Tuesday, March 25, 2025

Sovil engineering: Disarming the opponents - 786

Disarming Your Enemies: The Art of Making Weakness Appealing

When you disarm your opponents or weaken them, it is especially beneficial—and easy—to make them feel great about it. Make them hate what makes them strong, and make them love, appreciate, and embrace what makes them weak.

You might have noticed that psychopaths, when exploiting others, frame it as being in the victim’s best interest—how they’ll be "better off" with this new "deal." If you’re selling something harmful, a psychopath won’t just convince you it’s safe; they’ll make you believe your situation will improve.

Similarly, when disarming a society, feeding them a poison pill, or making them adopt weakness, you don’t just take away their power—you rebrand that power as a weakness and make them feel proud for relinquishing it.

The Greatest Defense Mechanism of Hindus: The Jaati System

Hindu jaatis (castes) are extremely diverse. Abrahamic conversion formulas failed because a single approach couldn’t work against all jaatis. A medicine works against a virus, but imagine a virus family where each strain requires a different cure. These viruses, upon multiplying, mutate into new strains faster than new medicines can be developed.

The Three Primary Powers (Deities) in Hinduism

  1. Wisdom/Intelligence/Education – Saraswati (6/A)
  2. Wealth/Prosperity – Laxmi (8/U)
  3. War/Health – Shakti (Durga) (7/M)

These three goddesses are the primary female deities in Hinduism. Their male counterparts are:

  • BrahmA (Generator)
  • VishnU (Operator)
  • Maheshwar/Mahadev (Destroyer)

Together, they form AUM (), representing the cycle of creation, preservation, and destruction.

The female deities are the source of power for the male trinity. Every human, especially men, is naturally driven to pursue these three forces—to attract them, align with them, and earn their favor.

How Hindus Were Disarmed

1. Giving Up Shakti (War/Health)

Hindus were systematically disarmed—made to abandon weapons, martial spirit, and warrior ethos—all in the name of "peace." Those preaching peace often glorified non-violence while enforcing it through violence. The result? The preachers gained power, while the victims lost both peace and strength.

British puppets like Gandhi were brought to India to persuade millions not to revolt. The British even promoted Gandhi as their "biggest opponent," fooling Indians into following him. The British were less than 1% of India’s population; even a small uprising could have driven them out. But by convincing Hindus to abandon Shakti (violence/self-defense), they prolonged colonial rule.

Gandhi preached non-violence for India’s freedom but urged Indians to join the British Army to kill Britain’s enemies. He struck a deal: if Indians fought for Britain, they might gain freedom. But when it came to resisting the British, he demanded passivity.

Similarly, figures like Ghanshyam Pandey (later rebranded as Swami Narayan) were propped up by the British to dilute Hinduism. His cult, BAPS, mimics Hinduism but rejects its scriptures, pushing monotheism—a stepping stone to Abrahamic conversion.

Gandhi never asked non-Hindus to disarm. He told Hindu women to endure rape and Hindu men to offer their necks to swords—all for "peace." When Muslims launched Direct Action Day to partition India, Hindus were defenseless.

2. Surrendering Laxmi (Wealth/Prosperity)

Today, influencers promote Hindu leaders who preach against wealth. Yet, wealth builds temples, funds political movements, and controls media. Hindu temple donations are seized by the government and spent on anti-Hindu agendas.

The wealthy preach against wealth because they fear competition. If 90% of society pursued riches, the elite’s monopoly would crumble.

Money can buy wisdom and power—it hires muscle and brains. Unlike forced allegiance, wealth secures loyalty willingly.

3. Abandoning Saraswati (Wisdom/Education)

Without knowledge, you remain enslaved. Hindu scriptures—Ramayana, Mahabharata—taught strategy, enemy recognition, and reciprocity. Had Hindus not been tricked into abandoning these texts, they would never have followed Gandhi or disarmed themselves.

False superstitions spread:

  • "Keeping Mahabharata at home causes family strife."
  • "Ramayana brings separation between husband and wife."

These lies severed Hindus from their intellectual roots.

The Uniqueness of Each Power

  • Shakti (War): Forces the other two powers to serve you—but forced allegiance is temporary.
  • Laxmi (Wealth): Voluntarily recruits wisdom and strength. Money buys loyalty more reliably.
  • Saraswati (Wisdom): Uses logic to persuade the other two powers.

Work is Worship

Worship isn’t just ritual—it’s action. Anyone who is pursuing knowledge, wisdom, intelligence, education is a worshipper of saraswati. It does not matter the pursuer knows her existence or he is an atheist. As the laws of karma dictate, one by default is destined to get the fruits of the labor almost all the time.

  • Pursuing knowledge = Worship of Saraswati
  • Acquiring wealth = Worship of Laxmi
  • Strengthening defense = Worship of Shakti

Non-Hindus excel in these areas without "worshiping" these deities. The key is action, not empty rituals.

When Europeans (or whites) went to Africa, India, or America, they encountered societies that welcomed outsiders and celebrated guests but did not prioritize material wealth or warfare. The existence of smaller kingdoms in India, for instance, suggested that most rulers were not focused on conquering their neighbors. It was an era of peace and prosperity—but peace breeds weakness, weakness breeds violence, violence breeds strength, and strength in turn restores peace. Thus, the cycle continues.

This excessive hospitality—treating guests better than one’s own—is a symptom of weakness, a lack of Shakti (power/war/violence) in society. Even if it were slightly stronger (say, 0.87 instead of 0.6), the outcome would remain the same: eventual collapse, though perhaps delayed. The damage would be severe, and recovery could take ages—if it happens at all.

Even today, in India—the last refuge for Hindus—Hindus have fewer rights than those of foreign faiths. Guests receive more privileges and special treatment than our own people. This is a sign of abandoning, rejecting, and insulting Shakti—the essence of warfare, vigilance, and Shatrubodh (the understanding of the enemy). Hindus were cunningly deceived into disarming themselves, surrendering their Shakti, their prime deity, through the influence of peace fanatics like Gandhi.

Furthermore, Hindus were manipulated into relinquishing wealth by non-traditional, non-scriptural neo-gurus and neo-saints, who gained popularity by preaching against material pursuits. They spread messages like, "Money won’t buy happiness," or "Wealth won’t get you to heaven." How convenient! If I were a wealthy man with vast riches, I, too, would promote such preachers to discourage competition. I would keep telling people, "Money isn’t everything," to pacify those who lack it.

Imagine if everyone realized that wealth does buy happiness, health, and power—the rich would face fierce competition, and their monopoly would crumble.

 

The Ongoing Psychological Warfare

Hindus are still told to renounce power while others accumulate it. They’re praised for "peacefulness," a hollow virtue in a material world. Politicians posing as Hindus preach surrender—abandon Shakti, Laxmi, and Saraswati—leaving Hindus weak but deluded into feeling "superior."

The cycle continues. Any society which has an imbalance in these 3 powers, will perish from a society which has a balanced view of these powers. This is why less thatn 1% of the people of any nation, country, society were able to colonise, conquer the rest.

 

Corrective or vengeful reciprocation

 Over years, I have become convinced about "corrective reciprocation" being the safest moral principle that an individual or a gro...