But now the Impulse inwardly and from the real TRUTH and from Light Information, is raising the frequencies, and as more of us evolve from fear-motivated living, this cannot and will not sustain and support the 'money' and 'power over others' regimes that we have been stuck in. Its over.
It looses strength to dominate as it is 'revealed' for what it is. Its over, as humanity sees what it has created through different eyes, the eyes of the 'higher self' so that God looks through us and through our eyes as we continue to grow and evolve. Michaela.
Capital and Conflict, a financial magazine, has this to say about the apocalypse.
BOAZ SHOSHAN
Dear Reader,
What image does the word “apocalypse” summon in your mind?
The terrifying arrival of the four horsemen? Natural disasters destroying cities in scenes from a disaster film?
Maybe a group of attack helicopters flying in and wreaking havoc, like in Apocalypse Now?
These all depict change. But I found out recently that's not what apocalypse originally meant.
Apocalypse comes from the Greek word apokaluptein, meaning “to reveal”.
Following this description, the havoc doesn't come from outside forces, but within.
It's not a scene of violent destruction. It's the realisation that the destruction has already occurred.
Goods thought to be fresh, infested with vermin.
Respected offices of state, rotten with corruption.
And institutions thought to be strong and solvent... revealed to be hopelessly bankrupt.
My colleague Nick sees an “old-school” apocalypse on the horizon. The chaos is already here. We just don't see it yet. But he can show you where it is.
John Stuart Mill, the 19th century political economist, wrote that:
Panics do not destroy capital; they merely reveal the extent to which it has been destroyed by its betrayal into hopelessly unproductive works.
The institution Nick has found is grossly unproductive. It has destroyed the capital that financial markets have fed it.
And when that betrayal is revealed, we may well have an old school apocalypse.
All the best,
Boaz Shoshan
Editor, Southbank Investment Research
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