Sherif Osman

Honolulu, HI, United States

Spirituality Blog. 35 "A Course in Miracles" Meditation Videos, Articles & Spiritual Stories. Heal inner pain, acquire peace of mind

Posted

07 Mar 11:16

I could entertain the possibility that if we think in terms of eternity, timelessness, eternal energy and endless space - that we are eternal beings - I could see how forgiveness would be seen differently then. But what about the suffering of countless people in this world now? If having consequences would lessen the crimes against humanity and lessen the suffering in this world, should punishment be considered necessary, and forgiveness used only after punishment has been given out, to benefit the victims, not so much those who victimize?

Posted

07 Mar 10:58

Again, we have seen what countless people have done when they knew there would be no consequences for their actions. Is forgiveness the answer for saving our society?

Posted

07 Mar 10:50

We have seen what countless people have done when they knew there would be no consequences for their actions. Is forgiveness the answer for saving our society? Note: Please ignore my strong language in this meme. I used it on social media when expecting push back.

Posted

07 Mar 10:21

Because the masses have been unaware of the "bankers wars" for profit, and the pedophilia, child rape, child trafficking and Adrenochrome crimes that has been occurring, and because the masses have been unaware of their deliberate financial enslavement by the Federal Reserve and other elites for decades, there were no consequences for what the elites did to humanity. And that was a form of forgiveness. No punishment, no outrage, no consequences. But did that change the elites for the better, or make the plight of humanity better? Or did things just keep getting worse?

1

Posted

07 Mar 10:05

I have read teachings of forgiveness many times in the past, but if the perpetrators of cruel and horrific crimes never learn and never change, if they intend to continue their cruel ways forever, should they be forgiven? It is taught that forgiveness is for you, not for the one who victimizes you, but is anything learned by others who see that cruel and evil people go unpunished for their crimes? Would those who witness no consequences for serious crimes then be more likely to commit serious crimes? I'm willing to forgive after the person has been punished for their crimes. Should we also be willing to forgive those who are never punished for their crimes?

17

Posted

07 Mar 09:17

Who think that the tyrannical frauds in our bought-and-paid for genocidal government care about the U.S. citizens who pay their salary and care about children?

Posted

06 Mar 23:03

Remember, don't speak out about their crimes, because speech that the genocidal elites don't like is equivalent to violence, which would make you a guilty bad person, and the genocidal tyrants victims.

Posted

06 Mar 22:46

Those who want to take away your freedom of speech and silence you (such as the United Nations, the European Commission, the WEF, etc), want to do so in order to be able to victimize you. The narcissist frauds want you to believe that speech is equivalent to violence. Never trust a wolf disguised as a sheep.

Posted

06 Mar 22:16

Which is worse, being blunt and rude to people who endanger others, or the behaviors and actions by those who endanger others? Is it always necessary to be a polite spiritual person? Are we required to let others trample all over our rights and freedoms? Are we guilty people for speaking out strongly, or are evil actions much worse than strong words?

Posted

06 Mar 21:34

Do our members of Congress or the Department of Justice ever plan to hold all those involved, or even half of those involved in the death jab rollout accountable? No, the bought-and-paid for self-serving, self-absorbed narcissists are complicit.