Greg Whiteley of Aquarian Lifestyle Research said …
“I don’t work for any individual person. I work for the universe. I think my life is better if your life is better. What good would it do for me to take a bath if all of you were dirty? My main affirmation is, ‘I, Greg, have an unlimited number of invaluable ideas in my consciousness that always produce healing, aliveness, fun, pleasure, and abundant income for myself and others.’ That’s my job description and my purpose all rolled up into an affirmation!”
Money is a FINITE principle while sitting in a savings account and an INFINITE principle when it’s used to stimulate production and expedite the purchase of goods and services.
Don’t mistake the finger for the Moon by ascribing a FIXED VALUE to gold or wampum or even cigarettes, which were used quite successfully as currency in most of the Thirteen Colonies and in post-World War II Germany.
Monetary inflation is NOT a threat to the economy, despite what all those pointy-headed economists on corporate TV tell you: lack of money caused by an all-debt economy is the real issue.
Jacques S. Jaikaran, M.D., author of Debt Virus, 1992, asked a panelist at a Houston financial seminar, “What causes inflation in our economy?”
“Inflation is caused by the government printing large sums of money to finance its expenditures,” replied the panelist.
“If you had either the privilege, the right, or the power to create money that you needed for your expenditures, would you ever be in debt, sir?” countered Dr. Jaikaran.
'Money In Motion Is Infinite Abundance & Aliveness' have 3 comments
November 7, 2012 @ 4:21 pm atomb
The esophagus is associated with unresolved “oral” issues.
This includes “heartburn.”
In the words of …
Karl Menninger, M.D. (Love Against Hate, 1942, 1970) wrote …
“Dr. Smith Ely Jelliffe used to say that the child’s first decision was whether ‘to holler or to swaller,’ when he discovers that the two cannot be done simultaneously. Yet simultaneous emotions exist in the heart of the child which he finds it is difficult to reconcile as he does crying and swallowing. How shall he resolve the problem if the same person who brings him his bottle also takes it away? No matter how ideal the mother is therefore, the child is bound to have both positive and negative feelings toward her.”
November 8, 2012 @ 10:07 am atomb
Two quotes from The Huffington Post (Nov. 7, 2012) …
“A ginormous number of brands are controlled by just 10 multinationals, according to this amazing infographic from French blog Convergence Alimentaire. Now we can see just how many products are owned by Kraft, Coca-Cola, General Mills, Kellogg’s, Mars, Unilever, Johnson & Johnson, P&G and Nestlé.”
“It’s not just the consumer goods industry that’s become so consolidated. Ninety percent of the media is now controlled by just six companies, down from 50 in 1983, according to a Frugal Dad infographic from last year. Likewise, 37 banks merged to become JPMorgan Chase, Bank of America, Wells Fargo and CitiGroup in a little over two decades …”
November 8, 2012 @ 10:28 am atomb
Butterball turkeys have pumped-up breasts.
Jim Hightower (There’s Nothing in the Middle of the Road but Yellow Stripes and Dead Armadillos, 1997) wrote …
“Ninety percent of the half-billion turkeys sold in the world each year are derived from only three breeding flocks that are maintained on secretive, highly guarded farms surrounded by chain-link fences. Owning these three flocks, and thus controlling the world market of breeding turkeys, are Merck & Co. (the pharmaceutical giant based in New Jersey), Booker PLC (the British food conglomerate), and British Petroleum (the world’s fourth-largest oil company). All three flocks are of the white breed, assuring such dominant commercial grower as ConAgra Inc. (owner of Butterball) that each and every one of their turkey chicks will uniformly develop those pumped-up breasts. But such genetic uniformity has its ugly side. Not only can these hapless birds not mate, they also are bred to be so heavy and are so disfigured that they can barely walk more than a few feet, and many cannot even stand on their own two drumsticks, so they spend their abbreviated lives mostly squatting in the sawdust or dimly lit turkey houses, jammed wingtip to wingtip with hundreds of their genetically altered siblings. This breed cannot survive on its own, so the birds must pass their entire existence in environmentally controlled buildings, where machinery automatically dispenses a steady ration of feed that is rich in artificial growth stimulants, but often denies them such basic minerals as iron. (To create ‘a whiter white meat,’ iron is eliminated from the diet because it imparts a healthy reddishness to turkey flesh and, well, this is not what the marketing department ordered.)”