Thursday, 22 August 2024

The Most Dangerous Superstition

This is a book that I haven't read yet but am planning to read very soon. As a reminder, Dr Tom Cowan recommended it in his latest podcast this week. 
 
Something I often think about when reading posts by people who want to try to get "the government" to change things, is that I have no faith whatsoever in "government" or in the process of trying to change anything by attempting to work within their systems. 
 
I think the NZ "government" is just a lowly division of the globalist scum, who run everything entirely in their interests, against the interests of NZ. But we have all been programmed to believe that we must have a "government", and that we must submit to it. And that is the Dangerous Superstition.

The Most Dangerous Superstition (2011) - by Larken Rose
 

"When someone looks out at the world and sees all manner of suffering and injustice, stretching back for thousands of years and continuing today, he invariably blames such problems on someone else's hatred, greed, or stupidity. Rarely will someone consider the possibility that his own belief system is the cause of the pain and suffering he sees around him. But in most cases, it is. The root cause of most of society's ills--the main source of man's inhumanity to man--is neither malice nor negligence, but a mere superstition--an unquestioned assumption which has been accepted on faith by nearly everyone, of all ages, races, religions, education and income levels. If people were to recognize that one belief for what it is--an utterly irrational, self-contradictory, and horribly destructive myth--most of the violence, oppression and injustice in the world would cease. But that will happen only when people dare to honestly and objectively re-examine their belief systems. "The Most Dangerous Superstition" exposes the myth for what it is, showing how nearly everyone, as a result of one particular unquestioned assumption, is directly contributing to violence and oppression without even realizing it. If you imagine yourself to be a compassionate, peace-loving, civilized human being, you must read this book."