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Posted: Wed Apr 30, 2025 2:43 pm
I have always assumed this to be true. Whenever I traveled to a country, it always felt like some places were behind my home country, as if they were its past version. And then I would visit another country, and it felt as though my country would evolve into that state in the future — as if we would reach that level, but only in 20 or 50 years. I always felt this, and it is true. But the paradox is that this matrix exists, as I always say, and it is a matrix within a matrix. Even if we take a single continent — or as I suggested before, let’s consider each continent as an entire country covering the whole landmass, without getting caught up in the fact that a continent might have five different nations. Let’s put it this way: one continent—one country. Now imagine we take the sixth continent, the sixth country — meaning it is already quite developed, nearly at the final stage, I would say. And just like the continents, its cities are developed according to the same principle. There are cities that are also divided into seven stages of development — from the most advanced, highly developed city to the least developed one. But here’s the most interesting part — something I was supposed to reveal in the fifth volume, but I will start revealing now. Don’t forget that the number seven must be unfolded like a flower. Now we have a stage, and it turns out that, for example, a country on the sixth level, a continent at this stage, can have seven spiritual cities, seven cities of good material development, seven instinct- driven cities, and seven cities dominated by evil intellect. Isn’t that fascinating? Fascinating. And the same hierarchy applies: those in the “ones” are the least developed, those in the “sevens” are the most advanced. But what’s even more interesting is that this hierarchy exists even within cities. And this hierarchy is present everywhere, even in schools. You have always encountered this, and I have provided examples of it in different books. There is no way around it. It is impossible to go against nature. But in school, there has always been this division — you sit in a classroom, and there are kids who are bookworms, kids who are loud and attention-seeking, kids who are kind, and kids who are mean. There’s always a natural split. It has always been that way. And then, even classes are divided further — there’s Class A, Class B, Class C. And people always say, “Oh, this class is full of rich, arrogant kids, while this one has the nice, simple ones, and this one has the struggling, poor ones.” Remember? It’s the same hierarchy, guys. The same four seasons. Right? Right. And now let’s take any city. New York — my favorite city after Saint Petersburg. Naturally,