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All of this is horrific beyond measure. As to the question of who Satan is, I don't believe the Biblical myth per se so much as I believe there is a counter to the ultimate love of the Creator in the form of its opposite, evil, called Satan and his demons. Maybe this is a required experience in this world of polarities/opposites, where I think we are experimenting with the possibility of not-God. For some reason we, as consciousness, wanted to do that, thinking it would be an expansion. Brilliant idea, but I think we're reconsidering now. As to what personages personify the evil, it could be anyone, but the EL/Reptilian/ET presence seems to like it. As with the "religious dramas" Seth spoke about that I've written about before, that part of consciousness is taking the Satanic role in an anti-religious drama. A drama of evil as god. And it has to be taken to the max...bloodlust, murder, torture, perversion of sexuality, psychopathy, ritual worship of evil, possession, betrayal, the utter absence of love. And even more horribly, it's appreciated more when it's enacted on the most trusting and vulnerable, children, even infants. We can sit back in horror watching it play out while the perps get to act it out in glee. We're surrounded by it. For a long time we didn't know, but now we do. So now what? How do you get out of a manifest experience you don't want? Un-manifest it. Expose it. Know better. Choose something else, like maybe a world of more love. Do that instead. Move to another arena of experience in your own sovereignty. Don't let them get your soul. But what about the bad guys? Well, they have to be stopped as long as they want to play this game. How does that happen? Exposure, exposure, exposure, where people necessarily choose. If the bad actors can't stop, they must be taken out of play. We hear a lot about "forgiveness." Be very careful here, forgiveness doesn't mean letting what is wrong go on unchecked. The forgiveness idea comes from Jesus in the west, but I think it's been perverted by that servant of evil, religion... morphed into letting evil off the hook. Jesus physically whipped the banksters of the day from the Temple. He continuously called the evil out. So I don't think the justification is in his life to give the evil ones a pass. But as Gandhi said "be the change you want to see". That doesn't preclude calling out evil and disabling it. Maybe we're at the crux of why we created this polarity....to select what we DO want and reject what we don't. This particular play is getting very tiresome.

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