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William Hunter Duncan's avatar

The world is not ending, but the American empire is coming to an end, and we Americans have believed that we are the world. It will be tragic, but we can prepare, and it could be a very creative time....

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Tereza Coraggio's avatar

Ha! I see your fermentables, saplings and seed business as a direct retort to my threat to move in with you when the apocalypse hits! For those who are still wavering on this, click on William's blog to see his fledgling farm.

In seriousness, you and Sharine are exactly the right people to turn the whirled (GREAT phrase for the current psyops) into the world of natural order. In my Five Feminine Economies post, the first is one of subsistence involving the land surrounding towns that's farmed collectively by neighborhoods and led by people who know what they're doing. That means you two!

And 'not good for composting' is also hilarious. Yes, the toxic shit needs to be buried six feet under. Maybe there are mushrooms somewhere that can turn it into something good. I hear that fungal networks can work magic.

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William Hunter Duncan's avatar

Fungal networks can break down complex chemicals including diesel fuel. Yes, I'm trying to make gardening sexy so people begin to see such a life as preferable to the digital life.

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Tereza Coraggio's avatar

If it works for saxophone, it can work for gardening: https://youtu.be/GXPSQvzbugs

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Sharine Borslien's avatar

The whirled according the to wayward wizards and their cushy-job-keeping career clowns is coming to an end. It may take decades, even centuries, but the death-cult tranny agenda shit is *not good for composting* and therefore must come to a complete and permanent halt.

But The Natural Order? Fully alive and kicking, my friend. Let's grow food and make good stuff and sip wine and continue growing The Real Divine World as it was made via singing and other sonic awesomeness by the Great Creator.

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William Hunter Duncan's avatar

I have a mind to set up a fermentables, saplings and seed business.

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Sharine Borslien's avatar

What do you mean by "fermentables"? I do ferments at home, just regular old vegetables like cabbage, cauliflower, zucchini, onions. Anyway, I like your idea!

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William Hunter Duncan's avatar

Fruit wine. But I do like fermentable food too.

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Tereza Coraggio's avatar

Ah I've been dreaming about that rhubarb wine you mentioned on your stack. Perfect for toasting the Karmaggedon!

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Sharine Borslien's avatar

Thanks for the clarification, Hunter!

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Ope's avatar

the ripple effect from the fall of this empire will be immense. my fear is for the many in developing countries who are not aware of this..

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Tereza Coraggio's avatar

I think that instead of 'developing countries' we should use 'resource and labor colonies' or neo-feudalism. Development is for the birds, by which I mean birds of prey!

I'm eager to put our minds together and imagine how my plan could be implemented in Nigeria. Are you under the African franc or another currency? I agree with William, I think, that the fall-out will be worse for consumer nations than producers, although that certainly differs within countries. Are you in Lagos?

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Ope's avatar

thats right! the term "resource & labor colonies" sounds about right unlike the PC term of 'developing countries.' Nigeria is under its own currency (Naira), thank goodness is not under the franc!

I see William's point however, Nigeria largely embraces the tenets of globalization religiously (we are a consumer nation) the main resource we produce is Crude Oil (90.7% of total exports) and that doesn't even benefit us - we export it and then import the refined version for local consumption (very expensive). Why we are in a dire situation is that our purchasing power is very low. I am keen to work with you to explain a lot of 'resource & labor colonies' situations a bit better so its fits into your plan. I will be posting a 2016 article from a well respected Nigerian newspaper on my substack today regarding this.

Lastly, I grew up in Lagos but currently in Dubai, UAE.

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Tereza Coraggio's avatar

Ah, you've gone from the fire into the frying pan. I was checking my book to see if I'd written about Nigeria, which I couldn't find but I thought I'd mentioned someone who'd organized workers in oil extraction. I do have a chapter on Libya called Swept Away by the Currency that looks at currency colonization and how Qaddafi and Laurent Gbagbo of Cote d'Ivoire were working to bring about the Pan-African dinar backed by Libya's gold.

And I write about the 'Dutch disease' that a high-priced export raises the cost of living without promoting local production. I propose that all underground resources belong to the whole continent and should never cross water but back a system of credit with decentralized banks and caps on individual income or savings.

I'm eager to learn more about the situation and look forward to the article.

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Ope's avatar

lol from the fire into the frying pan, on the hopes of going from frying pan to nature. dutch disease = resource curse.

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Tereza Coraggio's avatar

Resource curse or 'paradox of plenty' as another euphemism for extraction honeypot.

Good luck on your journey from frying pan to nature!

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Earl's avatar

'resource and labor colonies'

I like the term! OR 'indefinately developing countries.'

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William Hunter Duncan's avatar

Yes, and all the liberal urbanite Americans who think they are destined to rule the "renewable trans global empire." Their lives will be turned upside down more than the rural family I know in Senegal.

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Earl's avatar

We have been made to believe that we are the world for more than 100 years.

https://rumble.com/v2bqvw8-tragedy-and-hope-101.html

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Tereza Coraggio's avatar

Thanks for that reference, Earl.

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Earl's avatar

If you like the book, you might also like these books.

https://thedukereport.com/books/

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Tereza Coraggio's avatar

That's a very impressive array of books, and it's only the first page! I think it would take me another lifetime or two, but I do have the Whitney Webbs on them so I'll start there.

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Earl's avatar

I am reading Whitney's book now among others. I just discovered the book table a month ago or so. If I remember correctly, Peter Duke recommends the following books for beginners to understand the hidden US history in 1900s. I special ordered them from a local independent bookstore last week.

https://thedukereport.com/books/tragedy-and-hope-101-the-illusion-of-justice-freedom-and-democracy/

https://thedukereport.com/books/the-anglo-american-establishment/

https://thedukereport.com/books/the-wall-street-trilogy-a-history/

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Tereza Coraggio's avatar

I also noticed he has all of Matt Ehret's books on the first page, which Matt sent me in digital form to thank me for saving him the trouble of buying mine, and sending him a copy instead. I didn't look past the first page but I trust that Ellen Brown's Web of Debt would be here also. What my book does is start with anthropology and David Graeber's Debt (which I'd guess is on his list) and then go through colonial history, current economic-foreign policy, and deep economics before using system thinking to develop a new model that I explain in the final section. I suspect that these books would confirm my conclusion that nothing can be changed through politics and that the economic system at the heart of it can't be reformed. I see those systems heading to collapse with the fall of the petrodollar as the world's oil-backed reserve currency. If you're interested, here's the link: https://www.amazon.com/How-Dismantle-Empire-2020-Vision/dp/1733347607.

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Larry Druhall's avatar

Beautiful and meaningful post. Thank you.

The world is a subset of the universe. And there is a super universe. All thoughts are real. All visions are real. This world may have been set up to be impossibly challenging on purpose, perhaps as a test, perhaps as a simulation to generate improvements, perhaps as something else. Open minded nocturnal wanderings, appropriately embraced, can give insights to some. But those insights are not easy to communicate once the dream gateway insights end and one returns to this so called real world.

Creatively visualizing the most beautiful conceivable world is real, and, even if it does not manifest in this failing world, it is still real, still meaningful, and might manifest in more beautiful ways elsewhere.

One does not need to perpetuate one's self, individual consciousness, soul, etc. If one generates real loving kindness without expectation for one's self, for the greater good of all, that is real, and will manifest somewhere, somehow.

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Tereza Coraggio's avatar

What a gorgeous statement, Larry. I love all your sentiments: that thoughts and visions are real and creatively visualizing what we want has real effects and manifestations. And that we don't need to perpetuate our individuality but generate real loving kindness for the good of all. Beautiful!

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Larry Druhall's avatar

As the upcoming tests intensify, it will become more challenging to act along these kinds of lines. I am not giving up on worldly solutions, and will do my best in those areas, as a moral imperative. But the positive visualizations are very important too. If they cannot manifest to a significant extent in this world, the results are predictable for this world, but the positive potential beyond this world is beyond infinite. That positive potential is real, as are all thoughts, no matter how bad things get physically in this world. Maintaining balance is important. Learning opportunities for self improvement abound.

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Tirion's avatar

Clif High has published some interesting thoughts about how and why things get better and worse consistently in repeating waves/cycles over the Ages/Yugas:

https://clifhigh.substack.com/p/time-is-on-my-side#details

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Tereza Coraggio's avatar

Hopefully this will also get noticed by Specie below. But you weren't the only two to alert me to Clif High. I noticed when looking through some comments that Paul Black also had mentioned him on a previous episode. So I think the universe is flexing me in his direction (or maybe that's the galaxy?) I'll include my response on my Charles E episode. Thanks to you both!

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Tereza Coraggio's avatar

Someone else (maybe you?) mentioned Clif High to me. I'll be listening to this with interest and it might dovetail with one I'm going to do on Charles Eisenstein's recent talk on 'the space between stories'.

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Specie's avatar

Hi Tereza, It was me. Hope it's not too far out for you. That's the response i get sometimes when i recommend to others. Also, a lot of young people fail to get past his delivery method and miss out on the message. It's really a shame what has happened to our younger people. Thank you Tirion for mentioning Clif here again. I'll check out your reads.

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Specie's avatar

Also, one quick comment. Tereza, you have inspired me to subscribe. I read over a hundred substacks a day (I'm so grateful that my position allows me such freedom) but i have never subscribed to any of them. I always think of the old saying in essence (Groucho?) i would never want to be a subscriber to anything that would have somebody like me as a subsriber. But I am subscribing to yours first.

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Tereza Coraggio's avatar

Words cannot express how honored I am! I'm flabbergasted when I get a new subscriber in the single digits, or low double digits. I have never before been anyone's first! Particularly with reading over a hundred a day. Am I allowed to now call you by your first name? My association with specie, given the colonial history in my book, is money backed by metals, which is the opposite of the scrip my plan is based on. Is that how you mean it?

And congrats on making something so meaningful out of a job that requires a body but not continual minding ;-) My websites were all put together by someone who worked as a hotel night clerk. He put in hundreds of hours for free, an offer he made because he liked what I was doing. It revolutionized my radio show and other endeavors!

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Tirion's avatar

IMHO, Clif High is a flawed human being like the rest of us; but he is a good and honorable man.

I love the Enlil reference in your profile 🎯

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Specie's avatar

I read all of Sitchin, then Slaves of the Gods by Michael Tellinger then all of Gerald Clarks stuff. He was such a great man. What a terrible loss so young. I think i know who Enki and Enlil are and what they represent. Maybe we will all know soon.

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Tirion's avatar

🙌🏻

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Kathleen Devanney. A human.'s avatar

Thank you Tereza.

I dread/look forward to your upcoming piece on the dark underbelly of systemic pedophilia (yeah, we need a new word) that has been ignored far too long.

The feeling of the world ending, I think, is appropriate - so much is falling apart. I'm glad you and your daughter laughed about it.

And of course, something new (I'm convinced better) is coming. The split happened a while back; different tracks. I don't know how it works technically, I don't know how many can still jump from one to the other, but they take you to different destinations to be sure. In the most general terms one is pro-human, pro-nature, pro-life, and the other is anti-human, anti-nature anti-life. As with any really good book, we go right to the point where everything looks lost, before the PTWB fail and humanity breaks free.

Meanwhile, many goods continue and we can begin creating the next version of ourselves and our world even as this way falls away.

Best.

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Tereza Coraggio's avatar

Beautiful comment, Kathleen! I'm in agreement with you that something better is coming. I see the vast majority as people who've been fooled by their love of nature, their compassion for people, and their appreciation for other cultures. Those who are doing the fooling are a small handful. So I think the tracks are still running in parallel and, once the train crashes, will naturally converge. Maybe that's even what drives it off the rails, to extend the metaphor!

Dread/look forward is exactly the right sentiment. It's actually not the systemic form I'm researching, which I think Whitney Webb covers although I have her books and haven't read them yet. I'm delving into a particular situation that's ongoing and dangerous for the sixteen-year-old girl involved. She was failed by a corrupt court system and CPS is powerless because the Sheriff's dept is complicit. So I won't be mentioning names but it's keeping me awake at night because she's in danger and I don't know where to go.

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Kathleen Devanney. A human.'s avatar

Thank you, Tereza.

A small handful that are good at giving a larger impression to be sure.

I see - that's really challenging. It's the worst feeling to see a vulnerable child and not feel able to help! I wish the best you the best with it.💕

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Tirion's avatar

The anti- fork to which you refer sounds like The Eighth Sphere described by Rudolf Steiner and others?

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Tereza Coraggio's avatar

Good reminder to keep working on that Karma of Untruthfulness.

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Kathleen Devanney. A human.'s avatar

Definitely it does. I think of Steiner a lot lately.

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Ope's avatar

Thank you Tereza for the shout out and words of encouragement! Keeping my nose to the grind stone on my take on on tonic masculinity.

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Tereza Coraggio's avatar

I'm looking forward to that, Ope!

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Kerry's avatar

What a beautiful post. And yes it can be easy to descend into a downward spiral in a world that is designed to deceive you. Those of us who for whatever reason can see the scam have to navigate the emotional impact of knowing that there really is an evil cabal who wants most of us dead. It is quite a dance isn't it but also a wonderful opportunity to practice mindfulness. My husband was a Buddhist monk for six years before I knew him and he tells a funny story about his Guru. Here is the quote which refers to the preparations for a big teaching festival going horribly wrong:

"The newly arrived monk was welcomed with a huge smile and the Guru said: ‘We have SO many problems!’ The old Tibetan lama paused for a moment and then said with great delight ‘How Wonderful!’"

This is the link if you would like to read the story on his website: https://www.mindfulnesspoet.com.au/why-is-the-book-called-how-wonderful/

The way I am looking at it is that we are going through a huge transformation amidst the dying throes of a civilisation that needs to be destroyed or made irrelevant. And being able to deal with grief is important in that process because there is so much loss as things fall apart. Even with the creation of parallel systems there is already a lot of carnage and that isn't going to stop just yet. If we can navigate all of this with emotional intelligence and compassion for biological life we just might make it and create that better world that our hearts know is possible. (-:

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Tereza Coraggio's avatar

That is so beautifully put, Kerry! And I love the story about the Tibetan lama. I agree with every word that you said except evil. There is certainly a cabal who wants most of us dead. Recognizing that and taking away their power is paramount. I'm not sure whether labelling them as evil is helpful to that. But that's something I've been mulling over to put into a new post because you're spot on that this is quite a dance to maintain our equilibrium while seeing the truth clearly. I'm so happy to be read by someone as perceptive and mindful as you! And I will definitely read your husband's story in full.

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Helene Belloni's avatar

I'll try to find the video and send it to you. So what I have been doing since this White Sky started is I keep pointing it out to all everyone I encounter ever so nonchalantly of course. So for a long time now I have planned my gardening around the chem trails in the sky, so I noticed this white sky right off the bat. It reminds me of the Truman movie, maybe when he was trying to leave the dome. This sentence is harsh but true: Stupid can't see Smart, but smart can see stupid. Sounds like Forest Gump doesn't it?

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Tereza Coraggio's avatar

Harsh but very true, and proven to me every day on Substack. I know it sounds arrogant but the more intelligent someone is--in asking the same questions I am--the more likely they are to like and respect my thinking. Certainly there are types of knowledge, silo knowledge, that people excel in far more than me. But for putting the pieces together, it's their level of awareness AND their lack of dogmas blocking logic, that determines their engagement with what I'm saying.

And I'm certain that there are those I'm not yet aware enough to get. Maybe I still have dogmas I haven't identified. That's definitely been true in the past so I'm sure it's true now.

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Steve Martin's avatar

Hi again Tereza.

Just listened to the first of the YouTube links ... and had to chuckle. Did I get the title of my latest substack from you, subconsciously? Or is a bit of synchronicity linking us? I suspect, yes and yes.

I like how you deconstructed pedophilia. I'd never thought of it that way, and I fully agree with you. Linguistically, I am now curious how what must have been the original meaning of the word changed into something so vile and different.

And I am also wondering about how much fear is a conscious nudging from the sociopathic would-be god-kings, or how much is sub-conscious, that emergent Moloch-consciousness of what comes with corruption during the decline of an era?

I guess I will never 'know' in the literal sense of the word, so I'll just continue holding that as unreachable ideal, while trying to immerse myself in the 'do', and try not to get too much 'doo' all over my face. 😆

Cheers Tereza!

steve

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Tereza Coraggio's avatar

Yes and yes! I noticed that synchronicity too, which is the topic of my latest YT from Charles Eisenstein's talk on The Space Between Stories. Up on Substack later today.

Oh that's an interesting thought that pedophilia might have started out meaning something different. Although we're talking about a Greek word in which sex with young boys may have been viewed positively in patri-archon ancient Greece.

And yes, don't know if you've read Mathew's latest but I saw from him liking my comment here that he's read yours--I was going to refer him to it but saw that would be redundant. So you two are also thinking along similar lines and I think you'd like his on Dune and AI: https://roundingtheearth.substack.com/p/i-must-not-fear-not-even-ai.

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Helene Belloni's avatar

After an 8 year sabbatical ,Yesterday I spent the day in the magic kingdom for my husbands birthday accompanied by my kids and grand kids. And on the first ride of the day while waiting in line I glance up at the sky and it is white. You just can't get away from it here in Florida. On a Sunday they may let you have a sunrise, blue sky w/ puffy white clouds and sunset. What a treat, but you cant plan for it because you don't know for sure. And YES, I couldn't agree more with feeling better during covid than under the constant white sky. I hadn't heard about the black and white/ in color comparison, but that also is true. You have a way of putting my feelings into words. Could the dimming of the Sun be a prohibiting of the natural flow of things. I know what you mean about the good flow as opposed to stop and go flow of things. Did you ever see the video of Anne H on the gurney?

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Tereza Coraggio's avatar

It's so interesting when you talked about clouds coming in from the East rather than the West. I noticed the same thing yesterday after you pointed it out. Our normal pattern is low fog off the ocean in the morning that burns off around 1. But it never goes the other way. We got an hour of sun and then I saw the clouds coming in a bank from inland. Never happens.

Yes I thought the same thing. It was blue sky today but even then, I feel like I'm seeing dark gray in it with my sunglasses on. And I had the same feeling, that they were 'letting' us have a sunny day, maybe for good behavior.

I'm just glad I have someone to express these feelings to. Otherwise, I'd be muttering to myself and feeling like I'm crazy. What's the video of Anne H on the gurney?

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GLK's avatar

Happiness comes from within. Dependent on perception. If your basic needs are met then eat, drink and be merry. None of us gets out of here alive.

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Tereza Coraggio's avatar

Agreed. Slight amendment to eat, dance and be merry. Suffering doesn't help anyone else.

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