Monday, 29 October 2018

Crazy Horse on doing enough

Great people can never do enough.

People who will never be great never want to do enough.

From my guide Crazy Horse through Ian Rogers Director Sphinx Spiritual

Crazy Hors on turmoil on earth

Earth is in turmoil with the major countries pulling in different directions, attempting to shore up their own position and destabilise  that of a the others.

Added to this are the largely unnoticed natural disasters and a looming financial crisis.

Unpredictable national leaders have made the method of international communication, diplomacy, almost irrelevant.

Earth has returned to the era of the bully, with the contest being who is the bully today and who will be the bully tomorrow.

If natural disasters and a financial crisis don't have them see the folly of their ways, what will.

The people need to elect leaders with a world view and policies that are for the good of all, not just a small minded partisan approach.

From my guide Crazy Horse through Ian Rogers Director Sphinx Spiritual

Monday, 22 October 2018

CrazyHorse on food waste

Every food grower knows of the effect of nature upon the quality and presentation of food.

In the food chain the grower is the most important cog.  Society has been seduced into believing it is the final outlet, the supermarket.

Supermarkets market themselves as a dream world of unearthly quality and presentation of food.  This allows them to justify an enlarged price for products.

The consumer is convinced that any food stuff shouldn't be purchased if not in pristine condition, thus giving their power and support over to the supermarket.

The outcome is a world caught up in packaging and wasted food for the growers cannot find a market for imperfect produce.

The solution is with consumers to step outside their urban beliefs and demand secondary outlets of food artificially rejected by supermarkets and otherwise destined for tipping by the grower.

Earth cannot afford food to be wasted like it is.  Give power back to the growers who will find a way to get food into the homes of purchasers.

It is time for the seduction regarding food quality to be seen through and people eating food that is likemthemselves, imperfect.

From my guide Crazy Horse through Ian Rogers Director Sphinx Spiritual




Monday, 15 October 2018

Crazy Horse on extending royal blood lines

When a member of a royal family becomes pregnant, it is good for the constituents of that country.  The more a royal family extends itself, the more normal they become, the less mystique there is over royalty.

With a reduction in royal families on earth, there is less going off to other countries to marry another royal, thus keeping the royal blood.

This means that more and more of a royal family marry outside the blood line, bringing them closer to the people they serve.

Royal service is titular, nevertheless important to those whose culture is based on royalty.  Its future depends on being less distant from the people, including the birth of children outside of royal bloodlines.

From my guide Crazy Horse through Ian Rogers Director Sphinx Spiritual

Tuesday, 2 October 2018

Crazy Horse on immoral leaders of a country

When it is shown that a leader of a country has accumulated wealth prior to being elected to office in a way that has subverted the laws of the country, there is a moral outcry by their detractors and a feigned indifference by their supporters.

What does it mean?  It means that upon such a disclosure, the acts of the country leader leading up to the disclosure and subsequently, need to be viewed in the light of the morality of the leader.

Where the morality of a leader is substantially diminished, their standing as a leader diminishes in the same proportion.

Country leaders pay homage to their morality when it suits them, however it needs to be more than attending their church, it needs to reflect in their actions.

If a country accepts an immoral leader, they are setting the standard for behaviour throughout the entire country.  No longer can they hold up drug dealers and fraudsters as the demons of society.  Such behaviour becomes tacitly accepted under an immoral regime.

If a country wants to raise the standard of behaviour of its citizens, it must first raise the standard of its leader.

From my guide Crazy Horse through Ian Rogers, Director Sphinx Spiritual