@jampa posted: "I got what was for me very strong confirmation that the US would survive, intact, and as a democracy. I have no doubt it will be a bumpy road,"
@jampa, I totally concur. Bumpy as heck, yet ultimately not merely resolved, but leading to healing on many cultural levels across the globe. Bumps will lead to better understandings regarding "how" Congress and the States must (and will) seriously refine the flaws in the Founders' "experiment." i.e., How to historically retain the original Constitution (like a birth certificate) while care-fully adding in and correcting flaws.
Things like term limits and mental / psychological health requirements will be put in place along with the guardrails needed that the Founders simply could not have envisioned. Age (longevity) and global communications (tech) were limited at America's birth. The misuse of tech had to be seen to be understood. We are there.
A life term then was maybe one generation, now it covers several. Mental acuity amd health have to (and will) be factored in to any term length with checks and balances. Wisdom derives from life lived, so that too will be factored into new legal boundaries. Stregthening the Rule of Law and clarifying the parameters of the three aspects of government--legislative, judicial, and administrative leadership--will be reviewed and cross contamination eliminated.
We go forward. America will mature and strengthen in Light and good for all.
Sometimes things have to break in order to see and heal the flaws. That is where we are now.
And yes, dark powers have meddled and thwarted and dis-eased our national consciousness, for decades.
Nevertheless, this opportunity to review and refine the integral concepts of the Founders will supercede the machinations of evil and cruelty. The United States will prevail because we are doing the work to combat the dark.
Spirit indicates state powers will evolve as well, but not as separate, corporate, city states.
We will traverse the bumpy road.
The future is not a solid destination, immoveable and static. The future is dynamic, nourished by thoughts and actions. Feed the Light, dissolve the dark. Create the future rather than giving in and allowing others to determine it for us.
We were 250+ years in childhood. Puberty is never easy. It's time to grow up.
@tesseract I feel like you are correct, thus far, and this next chapter (whatever comes of us ) has yet to be written.
I think its quite possibile that we perhaps teeter on the edge of several possibilities. It's what the majority of the collective does that will determine what direction we go in.
@tesseract ❤ Words I needed to hear. Some posts in this thread have been disheartening.
Thank you, Tesseract and Dannyboy for your thoughtful responses.
That post, and Jeanne's new thread, did prompt me to take serious steps in emergency preparations. We needed to do that anyway since we live in hurricane alley. In that respect, it was helpful.
When I think of company towns I think of West Virginia just across the Ohio River from where I live, where the history of company towns is not that great. The idea was that the company (coal or some other extraction industry) would own the stores and the houses. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Company_town
@tesseract I'm gonna have to bandwagon onto your faith in humanity. Seriously, I'm glad you have some and I'll ride your wave because Im afraid I've been trying to find mine but it is lost.
@tesseract ❤ Words I needed to hear. Some posts in this thread have been disheartening.
A word about futurists that were mentioned in a couple of posts here, which might have made some disheartening predictions. There's a new book about futurists (not about intuitives/psychics, but people who use science and data to predict the future). A Century of Tomorrows: How Imagining the Future Shapes the Present by Glenn Adamson. Futurists' prediction records did not hold up well, when examined.
It's interesting that in ancient times, they did not use futurists (again, futurists are people who use deductive reasoning rather than intuition or psychic visions).
In ancient times, they relied on intuitives, aka oracles. Intuitives use the quantum processes in their psyche to glimpse what they can see of the future. It is not always right, especially difficult when it comes to elections. But I believe that intuitives (psychics) have a better hit record than futurists who rely on deductive reasoning. The future is beyond the rational mind. It is an organic, non linear, mysterious process. It is always full of surprises. And it comes from our subconscious minds.
We glimpse it in flashes of quantum consciousness. Deductive reasoning has a poor record, because it is piecemeal and orderly and inevitably misses the organic and unexpected.
I feel more comfortable with the visions of those who have honed their gift by posting and subjecting themselves to being tracked here. Their visions come in flashes of light. I am always happy to include others who want to try.
@jeanne-mayell Thank you Jeanne for this reply. I try to keep an open mind, and do recognize those individuals on this site who share their visions, I am most grateful for them.
@jeanne-mayell I agree with you; my comments have tended to be based on historical context because that is my knowledge. Now, I will admit I do look at the predictions by your above-mentioned who's who here, and look at it against a historical perspective as it's helpful to me, and in turn I do try to share context I have gleaned over the years when I feel it will be helpful to the discourse as we try to grapple with things ongoing.
That’s not to say I don’t catch glimpses of a better world and the steps needed to reach it, a view that ultimately drives my entire business. In that sense, my perspective may be limited, but I’ve found my North Star, which, paradoxically, provides a profound sense of grounding. And I can’t ignore the irony that the very man who is the bane of my existence is propelling me toward that star.
Me