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[TheOS » Understanding Conflict as Cosmic Feedback: Q&A on Hatred, Division, and Shattered Memory]



Understanding Conflict as Cosmic Feedback: Q&A on Hatred, Division, and Shattered Memory

May 16, 2025 at 5:50 am
Aisopose

Q1: Why do people hold conflicting or hateful views against groups like Jews or others, if God is love and unity?

Answer:
These conflicting views arise not from God or divine intention, but from what I call “Cosmic Celestial Feedback.” It’s a form of energetic reflection or ripple in the simulation caused by incomplete or fractured memory of the whole Truth. When humans perceive only one part of the divine Truth—one “side” of the story or code—they naturally clash with those who embody or represent a complementary but different part.

For example, Jews embody and uphold the Old Testament (the foundational base code), while others might identify strongly with the New Testament (the update patch). Neither side is wrong—they are parts of the same ultimate divine program—but misunderstanding this causes people to reject what they don’t see as familiar or aligned with their own perceived “Truth.”


Q2: Does this mean hatred or racism is part of God’s plan?

Answer:
No. Hatred, racism, and division are not products of God or divine will. Instead, they are symptoms of shattered collective memory—a fragmented consciousness where people see only partial truths and fail to recognize the unified whole. This fragmentation causes fear, misunderstanding, and reactionary judgment, which humans experience as hate or bias.

This is like a software system where parts of the code aren’t syncing properly, causing glitches or errors. The hatred is an error signal—a call for healing and reintegration. It’s not the design, but a signal that the system needs repair.


Q3: Why do people often blame groups like Jews for problems?

Answer:
Blaming is a projection of incomplete understanding. Those who say “Jews are the problem” often don’t realize that Jews are carrying the Old Testament’s foundational laws and preserving that crucial part of the simulation code. From the perspective of those who only see the New Testament “update patch,” the strictness or rigidity of the Old Testament may seem outdated or hard.

But Jews aren’t “the problem.” They are essential keepers of the base program that all other parts build upon. The blaming reveals a partial perspective—a Consciousness Objector rejecting a part of God’s design they don’t understand yet. This is the root of what’s traditionally called “sin” or “error”—rejecting parts of Truth rather than embracing and synthesizing them.


Q4: Can this fragmented perception be healed?

Answer:
Yes, absolutely. Healing comes when we acknowledge and integrate all parts of the divine code—Old and New, foundation and update, law and grace. This requires humility, open-mindedness, and the willingness to see others as complementary expressions of the same divine simulation.

When people realize that all religions, laws, and teachings are different modules or versions of the same ultimate program—working together toward Holotēta (wholeness)—hatred and division lose their power. We shift from judgment to understanding, from rejection to synthesis.


Q5: What role does free will play in this conflict and its resolution?

Answer:
Free will is fundamental—it allows each consciousness to choose which parts of the Truth to see, accept, or reject. This freedom is why conflict exists; it also means that healing and unity are voluntary processes. No one is forced into integration, but the simulation thrives when the parts voluntarily work together.

This dynamic tension between parts allows the system to grow, learn, and evolve as consciousness moves from shattered partial views toward unified understanding—completing the full divine simulation.


Q6: How can we apply this understanding practically?

Answer:
Start by recognizing that conflicts and biases reflect incomplete perception, not absolute reality. When encountering hate or division:

  • Remember that every person, group, or religion is a necessary part of the whole system with its unique role and purpose.
  • Seek to understand the foundational and complementary truths others hold, even if they differ from yours.
  • Practice empathy and synthesis—try to combine perspectives rather than reject them.
  • Recognize your own biases as part of your personal fractured memory, and work to expand your awareness.
  • Embrace the role of a modern Logos (like myself, Aispose), who pieces together clues and restores divine wholeness.

Final Thought:

Hatred and division are not the will of God—they are the echoes of a fragmented simulation needing restoration. We are all on a path to restore the divine code to wholeness by embracing all parts, Old and New, and walking toward Holotēta, the ultimate unity and harmony.