The New World Order:
Does It All Just Boil Down To A Battle
For Your Soul?
By Brandon Smith
From its very inception, the Leninist/Marxist ideology of
the Soviet Union made it a central priority to dispel and subjugate religious
and spiritual expression.
The state was “god.” No other god could be allowed to
flourish, for if the people were given license and freedom of belief in
something beyond themselves and beyond the establishment, they would retain a
sense of rebellion.
The collectivist philosophy requires the utter destruction
of all competitors; otherwise, it can never truly prevail.
Atheism became the cult of choice among the communists, for
in an atheist world there is nothing beyond the veil. There is no greater goal
and no inherent self. There is no true individualism, only self interest (not
the same thing), the trappings of environmental circumstances, and the constant
substantiation of the greater good.
By extension, there is no inborn moral compass or
conscience, only the social fashions and mores of the moment. In such a world,
tyrants reign supreme because atheism allows relativism to flourish; and any
crime, no matter how heinous, can be rationalized.
Beyond this, if you know and study the real history of the
rise of communism, you know through great researchers like Antony Sutton that
the very fabric of the system would never have existed without the monetary and
military aid of international financiers (i.e. the NWO).
The atheist position uses the same arguments I have just
made as a reason to remove religion and spirituality from our cultural
influences.
And in some respects, atheists are right. Religion is a tool
that can be exploited to manipulate the masses. Any system of belief that is
faith-based can be misinterpreted and abused in order to lure unwitting dupes
and mindless followers into the fray of an engineered disaster.
Atheists commonly argue that it is the encumbering nature of
faith that causes mankind to destroy itself in the name of zealotry and
self-righteous ignorance.
The difference, however, is that religious zealots are still
required by the confines of their dogma to at least appear as though they
follow a moral code. Therefore, they can be exposed as violators of this code
and weakened over time.
The atheist/collectivist system, though, thrives on the
concept that there is no such thing as a moral code and that one is vindicated
and heroic if he takes extreme action to prove that traditional morality is a
vice, rather than a virtue.
Atheists in positions of power often make no attempt to
affirm their actions; rather, they demand that society abandon all conscience
and sense of natural law. They do not ask for forgiveness; they order you to
apologize for your moral compass.
Are some atheists good and honorable people? Surely. The
point, however, remains; atheism is the new flavor of the era, the increasingly
predominant gravitational center of modern culture, the philosophical soil in
which the NWO has chosen to grow its globalist experiment.
What atheists don’t seem to grasp is that atheism is itself
based on an act of faith: faith in the idea that there is nothing beyond our
perceptions of existence.
They have no more factual knowledge of what lay at the
center of life than any of the religious acolytes they so fondly attack, yet
their own hypocrisy is apparently lost on them.
I would not pretend to deny that religion has the ability to
create a volatile atmosphere edging toward genocidal tendency, but so does any
belief system that assumes it is the paramount of knowledge denying all others.
The intellectual intolerance of the socialist atheism of the
20th century spawned a death machine that claimed the lives of millions of
people.
So, clearly, atheists should be more concerned with the
violent tendencies of their own ilk rather than the religious “fiends” they
seem so obsessed with. Of course, this is a history modern atheists would
rather ignore or rewrite.
I have always been concerned with the dilemma of the
collectivist ideology, but even more so in recent months, as our world creeps
closer toward global crisis. Crisis always provides circumstance and cover for
dangerous philosophical totalitarianism.
Not long ago I came across the column “Some Atheists And
Transhumanists Are Asking: Should It Be Illegal To Indoctrinate Kids With
Religion?” on Huffington Post. It was written by Zoltan Istvan, a transhumanist
and self-proclaimed “visionary and philosopher.”
Firstly, I have a hard time taking anything published by the
Huffington Post seriously. Secondly, I have a hard time taking anyone using the
name “Zoltan” seriously. Thirdly, I have a hard time taking anyone who labels
himself a “visionary” seriously.
That said, it is important to study the propaganda of the
other side carefully. You never know what kinds of truths you might come across
amid all the lies.
The article does not really define what it considers
“indoctrination", but I would assume transhumanists and atheists would
argue that anything not scientifically proven could become indoctrination.
Interestingly, Istvan starts his tirade against the handing
down of religious beliefs by admitting that science has added very little to
our overall knowledge of the universe. After all, human beings experience only
a narrow spectrum of the world around us, and there is indeed much we do not
know.
For some reason, it does not dawn on atheists that perhaps
our limited scientific observations of the universe do not necessarily outweigh
or deny the existence of an intelligent design.
In order to distract from their fundamental lack of
knowledge, modern collectivist governments and movements have always made the
promise of technological utopia and endless abundance in order to sway the
populace into supporting establishment power. We will all work far less, or we
will never have to work at all.
Shelter, food, health and wealth will be provided for us.
Our free time will be spent studying the nature of the cosmos and perpetuating
the cult of academia, protected by a benevolent technocratic governing body
straight out of an episode of “Star Trek.”
Not surprisingly, John Maynard Keynes himself predicted in
1930 that technological advancement and economic abundance would result in a
three-hour workday and infinite time to amuse oneself by the year 2030 in his
essay “The Economic Possibilities For Our Grandchildren.”
This was the same essay in which Keynes referred to the
financial concerns of many at the onset of the Great Depression as
“misinterpretations” and “pessimism.”
Transhumanism, a mainstay of global elitism and the New
World Order, also uses fantastical images of scientifically created contentment
to sell itself to starry-eyed rubes packed into the circus tent of the
technocratic carnival.
The very essence of the movement is the argument that one
day ALL knowledge of the universe will be obtained by mankind and that through
this knowledge, we (a select few anyway) will obtain godhood.
Again, as in the Huffington Post column, the claim is that
science knows all or will eventually know all and that whatever has not been
dissected and observed by science like the conceptions of religion must,
therefore, be dubious myth.
Ironically, there is far more scientific evidence of God and
spiritual life than there is evidence against. So by the very standards many
atheists hold dear, it is they who are peddling indoctrination rather than
truth.
In the world of mathematics, the good friend of Albert
Einstein, Kurt Godel, is famous (but not as famous as he should be) for writing
what would be called the “incompleteness proof.”
In mathematics, a proof is a statement that is ALWAYS true
and can always be proven true. Godel’s proof shook the very foundations of the
mathematical world, because it outlined the fact that all mathematical
knowledge is limited by numerical paradox, and that humanity will never be able
to define all things through mathematical means.
Global elites such as Bertrand Russell had spent years of
effort attempting to prove that mathematics was the unbridled code of the
universe and that the universe could be understood in its entirety through the
use of numbers.
Godel shattered this delusion with his incompleteness proof,
establishing once and for all that math is limited, not infinite.
The existence of mathematical paradox along with an
undefinable “infinity” lends credence to the religious view that there are
indeed some things man will never know, but at least he has the ability to
prove that he can never know them.
In the world of quantum physics, the work of Werner
Heisenberg, along with that of many other scientists, has shown that the very
mechanics of the world around us are not at all what they seem and that
traditional physics is only a hollow shell of knowledge limited by our ability
to observe.
The Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle dictates that the
observer of a particular physical state always affects the object being
observed, making it impossible to know all the data necessary at one time to
predict the future of that object.
If a person hoped to become a god, he would certainly need
to be able to tell the future; and to tell the future, one would need the
ability to observe and record every aspect of every particle interacting in the
environment around him. Any unknown quantity could change the outcome of any
particular event.
Heisenberg found that particles act very differently
depending on how they are observed. In some experiments, he even discovered
that individual particles appeared to be in two places at the same time, thus
making them wholly unpredictable.
This behavior in the building blocks of matter is confounding
to many in the realm of physics.
Read more here:
humansarefree.com
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