It is just amazing how little mankind learns.
On Genocide Denial, Gregory H. Stanton, formerly of the US State Department and the founder of Genocide Watch, lists denial as the final stage of genocide development:
Watch Turkey's South East especially Nusaybin, Yuksekova, additonally Armenia, Syria these days!
Times can Teach us
LoVe for All,
Not any cruelty though can be forgiven,
So that simply never will pass
That what is not admitted,
Returned back to Creation,
Into the Heart of Knowledge
Of what is Rightful and Good.
The Knowledge Knows
It, anyway
And Knowledge doesn't forget.
Whether you'd like to see this as a collective psychological rule or more from metaphysics aspects, or simply what is understood as The Ma'at is fully up to you.
Eternal rules always remain the same.
In principle needless to say but there are two effects which can destroy this process, too:
One is to blame the one that already admits even more and keeping oneself prettily covered about own acts. The other one is to keep dwelling in either the perpetrator or the victim role beyond the measure. This is quite a difficult one because who knows when the measure is achieved?
Both these behaviours then also turn the balance into unevenness.
Lyn
On Genocide Denial, Gregory H. Stanton, formerly of the US State Department and the founder of Genocide Watch, lists denial as the final stage of genocide development:
"Denial is the eighth stage that always follows a genocide.
It is among the surest indicators of further genocidal massacres.
The perpetrators of genocide dig up the mass graves, burn the bodies, try to cover up the evidence and intimidate the witnesses.
They deny that they committed any crimes, and often blame what happened on the victims."
Watch Turkey's South East especially Nusaybin, Yuksekova, additonally Armenia, Syria these days!
Times can Teach us
LoVe for All,
Not any cruelty though can be forgiven,
So that simply never will pass
That what is not admitted,
Returned back to Creation,
Into the Heart of Knowledge
Of what is Rightful and Good.
The Knowledge Knows
It, anyway
And Knowledge doesn't forget.
Whether you'd like to see this as a collective psychological rule or more from metaphysics aspects, or simply what is understood as The Ma'at is fully up to you.
Eternal rules always remain the same.
In principle needless to say but there are two effects which can destroy this process, too:
One is to blame the one that already admits even more and keeping oneself prettily covered about own acts. The other one is to keep dwelling in either the perpetrator or the victim role beyond the measure. This is quite a difficult one because who knows when the measure is achieved?
Both these behaviours then also turn the balance into unevenness.
Lyn
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