yeah, i feel the same way, and the whole world is sodom and gomorrah

i believe that actually if you read some of the apocrypha versions of Genesis, like The Book of Jasher they go into some more detail about how things worked in Sodom and Gomorrah and actually the story focuses on this location, but i believe that the whole world was quite messed up at that time, about 7000 years ago, and being at a similar point in the historical cycle created by the 6000 year disaster cycle

it was actually not just sodom and gomorrah around the same time in the story, it was also the tower of babel, and sodom and gomorrah and all these "cities" were wiped out by natural disasters, and the entirety of the world population was displaced and scattered due to it

i think it's not so much that "God punished them" but rather that the evil gets to the point of universal rot throughout the global population after 6000 years and then nature resets things

the Noahs and Abrahams are the people who lived in these last phases of the cycle and survive to the next, and knowing of the cycle is key to being part of that

a golden age starts after every two of these cycles because the destruction of each second cycle is almost total

just wanted to mention that because you mentioned sodom and gomorrah, and i agree that our modern world is like that

Reply to this note

Please Login to reply.

Discussion

Interesting, on the other hand it's very exciting to live in these times knowing and seeing those things.

yeah... been mulling over what to do about it for a while... the way the magnetic poles are dancing around this last 20 years says that we are in for a doozy, and i've worked out there is basically two places on the planet where people might survive it, mongolia and more or less in the region around colorado

I probably won't make it then, but I would rather go to Mongolia than Colorado. And I like horse meat.

haha yeah i've got similar equivocation about it on my mind too... and i looked into getting permanent residence and buying land in mongolia, it's not that difficult... easier than nearby siberia anyway

i think it's like a fractal pattern of good vs evil, repeating on local, smaller timelines as well as larger ones...in some ways things just seem worse because we see the worse. Comparing today to 2001, i feel like we are so much more free and more knowledgeable about what is going on. whereas in early 2000s, people could easily be duped by whatever was on 5 TV channels. The crescendo of amorality is met an equal crescendo of people becoming smarter and more moral.