So according to the science:
Aluminum in deodorant is bad, but aluminum in pharmaceutical products is good.
Mercury in fish is bad, but mercury in pharmaceutical products is good.
Formaldehyde in flooring is bad, but formaldehyde in pharmaceutical products is good.
Glyphosate in food is bad, but glyphosate in pharmaceutical products is good.
And most importantly, people who reject pharmaceutical products are bad, and people who gladly accept them are good.
It almost seems like science will conclude just about anything as long as
they profit from it.
@Thebestfigen Innocent but:
“Thou shalt not make unto thee any graven image, or any likeness of ANY THING that is in heaven above, or that is in the earth beneath, or that is in the water under the earth:”
Exodus 20:4 KJV
People don't just drop out of Harvard and become billionaires overnight like Bill Gates or Mark Zuckerberg.
They're created by the intelligence communities to introduce new tech or agendas.
They are puppets.
Tonight it finally clicked for me.
Neo asks her the classic question:
“If you already know what I’m going to do… do I really have a choice?”
And she hits him with the line:
“You’ve already made the choice. You’re just here to understand why.”
For years I thought this meant “there’s no free will.” But that’s not it.
Here’s the real insight:
Free will doesn’t exist in the moment.
It exists in the identity that leads to the moment.
The actions you take right now?
They’re mostly automatic - shaped by your conditioning, experiences, fears, habits, and past.
But the person you’re becoming?
That’s where your freedom actually lives.
You don’t choose the moment.
You choose the man who will meet the moment.
Or put in another way:
Determinism writes the past.
Identity writes the future.
Because when your life isn’t where you want it to be, the answer isn’t “make better choices.” The answer is: become the version of yourself who makes better choices automatically.
That’s the real red pill.