Thank you for this long and detailed piece. It is fascinating to me.
The thoughts you have - of inversion, of free will and its real meaning, of its evolution - are precisely the themes about which I am writing at the moment - and living.
As a foolish rebel, I can't think of a better way to describe my current choices than the voluntary co…
Thank you for this long and detailed piece. It is fascinating to me.
The thoughts you have - of inversion, of free will and its real meaning, of its evolution - are precisely the themes about which I am writing at the moment - and living.
As a foolish rebel, I can't think of a better way to describe my current choices than the voluntary consumption of breadstones; attempting to work towards self-sufficiency for no other reason than voluntary rebellion has, however, led to the evolution of my own free will. I have discovered that free will is not what I once thought it to be.
The piece I'm writing isn't finished. The daily fashioning of breadstones keeps me from the laptop most of the time. But it gives me what I want to say. When I have finished it, I will try to find a way to post it to you, in case you have interest in reading.
I think it heartening that - so far from each other - we can feel the same thoughts arise in response to the 4th Industrial Revolution. This, I believe, is the evolution of free will. Like all forces in nature, we are developing through oppositional pressure. I take hope from this.
On a final note, you write this:
"It would be safe to speculate that the highest echelons of the Cult membership are none too happy in their sociopathic views and perennial eugenics plans."
I have some randomly gained first hand knowledge of what the cult members truly feel. I wrote about it here:
Thank you for this long and detailed piece. It is fascinating to me.
The thoughts you have - of inversion, of free will and its real meaning, of its evolution - are precisely the themes about which I am writing at the moment - and living.
As a foolish rebel, I can't think of a better way to describe my current choices than the voluntary consumption of breadstones; attempting to work towards self-sufficiency for no other reason than voluntary rebellion has, however, led to the evolution of my own free will. I have discovered that free will is not what I once thought it to be.
The piece I'm writing isn't finished. The daily fashioning of breadstones keeps me from the laptop most of the time. But it gives me what I want to say. When I have finished it, I will try to find a way to post it to you, in case you have interest in reading.
I think it heartening that - so far from each other - we can feel the same thoughts arise in response to the 4th Industrial Revolution. This, I believe, is the evolution of free will. Like all forces in nature, we are developing through oppositional pressure. I take hope from this.
On a final note, you write this:
"It would be safe to speculate that the highest echelons of the Cult membership are none too happy in their sociopathic views and perennial eugenics plans."
I have some randomly gained first hand knowledge of what the cult members truly feel. I wrote about it here:
https://walkingwithgoats.substack.com/p/sheep-against-satan
Solidarity.