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The Cereal Bowl Delusion: How to Spot a Lie and Shatter It with Faith

The Cereal Bowl Delusion: How to Spot a Lie and Shatter It with Faith

 
Listen. Let’s talk about this “supremacy” thing. I was thinking about it over breakfast.
 
The delusion of any supremacy works like this: First, it creates an unnatural fear. Then it binds you, gags you, kills any idea or opinion that opposes it. While you’re bound and gagged, it puts a gun to your head or burns down what you built. It gathers people to sabotage anything you try to do. It takes our children, our women, our men by force. It kills and maims. Then, it looks at the dead body on the floor and says, “See? I’m superior to you.” Then it indoctrinates the survivors and their children to claim that same “supremacy” through the very terror it just used.
 
My flakes were the people, and I came to a conclusion. I indeed was delusional. There was no healthy competition between the flakes, the milk, and me. No higher education in that bowl surpassed mine. But I could eat the cereal, and somehow, I decided I had supremacy over the milk and cereal. It’s nonsense. It’s a story I told myself to justify my action.
 
When I hear people speaking on “white supremacy,” it sounds so… legitimate. To a child, they’ll take it as truth. I wish people really chewed on the words they use. Delusions of supremacy—of any kind, be it skin color or gender—are delusional precisely because they have nothing real to compare to. You can’t be “supreme” over something you created in your own mind to be inferior. Call it what it is: A Delusion. It strips away the false legitimacy and exposes it for what it is: a criminal pathology used to justify theft, violence, and the chaining of both people and nature.
 
Our job is to stop eating the lies they feed us and start feeding ourselves a different truth. That’s what faith is.
 
 
Expanding the Ancestral Blueprint: Faith That Shatters the Delusion
 
Faith isn’t about feeling good. It’s about holding a truth inside you so tightly that the outside world has no choice but to catch up. It’s assuming your freedom before you see it.
 
Take Abraham. God promised him a son, then told him to sacrifice that same son. The wild part? Abraham told his servants, “We will worship and return to you.” We. How could he say “we” would return if he was going to kill Isaac? Because his faith wasn’t in the terrible instruction; it was in the character of the God who made the promise. He assumed the end—preservation and blessing—even as he walked up the mountain. His faith wasn’t blind obedience; it was stubborn assumption.
 
Or Mother Teresa. For nearly 50 years, she felt a crushing absence of God, a “terrible pain of loss.” Yet, she never stopped. Her faith wasn’t a warm feeling; it was a “Yes” to her calling. She assumed that serving the poor was serving God, even when she felt nothing.
 
Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton were told by law they were not persons. They operated from the assumed state of free citizens. When Anthony was arrested for voting, she told the court, “I shall earnestly and persistently continue to urge all women… that resistance to tyranny is obedience to God.” The 19th Amendment didn’t give them anything; it was the world finally admitting the truth they had been living from for decades.
 
Every single triumph over slavery and suffering followed this pattern: First, assume the truth of your freedom in your mind. Then, let your actions align with that assumption. Refuse to accept the outer “reality” as final.
 
Martin Luther King Jr. and Shattering the Global Delusion
 
You’ve already spotted the core truth. What King’s movement challenged wasn’t just prejudice. It was a global, enforced delusion—a story crafted to justify the theft of land, labor, and life from non-European peoples. This delusion legally reserved “human rights” only for those at the top of its own imaginary ladder.
 
Martin Luther King Jr. and Shattering the Global Delusion
 
You have identified the core truth. The system challenged by the Civil Rights Movement was not merely prejudice; it was a global, enforced delusion constructed to justify the theft of land, labor, and life from non-European peoples.
 
Dr. King’s movement did not just seek fairness within this lie. Its profound spiritual power was in exposing the delusion itself as a spiritual sickness. The marchers in Selma and Birmingham, by facing dogs and hoses with disciplined peace, were not just asking for a seat at the segregated table. They were holding up a mirror to the nation, showing the crime of a people who believed they could own, chain, and devalue others. They demonstrated that living from the delusion of supremacy was a soul-sickness that corrupted both the oppressed and the oppressor.
 
But herein lies the solemn warning and the ultimate neutrality of the law: the power to live from an assumption is not reserved only for justice and liberation. The same creative force was used to build the prison. Their ancestors—the architects of colonialism and patriarchy—first assumed “European Patriarchal Normalcy.” They assumed it as the supreme, default state of human affairs. They persisted in that assumption with scriptures, science, laws, and violence until it hardened into a global “reality” that all others were forced to navigate, a reality where theft was law and hierarchy was divine order. They made their delusion the very sea in which others had to swim. This is the crime woven into the fabric of modern history: one group’s persistent assumption, rooted in deceit and a denial of shared divinity, was forced upon the world as reality.
 
This is the inevitable reckoning. You can only go so far living by deceit. It eventually turns on you. A reality founded on a lie is inherently unstable. It requires ever-increasing brutality to maintain, consumes the humanity of its enforcers, and creates the very conditions for its own collapse. The mirror King held up did not show a strong, superior civilization, but one spiritually ravaged by its own foundational falsehood. The assumed “Normalcy” now screams its abnormality through every protest, every court challenge, every awakened conscience. The lie, once an imposed reality, is now the prosecutor’s evidence. The law of assumption is absolute: what you persist in, you will create. And if you persist in a lie, you will eventually create the conditions of your own exposure and downfall. The delusion, in the end, consumes its host..
 
The Civil Rights Acts weren’t just laws. They were the legal system beginning to renounce its participation in the delusion. They created a tool—a new assumption made into policy—that said: the hierarchy is a lie. This victory echoed globally because it proved one thing: A delusion, no matter how violently enforced, can be broken by a greater spiritual truth.
 
If the lie could be broken in Alabama, it could be broken anywhere it was used to dispossess Indigenous peoples, exploit laborers, or deny sovereignty. Their assumed “Beloved Community” was a direct rejection of the delusion’s core idea: separation. Their faith cracked a centuries-old prison of the mind.
 
The Miskitu Ihabitants of 12 Tribes Application: Rejecting the Delusion, Reclaiming Reality
 
So, family, this is our weapon. The system that calls our land “empty,” our resources “commodities,” and our autonomy a “concession” is the same criminal delusion. It’s the story the thief tells after he’s stolen your things, to make you believe he owns them.
 
The victories of Anthony and King are our proof:
 
1. The delusion is fragile. It is sustained only by the fear and acceptance of those it targets. The moment you, from within, completely reject its story, its power begins to dissolve.
 
2. Our struggle is a spiritual war for reality itself. We are not just fighting for political rights. We are defending the true nature of reality—that the Creator is in the river, the forest, and our spirit, and cannot be owned, sold, or conceded.
 
Our task is to do what they did: Assume the state of sovereign reality so completely that the delusion has nothing to latch onto.
 
· Stop Repeating Its Language. Don’t call ourselves “marginalized.” That’s its word. We are not on the margins of its story. We are targeted guardians at the center of our own. We are sovereign.
· Assume Guardianship. Let your inner voice say: “We are the sovereign guardians of this sacred land and sea. Our relationship to it is eternal and non-negotiable. Any paper or pronouncement from a system based on a delusion is irrelevant noise.”
· Let Action Flow From That Assumption. Cultural revival, documenting our knowledge, standing in community—these aren’t just protests. They are acts of enforcing spiritual reality. They are us living from our assumption, not their delusion.
 
The same I AM that sustained Abraham, that spoke through Anthony and King, that breathed in our ancestors as they prayed to the spirit in the river and the forest… is within you. It is the only reality. The delusion of supremacy is a temporary ghost, terrified of the light of your unwavering assumption.
 
Assume your freedom. Assume your sovereignty. Assume your connection as indisputable fact. Do not wait to feel it first. Assume it, and then you will feel it. From that place, we won’t just win a battle. We will help end a global crime, one assumption at a time.
 
The True Guardians: Intellect, Virtue, and the City of Light
 
Finally, to understand the absolute contrast, let us look at true greatness. History reveals that genuine leadership does not build walls of fear, but cities of light.
 
Consider Dom Pedro II, the last Emperor of Brazil. A man of superior intellect and profound moral character, he ruled not with arrogance, but with an active commitment to making everything around him superior. He personally invested in education, science, and the arts, founding schools, observatories, and encouraging the immigration of scholars. He did not see himself as a “supreme” being separate from his people, but as a guardian responsible for elevating the entire nation. He was known to walk the streets with little to no security, engaging in dialogue with the people, because his authority came not from fear, but from respect and tangible work.
 
Look further back, to the legendary Malian Empire and its great city of Timbuktu. In its golden age, it was a global epicenter of intellect and scholarship, not of weaponry and coercion. Its scholars, like those at the University of Sankoré, thought deeply about astronomy, law, medicine, and philosophy. Their quest was not to dominate the world’s inhabitants, but to understand how the world and its people could thrive. Wealth was channeled into libraries, not just palaces. Their power was the power of knowledge, shared and expanded for the betterment of civilization—a legacy that lifted humanity, rather than chaining it.
 
This is the ultimate contrast. The delusion of supremacy is the posture of a coward: the chihuahua that barks ferociously only when protected by the fence of its bodyguards, by the systems of violence it has built. Step to such a person one-on-one, and you find a hollow core. True power, the kind wielded by an Emperor-scholar or nurtured in a city of learning, has no need for such fences. It is secure in its own substance. It is rooted in an intelligence that builds, a morality that serves, and a spirit that seeks to elevate all life. This is the higher blueprint—not of supremacy over others, but of sovereignty in excellence for the benefit of the whole. Reclaiming this is our final, most powerful act of faith.
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