Dear fellow Oera Linda friends,
The first time I read the OLB was many years ago, I don't remember when exactly, but it was before Otts' translation. Back then I found the book interesting, but at that time I did not really understand the significance.
My whole life I try to understand our world, and just recently I started to understand how little I really know. I now believe most things we learnt in school, most things we see in the media, are false. My wake up process started with the events in New York 23 years ago, but 2020 was my true awakening.
People like me, let's call us the virus deniers, were called Nazis, or fascists, just because we opposed curfews and restrictions, and wanted to keep some personal freedom. How definitions change over time! Mussolini saw fascism as the merger of the state with corporate interests. The 2020 Covid coup was 100% fascist following Mussolini's definition, but somehow the opposition against 'the new normal' got that label.
With the OLB it is the same, its a racist nazi book, because it talks about freedom and equal rights for everyone..?
Re-reading the OLB in the new translation now, puts everything in a whole new perspective. For me it tells about a past where our ancestors (I am pretty sure to have some Fryans between my ancestors) created a just society, with a law equal for all. It seems like it was a real democracy. The OLB shows us a world before all the corruption and deception, the reality we are living in now.
So basically the OLB is explosive material. If we talk about revolutions, people think of controlled opposition, like Marx. The OLB is a completely different story. If the OLB would get 'viral', it would be a big treat to our rulers, to the status quo. By the way, I am not suggesting violence here, I do believe revolutions can be peaceful.
If we read about history, even 'alternative' narratives like those of Miles Mathis, we can only conclude that humankind was cursed from the beginning. It seems we were always oppressed, enslaved, abused. The OLB changes that perspective totally. They say history repeats, or rhymes, and I think there is some truth in that. So if there once was a time were real moral values played an important role in society, I don't see why those times cannot return some day.
Why I think the OLB is important/dangerous for the status quo
Re: Why I think the OLB is important/dangerous for the status quo
I wanted to add to the previous post, I ment it as an invitation for all of you to reply and write why you think the OLB is important (I guess most of us will agree the book being important and relevant for us today). But if you disagree with me of course, please tell me where I am wrong.