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How frustrating you missed all the excitement
I actually felt that way after the first shock. The people at the conference were all really fine humans, and they rose to the occasion beautifully, trying to find ways to help. They may have catastrophised a bit though, after all, we/they are all awaiting the freaking obvious apocalypse and think this was part of the end game by the US, CIA, Mossad, who are in turn controlled by shadowy Illuminati-grade bad guys. A very plausible scenario if you ask me, and that's why I was there: I want to know how to prepare for, survive, and profit from the apocalypse. That's the main thrust of anarchapulco.
So those people were doing invocations, beach meditations etc, to try to quell the violence and turn the world one degree closer to sanity. They may have done so judging by how quickly things went back to normal. Other countries have failed at that miserably. Syria comes to mind here, and that country held on for a few decades before it fell to the very same forces at work in Mexico today. Venezuela held on well for many years too. In both those cases, as in others, they portrayed the leader as a citizen-murdering despots, when to my mind they had been standing and fighting admirably.
I am proud of the Mexicans. They showed that non-comliance is the key. Peaceful non-compliance won this battle as it seems to me.
They succeeded, it appears.
I deeply admire people that are devoted to family, honest, hard work, and fair dealing in business, I have exclusively met and worked with here, and in Mexico, too. I wish all Americans, and people around the world, measured up to that standard. We wouldn't be in the hazardous position we are in, poised on the precipice of war and afflicted with madmen intent on profiting from it.