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This 21-Century world perception on genocide is serious enough

BEING driven by the human culture and the self-presumed God-Self authority has always been dangerous. We cannot ignore the accusations and the billionaire names mentioned, who, like the 1940s meeting on the “Final Solution of the Jewish Question” which then had concluded the extermination of millions of the Jewish faith and others termed undesirables in Europe, recently sat and seriously plotted a concept towards the exterminations of three billion souls worldwide, today in the 2020s.

That it was done before generated attention, and real fears emerged with the advent of COVID-19, that in serious conceptualisation has become a common conversation, even following the COVID pandemic with a new panel of advocates. Whether it is a conspiracy theory or an actual ‘Event of Intent’, our knowledge of recent history and the genocides of the Bible and religions throughout recorded times was enough to send waves through our active and dormant historical memory, even more, sinister than this was televised (social media).

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The question is whether the world we live in will adjust to population control, not because of these sinister minds and their evil Anti-Man eagerness to play Apocalypse, but because of the reality of life, and living in our age will command it as sensible, but definitely in a different way. In the wealthy nations, there is an account of the lowering of population growth. Likewise, as the less affluent become better positioned, they will realise that the costs of educating five children, one would need ‘three lifetimes’ to fulfill that task, and still leave an economic balance for seniors to have that boast of “Life after children.”

I come from a family of ten children, and only three have excelled in the parenting of the mystical number of “seven” offspring. The rest have stayed in that realistic zone of ‘everybody gaffuh eats’ because an awareness of the obvious has taken root, that childhood hardships are frequently discussed, shaping new protective value systems.

I was fortunate when the family broke up. I was adopted care-wise by my Godparents, though I always had access to my father. There are things that I learned in those formative years that became a cultural priority that I’ve passed on to my children. Most of my other siblings were abroad and, unfortunately, did not have

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