Ethical Considerations

Dear Newsletter Reader,
About a year and a half ago, I had a discussion with a gentleman of approximately my age who had risen to a position of considerable power within the economy of Switzerland. It was our first meeting, and my discussion partner told me something rather shocking within the first few moments of our meeting.
“I would like an implant,” he said. This was not the subject of our conversation, nor was it the point of our meeting. I was shocked because no one had ever before approached me so directly about such a controversial subject.
I clearly understood the statement as a plea to me: “Make my life happy, and make it work so that bliss, peace and harmony become the basis of my earthy existence.” The gentleman was already wealthy and successful, so this was no longer his immediate goal.
At the time, I ignored the request. I would not do so today. Today, I would enter into a serious discussion with him and design a “software package” that works for him.
A “software package”? Is that at all possible? Is it possible to create something that makes people happy and that makes their life work?
Yes. But I do not like to call such a package an “implant,” for I do not feel it has anything to do with the way it works. And, I still have ethical considerations about the word “implant.”
What are these ethical considerations? What could be problematic or “wrong” about software packages that truly change your life?
In the Judaic-Christian society I grew up in and still live in, positive change is believed to come about through life experience. And, the generally accepted basis of such life experience is believed to be pain and suffering.
According to the deepest Judaic-Christian principals, life is believed to be a sea of pain and suffering. Inner growth, when it does occur, is assumed to develop out our pain and suffering.
And, indeed, if you look around and examine your own life and that of the human beings you have known, you will surely find the “corroboration” of this principal.
I put the word corroboration in quotation marks, because you must remember that just about everyone around believes in the principal of pain and suffering. That is the way society works; beliefs are reinforced by peoples’ experience, and peoples’ experience is created by everyone believing more or less the same thing.
It is a vicious circle of belief and belief reinforced by experience.
What if someone comes along and declares that the whole principal is not necessary?
What if this someone also tells you that he has a horde of co-workers who neither eat nor sleep nor pay taxes and are willing to work with any number of people from one to one million or more under any conditions, and these co-workers are all energetic specialists in the biological processes that make up your daily life?
I am this someone.
My co-workers are willing to do their “work” with you. I place the word work here in quotation marks because my co-workers do not experience what they do with humans as work. For them, it is pure joy, and they are delighted to be of service.
If you are interested in our offerings, please stay tuned to our site. My co-workers are going to be of service to you through the coming software downloads in our site and through our new energy intensives.
Until then, please consider enjoying every minute of your life. It is there for you to enjoy.
With my most sincere regards,
Andrew Terker
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