DECONSTRUCTING BABYLON #132 - THE LIE OF LONELINESS: WHY BEING CONNECTED MATTERS
In our last post, we looked at how Babylon acts like a giant machine, sucking wealth and talent out of the North. But how does it get away with it? It uses a very old trick: it tries to convince us that we are all alone. It tells us that we are just separate individuals, like little cogs in a machine, who have to compete against each other just to survive. In this post, we are looking at why this "Lie of Loneliness" is the foundation of the system, and how we can break it by simply remembering who we are.
The Research: The Mistake of Separation
Research Report #224 explains that the Babylonian system is built on a massive mistake. It treats people, land, and nature as separate "things" that can be moved around, used, and discarded. Scientists and historians sometimes call this the "Newtonian Error" - the idea that the world is just a big clock made of separate parts that don't really affect each other unless they bump together.
When the system convinces us that we are separate units, we become much easier to manage and far easier to exploit. If you are "just an individual," the system can sell you "privacy" as a luxury, when really it is just isolation. It can tell you that your neighbour is your competitor for a job or a resource, rather than your teammate. This intentional separation creates a huge amount of stress and a deep, underlying sense of loneliness. Babylon then steps in to "fix" that loneliness by selling us products, entertainment, and distractions. It’s a cycle that keeps the machine running on our energy while leaving us feeling empty and exhausted.