Bashar provides a metaphysical analysis of how political systems maintain control through the deliberate cultivation of fear. He explains that governing structures based on third-density consciousness require populations to remain in low-frequency states (fear, survival anxiety, division) to accept external authority as necessary. This is achieved through cycles of manufactured or amplified crises—economic collapses, health scares, security threats, and social conflicts—that keep populations perpetually anxious and dependent on 'leaders' for protection. The media serves as the transmission system for these fear narratives. Bashar emphasizes that this is not a conspiracy by specific individuals but an emergent property of consciousness systems based on separation and hierarchy. As collective frequency rises, these control mechanisms become less effective—people begin to see through the manipulation and demand authentic governance. The transition involves both recognizing how fear has been used to control and taking responsibility for one's own frequency. True governance of the future will be based on transparency, voluntary participation, and the understanding that all individuals are sovereign creators, not subjects to be managed.
The Politics of Fear: How Governments Control Through Manufactured Crisis
REL-060 Deep ·
Translation Note
'Manufactured crisis'譯為「製造危機」;'sovereign creators'譯為「主權創造者」;強調系統性分析而非陰謀論
'Manufactured crisis'譯為「製造危機」;'sovereign creators'譯為「主權創造者」;強調系統性分析而非陰謀論
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