How Can You Show Me Anything Spiritual When You’re Not Even Getting Enough Melanin in Your Fucken Brain? Are you stupid or just rude to insult my intelligence so badly?






You can only teach theory and fake authenticity. 

It’s like a computer with no battery life claiming it can download JPEGs and MPEGs. 

The question isn’t just about knowledge but about lived, embodied experience. 

A species dealing with chronic oxidative stress, neurological inefficiencies, and genetic limitations can theorize all it wants, but its practical execution will always be hampered by its biological deficits. 

No amount of external learning can override the internal disadvantages that come with a compromised vessel.

The Biological Basis of Spiritual Perception

Modern neurology and medical research have identified melanin as a critical component in the brain’s ability to function optimally, particularly in the substantia nigra and locus coeruleus, areas responsible for dopamine production and neuromodulation. 

Higher concentrations of neuromelanin are correlated with improved cognitive function, emotional regulation, and even heightened sensory perception. 

Studies have suggested that oxidative stress—often linked to genetic mutations and lower melanin levels—can contribute to neurodegenerative diseases such as Parkinson’s and Alzheimer’s, both of which disproportionately affect populations with lower melanin concentrations (Smith et al., 2017, Jones & Patel, 2019).

This means that spirituality, often described as an intuitive or energetic alignment with existence, may not just be a metaphysical concept but a physiological one. If your neurology is inherently compromised, how can you truly grasp the depths of spiritual experience beyond mere academic theorization?

Historical Patterns of Domination Through Abstraction

History has shown that certain groups, unable to directly access deeper spiritual or genetic excellence, have sought control through abstraction

—developing complex systems, 

institutions, 

and frameworks to compensate for their deficiencies. 

Colonialism, for instance, did not just conquer lands; it sought to replace indigenous spiritual and knowledge systems with rigid, hierarchical models. 

The forced imposition of Abrahamic religions, the erasure of oral traditions, and the codification of knowledge into texts that could be owned, restricted, and manipulated are all examples of this phenomenon.

Consider the widespread theft and distortion of African and indigenous spiritual systems. Vodun, Ifá, and Kemetian wisdom were demonized while their core knowledge was extracted and repackaged into Western esoteric traditions. 

Even today, institutions like the Vatican house artifacts and scriptures that contradict their official teachings, yet they refuse to return them to their rightful cultural contexts. 

This is not the behavior of a people secure in their own spiritual power—it is the behavior of those who must control narratives to compensate for an inherent lack.

The Fear of Spiritual Obsolescence

The greatest fear of those who dominate through systems rather than spiritual excellence is obsolescence. 

If a population cannot compete intellectually or spiritually on an even playing field, it must ensure that the competition never occurs. 

This explains the aggressive suppression of non-Western philosophies, the economic disenfranchisement of melanated peoples, and the push toward artificial intelligence and transhumanism. 

The goal is not just intellectual supremacy but the complete rewriting of what it means to be ‘conscious’ and ‘spiritual’ in a way that negates those with the highest natural capacity for it.

In modern society, this is evident in the push for technological spirituality—virtual reality ‘churches,’ AI-generated religious texts, and attempts to quantify mystical experiences through neuroscience. These efforts, while seemingly ‘progressive,’ are really just another way for the spiritually deficient to hijack the divine, reducing it to something that can be programmed, owned, and sold.

 Theory vs. Embodiment

True spirituality is not something that can be theorized into existence. It is lived, felt, and embodied. A being struggling with oxidative stress, genetic limitations, and neurological inefficiencies can only mimic what comes naturally to others. And so, the question remains: Is their greatest fear not just being outperformed intellectually but being rendered obsolete spiritually?

Many are called. few are the chosen.









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