Thursday, April 23, 2009

Psychology of the NWO and immunity against them (War on Consciences)

When we facing the NWO we have mainly seen the external agencies the NWO has created in society however we shouldn’t forget about people not dealing with our darker content in our inner republics which can be easily forget in this movement (never leaving consciences in the door). This post is actually linked to the musical industry agenda which I am posting next week which I found very interesting.When we look at this kind of information we shouldn’t look at this with great paranoia and fear because you giving this energy to the elites which they want you to be. This is the only time in history when we can wake up, no other time in history can the global community can actually see manipulation of the elite for thousands of years which our forefathers never had the luxuries we had. Some people have already seen a few of the links but check out the ones you have not listened to.

Future of Mankind (Psychology of the nwo+ Immunity) 3 hour talk Click here

The Outsider 1 (the Guilt Complex)Click here

The Outsider 2 (Enlightenment, the Ego, the Self and the Soul) Click here

The Outsider 3 (Children and the Outsider) Click here


"the power-elites, and their minions who apparently believe the world to be their personal play-pen, have a great deal to lose should the “Under-Classes,” or ordinary men and women of the world, learn about the subtle nature of the psychic and social control that operates all around them and which is hidden in plain sight. However, the task of revealers is made considerably more difficult due to "consensus trance" and the knee-jerk fear reactions that automatically inhibit a mutilated and conditioned mind. The Servants of Truth know from experience how few friends are won, if and when they should endeavor to expose the dirty little secrets of religion’s upper echelons. Nevertheless, a Servant of Truth is not permanently daunted by the discomfort caused by the presence and proximity of truth. The Servant of Truth is aware that it is easier to cut oneself with a blunt knife rather than with a sharp one, and that the price of ignorance is ultimately far greater than the price paid for knowledge. The Servant of Truth knows that freedom is never free and that silence is most definitely consent. He comes to realize that, on the great board game of life, if he fatally chooses to not occupy the white squares of knowledge, he will be manipulated by those who will" – Michael Tsarion

Michael Tsarion on the Psychonautilus 3 Part series of interviews check them all
out click here

What is the ego?
click here

Carl G. Jung (1875-1961), a psychiatrist of Zurich, Switzerland, was the founder of analytical psychology. Early in his career, Jung worked closely with Freud, but later went his own way after developing new theories about the deep unconscious. Freud considered religious expression to arise from neurotic "illusion". By contrast, Jung considered it to arise from the psyche's inner drive toward a healthy balance of individual consciousness and the collective unconscious. The collective unconscious, or objective psyche, is shared by all humankind. This instinctual heritage includes certain definite patterns, or archetypes, which govern the way symbols and psychic images are processed. Studies of dream and myth show these same patterns from all cultures and all eras of human history. Recognizing these archetypal patterns is the key to understanding dreams and the process of individuation. The process of fulfillment, taking place over the course of a lifetime, is the striving toward a personal unity of consciousness and unconsciousness, and of the person with the Whole. Though Jung called it individuation, it can also be called the Journey into Wholeness. ________________________________________

Jung's Model of the PsycheWhen I think of "myself," I am thinking of the part of me which I am conscious of. That is my ego (Latin for "I"). But there is more to me than that ... There is also my persona (Greek for "mask") which hides my ego from the outer world. I actively maintain that mask, according to the conventions of family, society, profession, etc. There is also my personal unconscious, which contains forgotten or never-conscious experiences of various kinds, but which is uniquely my own. And then, there is the collective unconscious which connects me with the whole human experience. Within this unconscious realm there are several different "structures." Though the Self is the whole person, conscious and unconscious together, it also acts as center, seeking to organize the whole.

Each of us has both masculine and feminine elements in the psyche. Though the appropriate one becomes incorporated into the conscious ego, the other expresses itself as an unconscious focus of creative energy, serving the balance of ego and Self. Jung gave the name anima to the feminine center of a man, and animus to the masculine center of a woman. But there is also my Shadow. In a sense, the Shadow is all of that which is "dark" (unconscious) to me; but in a more special sense, it can be an activated center ("complex") energized by repressed feelings, anger, old hurts, etc. If not recognized as such (made conscious), its energy can be projected onto others. Then the faults I see in other people are really the mirror image of my own. My first task of individuation is to "own my own shadow."

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