Everyone Knows Something Is Wrong
There is deliberate misguidance in all walks of life. Why? Culturally induced ignorance. Any sense of wrongness we feel isn’t an accident, but a feature of systems designed to keep people distracted, divided, or misinformed. History shows that the wrongness we feel today is the result of timeless tactics that have existed for thousands of years, following predictable patterns of excitement and confusion. This isn’t just a lack of facts; it’s the active production of confusion. How often do we read something and become annoyed with people?
By flooding the environment with junk information, the truth becomes harder to find. Even information that we believe is spiritually sound is still intellectualisation.
When a population is focused on internal conflicts based on class, religion, or tribe, those in power ensure that the public is too busy fighting each other to look upward at the system itself. The goal is to prevent a unified front. If you feel something is wrong, you’re guided to blame your neighbour rather than the architect of the situation.
Knowing something is wrong as it causes suffering – and acknowledging that – is the beginning of the path to enlightenment. The system’s only occupation is to prevent the awakening to understand the difference between knowing about something, and actual knowing.