliens.” Old texts, and even the book of Enoch, have been trotted out to convince us that we were made to be slaves; it’s in our blood. We are told we are inferior to our “creators,” the Annuaki, or some other superior race of beings. The guy with the goofy hairdo, Giorgio Tsoukalos, insist that even though we were created to be slaves, we have the DNA of the creators and thus, are able to rise above our enslavement and become like the gods. He forgets that any such arrangement would never be allowed by our lazy taskmasters, who, in their desperate quest for gold to save their atmosphere, would surely quash any resistance by their creations. It’s absurd. Why, I ask, didn’t these alien folk simply build machinery to do the job? If they can genetically engineer a race of slaves, surely they could have invented a machine to do the work. Why leave it up to a bunch of ill-tempered biological units?
The answer, of course, is to convince you that you are inferior; that you are little more than mine fodder; that you are limited. It is the ultimate expression of scarcity. The Earth is finite only in terms of the space it occupies. It is completely self sufficient. It is, and has been known for a long time that the Earth makes water deep in the mantle. Same for oil. It is constantly making more of the stuff. So much water that in Solano county, California, water started to bubble up and fill local creeks after the Napa earthquake. Water that it is being used to supplement the drinking water supply. Called primary water, water from beneath flows into countless springs and abandoned mines. Places like Elisha spring in Jericho have been supplying water for centuries. If it were up to the hydrologic cycle it would have dried up long ago.
The deepest oil well to date is the Tiber Oil Field, some 200 miles southeast of Houston, at a depth of 35,050 feet, well below any fossil layer. What? No fossils there? How in the world….? The idea that oil is scarce was exploited by none other than John D. Rockefeller. The crack fact checking team at Rueters wrote an article that tried to debunk the story that Rockefeller coined the term fossil fuels to introduce the idea of scarcity, thus making the commodity more expensive. The idea of fossil fuels was first proposed by the German chemist Casper Neumann, who observed what he believed were substances of biological origin in oil. The big snag is, Rockefeller never claimed to have coined the term fossil fuel, he only exploited it. So the article is a diversion from the truth: Rockefeller knew, or suspected, oil is constantly being produced by natural processes within the Earth and something so plentiful tends to be resistant to high prices. The idea that oil and water, arguably the two most vital liquids on Earth, are scarce and must be managed by our overlords for our own good and that we must conserve them, is central to maintaining control of the unwashed masses. It is scarcity that keeps the fear level high. What if I run out of toilet paper? Then what? Heavens to mergatroid, we must conserve oil so we can make it to the grocery store! We will die without water! Be afraid! Be very afraid!
Scarcity is the tool of tyrants. The belief that resources are scarce has been the reason for countless wars and restrictions of our inherent freedom by those who claim to have our best interests in mind. It’s all a lie. Creation, for all intents and purposes, is limitless. There is more than enough of everything to go around.
Let’s talk about energy. “in one hour, or 3600 seconds, our sun produces 1.4 x 10^31 Joules of energy or 3.8 x 10^23 kilowatt hour. It’s been doing this for about 4.5 billion years and will continue to do this every second, of every minute of every hour of every day of every year…” (From “Nikola Tesla’s Wireless Electric Automobile Explained, by Miran D. -Linkedin). In other words, we are surrounded by limitless energy. In 1931, with a simple push-pull amplifier, Tesla powered a Pierce Arrow, from which the internal combustion engine had been removed and replaced with an AC motor, and drove it around for hours and hours at 90 mph. Where did the power come from? From what Tesla called the ether. It’s all around us. We exist in a sea of energy and it is limitless.
Once again we are being assaulted with the old boogey man, climate change. First, global cooling, and when that didn’t happen, global warming. When that proved to be nonsense they changed it to climate change-something that happens with or without man’s input. What better way to acclimate people to the idea or scarcity than climate change? You have to limit your energy usage, your water usage, your “carbon footprint.” How much longer will people believe this nonsense? By now, it must be evident to all but the mentally dull that the goal posts on this one keep changing. First, it was reduce your energy usage to reduce carbon in the atmosphere. Now it is net zero carbon. Thou shalt not emit carbon. The absurdity of this one buggers belief. Pay no attention to the fact that plants need CO2; that higher CO2 concentrations tend to green the planet. In fact, without it, all life comes to a screeching halt. Does anyone out there actually believe this stuff? Yet, our overlords are counting on your self imposed ignorance about this issue to convince you to accept scarcity as though it were a good thing. It’s good for the planet when you eschew eating meat. How about a tasty bug burger instead? Those methane emitting cows have got to go.
The goal is to convince you that everything essential to life is in short supply. It is, in the end, a display of hatred for mankind. The irony is that the people doing this are, well, people, too. Is it self loathing? Is it delusions of grandeur? For what reason would some members of a species want to kill off the rest? Are they, in fact, a different species Hell bent on replacing us as some of the media are claiming? I have my doubts. More likely, they are simply convinced of their own superiority. Whenever I encounter this in another man or woman, my first response is indignation. But, it soon becomes clear that pity is the more appropriate response. These are people who cannot accept themselves as they are, a unique and one-time-only expression of the divine will. The seek refuge in the herd, the hive mind, the borg, because without it, their lives have no meaning. They are, in the end, lost children who have been used and abused by other members of their cult, including their parents. Feigning superiority gives them purpose and reaffirms, in their minds, perhaps, the notion that the herd is what is important. The herd must go on. It can lose individual members so long as the herd goes on. This is expressed in the corporate model. CEOs come and go but the corporation lives on. In fact, corporations never die, unless disenfranchised. They can exist for ever and ever, amen. These poor souls are using the corporate model, something most are familiar with, to impose their vision of the world on the rest of us. If you listen to their rhetoric, they speak of people in terms of productivity, what they bring to the table economically. There is no room for someone who is not being productive as they see it.
According to the corporate model, there is no room for art, for spirituality, for love, for individuality, for anything that does not contribute to the bottom line. Efficiency, that’s my motto, insinuates Klaus Schwab. How are we supposed to run a planet if we don’t have a complete inventory of everything including an accounting of the productive biological units? The flotsam and jetsam of mankind, the unproductive, must be washed away making way for a new beginning, a new deal, a new, improved, borg. One that is more responsive to the whims of its masters. One in which the worker bees will do as they’re told; a corporate utopia, right here on Earth.
At base, the corporate model is a rejection of natural law. It is an attempt to control that which cannot be controlled. It is the ultimate expression of fear. Fear that some things are simply out of our jurisdiction. It is, in the end, fear of life. Why wait for things to unfold, for life to happen, when it can be planned? A good plan takes the guess work out this messy business of life. It provides a sense of certainty. It’s like a warm binky on a cold night. After all, what could be worse than not knowing what the future will bring? It’s unsettling, I tells ya.
The lie of scarcity nudges the masses toward the promise of a good plan. A plan designed by those who know how to plan. Surely, this is better than facing an uncertain future, right? Why put your trust in something as fuzzy as faith when you can have certainty? At the core of the lie of scarcity is the need to control. The people who advocate for more control are the same people who talk about changing the world, making the world a better place as if it is defective. Now, I’ve had my doubts about this place. Sometimes it seems like Hell. I’ve accused the Creator of sloppy handiwork. Who could think up such a place as this? A place of so much suffering and death and pain? But, on the other hand, it can be a place of wonder and beauty and love. Maybe, it’s up to us to find that side of things instead of the other. Maybe, that’s “The Secret.” I don’t know these things for sure, but, I do know scarcity and fear and the need to control are not my cup of tea. These are things of the dark side. They bring lack and poverty of the spirit . They do not add to life, they subtract. So: