#SundayMorning #AMJoy #Resistance We are not jealous of these millionaires we speak of. We just want tax laws that help the middle class directly.
Calibrate to 432Hz.
https://www.sourcevibrations.com/
Im gonna agree with trent shelton on this one, loyalty is rare. Finding someone who wants to stay in your life no matter the circumstances, thats fucking rare. But, there will come a point where if you keep pushing your luck and keep treating this person poorly, they’ll say enough is enough and will have to choose to walk out of your life. And thats a terrible mistake, to let go of someone that loyal because whos to say you’ll ever find someone like that again.
Published on #FITSO Motivation
http://goo.gl/EB8p5
“Over time our individual sense of identity (social mask) has been shaped into a particular pattern (template) given to us by our society. This is the feeling of exclusivity; belonging to a particular tribe, race, religion or country. If this assimilation of ‘divide and conquer’ is successful (through conformity), you cannot successfully exit this artificial matrix construct.” -Anon I mus (Spiritually Anonymous)
“Most of us go through our entire lives experiencing unnecessary, personal suffering without ever waking up to the light of our true, infinite nature. The prison that we are trapped in exists only as internal programming inside of our heads; a thought-created construct of an illusory separate person (me, myself and my story) and its false conditioning.” ~Anon I mus (Spiritually Anonymous)
“All external enemies that appear before us are merely projections and judgments created from our own unobserved ‘egoic mind’.” ~Anon I mus (Spiritually Anonymous)
This is about properties and volumes of money that go beyond your imagination, but even more importantly power to make the laws of countries private, and channeling even the population as every other resource. Right from the seats of school we’re getting ourselves in great debt for trying to get educated, the higher the education the greater the debt, so that the top students are forced to sign for private research and much needed money. With signing comes the privacy of any future discovery, even if some of it gets released, it comes at a very high cost, so that you’ll have to spend half of your life working to be able to afford it - talking about dollars hides the fact that the real cost for anything in this society is how much ‘life’ we spend on getting it! The human genome project was done with public funding, from taxpayers money - and, this is written on the official site:
“Who owns the human genome?
Every part of the genome sequenced by the Human Genome Project was made public immediately - in fact, new data on the genome is posted every 24 hours. It is true that private companies have filed thousands of patents on human genes over the past several years. We don’t know how many such patents have been filed, whether the patents will be awarded or if they’re enforceable. Most of the patent applications have not been acted upon, so we really don’t know how much, if any, of the genome can be used freely for commercial purposes.”
So… any average Joe could of “immediately” benefited from the research, but with the ‘lack of public interest’, only big corporations (you know… the ones having the researchers and laboratories) were interested in profiting after all.
Scientific research is private, art collections are private, all the greatest minds from statisticians to lawyers and experts in tax evasion (see panama papers), to the best medical doctors and medical research… even money are private but they don’t teach that in school, about the ownership of central banks, including the american FED. These private 1 percent interests make the global social agenda so it should come as no wonder that the big funding is allocated for searching evidence against global warming , and in the propaganda hiding global warming.
Again - the top 1% of the population owns as much as the rest 99% ! - even tho all that wealth… knowledge and patents, art and medicine, resources taken from the ground and energy, institutions and infrastructure, are all the fruit of all our combined work. If there is someone who did Not contribute… is those very ‘1 percent’!
CNN failed to stress this? They’ve must of been covering ‘serious problems’. After all… they’re so professional if you’re looking at their involved faces and serious acting. They’ll surely inform you when you have to bail out the country from crisis or when you have to fight a war for oil.
images taken from NOAA
Take a moment and recognize the incredible contribution you made to your community and your country by voting in the midterm elections earlier this week. You exercised your right to vote and you made your voice heard. That is no small feat.
The results of the election may have left some of you disappointed, but we wanted to point out just how much new diversity and representation people like you voted into office. Our leaders should reflect the diversity of the communities they serve, and this year you elected a whole bunch of firsts:
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, representing New York’s 14th Congressional District, becomes the youngest woman ever elected to the U.S. Congress.
Rashida Tlaib, Michigan, is the first Muslim woman to be elected into Congress.
Ilhan Omar, Minnesota, is the first Somali American to be elected in Congress.
Ayanna Pressley becomes Massachusetts’ first Black Congresswoman.
Jared Polis, Colorado, is the first openly gay man elected governor in the United States.
Sharice Davids becomes one of the first Native American and openly lesbian woman to be elected to Congress.
Deb Haaland is also one of the first Native American women elected to Congress.
Letitia James becomes the first woman in New York to be elected as Attorney General, the first African-American woman to be elected statewide office, and the first Black person to serve as Attorney General.
Jahana Hayes is the first Black woman to represent Connecticut in Congress.
Massachusetts voted to maintain its anti-discrimination law protecting trans and nonbinary people.
Florida passes Amendment 4, which restores voting rights to 1.4 million ex-felons who have completed their sentences.
This was all done by you. You made these monumental changes happen with the power of your vote.
Let’s remember: it isn’t over. Voting isn’t the end. Continue to volunteer in your communities and attend events to keep your community in check. Remember that change rarely comes without action. Take action.
Thank you, Tumblr.