DWQA QuestionsCategory: Extraterrestrial InterlopersIn human society, the family is the central focus of most humans. Even in dysfunctional families, blood ties still mean something. For billions of humans, especially dedicated homemakers, the family will absorb 80 to 90% of their time and effort. Whether it’s caring for children, taking care of aging parents, doting on a spouse, planning the next family reunion, Thanksgiving dinner, or a family vacation, the family is central and, for some, almost all-consuming. If aliens in the Extraterrestrial Alliance are psychopaths, their families must be equally dysfunctional. Can Creator give us an idea of just how much the entire concept of the family remains alive in the three alien cultures?
Nicola Staff asked 2 years ago
The family is only a kind of shadow of what it is meant to be in all three alien races. The worst are the longest lived, the Anunnaki and Reptilian races, but in none of them is the family prized, it is simply a functional duty and activity to have offspring at some rate. This is not a pressing need among Anunnaki, who can live as long as a million years, so their society is quite carefully regulated to not overpopulate given the longevity they enjoy. But even among the others, there is not unregulated breeding. That is not only for practical purposes of keeping things in a positive ratio, with respect to attrition and maintaining an adequate birth rate to support their society. A major factor in keeping strict limits on reproduction is that there is no strong desire to have young in any of the extraterrestrial cultures, and that is because the beings are just too selfish, and because they are cut off from their higher selves so severely the ability to have love energy, to experience what it is like or be inspired, will be minimal, so the prospect of pregnancy and rearing young is seen as a burden rather than an opportunity. Because in human society it is many times the highest goal of females to become a mother and rear young, and have a family that includes a loving mate and partner who will be a co-parent of the young, and will have as much delight as a father as is true of the mothers giving birth and working to help them grow and thrive, the absence of love changes everything. This can hardly be overemphasized, how shallow and empty an existence is for the psychopath. In human society, female psychopaths are encountered in situations where a mother kills her infants, as a way to escape the burden and responsibility, if they are even in that situation and have not avoided pregnancy altogether. Many times, given the relative youth of the human civilization and the strong karmic links to being a parent in other lifetimes, because having a family is such a central role in human society, females who become corrupted and altered to the degree of the psychopath, may yearn for love as a kind of karmic echoing within themselves. But when they actually marry and start having children, find the rewards quite disappointing in finding out that children are not really there to serve and worship them, as they presumed, but are needy, as individuals, and demanding of endless attention and devotion the psychopathic mothers are unequipped to offer. So, at a minimum, there will be a detachment and severe neglect of the young, and many times will give rise to rage and hostile abuse that can become quite severe or even lethal. Things are no different in extraterrestrial societies. The level of brutality is severe in all three worlds among the Anunnaki, the Reptilians, and the Arcturians (the blond-haired Nordic types who look quite human). There is a coldness and a utilitarian approach to child-rearing, and that is frequently state-sponsored to provide an incentive for individuals to accept the burden and responsibility even though much can be farmed out through underlings to provide much routine daycare. This, of course, is quite unnatural and leads to infants and children of the aliens who will, in turn, be remote and heartless. Not only do they have little to work with, being cut off from the flow of love themselves, the clinical detachment of caregivers and the loveless world they come into does nothing to provide a useful positive role model to encourage them to be a joy to be with. So all in those worlds become self-contained and self-serving individuals, who may be kept in line through rigid rules and customs that are enforced with heavy punishment, but that is not a real substitute for having loving interest in one another in a mutual sharing.