I Am ALL That I Am

rp_djwhalKhul.jpgDjwhal Khul here. Tashi Delek.

Alright. We’re in quite a state of expansion. We’re going to have Mercury going direct although it’ll still be muddy pretty much until our next Spirituality Article so really double and triple check the communications, especially on very important things.

The next thing I want to go through is “I am ALL that I am”. Because the expansion is really sort of telling you ”I am everywhere. I’m so vast, I’m everywhere, I’m everything, I’m everyone, I am ALL that is.” We have such an opportunity to really bask in that realization and to know it in the core of the being.

So practice with “I am ALL that I am” and then feel the expansion into the entire universe like there’s no limit. You can’t find an outer boundary. You are just going, and going, and going, and your consciousness is interconnected to all of creation. That simple expansion practice and the words, “I am ALL that I am”, should be quite useful. Continue reading

Dmitry Orlov ~ How To Start A War And Lose An Empire

“[Hunter Biden] just got outed for being a coke fiend. In addition to the many pre-anointed ones, like the VP’s son, there are also many barns full of eagerly bleating Ivy League graduates who have been groomed for jobs in high places. These are Prof. Deresiewicz’s “Excellent Sheep.”” – D Orlov

HunterBiden_Cokehead

A year and a half I wrote an essay on how the US chooses to view Russia, titled The Image of the Enemy. I was living in Russia at the time, and, after observing the American anti-Russian rhetoric and the Russian reaction to it, I made some observations that seemed important at the time. It turns out that I managed to spot an important trend, but given the quick pace of developments since then, these observations are now woefully out of date, and so here is an update.

At that time the stakes weren’t very high yet. There was much noise around a fellow named Magnitsky, a corporate lawyer-crook who got caught and died in pretrial custody. He had been holding items for some bigger Western crooks, who were, of course, never apprehended. The Americans chose to treat this as a human rights violation and responded with the so-called “Magnitsky Act” which sanctioned certain Russian individuals who were labeled as human rights violators. Russian legislators responded with the “Dima Yakovlev Bill,” named after a Russian orphan adopted by Americans who killed him by leaving him in a locked car for nine hours. This bill banned American orphan-killing fiends from adopting any more Russian orphans. It all amounted to a silly bit of melodrama.

But what a difference a year and a half has made! Ukraine, which was at that time collapsing at about the same steady pace as it had been ever since its independence two decades ago, is now truly a defunct state, with its economy in free-fall, one region gone and two more in open rebellion, much of the country terrorized by oligarch-funded death squads, and some American-anointed puppets nominally in charge but quaking in their boots about what’s coming next.

Continue reading

Busted: Federal Reserve Investigation: 46 Hours Of Secret Recordings [Audio]

CarmenSegarraThis is a unprecedented report on one of the most powerful and secretive institutions in America. The New York Federal Reserve is supposed to monitor big banks and their activity.

But what is happening was the the regulators who were supposed to be regulating the big banks, like Goldman Sachs for example, actually got captured by these institutions. Regulatory capture is when a regulator gets too cozy with the company that he’s supposed to be monitoring.

They found regulators had an unwillingness to take action and displayed extreme passivity toward the very institutions they were supposed to be regulating.

This all followed the financial crisis of 2008. There was a lot of blame heaped on the one institution that was in a position to notice the problems that led to the meltdown and to do something about them before disaster hit.

That institution is the Federal Reserve– the Fed. And in particular, its office in New York City– the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. It’s responsible for regulating the banks on Wall Street, which is to say some of the biggest banks in the world. Continue reading

What If Age Is Nothing But A Mind-Set?

Photo illustration by Zachary Scott for The New York Times.
Photo illustration by Zachary Scott for The New York Times.

One day in the fall of 1981, eight men in their 70s stepped out of a van in front of a converted monastery in New Hampshire. They shuffled forward, a few of them arthritically stooped, a couple with canes. Then they passed through the door and entered a time warp. Perry Como crooned on a vintage radio. Ed Sullivan welcomed guests on a black-and-white TV. Everything inside — including the books on the shelves and the magazines lying around — were designed to conjure 1959. This was to be the men’s home for five days as they participated in a radical experiment, cooked up by a young psychologist named Ellen Langer.

The subjects were in good health, but aging had left its mark. “This was before 75 was the new 55,” says Langer, who is 67 and the longest-serving professor of psychology at Harvard. Before arriving, the men were assessed on such measures as dexterity, grip strength, flexibility, hearing and vision, memory and cognition — probably the closest things the gerontologists of the time could come to the testable biomarkers of age. Langer predicted the numbers would be quite different after five days, when the subjects emerged from what was to be a fairly intense psychological intervention. Continue reading