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Loosh: A Neutral Exploration of an Unusual Idea About Human Energy

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  The word loosh is not a scientific term, nor is it part of any ancient tradition. It first appeared in the writings of Robert Monroe, an American researcher known for his work on out‑of‑body experiences. Monroe used the word to describe a kind of emotional energy that living beings produce, especially during moments of strong feeling. Over time, the idea spread far beyond his books and became part of a wider conversation about consciousness, psychology, and the unseen forces people imagine might shape human life. From a neutral research perspective, the concept of loosh is best understood as a metaphor . It is a way of talking about the power of human emotion — how fear, joy, grief, and love can feel like they radiate outward, affecting both the person experiencing them and the environment around them.  Many cultures have their own versions of this idea: the Chinese concept of qi , the Indian idea of prana , and the Yoruba understanding of àṣẹ all describe life‑force in d...

Humanity’s oldest stories do not describe a universe ruled by a single, unified divine will. Instead, they reveal '' THE SOURCE VS. gatekeepers ''.

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Humanity’s oldest stories do not describe a universe ruled by a single, unified divine will. Instead, they reveal a tension — sometimes subtle, sometimes violent — between two very different kinds of power. One power creates, expands, and elevates. The other restricts, manages, and suppresses. When these claims are read without theological filters, a clear cosmology emerges: the Source , the infinite origin of being, and the Gatekeeper , a finite but powerful administrator whose authority depends on limiting human ascent. The conflict between these two powers explains why human attempts to rise — intellectually, spiritually, technologically, or collectively — are repeatedly met with suppression across cultures. The Source is the unbounded origin: the force behind existence itself, the wellspring of consciousness, creativity, and potential. This power does not fear human growth because it is not threatened by anything. It is infinite by nature. In traditions across the world, the Source...

SOMETHING IS TRYING TO KEEP HUMANS ON A LOW FREQUENCY FOREVER. What kind of entity behaves like this — and what does that say about its cosmology

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What kind of entity behaves like this — and what does that say about its cosmology Across the world’s oldest stories, humanity repeatedly reaches for knowledge, power, unity, or autonomy — and a higher authority responds with suppression. This pattern is not isolated to the Bible. It appears in Greek myth, Mesopotamian epics, Near Eastern cosmologies, and even later Gnostic traditions. When these narratives are placed side by side, a single behavioural signature emerges: whenever humans rise, something pushes them back down. The consistency of this pattern forces a deeper question about the nature of the entity behind these interventions and the cosmology that allows such behaviour. The biblical narratives form the clearest sequence. In Eden, humans acquire moral awareness — the “knowledge of good and evil” — and are immediately expelled. The text itself admits the reason: “The man has become like one of us.” This is not a punishment for ignorance; it is a reaction to human parity. In...

Enki and the Architecture of Humanity: A Creator '?' Who Loved His Design More Than His Hybrid Children?

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I have spent years wandering through the old stories, the clay tablets, the whispered myths that survived fire, flood, and empire. The more I read, the more I realised that the gods of the ancient world were not distant halos of light. They were personalities. They had rivalries, loyalties, fears, and ambitions. And among them, one figure always stood apart: Enki, the god of wisdom, water, and invention. People like to call him the “friend of humanity,” but the deeper I went, the more I saw a different truth—one that is harder, sharper, and strangely more human. Enki was brilliant. Everyone agrees on that. He could solve problems no one else could. When the younger gods complained about their endless labour, it was Enki who proposed a new kind of being to take up the burden. He shaped the first humans with the same care an engineer gives to a delicate machine. He gave us intelligence, language, craft, and the ability to build cities from dust. But as I followed the stories, I noticed s...

Contested Antisemitism Cases: 25+ notable reported or disputed cases across defined categories, False Flags, Misreporting, and Legal Standards

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Below is a curated list of 25+ notable reported or disputed cases across defined categories. Entries are concise and formatted for analytical reference. Fabricated / False-Flag Incidents Michael Kaydar (2017) – Responsible for hundreds of hoax bomb threats targeting Jewish institutions in the United States. Winnipeg Bermax Cafe incident – Business owners staged antisemitic graffiti and a break-in. Paris suburban synagogue vandalism hoax – Perpetrator admitted fabricating antisemitic damage. Brooklyn swastika graffiti hoax – Student staged incident for personal attention. UK Labour Party graffiti hoax – Activist admitted to staging antisemitic abuse. Chicago synagogue bomb threat wave – Included copycat hoaxes beyond primary perpetrator. University of Michigan fake hate crime – Student fabricated antisemitic threats. Duke University flyer hoax – Antisemitic flyers traced to internal source. Queens College graffiti hoax – Student staged vandalism incident. ...

Ancient Traditions and the Problem of Human Origins: Enochic Descriptions Challenge the Post‑Flood Pure Human Adamic Lineage

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  Across the ancient Near East, stories of human origins, divine intervention, and catastrophic renewal reveal a shared preoccupation with the boundaries of humanity. Whether in Sumerian, Akkadian, or early Jewish literature, certain figures emerge as liminal—beings whose birth, appearance, or destiny sets them apart from ordinary humans. These individuals stand at the thresholds between worlds, mediating between divine realms and mortal existence. Their stories suggest that ancient cultures preserved a memory, or at least a conceptual framework, in which humanity was periodically reshaped, selected, or re‑engineered after cosmic disruptions such as the flood. Within this comparative landscape, the Enochic portrayal of Noah becomes especially destabilizing, for it challenges the coherence of the traditional Adamic lineage and raises the possibility that post‑Flood humanity descends from a figure who was not entirely human. The Sumerian sage Adapa provides one of the earliest examp...

How can a movement that seeks distinction 'OR' distance from the larger collective still claim allegiance to the human whole?

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Humanity speaks often of unity, but unity has never been evenly distributed. Some groups inherit safety; others inherit precarity. Some inherit visibility; others inherit erasure. In such a world, the idea of “one humanity” becomes an aspiration rather than a lived condition. Separatist movements emerge precisely in the gap between the ideal and the real. The paradox or the question should now be: how can a movement that seeks distance from the larger collective still claim allegiance to the human whole? The answer is not in sentiment but in power. Separatism does not arise in a vacuum. It emerges in landscapes shaped by: historical domination cultural dilution political exclusion economic asymmetry spiritual or symbolic erasure A group that chooses separation is not necessarily rejecting humanity; it may be rejecting the conditions under which humanity is currently organised.   Universalism Without Justice Is Cosmetic The phrase “one humanity” is powerful, but it can also be used...