Quote from Morphius:
"People don't wake up thinking ww3 or ET's are coming. People wake up when they realize they can create there own reality. For example, when they realize they aren't a prisoner! But the belief in being a prisoner is the problem."
We should consider this possibility.
What if Earth isn't a prison planet, and everything Farsight is telling us is a lie?
Well, then we need an explanation why people don't remember past lifes.
Possibility 1: Forgetting the experiences of a lifetime is how it's supposed to be. This raises the question: Why?
Possibility 2: There are no past lifes to begin with. Every person comes into existence with conception and vanishes with death.
Both possibilities show a distinct ignorance to the experiences made within a lifetime. What do I mean by that? Well, whatever you experience and learn within a lifetime seems to be irrelevant. For example, if you have learned an important lesson that is enabling you to create a better life, the only way to make it last within society is to create a lasting institution that teaches this knowledge.
But this strikes me as odd: Why would evolution be dependent on creating artificial institutions? I mean, it could be, it's a valid concept, but: Wouldn't it be easier to let people just keep their knowledge?
And what about people who actually remember past lifes? Are they just hallucinating?
There's another aspect that seems to be relevant:
"People wake up when they realize they can create there own reality. For example, when they realize they aren't a prisoner!"
Saying it this way creates a false dichotomy: You either are able to create your own reality, or you believe that you are a prisoner. But the first statement actually doesn't contradict the second one. You can both be a prisoner and create your own reality. This means that you being in a prison is either your own fault by creating that reality yourself, or you didn't meet the requirements necessary in order to avoid the prison that has been created by someone else.
The false dichotomy implies that you are stuck in a prison for believing it. But that logic then should apply to everything else: You are working like a slave because you believe in slavery, you are getting sick because you believe in disease, and you die because you believe in death.
So, not believing in death should make you immortal, right? But there's zero evidence that reality works like that. In fact, the world shows us on a daily basis that believing in certain things doesn't make a difference, while the thing that does make a difference is knowledge and action.
So, implying that you shouldn't believe the prison planet possibility is problematic, because: What if it's true? What if not believing it leads to not acquiring the knowledge you need to take the appropriate action?
What if ignorance leads to the inability to create reality?