You are on page 1of 2

What Do We Really Know At All?

(Or: The Evolution of Politics)


One more aspect in which we seem to be living in a scenario comparable to the one portrayed in
the Matrix movie trilogy, turns out to be history, and especially our recent history, if one happens
to stumble across issues as those revolving around the controversial British historian David
Irving.

It's pretty obvious that some of the claims made by the Soviets at the Nuremberg trials were false,
and yet there seems to be no area in our present scope of political thought where light shed on
potential facts which might alter our current view and knowledge on these things is more ardently
and vehemently resisted.

While scientists, journalists and educators may lose their jobs for even lending an ear to
alternative views of the ancient history of our planet (as in what exactly happened "billions of
years ago," instead of the gazillions of beneficial mutations that are supposed to have brought
forth the human race, whales crawling out on land and back into the water, etc.), such as the
number of scientists who developed the school of thought of "Intelligent Design" had the nerve to
do; and while guesswork and theories on physics are the only goodies teachers can sell their
pupils in schools for facts, far from an ultimate theory that explains it all, without one law of nature
contradicting another; when it comes to history, it becomes even more prickly, since people who
are interested in finding out what really happened as recently as 60-some years ago, might not
only risk their jobs, or their students' enthusiasm, but their very freedom, health or lives.

It seems that our oh-so-enlightened Western democracies aren't that much of a Wonderland of
the Free, after all, as which our modern politicians try to sell us our current system. Speaking of
which. According to God's views, as laid down in His much disputed account of such
(nevertheless found to be absolutely reliable by those who have the guts to believe it), the Bible,
the evolution of politics over the past 2500 years isn't quite as flattering as we may see our own
current state.

The prophet Daniel (in an interpretation of the king of Babylon's dream, given to him by God)
pictures the world's empires from Babylon to Rome as deteriorating. While Babylon is symbolized
by a head of gold, the subsequent empire, Medo-Persia, becomes silver, Alexander the Great
and his Grecian empire turn out with a bronze medal, and Rome is devaluated to mere iron, only
to wind up in a useless mixture of clay and iron good for nothing but to be replaced by God's
eternal kingdom toward the end end of the world as we know it.

So, while we look back at ancient rulers and systems as primitive, from our high and lofty
democratic pedestal, God, evidently, has a perfectly different view of things.

We don't even have to go as far back as Babylon or Rome to note drastic differences.

While we know by now that neither Abraham Lincoln, George Washington, FDR or even JFK
were flawless, yet they all seem to have had a residue of nobility and honor that perfectly eludes
our 21st century statesmen.

And while some of us may still live in the illusion that the current administration is an improvement
on the stock, compared to the former, as shocking as it may be for all of us, judging by the Wall-
Street nature of that administration, it would be a very big surprise indeed, if that illusion will not
turn out to be just such.

20th century statesmen at least attempted to speak the truth every now and then, and when they
made promises, they made somewhat of an effort to keep them, which is more than you can
expect from the puppet position that a presidency has become in Century 21.

"You never know when the sky will fall. What do we really know at all?" the "Rembrandts" from
California once sang, and they must have been on to something.

What do we really know at all?

What of all that which we call "knowledge" could really be called such? Isn't it much more often
simply faith in the portrayal of the picture by a certain group of people, the "winners," those who
have the money and the propaganda machinery?

So, why not be honest and reduce the preposterous claim of "knowledge" to that which it really is,
namely faith?

After all, it has served true believers good and well for thousands of years, all throughout history,
where empires and emperors have come and gone.

Maybe St. John was really on to something when he claimed that our faith is the victory that
would overcome the world.

Maybe we know something they don't. Maybe we really know something. Even if it's just a fact as
simple as the one that says "There is a God, and He loves you," along with His Promises that
someday soon He'll save us out of the mess all those big shots are getting us into in the name of
illumination.

Oh, and along with the promise that we'll know then, even as we are known.

You really want to know what happened? Just hang on a little longer.

You might also like