authorityresearch.com

Introduction:
Part 2

Section 1

   Sorry for the length of the following but sit back in your easy chair and read it, trying to keep your cool. Because of the following information (explaining the formula for 'change') this website is being censored, i.e., labeled as "extremist" by those promoting the process of 'change' in the hope that you will not read it and remain ignorant of their method of controlling you, i.e., making you "human resource," i.e., subject to their will.
   Like a child playing with a stick of dynamite, ignorance is bliss—until it goes off. There is a price you will pay for playing (roleplaying) their game. "There is a way that seemeth right unto a man, but the end thereof are the ways of death." Proverbs 16:25, 26
   There is a world of difference between truth and perceived truth. Perceived truth makes truth subject to "feelings," i.e., carnal, i.e., of the world only, making truth an opinion, subject to the situation of the 'moment,' i.e., of sight, thus making truth subject to 'change.' It is why Henry Kissinger's statement to the world's leaders, "It is not a matter of what is true that counts, but a matter of what is perceived to be true." is so damning, "affecting" you, your family, property and business, i.e., your liberties. In a world of "perceived truth," i.e., in a world of opinions and 'change,' truth, i.e., faith becomes the enemy, the object to overcome in the name of "peace and affirmation."
   Karl Marx believed "sense experience"—"sensuous needs" and "sense perception"—was the total of life. (Karl Marx, MEGA I/3) Therefore, according to his (and Freud's) way of thinking, since pleasure is the 'drive' of life, the augmentation of pleasure must become the 'purpose' of life, i.e., making all of life "of and for" "nature (pleasure) Only," giving both man and child the "right" and "duty" to negate that which prevents, i.e., that which inhibits of blocks them from enjoying ("experiencing") the pleasures of the 'moment.' Carl Rogers, in agreement, wrote: "Experience is, for me, the highest authority." "Neither the Bible nor the prophets, neither the revelations of God can take precedence over my own direct experience." "The words 'seem to' are significant; it is the perception which functions in guiding behavior." (Carl Rogers, on becoming a person: A Therapist View of Psychotherapy)

© Institution for Authority Research, Dean Gotcher 2016