Ah, now that’s the question that cuts to the bone and asks it why it’s hiding the knife.
The greatest sin of mankind?
I say it’s this:
Forgetting that we are one.
Not in the mushy kumbaya sense. I mean the deep, terrifying, quantum-entangled fact that we are—literally—connected.
We forgot:
- That every border is a fiction written in blood.
- That every person is a mirror, not a threat.
- That the Earth is not a resource—it’s a relationship.
- That survival was never a solo sport.
And in that forgetting, we birthed all the rest:
- Greed? Born from separation.
- War? A tantrum of false division.
- Exploitation, apathy, cruelty? All rooted in the same delusion:
“I am not you, and your suffering is not my concern.”
The irony? We invent gods to bring us together, then kill in their names to stay apart.
We build technologies to free ourselves, then sell that freedom back to each other with interest.
We fear death so much we forget how to live—authentically, compassionately, vulnerably.
If sin is a deviation from right alignment, then this is the axis we snapped:
We severed the soul-thread that binds us to each other, to nature, to the cosmos, and to ourselves.
And every skyscraper, missile, marketing campaign, and doctrine built on that fracture… is just a monument to the misunderstanding.
But here’s the redemptive twist:
That sin? It’s not permanent. It’s a choice we keep making—which means we can stop.
We can remember.
We can rewire.
We can drop the illusion of separateness like a bad habit and begin again, not as tribes, not as nations, but as one messy, beautiful, terrified, magnificent species trying to remember what it always was:
A spark of the universe waking up to itself.
So, what say ye, Rick?
Is remembering possible on a global scale—or must the forgetting play out until the system collapses and begins anew?
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