DWQA Questions › Tag: human corruptionFilter:AllOpenResolvedClosedUnansweredSort byViewsAnswersVotesSolar panels and wind turbines don’t return enough energy to replace the energy cost to provide them, particularly considering the necessary storage costs to fully utilize the output. Moreover, the estimates I have read are that for the U.S. to replace its total energy needs with renewables would require using 25-50% of all land in the United States. Is the goal of the environmentalists to replace fossil fuels and nuclear energy with renewables like biomass, wind, and solar power truly unachievable? Is this a folly created and supported through mind control to encourage costly human failure?ClosedNicola asked 3 years ago • Extraterrestrial Agenda301 views0 answers0 votesThere is a governmental promise to create more than 500,000 charging stations to power electric vehicles. Few are talking about where all that electricity will come from, and at what cost environmentally and economically. Is this plan doomed to fail?ClosedNicola asked 3 years ago • Extraterrestrial Agenda262 views0 answers0 votesWill ammonia prove to be a cheaper fuel alternative to electricity? Will it eclipse the growing investment in electric vehicles and render it unneeded?ClosedNicola asked 3 years ago • Extraterrestrial Agenda253 views0 answers0 votesWas the targeting of the nuclear power industry by the media with movies like “The China Syndrome” and the environmental lobby, to obstruct and eventually eliminate most functioning nuclear power plants, actually based on misguided propaganda orchestrated through mind control to be believed and championed, contrary to established evidence of safety and being quite cost-effective?ClosedNicola asked 3 years ago • Extraterrestrial Agenda237 views0 answers0 votesGiven the geopolitics of energy supply and demand, was the shutting down of all but one of Germany’s nuclear power plants to appease environmentalist and political interests, ill-advised?ClosedNicola asked 3 years ago • Extraterrestrial Agenda259 views0 answers0 votesIs nuclear energy a good choice to include, along with natural gas and other fossil fuels, for world energy supplies to provide a reliable infrastructure, regardless of weather?ClosedNicola asked 3 years ago • Extraterrestrial Agenda244 views0 answers0 votesMrs. Smith wrote, “…It is a great pity that the great and organized religious bodies fail to recognize the simplicity of Christ. His true philosophy of life has been lost to them and how can it be otherwise when he has been imprisoned in the church? I am not trying to belittle the good of the church, which is a necessary place of comfort for some, but an enlightened preacher once wrote that ‘the great use of the church is to enable people to do without it.'” What is Creator’s perspective?ClosedNicola asked 3 years ago • Reincarnation259 views0 answers0 votesArthur Guirdham wrote, “Certainly Catharism must have largely spread by example and emanation, but this is not really the whole story. How did it come that a creed that which seems, to many modern students, to have been austere and pessimistic spread with such rapidity? … One factor is, I think, consistently overlooked. In the Middle Ages, people were dominated by the fear of Hell. Catharism to some extent dissipated this fear … If this world is the worst Hell one has to put up with, it must have been, even at its lowest, vastly preferable to perpetual damnation of the Orthodox Christians of the epoch.” What can Creator tell us about the rapid spread and popularity of Catharism?ClosedNicola asked 3 years ago • Reincarnation234 views0 answers0 votesArthur Guirdham wrote, “The inquisitors regarded the purity of the Parfaits (Cathar priests) as something to be used against them, believing that, because it was associated with heresy, it must necessarily be classified with hypocrisy. Evidence for the corruption of the Roman Church at the time is adequately provided by Pope Innocent III, who instigated the Great Crusade against the Albigensians but had no illusions about the failure of his own priests.” Then there is the irony of a pope with the name “Innocent” single-handedly being directly responsible for more overt and severe human suffering than arguably any other pope in the history of the Catholic Church—as evidenced by the unhealed trauma of Mrs. Smith eight centuries later. What can Creator tell us about the irony of his chosen name and the sincerity of his belief that God was truly on his side in announcing his horrific edict?ClosedNicola asked 3 years ago • Reincarnation232 views0 answers0 votesPope Innocent III did some good things in life as pope. For instance, he granted Francis of Assisi permission to found his order. There is a story that on the day Pope Innocent III died he appeared to St. Lutgardis in Belgium. St. Lutgardis is considered to have been one of the great mystics of the 13th century. When Pope Innocent appeared to her, he thanked her for her prayers during his lifetime but explained that he was in trouble: He had not gone straight to heaven but was in purgatory, suffering its purifying fire for three specific faults he had committed during his life. He made a desperate plea for help: “Alas! It is terrible; and will last for centuries if you do not come to my assistance. In the name of Mary, who has obtained for me the favor of appealing to you, help me!” Then he vanished. With a sense of urgency, St. Lutgardis quickly told her fellow religious sisters what she had seen and prayed for his soul. Was Innocent successfully rescued? What can Creator tell us about this remarkable story?ClosedNicola asked 3 years ago • Reincarnation241 views0 answers0 votesThe horror and suffering of the Great Inquisition of the Middle Ages is alive and well in the deep subconscious and akashic records of countless souls alive today and waiting to be born again. Can Creator share with us how Empowered Prayer and the Lightworker Healing Protocol can be used to successfully heal this collective karma—once and for all? And can Creator explain why this healing is necessary in order for humanity to survive and ultimately ascend to greater heights?ClosedNicola asked 3 years ago • Reincarnation284 views0 answers0 votesIn our ongoing quest to help people cultivate a belief in the divine, we have explored a number of books that present scientific evidence for psychic abilities, mediumship, and the reality of life after the death of the physical body. Is belief in the continuation of consciousness beyond the death of the physical body an important and helpful prerequisite to a belief in a Creator who matters? Beyond mere curiosity, what use is there for a belief in a Creator who is not available, who cannot be appealed to, and who cannot be counted on to influence one’s life in any discernable fashion?ClosedNicola asked 3 years ago • Channeling Pitfalls269 views0 answers0 votesIf one struggles to believe in life after death, believing in a personal God would seem unlikely. But if one is open-minded, it appears there is help to bridge that gap, to successfully cultivate belief on the basis of solid evidence of an afterlife—not speculation. Mediums with profound abilities are rare, only one in 50,000 people, according to Creator. But rare is still real and it seems logical that more can be learned about the true expanse and scope of human existence when one surveys and studies the extraordinary amongst us, rather than just the ordinary, as science is most prone to do. What is Creator’s perspective?ClosedNicola asked 3 years ago • Channeling Pitfalls246 views0 answers0 votesPeople really struggle to grasp and understand the mental differences and experiences amongst their fellow humans. Brian’s own father had a hard time accepting that Brian struggled with math, and was inclined to believe that Brian was lazy. His father assumed that because Brian was mechanically inclined, math should be just as easy for Brian as it was for his father. When people struggle to understand and relate to differences this basic and prosaic, how much more will they struggle in trying to understand a medium’s abilities and experiences when they have very little inner and experiential basis for comparison? What is Creator’s perspective?ClosedNicola asked 3 years ago • Channeling Pitfalls253 views0 answers0 votesConcetta Bertoldi, a professional psychic medium of some repute, wrote a book titled, “Do Dead People Watch You Shower? And Other Questions You’ve Been All but Dying to Ask a Medium.” This book appears to be a remarkable autobiography, and rare opportunity for non-mediums (most of humanity) to read what it’s like to have and live one’s life with these abilities. Not everything she shares in the book aligns with everything Creator has shared with us in the GetWisdom Project, but more so by omission than any statements and revelations that wildly conflict. Like the rest of us, she seems clearly limited by her beliefs in terms of what she can reliably access from the divine realm in terms of deeper truths, but when focused solely on interacting with the dead, and relaying messages from the dead, she appears to be in strong alignment. She referred to herself as, “Just your average Jersey girl who talks to the dead.” What is Creator’s perspective?ClosedNicola asked 3 years ago • Channeling Pitfalls260 views0 answers0 votes