I've heard that also - and understood that....to a point. It's taking much longer, I think, for people to wake up, which means more injury/death. I think if they bothered to tell people and show people the truth (maybe some confessions in exchange for a lesser plea), people might actually wake up. Unfortunately death and more death is…
I've heard that also - and understood that....to a point. It's taking much longer, I think, for people to wake up, which means more injury/death. I think if they bothered to tell people and show people the truth (maybe some confessions in exchange for a lesser plea), people might actually wake up. Unfortunately death and more death is not doing the trick. Hiding the truth is not really waking people up IMHO.
3. Game Theory: “Every battle is won before it’s ever fought.”
In the game of chess, very often the winning player appears to be losing for much of the game. Rooks and bishops are sacrificed; the queen hangs in peril; the King seems cornered; all seems hopeless; and all seems lost. However, while all that is happening, a deeper strategy is at work.
Temporary sacrifices and losses should be measured not by one’s personal expectations, nor by one’s immediate physical or emotional comfort, but by the end and purpose of the operation, which is nothing less than total victory. I highly recommend reading Sun Tzu’s 5th century BC the Art of War with all of this in mind.
During the American Revolutionary War, General Washington lost far more battles than he won; and all while losing them, he had his eye fixed upon the entire spectrum of constellating events; and despite near continual calamity, he was certain of victory. It was only a matter of time.
At a certain point in a chess match, the best players already know who is going to win.
Remember, lest anyone forget: we are at war. And I don't mean this metaphorically.
I've heard that also - and understood that....to a point. It's taking much longer, I think, for people to wake up, which means more injury/death. I think if they bothered to tell people and show people the truth (maybe some confessions in exchange for a lesser plea), people might actually wake up. Unfortunately death and more death is not doing the trick. Hiding the truth is not really waking people up IMHO.
How long does a chess game take? How long is a piece of string?
From my May 2022 piece: https://open.substack.com/pub/mistermicawber/p/breaking-the-spell-of-the-warlocks?r=110wl5&utm_campaign=post&utm_medium=web
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3. Game Theory: “Every battle is won before it’s ever fought.”
In the game of chess, very often the winning player appears to be losing for much of the game. Rooks and bishops are sacrificed; the queen hangs in peril; the King seems cornered; all seems hopeless; and all seems lost. However, while all that is happening, a deeper strategy is at work.
Temporary sacrifices and losses should be measured not by one’s personal expectations, nor by one’s immediate physical or emotional comfort, but by the end and purpose of the operation, which is nothing less than total victory. I highly recommend reading Sun Tzu’s 5th century BC the Art of War with all of this in mind.
During the American Revolutionary War, General Washington lost far more battles than he won; and all while losing them, he had his eye fixed upon the entire spectrum of constellating events; and despite near continual calamity, he was certain of victory. It was only a matter of time.
At a certain point in a chess match, the best players already know who is going to win.
Remember, lest anyone forget: we are at war. And I don't mean this metaphorically.