Monday 26 February 2018

Can't Buy A Home? - That's The Idea And This Is Why - The David Icke Dot...



Put succinctly, why we can't own our homes.

 In the past renting a home was normal. There was no stigma in it. The social strata was quite distinct, those who could, bought property, those who couldn't, rented. This of course is social engineering, you have to buy into the system to get a place in it.

Now, those who have the properties call in extortionate rents to financially cripple those whose fortunes are no where near close to buying, and never will be, and as wages of the normal classes will never be hiked to meet the costs of managing rents, especially in London, actually buying a home is equally as UNlikely as renting a decent home, in an out of danger area, and way out of the grasp for large sections of the population.

That is not enough though, no, there is shame burdened on you, when renting as an (older) adult in 2108 means you have failed economically and socially. Renting as an adult in the town or city of the country you grew up in is seen as a double failure.

I live in suburbia and feel it is a place with no soul,  "Only real thing is about what property and business you got." Even though most of the monied population is old money, there is still a strong rush to the place from people, and cultures  who 'live up to' and have bought into 'the status game'.

I came back to live here, to raise my children and live closer to my old folks. Its not far from the place I was born, but it is far enough to be considered a choicer part of London. Where I was born was a place which only ever had enough housing after the war, and then the newly built council houses were filled with the people moved out of overcrowded tenements in London's East End. Families raised their children and then the young people could get married and have homes near to where they grew up and worked. It was working class but the needs were met. Council housing estates were filled and schools and jobs were busy. That was in the sixties. By the 80's and 90's that was finished.

Some people make 'amounts of money that means they can buy a home' and so move out of the relentless renting dilemma.

Some people that get the lower rent council housing would be seen as being the lucky ones,  but the actual numbers of properties were and continue to be no where near sufficient, and with waiting lists to die on, and overbearing bureaucracy, depending on how you looked at it private renting is often the only way to get a home.

We are a diverse population,  we are not all the same, but most of us 'are dipped in the same sheep-dip' of being fleeced, life and soul for a place to call home, a sanctuary, a place to settle, and have a child. 

For many, and that includes the vast incoming numbers,  flooding in to live their dream of living in London, a London which although no longer Dickensian, already exists as a force-fed goose, bursting at the seams, bleeding from its anus and struggling to breathe let alone walk. Leaving homeless and the vulnerable outcast, a shocking city where wealth is hoarded and flaunted, and dangled as carrots on sticks, to keep the deluded blinkered in the illusion that they can reach up and grab it. 

A London where  'Human rights' mean being boxed up and chicken cooped.


Who organised this state of affairs?

We are leaving these important matters to people who have ulterior motives in their agendas.
This tip of the pyramid, is the 'they' who ultimately plan the social engineering and choose how the masses are to be educated and entertained, and have long controlled, manipulated and predetermined the health needs of masses. 

How humanity got around to 'organising' itself, was woefully corrupted. It was based in an historical context where mostly, the majority of us were conned/cheated/tricked and seen as not being clever enough, or worthy enough to be part of the debate of how we get to live.

There was no debate on equality, or egalitarian living, no views on how to share in a community. And, worse, not being part of the blood line families who want to keep the wealth in their own BLOOD, means you are the slave. That is seen in practically every so-called civilised country surviving today. 

egalitarian
ɪˌɡalɪˈtɛːrɪən/
adjective
  1. 1.
    believing in or based on the principle that all people are equal and deserve equal rights and opportunities.
    "a fairer, more egalitarian society"
noun
  1. 1.
    a person who advocates or supports the principle of equality for all people.
    "he was a social and political egalitarian"

Its not about living in such divided realities,  we are all different and require differences, just equally respected would be a start.

For me the crime is in the perpetuating this 'reality of social inequality' just because
that's the way it has always been done. The hostage hoods came in en masse with the industrial revolution.

So So so glad the game is finally up, the rules are having to be dissolved and the historical game is over,  in what ever way that comes.

We are ALL part of the debate now. It is a co-creation that begins with each moment,  thought and intention.  The more we clear the blood of victim-hood,  the more we become masters of our own lives, and that mastery is divine.

Michaela. 

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