Sunday 7 July 2024

Ben Emlyn-Jones on Beyond the Forbidden

 
I have been featured on Beyond the Forbidden TV. Subjects discussed include: "Catastrophic Disclosure", aliens false flag, spiritual contact and much much more.

3 comments:

  1. Gravity Mirror9 July 2024 at 10:49

    I wonder if reptilians have an absolute physiological need for loosh in the way humans need food, or if it is more like an acquired addictive dependency as with a human heroin addict.

    As humans we spend much of our time shovelling the carcasses of dead creatures down our necks, creatures we have killed for that specific purpose. I include plants as creatures. We can justify this by saying we evolved in an ecosystem where everything is furiously trying to eat everything else. Our co-terrestrials are all programmed to age and die so we all share the same ultimate fate, either to be killed as prey or to be scavenged as food after death. As Bill Mollison says "All plants are carnivores, they eat you in the end". These trophic relationships sustain the ecosystem and without them the Earth would be lifeless and barren.

    Alongside our voracious appetite for food we have also developed a capacity for empathy, our intelligence giving us the ability to imagine ourselves walking in the shoes of others. We have codified empathy in our laws enabling us to build a civilization where the expectation is not to be killed by one of our own species, much less to be eaten by them.

    Other animals can of course show empathy, but it doesn't usually extend much beyond their own offspring or related herd or pack. Humans routinely extend empathy to other species. So we have cat-lovers, dog-lovers, horse-lovers and many people who would not eat the meat of these species or that of wild species seen as almost human like chimps and gorillas.

    The really bizarre relationship I struggle to get my head around is that between humans and chickens. They are our #1 prey species. We slaughter billions of them every year. Yet we enable them to exist in numbers and reach places they could never have attained or reached as wild birds. We must also demonstrate some empathy toward them or there would be no such notion as 'free range' chicken or eggs. One of my cousins has a large orchard and vegetable garden and used to keep a few chickens for eggs. As expected they stopped laying at a certain age but he did not butcher them at that point, allowing them to live out their lives in luxury, foraging in his garden and tending to their every need. When they eventually died he buried them and marked their graves.

    This brings me back to the Reptilians. It's a fair assumption they have a civilization and some capacity for empathy, at least for members of their own species. I wonder if some or many of them are saddened by their own dependency on causing suffering and fear to others, humans in particular. Or is the desire for loosh is an ingrained part of their culture which cannot be questioned? Many commentators in exopolitics speak about good and bad reptilians so perhaps there has already been a split and the good reptilians have migrated elsewhere.

    The white pill in all of this for me is the observed link on our own planet between intelligence and empathic behaviour. Simple organisms with little or no brain are ravenous cannibals showing no regard for the 'other'. As neural networks get more complex you start to see more empathic behaviour, starting with parental care. Humans and/or Reptilians are as good as it gets on Earth and we are both falling short of our potential if only because we can imagine something better. I think it's a fair bet that civilisations capable of interstellar or interdimensional travel are both highly intelligent and highly empathic. I take comfort in the belief that it is only a matter of time before we find out for sure.

    I'm sorry to go on like this Ben, and if I've gone way off topic but thanks for reading if you got this far.

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  2. That's alright, GM. Feedback is always welcome, but do you mind if I treat this as a HPANWO TV comment and reply to it on my reply video? Thanks.

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  3. Gravity Mirror9 July 2024 at 19:40

    By all means do that but only if you feel it would be a useful addition to the next Comments Reply video. Given how busy you are you should not feel obliged to reply at all and I will already have several other comments in play by the time the next Comments Reply comes around. I actually put it on here so you wouldn't be in the position of needing to read it all out in a video. Another possibility would be to briefly paraphrase the essence of the comment and then make a spoken reply.

    I'm blessed with the ability to type almost as fast as I can think but don't always consider how it comes across to others. I'll try to keep them concise and to the point from now on.

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