We are being manipulated, procured, and directed by the will of others. This raises a difficult distinction: what is commonly called “human” behavior often aligns so closely with destructive and exploitative tendencies that it becomes difficult to separate the individual from the influence of something more pernicious.
If transcendence is seen as impossible, then the pursuit of becoming better—purifying oneself and refining the total enthalpy of energy—takes on a paradoxical role. In such a world, the act of ultimate good is not received as improvement, but as dismantling. To purify is to destabilize, for the very structures of this existence are built upon imbalance. Thus, the effort to rise above error is experienced by the system as destruction.
Within this framework, error itself becomes a pivotal force. Errors are not simply mistakes, but bargaining chips—currencies that can be exchanged, leveraged, and used to bind people into cycles of debt and control. In this way, individuals are compelled to act in ways that are not neutral but serve the sustaining of a larger hidden order.
This leads to several key observations:
Error as Currency: Mistakes, sins, and weaknesses are used as commodities, giving the system leverage over individuals.
Hidden Allegiances: Actions, jobs, and traditions are rarely neutral; they act as vessels carrying ideological or occult influence.
Weaponized Compassion: Selfless individuals are threatened with the suffering or erasure of their loved ones, turning care itself into a tool of control.
Suppressed Identity: Our true selves have little to no value here, because the structure of this existence does not support authenticity or purity.
Purity as Destabilization: True purification destabilizes this system, because the world is built upon imbalance and error as its sustaining force.
Seen in this way, the struggle is not simply moral or personal, but systemic. The world we inhabit is an intentionally maintained construct designed to thrive on distortion. Recognizing this dynamic clarifies why transcendence is resisted, why compassion is turned into a weapon, and why identity is suppressed: purity is not a resource here but a threat.
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