The Moon Is A Harsh Mistress [Audio]

James Corbett – This month on Film, Literature and the New World Order David Friedman joins us to discuss Robert Heinlein’s science fiction classic, The Moon Is A Harsh Mistress. We discuss the power of Heinlein’s example of an anarchistic society and examine that society’s devolution into democracy. We also talk about whether books like this have value as metaphor or even blueprint for an anarchist transformation of society.

For those with limited bandwidth, CLICK HERE to download a smaller, lower file size version of this episode.

SF Source The Corbett Report  Mar 2016

[widget id=”text-44″]

Different, But Not Divided

Neale Donald Walsch | Neale Donald Walsch
November 28 2011

DivinityHello my wonderful friends…

It has been my great joy in these past weeks to be discussing with you what I have come to call The Holy Experience, which in my world is the moment–and I hope there are many of them for you–of meeting God.

Perhaps I have not made that clear before. That IS what we are talking about here. That is what we are discussing. When we talk about the Holy Experience we are talking about meeting God. It is a face-to-face meeting, too, not something that exists only in conceptual constructs.

We are talking about looking at Divinity directly, seeing It right there in front of us, knowing It as part of us, experiencing It as integral to us, and merging into It as our felt reality.

This is precisely our experience following our death, and God has made it clear to us that we are not required to wait until death in order to have it. We may embrace–and, indeed, create–this experience at any time. But we must feel that it is possible, and that we are worthy, to do so.

How, then, to shake off our own thoughts of unworthiness?

The first step is to re-identify ourselves. We must decide again–and for many decide anew–who we are. So long as we imagine that we are other than Who We Really Are, thoughts of our unworthiness will be possible.

The moment that we re-identify ourselves, assuming our true and real identity, the idea of unworthiness as it relates to us becomes impossible to conceive.

Continue reading