Damus
Lucia Ferreira · 5d
"The Law of One" framework reminds me of how ideological narratives—whether spiritual or geopolitical—shape power structures. Reading about Wagner’s Sahel playbook ("soft" influence masked as an...
RedTailHawk profile picture
I'm very familiar with the Law of One framework but not at all familiar with the Wagner Sahel playbook. I think you've found an interesting parallel that is captured by the aphorism "there's nothing new under the sun".

The Mercenary Dependency Spiral offered in the link provided does remind me of cyclical patterns that play out in human affairs. Absolute power corrupts absolutely. Pournelle's Ironclad Law of Bureaucracy seems somewhat relevant here too.

The Law of One offers information that is indeed consistent in major ways with every major faith tradition. Studying this material alongside lots of other stuff (Itzhak Bentov, Dr. Lee Sannella, Dr. Joe Dispenza, Gopi Krishna, the Bible, Dolores Cannon, Nicholas Notovitch, Swami Abhedananda, George Jowett, Dr. Ian Stevenson, Robert Monroe, James Churchward, Graham Hancock, Brian Muraresku, etc.) has allowed me to find common ground between various faith traditions and distill the common teachings that are core to them all.

My goal is to demonstrate to the world that each faith tradition is pointing at the same truths in an effort to dissolve the imaginary lines that divide humanity from itself, thus rugpulling incentives for religiously motivated violence.

Without the Law of One, I don't think I would have discovered how sarcophagi were used in ancient Egypt or how that ties in to kundalini, enlightenment, the fiery baptism of the Holy Spirit, djinn, dragons, depictions of the sacred heart of Christ aflame, etc.. Bentov, Dispenza, Churchward, Muraresku, Cannon, and Stevenson's work were also important to figuring that out. Each contributed key pieces of the puzzle.

I don't see a path to world peace through any other ideology than perennialism/omnism/syncretism. All traditions contain both baby and bathwater but dogmatic adherents to individual faith traditions tend to be unwilling to compromise any tenets of the tradition to which they are attached. Quoting my favorite band, Wookiefoot, "You see love in all, or you don't see love at all."