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In this wide-ranging and provocative episode, I’m joined by Steve (“Survival Steve”) and Mark from The Coop Files to unpack why modern society feels increasingly controlled, polarised and spiritually anaesthetised—and what we can practically do about it. We explore the journey from questioning mainstream narratives to a deeper examination of natural law, morality, and the occult (in its true sense of “the hidden”), and how these ideas help decode manipulation tactics like propaganda, NLP, and cognitive warfare. We contrast leadership with authority, force with violence, and discuss why self-ownership and action—aligning thoughts, emotions, and deeds—are essential to real freedom. Along the way we touch on historical propaganda, policing and moral relativism, the “battle of the Beanfield,” protests versus genuine change, and how to raise resilient, principled children who can say “no” with confidence.
We also consider whether government is reformable or inherently coercive, how societies closer to nature (from Amish to tribal elders) achieve order without authoritarianism, and why a true spiritual awakening is less drum circles and more courage, conscience, and self-defence. Practical takeaways include key readings on natural law and the anatomy of authority, plus ways to cultivate autonomy, community resilience and moral clarity in everyday life.
By Eric von EssexIn this wide-ranging and provocative episode, I’m joined by Steve (“Survival Steve”) and Mark from The Coop Files to unpack why modern society feels increasingly controlled, polarised and spiritually anaesthetised—and what we can practically do about it. We explore the journey from questioning mainstream narratives to a deeper examination of natural law, morality, and the occult (in its true sense of “the hidden”), and how these ideas help decode manipulation tactics like propaganda, NLP, and cognitive warfare. We contrast leadership with authority, force with violence, and discuss why self-ownership and action—aligning thoughts, emotions, and deeds—are essential to real freedom. Along the way we touch on historical propaganda, policing and moral relativism, the “battle of the Beanfield,” protests versus genuine change, and how to raise resilient, principled children who can say “no” with confidence.
We also consider whether government is reformable or inherently coercive, how societies closer to nature (from Amish to tribal elders) achieve order without authoritarianism, and why a true spiritual awakening is less drum circles and more courage, conscience, and self-defence. Practical takeaways include key readings on natural law and the anatomy of authority, plus ways to cultivate autonomy, community resilience and moral clarity in everyday life.