Q: Let’s talk “Messiah Complex.” How did you develop this show?
A: I’ve reached a point in my career where I felt I could write about whatever I wanted to, so I thought, “Why not write about what actually interested me?” I wanted to write about who inspired me, and why they inspired me, but also why they are relevant to society today … people like Gandhi, Che Guevara, Malcolm X, Jesus Christ — and how figures like that changed the world. It’s an essay on meaning.
Q: Why do icons such as Jesus and Gandhi inspire you? Why are their stories so important?
A: What is important about all the icons … are that they represent the possibility for change. They all represent opposing masses against an elite enemy — whether it’s Gandhi against the British Empire, or Malcolm X against the oppressive racists, or Christ against Roman Imperialism. They’re all about the emancipation of human beings, the freedom of human beings.
I was 25 years old on 9/11 when the Revelation prophecy was fulfilled. My anger comes from the fear of being a thought leader, in the face of an all encompassing, monolithic, psychiatric thought police.
Fear of failure: inadequacy; still taking charge and as a result making mistakes that have major consequences. Failure is what the strongest, most intelligent and most confident leaders fear. Whether starting a new project or succeeding in the current one, the difficulty lies in escaping from the gnawing sense of failure. Being afraid to fail will lead you to tell people that you don’t expect to succeed. To lower expectations destroys imagination.
Fear of being abandoned: the fear of becoming isolated, being pushed out of the team or organization. A branch of this fear is this is the fear of not being popular and being rejected, the latter becoming crippling for some. If untreated, fear of rejection worsens over time and gradually takes over every part of life. You fear people losing interest in you and disappointing those whose opinion you value.
Fear of criticism: this particular type of fear focuses on what other people think about you and hinders you from pursuing the future you desire. Being afraid of others telling you what you cannot or should not do, and what you cannot accomplish, will quietly and quickly fester if left untreated.
Fear of being an impostor: the fear of claiming a leadership role and others finding out that you were not born, trained, or qualified for it. Not everyone can function on the “fake it till you make it” theory.
Fear of making a mistake. When we become afraid to move forward, and are afraid to make mistakes along the way, we miss many great opportunities.
CONCLUSION
Old GF NF told me to TRY. So i kept trying. Despite impossible odds and a braindead populace. I’m not angry anymore at NF. Alexander the Great was 20 years old when he became King, 32 when he died. His famous quote was, “Nothing is impossible to those who TRY“.
Alexander never lost a battle in his life. In the end, he died from a mutiny by his own men.
a small army consisting of a fire team of Marinko and Dusan Jukic and Jozo…was all it took
too bring IRS (Irwin R Shyster) to the World Trade Center and the Pentagon…serbian hackers as shit puppets, in our shit play…with backdoors into the pentagon booky wooks