Even those who are alive yet have lost their minds—believing themselves greater than others—leave their signs buried beneath the dust. They hate so many things because, deep inside, they know their past deeds meant nothing. And if you allow evil to dwell within your house, you eventually forget what goodness feels like.
So it is with the people of this town. They have begun to believe that what is bad is now good in their eyes. They no longer search for truth, nor do they try to protect the dignity of this place. Instead, they hide the stains that make the town look bad.
And the ones who claim to uphold the law are the very ones destroying the laws meant to protect us. They twist justice, break what they swore to defend, and call it righteousness. But the signs are there—under the dust, in the silence, in the things they refuse to see.
It has long been said: if you see evil and allow it to persist, you become part of it. Do you run when this happens? No, because the more you run from it, the more it harms people just like you.
Yet in this town, not one person seems able to see what is being done to them. So they ignore it. They fight harder when they seem to not know. They call themselves strong, but they refuse to confront the truth.
If you do not take that final stand — in this life — then when you return to Earth, you will be caught in the same cycle again. And even if you rise to Heaven, you will see clearly what happens to good people who could not change a law that stripped their rights from them, even though they had done no wrong.
Worse still, when we allow people to twist the system for their own gain, the corruption deepens. Not because the law failed — but because we failed to watch the law, and we failed to watch those who reset it for their own benefit.
Some people manipulate the system, who set others up, who criminalize the innocent using the very tools meant to restrain people like themselves. This is how injustice grows: quietly, confidently, and without resistance.
this is a message to Greg Stevens and Todd Homles for thier out satnding work among the community.
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