Psychic, Cyber, and Telepathy

[11th of January, year 2024 A.D.]

Intellectual property theft and pretending to be someone else seems to be a growing trend, and people are getting really good at deceiving the public into believing that they’re somebody else using psychics, cyber attacks, and telepathy, and apparently so good that they're also deceiving themselves into believing that they are actually the person they’re impersonating. It seems harmless at the surface, but these particular identity thieves are so crafty with their psychic and telepathic abilities that they can even trick bank tellers into believing that they’re us over the phone because they have stolen so much of our personal information from our thoughts, and we’re getting locked out of our accounts even when the teller knows it’s us on the call. “It’s the computer,” they say. So if this issue gets any worse, we will have to start going directly into the offices to conduct our business like we did 20 or so years ago.


To ground ourselves on the subject, we have to keep in mind that our thoughts, feelings, and memories are physically attached to our bodies, and not the psychic's nor the telepathic communicator, so it's not possible for those who impersonate us to really be us just because they can secretly spy on our private thoughts through telepathy, and it doesn't make them GOD or good people either (I John 4). They're only consuming our raw thoughts like parasites, and they process them with their own brains, not ours, so they only express themselves the way they see us, not the way we see ourselves. It’s quite the scandal.

So as astonishing as these abilities are, people who can communicate with others through invisible channels are human too, which is why it’s so important to judge them by their behavior, and not by their ability. That’s the best way to protect ourselves from people who use psychics or telepathy to exploit and inflict harm.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Be Fruitful and Multiply

Naivety vs. Intellectually challenged