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with. None stand alone. All of them are affected. Can we stop nuclear explosions? Can we do so today? Yes and no,

depending upon whether this is interfering with orientation decisions of the 3rd Density humans on Earth. This is why

we have made the statement that man would be allowed to destroy his world in a nuclear war, but likewise we can

interfere with other steps that are being taken and can influence the state of the world. Basically, we can't interfere

with the lesson, and where the lesson won't be interfered with we have the right to do so as future residents.

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ZetaTalk: Precious Possessions

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ZetaTalk: Precious Possessions

Note: written Aug 15, 1996.

During the Transformation, human society will not only find their moorings lost, they will also find their priorities

changed and their sense of what is considered to be a precious possession drastically altered. During stable times,

civilizations build on the past, the past dragged forward as welcome or unwelcome baggage. The past is intrusive,

something the young and old are constantly reminded of, and serves as models for the young, rules to be guided by,

and social norms for the newborn to adapt to. During tumultuous times the grip that the past has on society is broken,

and priorities are reassessed. What are termed great works of art by humans are considered valuable only because they

came from the past and carry a long list of credits. Each new admirer is thus bolstered and each potential critic is thus

intimidated. Even frankly ugly works are thus floated forward, gaining in price. Possessions such as houses or land

carry value as they are assumed to be permanent, the house standing until deliberately torn down and the land

maintaining its view or agricultural productivity on into the future.

After the coming pole shift surviving humans will be starving, broken, frightened, and will find that the price of a meal

is nothing so worthless as a painting or statue from the past. A sharp knife, a sewing needle and thread, some seeds,

these things will become the precious possessions.

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ZetaTalk: Social Services

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ZetaTalk: Social Services

Note: written Dec 15, 1995.

After the cataclysms the snug blanket of protection that many have taken for granted will be gone - no Social Security

checks, no home deliveries, no 911 emergency service, no free medical services, and no welfare checks. For those not

relying on those services the shock will be as great, as with home, job, and service providers gone they will be just as

destitute and bereft. In essence, humans will be relying on one another, and not on an infrastructure. What will this

mean? In most societies there are rules about who should live and who should die, even when these rules are not

articulated. Many American Indians let their old choose the time of their departure, a spiritual and poignant moment

for all, as the old were a burden on the young that all agreed could not be borne. In some cultures malformed infants

are not nourished, and all cultures push what they consider their undesirables to the periphery, to wither and perchance

to die.

After the cataclysms new rules will spring up, depending on the desperation of the community and whether a Service-

to-Self or Service-to-Other orientation prevails. In Service-to-Self groups the strong will prey upon or ignore the weak

until a homeostasis is established. What this means is that injured or frail humans will be ignored, not fed or assisted,

and they will die. If they refuse to go quietly they will be killed, and if food is short they will be killed and eaten in

any case. Eventually the group reaches a point where there are no young, old, or injured and the pecking order among

the remainder is well established. In Service-to-Other groups, those hopelessly maimed or chronically in pain will be

allowed to choose suicide, and birth control will be used to limit the demands on scarce resources, if need be. All who

wish to live will be fed and cared for, sharing equally among all. In crisis mode, when overwhelmed by large numbers

of injured members in great pain, Service-to-Other groups usually end up prioritizing care in the following manner:

Where the injury is clearly life threatening and the outcome inevitable, making the injured comfortable is the

only treatment given. This should be explained firmly and kindly to the injured, as a choice between treating

those who could benefit or wasting effort on one who could not benefit. If the injured is in pain, this means pain

medication to the point of stupor or, if no medication exists and the pain is extreme, assisted suicide. Contrary to

what humans may have been led to believe, individuals in severe, chronic, and hopelessly painful situations

invariably request to be allowed to die. They beg for this, in fact.

Where the injured still outnumber the capacity of the caregivers, quality of life next enters the equation. Will a

life be saved only to live in pain or in a diminished capacity, or will a life be saved and restored to full

faculties? In this determination full faculties does not mean the blind or amputee should be neglected. Full

faculties means reasonable mental faculties, the ability to eat and eliminate without humiliation, the ability to

live without being perpetually hooked up to machines, in short, a life one could tolerate rather than a life one

would dread. Here again the decision should be explained to the injured, who may exhort the caregivers to

reconsider if they don't agree with the decision. Be firm, as vacillation only tortures the injured who should be

allowed to come to terms with the situation. Remind the injured of the others who also cry for help.

If the injured still overwhelm the caregiver's capacities, choices fall along lines familiar to humans. Treatment

quickly given, such as a tourniquet to prevent the injured from bleeding to death, is chosen over treatments that

would take more time, such as surgery to stop internal bleeding. Lavage of poisons eating at skin takes

precedence over removing a splinter piercing an eye or a limb. Preventing shock takes precedence over setting a

broken bone. The caregivers should be firm and committed during such a process, and not expend precious time

arguing with those in pain and frantic with anxiety over their injuries.

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ZetaTalk: Barter System

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ZetaTalk: Barter System

Note: written Dec 15, 2001

We predict that long before the shift, a barter system will be replacing the current paper money system. The value of