The Eightfold Path of Good Character
Gary ‘Z’ McGee – A robust character hinges on eight core virtues: courage, curiosity, temperance, humility, liberty, honor, wisdom, and humor.
Gary ‘Z’ McGee – A robust character hinges on eight core virtues: courage, curiosity, temperance, humility, liberty, honor, wisdom, and humor.
Dr. Tim Coles – In Brave New World, author Aldous Huxley wrote that the slaves of the future are happy.
Dylan Charles – How is your spirit affected by the insanity coming at us everyday?
Dylan Charles – So, how did we go from rugged individualism to ‘acquiescing to whatever they throw at us is awesome?”
Brandon Smith – Real mind control is not about torture and force, it is about quietly induced acceptance.
Dylan Charles – It must be a spiritual illness which plagues society.
Dylan Charles
– The author of Brave New World left a warning for those who love liberty.
Gary ‘Z’ McGee – You have from this day until the day you die to live the life you want to live.
Kingsley Dennis – The more I observe external events unfolding, the more I perceive predictive programming at work.
Dylan Charles – Never forget what people are capable of doing and becoming when influenced by scientifically engineered mass propaganda.
Dylan Charles – This conversation serves to bring light to how world events are affecting people like you and I.
Bruno Waterfield – Orwell was concerned above all about the particular threat posed by totalitarianism to words and language.
Patrick Henningsen – The last 250 years have been an extraordinary progression from monarchies to democratic nations, in which the state eventually assumed a god-like status.
Dr. Timothy Coles – Rockefeller’s profit-making agenda included the promotion of so-called “scientific medicine,” which has now become the norm.
Kingsley Dennis – Social norms are persuading many people to prefer safety and security rather than the potential discomfort that comes from gaining new realizations and understanding.
Dylan Charles – There’s a profound sense of mental and spiritual clarity which continues to deepen with each day of sobriety.
Dylan Charles – How do you condition people to destroy themselves, and why is it such an international priority?
Dylan Charles – In our quest for more knowledge we seek the comfort and sense of security we think we can find by knowing that we’re not alone.
Kingsley Dennis – It is difficult for humans to accept that great change and shifts come about through breakdown, and what appears as destruction.