sublimesatanist
Active member
Sorry to get somewhat theoretical on you guys but I have some thoughts I wanted to throw out there.
Call me crazy but I firmly believe money today is a major part of the slavery system. It has become heavily traced and monitored. Even cash can instantly be tracked in the presence of a 'points card', which nearly every business pushes.
At many places you can't get discounts on items unless you have one. The points you get back (for a single person) are barely worth anything over the years, yet they insist on calling it a points system.
Another possible way "they" can track our spending is the alphanumeric codes on banknotes scanned by ATMs and banknote counters at banks. Everything belonging to the "Jewtrix" is made up of numbers. (Term brilliantly coined by HP Hooded Cobra).
Overall, I feel that money is many things and in modern times it has largely become a tool for creating statistics and algorithms. For those who are curious about understanding the system we call 'society' I think it is valuable to recognize that effective mass-control comes only through surveillance.
A partially unrelated side note as some may ask: "Why do you like such negative topics?"
Answer: I find intrigue and beauty in them. I have a fascination with dystopia and the macabre. Although these subjects are negative I think about the positives that can come from facing them. For instance, acceptance of the unknown and possible death/mortality. I'm very weird that way but I'm sure some of you might get where I'm coming from.
Consider this quote:
"Beauty is no quality in things themselves: It exists merely in the mind which contemplates them; and each mind perceives a different beauty." - David Hume
That aside, here are a few etymologies I learned to offer further meanings and information:
Tax: Middle English (also in the sense ‘estimate or determine the amount of a penalty or damages’, surviving in tax (sense 4 of the verb)): from Old French taxer, from Latin taxare ‘to censure, charge, compute’, perhaps from Greek tassein ‘fix’.
Penalty: early 16th century: probably via Anglo-Norman French, from medieval Latin poenalitas, based on poena ‘pain’
Mortgage: late Middle English: from Old French, literally ‘dead pledge’, from mort (from Latin mortuus ‘dead’) + gage ‘pledge’.
Between taxes and mortgages there exists pain/damage and death. It's as though these words were more accepted and thought about back then; not like in our hyper-sensitive world today. "Oy vey, don't worry goyim. We make words less painful for you. Ignorance is bliss."
Money: Middle English: from Old French moneie, from Latin moneta ‘mint, money’, originally a title of the goddess Juno, in whose temple in Rome money was minted.
Wikipedia: "Juno Moneta, an epithet of Juno, was the protectress of funds."
Here we see money/mint has Pagan origins. It's interesting that money was derived from Juno, Goddess of marriage (bringing together) and childbearing (creation).
Currency: 1650s, "condition of flowing," a sense now rare or obsolete, from Latin currens, present participle of currere "to run" or "to flow".
We can think of it as something like water. I've heard people relate currency with electric currency, which also flows.
This adds to the concept of it being energetic/spiritual. Consider the way Jews gain power through money and use it to oppress and exploit people (corporatocracies, interest rates, brainwashing media, etc). Every transaction has an emotional/spiritual and physical aspect to it; it can be used for bad and good.
This also further verifies for me that money workings do in fact work. I've read some comments where people say "meditation won't get you a job/money". They made comparisons to people in third-world countries when stating this. Understand that prosperity is related to money. For people in these situations it would be more effective to meditate on the former rather than the latter (tangible) object.
In closing I want to state that since that since our thoughts/feelings are what make money spiritual we should focus positively on our finances, be flexible, mindful and live lavishly if or when it is practical.
Thanks for reading my "two cents." :lol:
Call me crazy but I firmly believe money today is a major part of the slavery system. It has become heavily traced and monitored. Even cash can instantly be tracked in the presence of a 'points card', which nearly every business pushes.
At many places you can't get discounts on items unless you have one. The points you get back (for a single person) are barely worth anything over the years, yet they insist on calling it a points system.
Another possible way "they" can track our spending is the alphanumeric codes on banknotes scanned by ATMs and banknote counters at banks. Everything belonging to the "Jewtrix" is made up of numbers. (Term brilliantly coined by HP Hooded Cobra).
Overall, I feel that money is many things and in modern times it has largely become a tool for creating statistics and algorithms. For those who are curious about understanding the system we call 'society' I think it is valuable to recognize that effective mass-control comes only through surveillance.
A partially unrelated side note as some may ask: "Why do you like such negative topics?"
Answer: I find intrigue and beauty in them. I have a fascination with dystopia and the macabre. Although these subjects are negative I think about the positives that can come from facing them. For instance, acceptance of the unknown and possible death/mortality. I'm very weird that way but I'm sure some of you might get where I'm coming from.
Consider this quote:
"Beauty is no quality in things themselves: It exists merely in the mind which contemplates them; and each mind perceives a different beauty." - David Hume
That aside, here are a few etymologies I learned to offer further meanings and information:
Tax: Middle English (also in the sense ‘estimate or determine the amount of a penalty or damages’, surviving in tax (sense 4 of the verb)): from Old French taxer, from Latin taxare ‘to censure, charge, compute’, perhaps from Greek tassein ‘fix’.
Penalty: early 16th century: probably via Anglo-Norman French, from medieval Latin poenalitas, based on poena ‘pain’
Mortgage: late Middle English: from Old French, literally ‘dead pledge’, from mort (from Latin mortuus ‘dead’) + gage ‘pledge’.
Between taxes and mortgages there exists pain/damage and death. It's as though these words were more accepted and thought about back then; not like in our hyper-sensitive world today. "Oy vey, don't worry goyim. We make words less painful for you. Ignorance is bliss."
Money: Middle English: from Old French moneie, from Latin moneta ‘mint, money’, originally a title of the goddess Juno, in whose temple in Rome money was minted.
Wikipedia: "Juno Moneta, an epithet of Juno, was the protectress of funds."
Here we see money/mint has Pagan origins. It's interesting that money was derived from Juno, Goddess of marriage (bringing together) and childbearing (creation).
Currency: 1650s, "condition of flowing," a sense now rare or obsolete, from Latin currens, present participle of currere "to run" or "to flow".
We can think of it as something like water. I've heard people relate currency with electric currency, which also flows.
This adds to the concept of it being energetic/spiritual. Consider the way Jews gain power through money and use it to oppress and exploit people (corporatocracies, interest rates, brainwashing media, etc). Every transaction has an emotional/spiritual and physical aspect to it; it can be used for bad and good.
This also further verifies for me that money workings do in fact work. I've read some comments where people say "meditation won't get you a job/money". They made comparisons to people in third-world countries when stating this. Understand that prosperity is related to money. For people in these situations it would be more effective to meditate on the former rather than the latter (tangible) object.
In closing I want to state that since that since our thoughts/feelings are what make money spiritual we should focus positively on our finances, be flexible, mindful and live lavishly if or when it is practical.
Thanks for reading my "two cents." :lol: