Here's an example of how disclosure applies to personal relationships in the same way it applies to the whole planet:
➡️ https://www.farsightprime.com/forums/general/75321-we-haven-t-seen-et-ships-yet#post-435970
My response to @sunny Bailey:
"I live in a house tied to powerful people in this town. My life is monitored and manipulated, yet no one steps in."
Move out. I can't take you seriously if you choose to live there.
"I am not fully sure I know the reason why I've chosen this platform to vent on but oh well here I am"
You want personal disclosure. You need the truth, no matter how hard it is. And the truth is: You choose to connect with people who abuse you. You choose to stay. You need to get out and away from them. The reason that you don't do this is because you believe that you will die if you do it. It's because of the parental abuse. Psychologically, you are still the child that holds on to its family in order to survive, as children can't survive on their own. So basically, you are confronted with unresolved existential fear.
"our own systems poison our food water and air so why can I not poison myself if I want to"
You can. But poisoning yourself has consequences. If you choose to do it, don't blame others for not being able to escape. It's the same principle with this prison planet. If people choose to stay, the logical consequence is that they remain prisoners.
@sunny Bailey responded:
"I choose to live here still because I want to expose them and I feel like I won't be able to do so if I move because the proof is everywhere here. And I don't have anything to do with my parents so I'm not sure what you mean but I do desperately want to understand. I also want to clarify that I don't feel any fear as I walk this earth it is something that I have moved away from internally and outwardly as I do know the consequences of fear. And as far as the poison goes you're right about that but it is how I'm choosing to live my life right now as it keeps me alive"
My response:
1. Poison doesn't keep you alive. It's a clear sign of addicton that you believe you need the poison for survival. The underlying psychology is unresolved existential fear from childhood. A withdrawal will put you in a vulnerable position. You can't do it without help. But you are alone, just like you have been left alone when you were a child. That's the vicious cycle: You believe to deserve to be left alone. The addiction numbs you so you don't have to confront the existential fear.
For the readers: The exact same psychology applies to humanity as a whole. Humans are the result of abuse. ETs came here and messed with our genes in order to create a hybrid slave force. Because of this, the ETs can be considered our cosmic parents. They abused us, and then they left us alone. On a greater scale, humanity feels the same way how Sunny feels.
2. The fact that you don't feel any fear is proof that you dissociated from the trauma. That's the problem.
The solution is to confront the existential fear. To confront the abuse. Sunny wants to expose the people who manipulate and abuse her. But she can't, because there's no help. Exposing it alone just results in more violence and manipulation.
This is also true for humanity as a whole. How can we even think of confronting powerful aliens who are running a prison planet, control governments and media, and even control death? How could that even be possible?
3. Is it realistic to assume that you can expose them?
As far as I understand Sunny's story, nobody believes her, even if there's proof. Sounds familiar?
So she asks for help, an outside force that will stand by her side against evil. Sounds familiar?
Just like Sunny, humanity is in a vulnerable position. We can't do it without help. We need disclosure to expose the manipulation and abuse. But we don't want to "move out" – we want somebody to come here and stop the abuse.
But here's the thing...
What will happen if we stay, and what happens if we move out? What does it even mean, to move out? In Sunny's example, it means to leave the house. She says she stays there because she wants to expose them. But what's the logic behind that? The question is: Is it even necessary to stay there in order to expose them?
Let's think about that. Let's imagine that Sunny manages to move out, and even manages to overcome the addiction. What happens to the people who want to abuse her?
The same is true for the prison planet. What does "move out" mean regarding the prison planet? What is this "house of abuse" humanity chooses to live in?
It's not the planet. It's the prison. What is the prison? Harvey already told us, it's a psychological prison.
The belief that we deserve it. That we will die if we try to change it.
So how do we, Sunny as well as humanity, leave this psychological prison?
We must stop believing that we deserve to die. That we deserve to be abused. We must opt out from this belief system in order to be able to change anything.
We can't expose them by accepting more and more violence. It will never end.
They will expose themselves when we move.