
I wanted to talk about BFO, resonance, and state change, but things are happening too fast in Washington for any of that right now.
It feels like Trump’s goons are closing in, doesn’t it? I’ve been trusting the government to hold the line and preserve our Constitutional Rights, but that’s clearly wrong.
That feeling is heavy. We can walk through what’s going on “out there,” and figure out ways for our circle to stay safer and more grounded — and hopefully avoid the violence and terror of the current political climate, which is pretty ugly, to say the least.
Reality vs. Fear
There are real tensions in U.S. politics right now — it’s not your imagination. The Trump administration has been pushing increasingly aggressive tactics, including deploying federal forces and hinting at using military power domestically against U.S. citizens.
Some legal experts and state leaders are pushing back, saying these moves flirt with or cross constitutional limits, such as the Posse Comitatus law that restricts military involvement in civilian affairs.
There are also increasing reports of protest crackdowns, arrests, use of excessive force, cruelty to civilians, and military surveillance in various U.S. cities.
So if you’re freaked out by all this, your intuition isn’t baseless. You’re not paranoid — it’s fully justified fear. There is a powerful movement against progressives and peaceful protests, and that kind of political energy often produces both real threats and collective anxiety — and sometimes it gets worse.
What You Can Do (How to Buffer, Protect, and Be Resilient)
Situational awareness and boundaries
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Know your surroundings. Be alert to unusual activity nearby — new faces, unmarked vehicles, drones, and so on.
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Limit sharing of sensitive details — where you are, when you’re shopping, when you’re walking the dog — to only people you fully trust.
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Create “safe zones” on your property that are secure or hard to reach.
Community strength and alliances
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Stay tight with your friends, neighbors, and like-minded people. A strong network is a deterrent — people watch out for each other. Stay close to your community, whether in person, on Zoom, or in Second Life.
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Share knowledge: teach each other what signs to watch for, how to respond.
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Connect with legal or civil-rights organizations in your area so you know your rights and have allies if needed.
Legal readiness
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Know your rights under the U.S. Constitution. Carry COPIES of your birth certificate, passport, driver’s license and any other I.D. you think might be needed, with you at all times, and don’t leave the house unless you have to! It’s that casual walk that can lead to disaster!
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Keep legal contacts — civil liberties advocates, activists, lawyers — handy, and within easy reach.
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Document everything: photos, videos, logs of interactions, all of it. Don’t ever touch a law officer for any reason — even sticking a finger out at him can constitute assault and battery, and that goes for the middle finger salute, too. Don’t make a statement, just shut your mouth and see them in court.
Communications and backup plans
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Use backups: extra phones, encrypted messaging apps like Signal, or off-grid communication options if things go really dark.
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Have fallback plans — routes, meeting points, and clear “if you don’t hear from me by X time, I’m in trouble” protocols.
Psychological and spiritual wellness
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Center yourself with practices you trust: meditation, prayer, music, time in nature, attend zoom meetings, get into the Ashram.
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Keep morale up: talk, laugh, share stories, sing songs, listen to music, pray.
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Be gentle with fear — fear is a signal, not a sentence. It tells you to pay attention, not to collapse.
Visibility and moral stance
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If you feel safe doing so, participate in nonviolent resistance, expression, art, or messaging.
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Use your platform — your farm, your network, your business — to speak with integrity about the situation, if you can do so safely.
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Shine the Light. Transparency, documentation, and truth weaken fear — but it starts with you not responding from fear. It’s not about being afraid; it’s about what you do with that fear.
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Song: It’s Not Fear
[Verse 1]
I wanted to talk about BFO and state change,
But Washington’s burning, the sky’s gone strange.
Feels like the goons are closing in again,
And the law we trusted just won’t defend.
[Pre-Chorus]
We’ve been counting on the line to hold,
But it’s cracking now, we’re out in the cold.
[Chorus]
It’s not fear, it’s what you do about it,
Don’t run, don’t hide, just move around it.
Keep your light where the shadows shout,
It’s not fear, it’s what you do about it.
[Verse 2]
They’re rolling troops down city streets,
Drones hum low where the silence sleeps.
You’re not paranoid, it’s all too real,
Justice bends on a turning wheel.
[Pre-Chorus]
We’ve got to breathe, keep the fire inside,
There’s strength in the truth we refuse to hide.
[Chorus]
It’s not fear, it’s what you do about it,
Stand with your friends, don’t let ‘em doubt it.
Keep your heart where the dark clouds crowd,
It’s not fear, it’s what you do about it.
[Bridge]
Lock your gates, but keep your soul unlocked,
Make safe zones where the noise can’t knock.
Write down names, keep your proof and song,
Hold the line — it’s been yours all along.
[Verse 3]
On the farm, on Zoom, in Second Life,
We share the load, we cut the strife.
The circle holds through night and storm,
We’re light and warmth in a world transformed.
[Final Chorus]
It’s not fear, it’s what you do about it,
Raise your voice, make the whole earth shout it.
Keep the truth where the liars crowd it,
It’s not fear — it’s what you do about it.
[Outro]
Shine your light, don’t let it dim,
They can’t take the soul, can’t silence the hymn.
We’ll hold the line, that’s what we’re about —
It’s not fear… it’s what you do about it.
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ARE U a KGOD DJ?? Here’s some breaks between cuts:

