DWQA QuestionsCategory: Extraterrestrial Corruption of Human InstitutionsFollowing the Magna Carta, the king countered against the loss of power to the barons by removing the ability to trespass against the peasantry or the common person. This seeming act of tit-for-tat retribution essentially ended the slavery of the peasant and the practice of serfdom in England. It appears this was an unintended consequence of an impasse and conflict between two orbits of political power—the monarch and the aristocracy. To what extent did divine intervention make this dramatic turn of events for the common person possible?
Nicola Staff asked 3 years ago
Here again, a seeming political maneuver to reduce tensions and allow a respite during these times of great conflict and depletion of resources and even human capital, the divine realm was able to build on a good idea by impulsing this notion to the warring parties and arrange an accommodation through the creation of an extension of law that allowed a way to reduce the conflict between the royal kingdom and the aristocracy, and again humanity was a beneficiary and all parties ended up as winners, as happens when things return to divine alignment instead of conflict and war.