THE EVIL INSIDE ME: How it has operated through time

Still pecking.

Very soon after posting yesterday, I realized that I should have brought the outside in. My quotidian concerns, though seemingly floating free of larger world concerns, and the evil accumulating there, actually do not. Or if they seem to, that’s because I did not take my much vaster unconscious mind into account. And, with Jung, I assume that my own unconscious mind is fed by/coterminous with the mass unconscious mind. In other words:

 

 

Okay. That being the case, what to make of what this amazing Chinese immigrant, Xi Van Fleet, who grew up during Mao’s revolution, when minds were deliberately indoctrinated in “struggle sessions,” during which people called out each other for their politically incorrect views, and the one so shamed then vowed to do better?

Here’s the difference: shadow work (consciously processing ones own shadow material) originates within the self, not prompted or directed by an outside source. Period.

This may be the single most important interview Tucker has ever done. Anyone, like me, who finds him or herself mesmerized from beginning to end will recognize, given all the subtle and blatant parallels with Mao’s revolution as a historical process, how our country has just about been taken over, and that to wrestle it back we simply must dissolve the extreme leftist capture of our educational institutions, kindergarten through graduate school.

https://x.com/TuckerCarlson/status/1762249935116963993?s=20

Okay. Here’s some shadow work.

Mao’s revolution began in 1966, when eruptive Uranus and primal Pluto came together for the first time in 135 years (last time was during the Civil War). That was also the year when I, and my generation of women, started to hold “consciousness raising” sessions, waking ourselves up to our common oppression. The eventual result? The utter obliteration of family bonds, which are, or were, the bedrock of a stable society. I already knew this about myself, how, swept along by the zeitgeist, I participated as an angry feminist in that ignition of chaotic cultural conditions.

Now, what Xi Van Fleet has done for me, is to forcibly enlarge my overton window, so that I can begin to appreciate the parallel between our “consciousness-raising” sessions and Mao’s “struggle sessions”!

 

 

 

 

 

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