I'm not a religious man. However, I do believe in the existence of reality as something coherent and absolute. Nature follows its own rules which we can only infer from observation. We learn a lot about nature from simply observing it. But we never know for sure if we really understand it. This is why true science isn't about absolute certainty. There's always some degree of faith, even in science. We only know the outcomes of our experiments and undertakings when framed in extremely sterile and predictable environments. In the real world, things are uncertain and unknowable.
This is why I often use the words nature and God as synonyms, even if they're technically not the same thing. The distinction is that nature is reality as it is, and God is the rules that governs this reality. However, as far as everyday life goes, we can think of the two concepts as being the same.
This line of thinking leads us to two lines of enquiry into reality. One being that of observation and deduction, and the other being that of reading and extrapolation. Science is our method of investigation into the nature of reality, while history books and the Bible give us insights into universal truths related to our existence.
I use both approaches, and I see no conflict in this. I look at things from a scientific angle to figure out how the mechanics of the universe is put together, and I read history and religious texts to learn about universal patterns in nature and human behavior. Then, I put it all together to form a model of reality.
This is how I've been able to anticipate and predict a lot of the madness that we're seeing around us. It started out with a hunch that something was about to go seriously wrong, and I've since developed something of a system around this to further my ability to anticipate and predict.
An insight derived from the Bible, and history in general, is that reality has a tendency to reward those who are in tune with it while punishing those who operate in defiance or opposition to it. From this, we can expect bad things for those who went along with the experimental vaccines, because the rollout was anything but scientific. The vaccines were half baked. They were also sold as superior to nature's own remedy; namely natural immunity. Hubris is everywhere. Politicians and doctors image themselves greater than God.
What we're seeing is a classic recipe for disaster.
The punishment for defying God has already started, with some getting seriously ill and others dropping dead for no official reason whatsoever. However, there has been little in the way of rewards for those who declined the vaccines. But this is the nature of reality. It reacts slowly, with punishments dished out before rewards.
The reason for this is that we can make a lot of mistakes before reality catches up with us. Reality doesn't always react instantly. It can be pushed back for a long time before it comes thundering back. A few may be struck dead due to their excessive risk taking, but that's as far as it normally goes at the start.
What follows is a surge where reality reasserts itself. More people become ill. The economy crumbles. Institutions collapse. All sorts of unintended consequences appear, and the only reward for those more in tune with God is that they are relatively safe from the havoc. Those in tune with reality have positioned themselves at a distance.
Then, seemingly out of nowhere, there's a reward, often in the shape of something sinister, and this reward has now arrived. The latest virus variants are both mild and contagious. They spread at lightning speed, rendering everybody who haven't taken any of the vaccines immune to future mutations. The latest variants are God's own vaccination programs, and they provide much better immunity than anything cooked up in a lab.
However, the rewards won't stop at this. Society is going to transform, and the new order of things will be in the image of those who were in the right. The meek will inherit the world, and it is they who will set the rules for the future.
Tower of Babel |
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