I was just playing with a newly acquired toy. -A shortwave radio! The wind-up kind. (After a recent power outage, I realized that I had no means of tuning into the rest of the world during an emergency. I figured it wouldn't hurt to have a self-powered radio on hand. I don't even have a clock radio, and certainly no cell phone, so...)
It's actually really cool. 90 seconds of winding produces supposedly an hour's worth of radio. I only ran it for ten minutes though when I decided to turn it off and come here to post...
I was dialing around and stopped on a powerful signal; a talk radio station which was featuring a collection of people discussing ever-so-reasonably and with such an enlightened air, their Ketamine-therapists, how the clinics are both modern and yet spiritually respectful.
Huh?
I rolled around the dial a bit more and came across the same station further up the frequency map, stronger this time. Now they were talking about how lots of famous people had been helped over the years by LSD, and how "The War On Drugs" was preventing people from reaching their spiritual potential. They then cut to a Native Canadian woman being interviewed about the value of psychedelics in their most holy Earth-lovin' practices. Who were these people? I had a good guess...
I turned off my new radio and went to the internet to see what frequencies I'd stumbled into. It was, (drum roll...) the CBC. -Canada's beloved 100% government funded radio station. The Canadian version of VOA, (Voice of America) aimed not across the iron curtain, but rather inward, keeping Canadians all on the same page. A page where apparently psychedleics are now 'in' and being given clearance by both the cultured and official culture.
Earlier this week, I was watching one of Bret Weinstein's "Dark Horse" podcasts, to learn the latest news on the Covid scandal, and what did I find? He and his wife were sharing their own recent explorations into psychedelics. Oh really?
Jordan Peterson last month was commenting in one of his podcasts that he was hoping to explore the same thing.
My thought was, "Ha! That Joe Rogan is the kid your parents warned you about getting too friendly with on the school yard. He's a bad influence. Just because you're an adult and have a fancy degree, doesn't mean the same weak/strong energies of influence don't apply. Joe's just SO cool, and gosh, he likes me. He really does!"
And for a few years now, the young 20-somethings I bump into around the edges of my life are all abuzz with the subject, eager to try leaving this realm through chemicals. It's always been a subject of fascination to some degree among young people, but it seems to be more popular than ever, hitting the main stream more and more now.
This was provided to me from a real conversation I was in back in December: "Did you know that Christmas was originally a mushroom celebration? Psychedelic mushrooms tend to grow around pine trees, and the natives would slice them up and hang them in the tree to dry them out. You know? Like ornaments? And Santa's elves were references to the elves people see when tripping!"
I find it interesting that it takes guys like Alex Jones to wave his hands and explain the (very) dark side of this stuff. But he's the crazy one; nobody but rednecks listen to him. He's been booted off the internet, after all. Bret and Jordan and Joe are all hated by the media gatekeepers, but somehow they just seem to remain on air with massive followings.
And of course, when I caution with what I know about spirit attachments and free lunches and many, many other reasons people should avoid this stuff like the plague, I find myself completely ignored.
I just wondered if anybody else noticed this trend?
My first notion is that these media figures, and others like them, are perhaps being chumped into Pied Piper roles, (and may even be provided positive drug experiences by 4D residents eager to use them as lamprey fish), in an effort to brain-fry exactly the sort of people who might be best positioned to benefit from Wave energies flowing in.
And Jordan Peterson, for goodness sake! He seems to have a real blind spot when it comes to drugs of all varieties.
Anyway, the whole thing just seems dark and sketchy and worrisome and no amount of arm waving on my part seems to do any good.
That's what was on my mind.
Thoughts?
It's actually really cool. 90 seconds of winding produces supposedly an hour's worth of radio. I only ran it for ten minutes though when I decided to turn it off and come here to post...
I was dialing around and stopped on a powerful signal; a talk radio station which was featuring a collection of people discussing ever-so-reasonably and with such an enlightened air, their Ketamine-therapists, how the clinics are both modern and yet spiritually respectful.
Huh?
I rolled around the dial a bit more and came across the same station further up the frequency map, stronger this time. Now they were talking about how lots of famous people had been helped over the years by LSD, and how "The War On Drugs" was preventing people from reaching their spiritual potential. They then cut to a Native Canadian woman being interviewed about the value of psychedelics in their most holy Earth-lovin' practices. Who were these people? I had a good guess...
I turned off my new radio and went to the internet to see what frequencies I'd stumbled into. It was, (drum roll...) the CBC. -Canada's beloved 100% government funded radio station. The Canadian version of VOA, (Voice of America) aimed not across the iron curtain, but rather inward, keeping Canadians all on the same page. A page where apparently psychedleics are now 'in' and being given clearance by both the cultured and official culture.
Earlier this week, I was watching one of Bret Weinstein's "Dark Horse" podcasts, to learn the latest news on the Covid scandal, and what did I find? He and his wife were sharing their own recent explorations into psychedelics. Oh really?
Jordan Peterson last month was commenting in one of his podcasts that he was hoping to explore the same thing.
My thought was, "Ha! That Joe Rogan is the kid your parents warned you about getting too friendly with on the school yard. He's a bad influence. Just because you're an adult and have a fancy degree, doesn't mean the same weak/strong energies of influence don't apply. Joe's just SO cool, and gosh, he likes me. He really does!"
And for a few years now, the young 20-somethings I bump into around the edges of my life are all abuzz with the subject, eager to try leaving this realm through chemicals. It's always been a subject of fascination to some degree among young people, but it seems to be more popular than ever, hitting the main stream more and more now.
This was provided to me from a real conversation I was in back in December: "Did you know that Christmas was originally a mushroom celebration? Psychedelic mushrooms tend to grow around pine trees, and the natives would slice them up and hang them in the tree to dry them out. You know? Like ornaments? And Santa's elves were references to the elves people see when tripping!"
I find it interesting that it takes guys like Alex Jones to wave his hands and explain the (very) dark side of this stuff. But he's the crazy one; nobody but rednecks listen to him. He's been booted off the internet, after all. Bret and Jordan and Joe are all hated by the media gatekeepers, but somehow they just seem to remain on air with massive followings.
And of course, when I caution with what I know about spirit attachments and free lunches and many, many other reasons people should avoid this stuff like the plague, I find myself completely ignored.
I just wondered if anybody else noticed this trend?
My first notion is that these media figures, and others like them, are perhaps being chumped into Pied Piper roles, (and may even be provided positive drug experiences by 4D residents eager to use them as lamprey fish), in an effort to brain-fry exactly the sort of people who might be best positioned to benefit from Wave energies flowing in.
And Jordan Peterson, for goodness sake! He seems to have a real blind spot when it comes to drugs of all varieties.
Anyway, the whole thing just seems dark and sketchy and worrisome and no amount of arm waving on my part seems to do any good.
That's what was on my mind.
Thoughts?