DWQA QuestionsCategory: Problems in Society“You can be certain!” “Why, of course!” “It’s a sure thing!” “You can count on it!” are actually phrases of great comfort and reassurance. People long for certainty, for predictability, for confidence and not just in themselves but in those around them. They long for stability, for reliability, and for longevity. And yet, it seems that more than ever, certainty in almost ANYTHING is in short supply. You cannot count on ANYTHING anymore! Whether it’s your favorite restaurant surviving the next downturn, your job surviving the next reorganization, your kids making it to adulthood without a life-threatening chronic disease, your new refrigerator working when the warranty expires, etc. You would think you could at least count on the sun rising tomorrow, but the sun might be our very demise! Is this all an exaggeration? Am I reading too much into all this? What is Creator’s perspective?
Nicola Staff asked 3 weeks ago
You are not misreading things, or perhaps have changed personally, to have developed some greater sensitivity or impatience through having gained maturity as a beneficiary of considerable life experience. What you are doing is observing the passing scene and recognizing that change is truly accelerating. It is not simply that things have changed but the rate of change has changed, and this is why you are noticing more and more things becoming slowly less recognizable or perhaps completely different than their historical origins. In a sense, this is a logical extension of things becoming denser and more complicated, by virtue of having almost 8 billion humans on the planet now, along with much greater mechanization and, in particular, cybertechnology to greatly expand cheap memory storage and accessibility, with a vaster array of usage for stored information, and many modes of communication depending on computers and intelligent conveyance of knowledge so that the individual reach is much vaster than ever before. This creates many opportunities for adding a nuance or making a modification, given the growing aggregate of things contains additional variety, and some of that can be transferred and repurposed to take advantage of a good idea in a differing setting, and so on. But that is looking at it as a natural and inevitable progression when what is going on goes beyond what makes sense and what would be truly a level serving society and individual benefit. What is happening is a more rapid acceleration than is logical or even safe. There is a degradation, in fact, from the torrent of new products and new manipulations of information to, in a sense, multiply possibilities simply for the sake of doing so because it can be done. The fact few stop to consider whether it should be done is diagnostic that there is another force at work here than human consciousness, intentions, and planning. This is planned out for you through a kind of relentless ratcheting up of energy to have it deliberately accelerate to the point where just containing things involves a kind of juggling act that may well lead to accidents and misadventures, where things prove to be faulty or defective, and what had fresh promise, as the shiny new thing to catch people's interest, might end up being a disappointment, or worse, a danger to well-being in some way. If you think about this logically, a wholesale acceleration in the rate of change in society across the board will have consequences and, if it proceeds too quickly than existing systems can allow without risk, there will be breakdowns, mistakes, defects that leak through and are not caught in time. You did not mention it, but product recalls are at record levels, and this is most often associated with something having changed, not just the launching of something new that proved to have problems not appreciated in the design, for example. This wholesale acceleration is deliberate and sinister because it is well-recognized by the interlopers that humans enjoy a certain pacing of events, and the trajectory in their life, to do everything in hurry-up mode, adds tremendous stress because times of uncertainty will be much more frequent, and those feelings will become more and more justified when the frequency of things falling apart, not working as intended, not being effective as planned, and perhaps creating significant extra burdens to clean up the mess and do a course correction, it gets harder and harder for people to keep up, and that is the point. This acceleration is not intended to increase progress and benefit humanity, but rather the opposite, it is using the promise of new events, circumstances, products, technological enhancement, and so on, to entice people to ever expect something exciting to happen, and for something new and rewarding to be on the horizon frequently because you are conditioned with expectations it will happen. This increases desire and a willingness to allow the treadmill to run ever faster. At the same time, you are subjugated through mind control to be complacent to the true consequences and hidden meaning of this ramping up in the timeline for change to occur. There are many cultural milestones in film beautifully illustrated, as with the advent of steam power and other sources of energy, in the increasing mechanization of manufacturing and production. There are many iconic moments of production lines being sped up and people being expected to quicken their pace accordingly, because they are under such pressure to do their part on the assembly line, in a short span, at the risk of the whole thing coming apart and being blamed on them. So the plan here is for a general worsening of things, and this is Exhibit A occurring right under your noses.