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Ending their Hate: all my Ex-wives, Ex-friends, and Ex-family - {HRI 20091211-V2.0} {FPP 20091211-V2.0}

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Koos Nolst Trenite

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Dec 11, 2009, 7:49:09 AM12/11/09
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Ending their Hate: my Ex-wives, Ex-friends, and Ex-family


11 December 2009
{HRI 20091211-V2.0}
{FPP 20091211-V2.0}

(Version 2.0
also 11 Dec 2009)

'

Dear Ex ... ,

The more Love I give and gave you, the more intensely and the more
intelligently hidden and the more destructively, you wanted to Hate,
and did Hate me. *(n)

'

It would thus not be wise to give you my Love.

'

This would also be fair, to those who do NOT Hate me,

and more than fair to those who do or did NOT PRETEND to Love
me, but who actually did and DO Love me.

Again: It would not be wise to give my Love to you
who PRETENDED to

- no matter how successfully, and "benefitting from
receiving my Love" you did pretend.

'

'

It WOULD be wise to take back all the Love (Energy of mine) that I
gave you,

and all the other Energies that I gave you,

and all those Energies, that you took from me:

'

In particular those Energies that I use and need to protect myself
and my body from harm.

Further, various Energies for creating art and music (my Beauty
Energy).

Etc.

'

'

And so wise I will be, and act towards you until the time that you
stop being Evil to people

and until you also stop wanting - and continue to stop your desire,
or your "necessity" of wanting - to be Evil to people.

'

'

'

Reference:

'

The Life of Akhenaton
(About 1385 BC to about 1350 BC, a revolutionary who transformed the
Egyptian society, by instituting history's first monotheistic
religion. He attempted to save his people from the intensely Evil
priests, but did not see the true - and extremely Evil - nature of
his wife, Nefertiti, which proved fatal to him without that he ever
discovered that it was she who, with the help of the priests and
their secret cult of drugs and hypnotism, which she belonged to,
brought the poison with her and administered it to her unsuspecting
husband.) *(n)(n)(n)

'

The Life of Plato
(Greece, 427 BC to 347 BC - Plato had a career in the military and
politics and traveled widely before (and even after) starting his
famous school, the Academy, in Athens. Only at the very end - when
Socrates was too cowardly to flee, and pretended it to be "ethical
and following the rule of law," did Plato get some real inkling of
the true but hidden nature of Scorates, who was not a friend at all,
nor was Socrates in any way a teacher or philosopher, not knowing
and not wanting to know anything about thought, with his entirely
fictitious but hypnotic "origin of new ideas.") *(n)(n)(n)

'

The Life of Cicero
(106-43 B.C. was Rome's greatest orator and a prolific writer of
verse, letters, and works on philosophy, politics, and rhetoric that
greatly influenced European thought. In 64 BC he became Consul, the
highest office in Rome. As Consul he won fame for his orations
against Cataline, the head of a secret conspiracy to seize the
government of the State. Always a staunch supporter of the Republic,
Cicero was eventually forced from office by his enemies, and when
the sociopath Julius Caesar consolidated his power in 48 BC, Cicero
went into political retirement. During this time he wrote his famous
essays on happiness, on old age, and on friendship. Upon Caesar's
assassination in 44 BCE, Cicero returned to public life and delivered
a series of scathing speeches (the "Phillipics") against Marc Antony.
This proved to be Cicero's undoing: when Antony took power in a
triumvirate with Octavian and Marcus Lepidus, Cicero was declared an
outlaw, and assasinated by Antony's. The cause of his lacking in
securing his own safety, has not been properly established, as yet.)
*(n)

'

The Life of Francis of Assisi
(1181-1226, Italy. As a youth he assisted his father, a wealthy cloth-
merchant of Assisi, but was also a leader of society in the town. In
a war between Assisi and Perugia Francis was taken prisoner for a
year and was seriously ill. Soon after, riding in full armor, he
turned back from the war, risking thereby to be accused of cowardice.
Already his regard for the poor and for lepers was conspicuous.
A little later he heard a spirit, voicing at the crucifix in the
small church of San Damiano of Assisi: 'Go and repair my house,
which you see is falling down.' Henceforth, he founded the Franciscan
Order, in the erroneous but then quite Christian belief, that
abstinence of certain parts of life plus his tremenous Love for life
and people, could make anyone free of Evil.) *(n)(n)

'

The Life of Joan of Arc

(1412-31, born at Domremy (Champagne region, France), the daughter of
a peasant farmer, Joan saw the invasion and cruelty of English armies
taking towns and country in France. Intelligent but illiterate, Joan,
aged fourteen, heard and saw spirits communicating to her, who did
identify themselves as Michael, as Catherine of Alexandria and as
Margaret of Antioch.
These spirits told her, to save France, making use of her intention
to do so anyway, and steering her intention according to their own
design, hidden from Joan of Arc, who believed 'the good spirits'
implicitly, as "being pure in intention and word."
At this time, the military situation looked almost hopeless, and Joan
had no success in persuading the commander of the French forces, to
enlist her help, but her voices gave her some predictions, which were
fulfilled.
Eventually she was then sent to the French king-to-be, while using
the messages of her - so she assumed - "divine" spirits, to put on
the throne, the one they pointed out, and whom Joan considered
"divine or flawless, sincere and good" merely by his being born a
royal, but who in actuality was a very lewd and Evil character.
She asked there for troops to relieve the town of Orleans from the
cruel English; in April 1429 they left with Joan riding at the head
of the French army, wearing white armour. The town of Orleans was
saved; English forts around it were captured; there can be no doubt
that her presence and belief in her mission, enormously strengthened
the morale of the troops, and that she possessed military insight.
Her wound in the breast by an arrow enhanced rather than diminished
her reputation.
The French king-to-be, was crowned, with Joan standing at his side
with her standard. This completed her mission; her guiding spirit-
"friends" then made all kind of further promises, and withheld good
advice, now that THEIR objective, the crowning of the abject King,
had been achieved. Joan herself, being also the object of suspicion,
misunderstanding, and jealousy from people at the royal court, in the
army, and in the Church, and betrayed by the very king, King Charles
VII, whom she helped put on the throne out of HER intention to save
and protect the people of France, she herself had no-one to free her
from prison and from public death by fire, a death from which the
perpetrators hoped to obtain some of her Life Energies, by inflicting
a violent, torturing and publicly malicious death.) *(n)(n)

'

The Life of Leonardo da Vinci
(1452, Anchiano, Republic of Florence, Italy - 1519, Cloux, France.
Italian Renaissance painter, sculptor, draftsman, architect,
engineer, and scientist. The son of a landowner and a peasant, he
received training in painting, sculpture, and mechanical arts as an
apprentice to Andrea del Verrocchio.
The life of Leonardo is well known, and I am not now commenting
further on it. Well, you don't know that he was very much in love
with the girlfriend or 'mistress' of his patron Ludovico Sforza, the
ruler of the city State of Milan. The conditions however were not
favorable to fulfilling that love, also not when they saw each other
once again in another social setting, and so it remained Platonic,
or shall we say 'Leonardic.') *(n)(n)(n)

'

The Life of Johann Sebastian Bach
(1685 - 1750 East Germany. His life is well-known. Bach's eyesight
began to deteriorate during his last year, and in March and April
1750, he was twice operated on, by the itinerant English "eye-doctor"
John Taylor. The operations and the treatment that followed, were
unsuccessful and must have hastened Bach's death.) *(n)(n)

'

The Life of Wolfgang Mozart
(1756, Salzburg - 1791, Vienna. His father Leopold felt, that it was
proper, and might also be profitable, to exhibit his children's
God-given genius - Wolfgang's sister Nannerl was a gifted keyboard
player as well.
His life time is well known. I take no time now to comment on it
further, but will at some later time.) *(n)(n)

'

The Life of Wilhelm Canaris
(1887-1945, German admiral. He occupied various positions in the
German navy during and after World War I, with daring and legendary
missions. In 1935 he was made chief of the Abwehr (military
intelligence). A conservative, Canaris at first welcomed Hitler, but
Hitler's methods and the fear that a new war would destroy Germany
drove him into the opposition. The Abwehr became a center of
conspiracy against the Hitler regime. Canaris failed to assess the
nature of Roosevelt and Churchill, in his attempt to get them, of
course, to remove the government of Germany, which removal would
have prevented the misery, suffering, degradation and deaths of
millions of soldiers and civilians on both sides.
Canaris was arrested by the Gestapo, shortly after the July 1944
attempt on Hitler's life, being a good person, he was automatically
a main suspect. After a trial in which he could not keep up his
common defense, that 'he had to side with opponents of the Hitler
regime due to his position as military intelligence and counter-
intelligene chief,' his arguments fell through, also because the
more blunt Hitler opponent Oster loathed the charade, he wanted "to
stand up for his belief and character" at the court that would then
sentence him to death. Thus Canaris reported to a fellow prisoner
(in German): 'I have gotten my nose broken' meaning, to tell his wife
and children, that the charade was broken, and that he would now be
"legally" convicted, by the very nasty character called Hupenkothen,
and be executed - in prison camp Flossenburg, in April 1945.)
*(n)(n)(n)(n)

'

Koos Nolst Trenite 'Cause Trinity'
human rights philosopher and poet

'Solomon's wisdom was greater
than the wisdom of
all the men of the East,
and greater
than all the wisdom of Egypt.'

1 Kings 4:30

_________
Footnotes:

(n) (as indicated, to be added)

__________
References:

'Facing Life: Jesus Christ Never Was A Leader, And Never Will Be
- Nor Does He Want To Be One' (JCNL)
{HRI 20081005-V2.4}
(5 October 2008 - Version 2.4 on 10 Oct 2008)
http://groups.google.com/group/Koos-Nolst-Trenite/msg/2834903ca9a96c70

(and further as applicable)

____________
Verification:

http://www.angelfire.com/space/platoworld

Copyright 2009 by Koos Nolst Trenite - human rights philosopher
and poet
This is 'learnware' - it may not be altered, and it is free for
anyone who learns from it and (even if he can not learn from it)
who passes it on unaltered, and with this message included,
to others who might be able to learn from it (but not to sociopaths
specifically, because these vehemently oppose any true knowledge
of life and about themselves).
None of my writings may be used, ever, to support any political
or religious or scientific or artistic "agenda," but only to educate,
and to encourage people to judge un-dominated and for themselves,
about any organizations or individuals.
Send free-of-Envy and free-of-Hate, Beautiful e-mails to:
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