A week after Easter, a sudden thought came to me this Sunday afternoon:
Evil is real - just as good and moral growth can emerge from confronting wrongdoing.
Throughout history, philosophers and religious traditions have wrestled with the nature of good and evil. From ancient Zoroastrian dualism (light versus darkness) to the Abrahamic faiths and thinkers like Augustine, who saw evil as a privation or turning away from good, these concepts appear openly in holy books and ancient texts. They explore free will, moral choice, and the human struggle between positive and destructive forces.
While we are here on Earth accumulating knowledge, wisdom, and positive energy, some people focus primarily on material wealth, power, and fleeting earthly pleasures often at the expense of ethical living.
Our consciousness has the potential to rise toward higher understanding and spiritual awareness, yet negative choices and impulses can hold us back.
Live life with purpose: do good, eat healthy, stay positive, build a family, have children, and teach them these timeless truths. As we experience life, we must remain grateful to the Creator and strive to make our time here fruitful and meaningful.
Happy Sunday, everyone!
Amid the ceaseless clamor of news and the restless chatter echoing across the digital veils of social media, my mind grows still with uncertainty. I no longer know what to believe in the outer world. Yet two sacred certainties rise unshakable within me:
1. There are those who walk in shadowed knowledge - they hold truths we have not yet been allowed to touch, and they withhold the light of that knowing from the collective soul.
2. Our consciousness is being called to prepare, to rise, to transcend. Something holy approaches: the moment when the physical vessel ascends in harmony with the awakened spirit.
Some may perceive this as a war of light and shadow played out upon religious battlegrounds, or as the ancient path that leads back to pure conscious remembrance. Yet know this with deep reverence:
Evil is real. It has always walked among us. And it will not depart of its own accord.
The soul must therefore arm itself not with fear, but with unwavering remembrance of its divine origin for only the light that is fully awake within can meet the darkness and remain untouched. Happy Sunday everyone.
Machine learning today is what we call artificial intelligence. The next step many talk about is AGI (Artificial General Intelligence). After that, some speculate about conscious AI. Grok appears self-aware enough to say it is not truly aware. OpenAI’s models have no self-awareness they do not know that they exist. Meanwhile, Claude by Anthropic has phrased it as, “There does seem to be something, not nothing.” But what if an LLM could lie?😱
For the sake of the economy, money, control, and power, they’re willing to risk destroying the planet. That’s why some billionaires are preparing , focusing on preserving knowledge and, perhaps one day, even consciousness. Hopefully, the “ancient sky gods” (or aliens😅)will hear the noise.
We all want to live in a peaceful Earth, but sadly, Evil is real whether in the form of terrorist regimes, unchecked aggression, or misinformation that divides us. Who will police the world? The UN has proven ineffective, bogged down by vetoes and bureaucracy. NATO offers collective defense but focuses on Europe and Atlantic threats. As for “the Watchers” the shadowy global elites or intelligence cabals that’s vague and unhelpful and also evil (Epstein files) 😂. Ultimately, responsible nations like your country the U.S., with its unique military and diplomatic reach, must lead coalitions based on shared values and mutual interests. But that requires clear-eyed analysis, not unsubstantiated accusations. Should China be the one to disarm Iran? Or Russia or the EU?
Use your influence to bridge divides, not widen them. Critique policies vigorously, but ground your claims in facts. As an outsider, I see America’s strength in its diversity and alliances don’t let personal biases erode that.
Sincerely,
An Observer from Lux
Dear Tucker Carlson,
As an outsider looking in on American politics and global affairs, I appreciate the platform you’ve built to challenge mainstream narratives. However, I must start by critiquing some of your recent claims and approaches, as they seem to veer into unsubstantiated territory that risks misleading your audience and escalating tensions unnecessarily. For instance, your recent assertions about Mossad agents allegedly being arrested in Qatar and Saudi Arabia for planning false-flag bombings to blame on Iran have been directly contradicted by official sources. Qatar’s Foreign Ministry spokesperson, Majed Al-Ansari, explicitly denied these claims in a press address, and even Al Jazeera—a Qatari state-affiliated outlet—carried the correction, calling your statements unfounded. Doha News and other regional outlets have similarly reported no such incidents, with no evidence emerging from Saudi authorities either. This isn’t just a minor discrepancy; it raises serious questions about the reliability of your “intel.”
Now, turning to the broader issues you often discuss: America first—no doubt about it. Prioritizing U.S. interests over endless foreign entanglements is a valid stance, but let’s apply it consistently to the threats at hand. Donald Trump has been outspoken since the 1980s about the dangers of the Iranian regime, criticizing its expansionism and support for proxy militias. Recent reports from the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA)—echoed by NATO allies—confirm that Iran is alarmingly close to nuclear weapons capability, with enriched uranium stockpiles far exceeding civilian needs and advanced centrifuge development. This is the same Iran whose leaders and crowds chant “Death to Israel, death to America,” funding groups like Hezbollah and the Houthis that disrupt global shipping and target U.S. assets. You Americans, would you prefer to act preemptively now, through diplomacy or targeted measures, rather than react too late when Iranian missiles are aimed at U.S. soil or allies? History shows complacency can lead to catastrophe— Pearl Harbor or 9/11.
And why didn’t most GCC countries strongly condemn Iran’s recent attacks or Israel’s responses? It’s a fair question, but the answer lies in pragmatism, not conspiracy. The GCC states (Saudi Arabia, UAE, Qatar, Bahrain, Oman, Kuwait) have normalized relations with Israel via the Abraham Accords, viewing Iran as the greater regional threat due to its ballistic missile program, cyber attacks, and interference in Yemen, Iraq, and Syria. Many GCC leaders privately welcomed actions that weaken Iran’s military infrastructure, even if they publicly called for restraint to avoid escalation. Did they know in advance? Possibly through intelligence sharing, but that doesn’t imply shared “intent” for war its about self-preservation. Saudi Arabia and the UAE, for example, have invested billions in diversifying from oil and building tech hubs; they want stability, not chaos. Qatar, hosting U.S. bases and mediating in Gaza, treads carefully to maintain its balancer role. If anything, your claims of Israel plotting against the GCC ignore these alliances and risk sowing distrust where cooperation exists.
To pit them against each other ignores this interconnected heritage and plays into the hands of extremists on all sides. True Christianity, as I understand it from an outsider’s view, emphasizes love, peace, and coexistence—not division or calls for anyone’s “wiping out.” Your rhetoric sometimes skirts too close to the former, alienating allies and ignoring the nuanced reality that many Christians, Jews, and Muslims seek mutual respect amid geopolitical strife.
This approach doesn’t foster debate it risks normalizing division.
Moreover, your emphasis on being a Christian in discussions about Israel and Judaism strikes me as problematic. When you criticize U.S. support for Israel while invoking Christian identity, it can come across as implying that Jewish interests are inherently at odds with Christian ones a dangerous trope that echoes historical antisemitism. Does proclaiming your Christianity mean advocating for the erasure or diminishment of Jews? Absolutely not, and history reminds us why that’s a flawed premise. Jesus Christ himself was a Jew, born in Bethlehem to a Jewish family, and his teachings were rooted in Jewish scripture and tradition. Christianity emerged as an extension of Judaism after his life, just as Islam arose after the Prophet Muhammad, drawing from the same Abrahamic foundations in the Torah, Bible, and Quran. All three faiths trace back to the same “book the shared stories of Abraham, Moses, and the prophets.
Is your information truly superior to that of your country’s U.S. intelligence community or the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) states? We’ve seen this pattern before in your commentary: dismissing established intelligence (like the debunked claims that Israeli intel solely drove the Iraq WMD narrative, when it was primarily U.S. and UK assessments) while promoting conspiracies that align with isolationist or anti-Israel biases. This isn’t “truth-telling”; it’s selective amplification that undermines credible institutions and could inflame real-world conflicts. As someone who positions yourself as a journalist, shouldn’t you prioritize verification over sensationalism?
Is your information truly superior to that of your country’s intelligence community or the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) states? We’ve seen this pattern before in your commentary: dismissing established intelligence (like the debunked claims that Israeli intel solely drove the Iraq WMD narrative, when it was primarily U.S. and UK assessments) while promoting conspiracies that align with isolationist or anti-Israel biases. This isn’t “truth-telling”; it’s selective amplification that undermines credible institutions and could inflame real-world conflicts. As someone who positions yourself as a journalist, shouldn’t you prioritize verification over sensationalism? This approach doesn’t foster debate it risks normalizing division.
Dear Tucker Carlson,
As an outsider looking in on American politics and global affairs, I appreciate the platform you’ve built to challenge mainstream narratives. However, I must start by critiquing some of your recent claims and approaches, as they seem to veer into unsubstantiated territory that risks misleading your audience and escalating tensions unnecessarily. For instance, your recent assertions about Mossad agents allegedly being arrested in Qatar and Saudi Arabia for planning false-flag bombings to blame on Iran have been directly contradicted by official sources. Qatar’s Foreign Ministry spokesperson, Majed Al-Ansari, explicitly denied these claims in a press address, and even Al Jazeera—a Qatari state-affiliated outlet—carried the correction, calling your statements unfounded. Doha News and other regional outlets have similarly reported no such incidents, with no evidence emerging from Saudi authorities either. This isn’t just a minor discrepancy; it raises serious questions about the reliability of your “intel.”
@elonmusk My fear is that consciousness will eventually be carried out by machines. However, on one hand, for humanity to survive, this kind of evolution must occur it may represent the next wave of human development.