Digital ID - permission given, denied or revoked in all aspects of life
Denial and the Illusion of Safety
When I mentioned the possibility of a nuclear war to a friend recently, they later told me I had negative energy which brought them down with all that doom about the end of the world. What a bummer. Yet I hadn’t felt my energy to be negative at all, and the topic is frighteningly real, more so by every passing day.
This is just one example of many where I interact with people going about their lives as normal, planning their future as if nothing bad is really happening and if it is, it’s somewhere else to someone else and only on the television. After all, the authorities are on top of it and protecting us as they’ve always done.
Needless to say, almost every one of them is jabbed and under the illusion they and those around them are thus protected from sickness and death and even World War III.
Nothing could be further from the truth.
But to them, they are free to operate within society and travel in complete safety with official recognition and, most of all, permission. They are good citizens doing their moral and civic duty.
A permission-based life contains within it the element of fear, of what might happen acting without permission. On a small scale, it’s a thrill to break. On a larger scale, the threat of fines, imprisonment or, in some countries, death makes for efficient compliance.
Living a life of permission is giving your personal power, your individuality, your freedom to someone else, be it a partner, an institution or the state. Our current systems are built around it. Many would argue we couldn’t live without it.
Let’s see about that.
License to Kill
Culturally, permission is sought more by some than others. Germany springs to mind as permission-seeking and the virtue of obtaining it has immense social value there. Permission is a form of currency and national loyalty, validating one’s very existence.
Looking back, the German people’s embrace of socialism enabling its rise in the 1930s as fascism and the horrors they went on to act, also considered themselves good citizens, or as they put it, good Germans, complete with a health passport. They thought they were free.1
Given permission, it is not only Germans, but any of us who hold the potential to commit acts of horrific violence in loyalty to our tribe or protection of our national family and identity. Once self-determination is transferred to the perceived authority of others, responsibility is eliminated and only obedience remains, regardless of the act or outcome.
A permission-based life is not only cowardly, it can be a license to kill.
The repression of our instinctive animal nature, our innate power, the domestication of humanity as a whole, is where we find ourselves today. Over the last two-and-a-half years, those repressed instincts have erupted like pus from a fetid wound, aimed at anyone who acted without permission.
Disobedience was, is, a selfish act that jeopardizes the safety of others, of the tribe.
How dare you!
The Anatomy of Abuse
Any controller in an abusive relationship knows the power of permission and knows how to elicit it for the purpose of enacting pain and trauma for their own pleasure. Collectively, we have been and still are in an abusive relationship with governments, their agencies, financiers and specifically, the people behind them, the unelected globalist elite with their plans to ‘guide humanity into a sustainable future’.
Permission was first asked for, then coerced, then mandated and then enforced, at times by violence. We have been forced to cover our faces, to breath our own exhaust, we have been incarcerated, physically separated, our businesses closed, the elderly isolated, restrained and euthanized, our children psychologically abused and damaged for life - and we let them.
As more and more of this abusive relationship becomes apparent, not only to the disobedient but to those good citizens who did their moral and civic duty, who have been left high and dry when they, their spouse or their child suffer horrific injuries from a product told to be ‘safe and effective’, a reckoning is at hand.
The term ‘safe and effective’ for a toxic product should have been a dead giveaway of an abuser - which it was for many of us - but their deceptive persuasion was professional grade at industrial scale and highly successful.
It still is.
Yet understood from the side of the abuser, safe and effective makes perfect sense. For what is the role of the abuser but to harm and disable others to feel safe? Beneath their twisted psychological pleasure the abuser is terrified of losing control. From their perspective, the collective harms we have been subject to have indeed been safe and effective.
Those still willingly captive in this relationship are giving their sovereign power and dignity to abusers, people with immense global power, money and influence who are setting up the infrastructure to maintain that abuse with such names as ‘freedom as a service’ and a ‘rules based order’ with ‘digital ID as a human right’.
That entire infrastructure is based on permission. For permission to exist, a hierarchy of authority needs to be in place: a small group of people and their enforcers telling everyone else what to do, how to do it, what to eat and drink, what to say, what to think.
Recently, I was in the London tube and as we pulled into a station, a voice hailed us from the loudspeakers: Mind the doors. Make sure shoelaces are securely fastened.
We are being treated like children in need of a parent. To the abusers, we cannot, must not think for ourselves or take responsibility for ourselves. We must need them. Their work - all the propaganda, the threats to our wellbeing and survival, the deliberate destruction of our food supply, the chemical alterations of the weather, the possible nuclear fallout - is to ensure that happens.
Our work is to make sure it doesn’t.
Breaking Free
Stop needing permission. Use your own initiative. Live your life, not someone else’s. Breaking an abusive pattern can be tough when we believe the abuser, when we think we need them. But when we see the abuser has lied to us so thoroughly, so effectively, so remorselessly, their hold begins to weaken, the ground beneath us starts to give way, our knees buckle as we wake up to the torture we’ve agreed to, and then something magical happens...
A strength within starts to rise like a tidal force and our eyes open as if for the first time. We feel the power within us, a power connecting us all, a power far greater than we can imagine, infinitely greater than the globalist abusers.
Once we allow our true selves to emerge, to burst forth, we never need permission again. We become unstoppable. We become ungovernable.
A people, each in their own sovereign power, working together, creating together, cooperating together, living and loving together, caring for one another, will create a world worth living in.
This is our sustainable future.
NE
They Thought They Were Free: The Germans 1933-45 by Milton Mayer https://brownstone.org/articles/they-thought-they-were-free/
Great piece, thank-you for writing it.
I think about this a lot as for several years it was a personal journey/project of mine to stop seeking permission--it was a way I was raised and only in adulthood did I realize it was effed up, even when disguised as behaviors like"achieving" or "being ambitious". It was still a form of, 'can I do what I really want, if I satisfy you that I am worthy in this other arena?' The desire for approval and permission can be masked by all kinds of socially accepted stances.
Unlearning those habits took practice, but I unlearned them for one of the same reasons you list--it is abnegation of the self, a license to abuse and kill, to be abused and be killed.
Perfectly expressed.
It melds perfectly with the turning point in woke arising (and waking to woke, I hope): complete abdication of personal authority, autonomy and agency, with the woke in particular seemingly stuck around the age of two in their capacity to think and by the explosive narcissistic idiocy they spew when confronted.
Like you I don't feel enervated by seeing what is, although some people around me feel exhausted by even considering what might be true. The opposite for me. The more I act to see actively what is happening, the more alive and connected and optimistic I am. The I Ching puts it perfectly, slightly paraphrased:
When we are faced with an obstacle that is to be overcome, weakness and impatience can do nothing. Only strong individuals can stand up to their fate, for their inner security enables them to endure to the end. This strength shows itself in uncompromising truthfulness with themselves. It is only when we have the courage to face things exactly as they are, without any sort of self deception or illusion, that the light will develop out of events by which the path to success may be recognised.
I Ching 5 Hsu p.25 Baynes/Wilhelm
Thank you.