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Awakening Consciousness
World Evolution of Animals (and us too!) (Evolution Series Part II)
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World Evolution of Animals (and us too!) (Evolution Series Part II)
What if we were to respect this sacred symphony of life that was created over millions of years?
Read on / print out if you're a teacher:
My Website: https://www. .community/healing-the-world/world-evolution-of-animals-and-us-too-evolution-series-part-ii
or
Medium https://medium.com/new-earth-consciousness/world-evolution-of-animals-and-us-too-evolution-series-part-ii-9bad8e3f6fcc
You can also read this series in my book on Amazon, New Social-Ecological-Economic Theory for The World : Saving the Earth from Poverty and Pollution, and Preparing for the Rise of Artificial Intelligence, https://a.co/d/0bQatzqw
Ashley Heacock, 2026
Okay, hello everybody. Welcome to the Awakening Consciousness podcast by Ashley Heacock. So we're now on the evolutionary series part two. This one is entitled World Evolution of Animals and Us Two. What if we were to respect this sacred symphony of life that was created over millions of years? So you might want to listen to my first podcast, which talks about how what if we were to really understand our evolution that has happened over billions of years? I gave the metaphor of building a house. You wouldn't want to destroy it. You spent lots of time and effort on that house. You created beautiful decorations and memories in it. Why would you destroy it? It's the same with the earth. The earth was created over billions of years. Beautiful animals and plants, minerals, gemstones, mountains, rivers were created. Why are we destroying it? So I'm hoping that this three-part series might help people awaken to the devastating impacts we're having on the earth. And and I give much many solutions on my website, awakeningconsciousness.community, also on my Medium profile, under Ashley Heacock, and so you can read through the solutions as well. So right now let's go back to this article. So as humans, our brains have difficulty understanding time. We live in our current reality, and most people don't consider the sacredness of this earth and the long evolutionary development of animals and our own human species. What if we were to take this timeline below more seriously? So I'm going to talk about animals and our timeline in this article. What if we were to respect this sacred symphony of life that was created over millions, billions of years? We currently are in a phase of delusion, polluting with petroleum, fertilizers, pesticides, burning of trash, throwing trash in the ocean. It's really ridiculous, it's idiotic, it doesn't make any sense. This incredibly beautiful earth is really a paradise or heaven. It's like the Garden of Eden, right? It's so precious. So do we even logically, rationally, emotionally know what we're doing? We're literally killing ourselves and all of these incredible species. This is about our survival. Are we aware of that? Do we need some waking up in some way? So I'm hoping these articles might help. So the United Nations is supposed to help the world, but countries are not following the net zero carbon emission suggestions. Poverty seems to be a major cause of this. There's tons of inequality in the world. We could distribute the wealth and we could help these countries get to net zero emissions. I also talk about hemp as a huge help. It takes in tons of carbon. It's the best plant out there that I've researched. And hemp doesn't have any THC, any CBD, nothing. And so we could plant it all over the earth. And I also talked about phytoplankton in part one, that is a really great carbon reducer and oxygen emitter. So clearly, brave and bold leadership is needed, and distribution of wealth and investment in green technology is needed. And I also believe the plantations of hemp is needed. And in my articles on hemp, I talk about how we can use 3D printing. You can create homes, you can create cars, desks, tables, uh clothing, you can create tons of really incredible things with hemp. It was banned like in 19, I don't know, 30 or something, 40, because of the cottonwood industry, didn't want the hemp industry to compete with them. And democracy is actually quite corrupt. And so the hemp industry lost to the cottonwood industry at the time, and tons of manipulations were put out there about hemp that were untrue. And so finally in 2017, the United States legalized hemp, which is so funny because it has it's a I mean Ford even knew, Ford knew back in the day that it was ten times stronger than steel. So obviously we could use this amazing plant to help rebuild the ozone layer. And I talk about in my articles about how Africa itself could become completely barren, completely so hot and intolerable that no life could live there. What are we doing as an earth together? In my first series I talked about about uh how organelles and and ourselves cooperate together. Um that's what we need to do as a species now is cooperate to save the earth. Okay, so with that introduction, I'm gonna take a little break with some juice and some cacao, some which is uh filled with iron, great for you, iron and vitamin C prevent anemia. I also talk about that in my articles. You can read about. Okay. So as you read through this, as I read through this timeline below, or you read it on my media more website, perhaps meditate on the sacredness of life and how these precious, unique animals were created. So 560 million years ago or so, maybe billions, sponges. Again in part one, I talk about how the earth used to be methane, and then eventually oxygen was formed because of sponges. It's incredible, it's so interesting. So 530 million years ago, the first fish appeared on earth. These were these fish were jawless and belonged to the Agnatha group. I'm not sure if I pronounced that right. So I show a picture, I show pictures on my website. So if you're a teacher, uh you might want to print out uh my articles so the children can see um the the photos. So it's incredible that these fish discovered ways to swim. Like, wow, swimming. Incredible. Um and I talk about in the first series again about how because of what we've done to the ocean with petroleum and and trash and doing really idiotic things, us homo sapiens think we're really smart, but actually we're we're really dumb. We're using our sacredness of tool building to do really dumb things to the earth. Uh so yeah, so fish learned to swim about uh five hundred and thirty million years ago. And then 370 million years ago, the first amphibians appeared uh during the Devonoian period. I don't know if I'm pronouncing that right. They evolved from lobe-finned fish that had multi-jointed fins and primitive lungs. So lungs started to be created. How interesting, right? Three hundred and thirty million years ago, the oldest known octopus arrived, appeared on Earth before the age of dinosaurs. So wow, they have so many tentacles. Uh they have like I think like eight eight arms or something. That's incredible. Wow, like what a unique innovation. Um can we respect that? So 315 million years ago, the first reptiles appeared on Earth. So uh this was during the carboniferous period. These reptiles were small lizard-like animals that evolved from amphibians. So this is really interesting. So life started to go from the sea to the land, and these were reptiles. So they learned somehow to go from the sea to the land. Maybe it's because of the lungs that were created. I'm not sure. Scientists who have studied animals and evolution might know a little bit more about that. That's it, that's remarkable. Um can we appreciate that? Can we respect that? 245 million years ago, dinosaurs first appeared on Earth during the Triassic period. They were dominant land vertebrates for millions of years under the Cretaceous Pelogene extinction event about 66 million years ago. So 245 to 66 million years ago they lived for. So I'm from South Dakota, so uh there's dinosaurs in South Dakota, uh, dinof dinosaur fossils. And so I learned about dinosaurs at an early age. And wow, they they were really big, um, really massive animals. Uh, but we only have fossil records because there was an asteroid that that uh unfortunately killed these incredibly unique species. So 230 million years ago, turtles have been on Earth four, making them one of the oldest reptile groups. They're really wise animals. So I'm a shaman, I channel with animals, I channel with humans, with extraterrestrials, with angels. Um turtles are extremely wise. The really really old animals. Uh deeply, deeply respect uh for them would be appreciated. Okay, so then we go to 225 million years ago. The first mammals appeared during the late Triassic period, about 225 million years ago. The earliest known mammal is Brasilodon Quadra Gularis. I I don't I'm not pronouncing that right for sure. A small shrew like animal, really cute, it's on my website. Uh so a little mammalian with fur. Mammalians typically have breasts, they typically feed the young with the hearts, right? The the the women feed the young with the breasts. Uh, versus other species, they might have eggs. Uh mammalians have vaginas and penises, they they then bur them, they then feed them with their breasts, uh, they give them love from the hearts. It's uh so that's that's a really big deal, right? So that was 225 million years ago. Okay, so 175 million years ago, Pangaea started to fracture and disperse due to tectonic plates. So some people might not know that the earth used to just be one, one land mass, and then and it was called Pangaea. And then it started to fracture and disperse, and then so now we have continents. So that started 175 million years ago. 165 million years ago, birds evolved from theroport dinosaurs during the Jurassic period, around 165 to 150 million years ago. Okay. So the earliest known bird fossil is 150 million year old. Wow, it's really difficult to pronounce Archaeoperyx. Alright, so this is when life learned to fly. Wow. Wings flying. Are you kidding? And then multicolored, like the lizards was multicolored. Wow. They learn to evolve to survive with different colors, different attributes. So animals learn to swim, animals learn to fly. That's remarkable. That's to be respected. 124 million years ago, the first bees appeared around 124 million years ago, during the early Cretaceous period. I don't know if I pronounced that right. They likely originated in South America or Africa on the supercontinent of West Gondwana. Okay. So, and did you know that we know we need bees to survive? And that bees are are dying right now because of climate change, because of pollution. So the Woodland Trust says without bees and thousands of other insect species, um, it wouldn't be long before our ecosystem collapsed. So we would all die. Bees pollinate our wild trees and wildflowers, which then support other insects, which then support birds, bats, mammals, and everything up the food chain, with food and shelter, which includes us. So we're literally killing ourselves because of pollution. Bees are dying, so we are dying too. That's the circle of life. Alright, so now I'm gonna quote from Google AI Worldwide, bee species have declined significantly significantly, with one study noting a 25% reduction in species between 2006 and 2015 compared to before 1990. Wow, 25% reduction. That's a massive though rates vary regionally in species of managed honey bees have generally um let's see, the number of bee colonies per person has dropped by over 23% globally, and climate change threatens to reduce the dis distribution of many bee species. So we're a threat, our survival is is a threat. Okay, that's kind of the part of that. All right, I'm taking a little drink. Okay. So one hundred a million years ago, butterflies first appeared on Earth in North or Central America. This was during the Cretaceous period when dinosaurs were still dominant. And wow, aren't butterflies beautiful? Aren't they they're like dancers to me. They're so lovely. Like what would Earth be without butterflies, right? They they just give us such brilliance, such beauty. They're like birds too, like hummingbirds. Wow, the they're the beauty of this earth. However, unfortunately, we're not taking care of this precious earth and animals. Uh, as I said, I think there's a malfunction in our brains that is not calculating the survival of our animals and our own species. Between 2000 and 2020, I'm quoting Google AI, total butterfly populations fell by 22% across the 554 recorded species. Species level population declines are widespread, with 13 times as many species declining as increasing. So butterflies are so beautiful. Why are we not caring about our impact on the environment, ecology, the beauty of a planet, the circle of life, uh, on survival, the beauty of butterflies and and birds and animals. It doesn't make any sense to me. It seems like the there's something uh wrong with our brains, and like We're extremely egotistical species. We really need to humble ourselves and realize that the impact we're having on other animals is really disastrous and that through the circle of life, through karma, we could also end up dying ourselves. Alright. So 66 million years ago, as I said, a large asteroid impact played a role in the extinction of dinosaurs and many other plant and animal species that hit Mexico. Current day Mexico, right? We created nation states. So despite the widespread extinction, some species, including birds, were direct descendants of therapeuid dinosaurs. Mammals, reptiles, and certain types of plants survived the extinction event. The surviving species were likely those that were smaller in size, had diverse diets, or were able to adapt to the changing environmental conditions. Alright. So 65 million years ago, rodents, which include mice, have been around for at least 56 to 65 million years ago. The first rodents likely evolved from a small mouse-like mammal. And so some mammalians did survive. So 60 million years ago, the earliest known elephant ancestors, well, this is a hard word to pronounce, called Proposidians, first appeared in Africa around 60 million years ago. Wow, they're such beautiful animals. The mammalians, they care for the young, they're they're extremely intelligent, beautiful. Like I don't think I don't think humans understand the intelligence of animals. Since I'm a shaman and I channel with them, I understand that some a lot of animals are actually more intelligent than some Homo sapiens today. I recommend contraception, I recommend education, I recommend uh instinctual abilities for humans to become more intelligent because right now a lot of animals are actually more intelligent than some of the human species that are alive. I also have an article on abortion. It gives advice for that. Um you can read through that on my website or on my medium profile. Uh there's a lot of countries that have tons of people living there, and they could they could use uh um contraception to to to have less human beings care about them more, and that would be really helpful. Okay, I'm gonna take a little drink. Okay. So all right, so fifty-five million years ago, the first primates, which include the ancestors, our ancestors, of modern monkeys, apes, and humans appeared in the fossil record. So that's fifty-five million years ago. Six zeros. These early primates were mouse sized and lived in forests across Asia, Europe, and North America. It is theorized that they rafted on vegetation and debris, floating hundreds of miles across oceans to Africa to then become apes. But, you know, wow, there might need to be more research, we're not really sure. The the fossil records of our ape-like ancestors are in Africa, are in eastern Africa, um, and through my channeling, that's where our first communities began. The first uh human burials began as well, ape burials. Again, the there were the I think I I speak about this in part three, about our ape evolution. So wait for that uh uh to be talked about in part three. Alright. So 50 million years ago, whales first appeared on Earth. This was during the Eocene epoch, after the extinction of the dinosaurs, but the first the fur the before the first humans. And whales are mammalians, and dolphins are mammals. Um they breathe oxygen in the air, so that's why they fly up into the earth, out of the ocean, to breathe in the oxygen, and then they go back down, so they have lung capacity, right? So some animals went from the sea to the land, other animals went from the land to the sea. Um again, more research would need to be done to understand all of that. But uh whales are also extremely intelligent, very compassionate, uh, they care for the young, they have uh very sacred uh communal practices uh that could be studied. I've learned about it through my own channeling. Um other people might know more who have already been studying these animals who again are to be deeply respected. Um 40 million years ago monkey-like fossils appear in Africa. Um years ago, apes first appeared in Africa. The earliest known ape is the Proconsul. I don't know if I'm pronouncing that right, which l lived in East Africa. So this is kind of the beginning of our of our ape family. They're bigger than monkeys. They they they look more like us. Uh so this is twenty-five million years ago is is a really big uh important event for for our monkey ape uh species. So twenty five million years ago, Proelurus again, not sure if I'm pronouncing that right, an ancient cat species that eventually evolved into lions appeared. Wow, these are really elegant animals. The fur and they care for the young. Wow, like really special animals. Twelve million years ago, the genus gorilla first appeared. Um it could be between 8.8 and 12 million years ago. Uh this was when the the group of primates that would evolve into gorillas split from the common ancestor with humans and chimps. So eight million years ago, chimpanzees evolved between five and eight million years ago, around the same time that humans and chimpanzees shared a common ancestor. So again, we we look similar to chimpanzees. Um bonobose as well appeared pretty pretty soon later. Okay, we'll get there soon. So six million years ago, the earliest mammoths appeared in Africa around 6.2 to 5.3 million years ago. The earliest known species is mammothus subplaniferons. Not sure if I pronounced that right. They crossed Beringia into North America about a hundred thousand years ago. Mammoths went extinct due a combination of factors, primarily uh changes in the climate, habitat loss, and human hunting. I'm not sure which I would need to I would need to research this more to understand more. Again, I'm from South Dakota, there were mammoths there, so there's the mammoth site, there's uh there's you I I learned about mammoths as a as a young girl as well. Um so there are uh you can yeah, you can if you're interested in this any of these subjects, any of these animals, please feel free to research more. So six million years ago. Wait, five point let's see. So we're moving on to five to two million years ago. The earliest lion like cats appeared in East Africa around five million years ago. The earliest bosses of lions that are recognizable were found in Tanzania and are estimated to be up to two million years old. So again, I talked about 25 million years ago, the first cat species uh began, and then yeah, so they they just keep so animals keep evolving, right? So eventually lion-like cats appeared. Um I'm not I'm not an expert on science. A lot of this is from Google AI, um, but I'm just trying to explain the significance of the enormous amount of time it took to create these animals, uh, and how much respect they should receive from us. Um in the Bible it talks about how we are the caretakers, uh and right now we're not acting like that. So that is uh negative karma, that's sinful, that's evil. Um so we really need to uh be more respectful, we need to care for the earth, we need to gain appreciation for these animals. I have a theory that due to industrialization, we've kind of grown detached from the earth, grown detached from animals, from food, uh, and so we might that might be part of why our brain chemistry is a little off. Because we could lit again, we can literally die, and these sacred animals, all of us could. Uh so part of it could be industrialization. I talk about in my articles a solution of having organic farms, also a lot of this this whole monogamy situation, it was used in the Bible because there was a lot of dirtiness, a lot of just uh behavior that was not very uh pure, and so monogamy was introduced. However, today we have showers, and so uh, you know, you can be so we come from bonapes and chimpanzees, which are both they have homosexuality in them, it's a natural uh part of who we are as a as a monkey ape species, and so I talk about that in my art in one of my articles on my website or on Medium that you can read about as well. Um so if we become more uh community oriented oriented, if we if we have like more tribalism, more organic farming, more you know, we can use 3D printers and hemp to create houses and and we could instead of having large land masses of just wheat and soy, we could have really diverse uh farms and gardens of the food that our community would need to survive on. So we could have hemp with 3D printing to build what we need to build, we could have farms with all of the food we need to survive, and that would be an extremely sustainable plan. Plus, then I used to live in Africa, so I've lived in uh the Middle East, I've lived in Africa, I've lived in Latin America, um I was in the Peace Corps in Africa, I lived in a little village without water and electricity, and in this little village the children were basically everybody's children. They just could run around to all the different houses. Um so this whole monogamy situation is very stressful on parents, right? So what if we started living in communities again? That would be less stressful, plus then the babies could, the children could have more people to be around. Maybe they relate to the uncle more, maybe they relate to the cousin more, maybe they relate to their grandfather or somebody else a little bit more than their than their than their parents even. Um it's a possibility. The the amount of sperm that comes from a male, it's like I think it's like millions of sperm. That means you could be anybody. You could you could be similar to your African ancestry, more than your Chinese ancestry, then you then your Hindu ancestry, then your etc. etc. We're all really unique. So and in America especially, I mean there was a lot of rape of, I talk about this in my articles, there was rapes of the African slaves, so there's a lot of African ancestry in America, there was a lot of rape of Native Americans, indigenous people, so there's a lot of indigenous people in America. Um there's so much diversity in America. Uh basically, most people are multi-ethnic. Uh so having these diverse community-oriented farming, sustainable communities where people can feel free might be a great solution. All right. So again, you can just read more about that all um on my website, uh awakeningconsciousness.community or my medial. Um, I also have books out on Amazon that you can that have these articles in them that you can look up. Again, my name is Ashley Heacock. Just look it up on Amazon and my books will appear. Alright, so let's go back to the article. 2.6 million years ago, bison first appeared in Asia around 2.6 million years ago. They then migrated to North America between 195,000 and 135,000 years ago. So they probably crossed the Bering Strait, I would assume. Um so because bison are also in South Dakota, where I'm from, and extremely sacred to the Lakota Sioux, indigenous people. They would use all parts of the animal. They would build teepees, make moccasins, they respected them deeply. Uh that's really how we should respect all animals, is is how they do. All right, so I'm gonna take another drink. Okay. So one point seven million years ago, the bonobo species diverged from the common chimpanzee line. This means that bonobos are closely related to chimpanzees. They're like sister species. And the Congo River is believed to have formed between 1.5 and 2 million years ago, separating them. And that's what led to the divergence of this of the chimpanzees and monobos. So they evolved differently because of the Congo River. So it separated them and then the evolution changed. Isn't that fascinating? And and we evolved then from both of them. Um and the the they're a little different, so chimpanzees are a little more masculine, uh more uh uh bigger in size, bonobos are stand more upright, are a little bit more human-like in that way. Again, our genes are a little bit more like bonabos. Um and bonobos are extremely loving animals. Uh they use they use love, they to uh to create bonds to to um to to form beautiful communities. Uh the you can research both of them more if you're fascinated with this topic. Uh I I took so I took evolution classes at Harvard, um that was at a university level and one that was at a PhD level. So I have I do have a background in evolution. Uh I went to Harvard graduate school, an MIT graduate school. So um so I do know something about evolution, um but I'm not an expert. Uh just just to put that out there. Okay. So one million years ago, wolves appeared in Eurasia. They evolved from smaller dog-like canids that were native to the region. Wow, so wolves are extremely extravagant, really beautiful animals, the pack animals, the cooperative, the really intelligent. Um so again I channel with all of these animals the the extremely the extremely intelligent uh and and you know I I learned as a young girl about the ididerod, they the yeah, the the really cooperative pack animals, really interesting uh evolutionary traits. So again, evolutionary traits can be about how to live together cooperatively, how to create communities. Um and so it's not just about you know how to be, how to camouflage yourself. Uh, it's also about how to live together peacefully. And what if our world could do that? What if uh all of us uh in all of our different ethnicities couldn't come together as one and live cooperatively and peacefully and uh figure out ways to be more diplomatic, more intelligent, rather than our past that I would say is uh pretty barbaric. Um what if we now used our intelligence to respect different cultures, to maybe change the borders that were created by Europeans that did not understand the cultural differences of people around the world. So we'll probably need new maps, we'll need diplomats, we'll need diversity of women and men. Women are really good listeners, very compassionate. Uh I talk about in one of my articles how to fix our democracies that are very corrupt. My first solution is 50-50 women and men. Instead of having basically fraternities of men, uh having women there too. So men, in my research that I've learned about in graduate school, so men care about tools, the tool builders, but women care about humans. They care for the young, right? So it's why did God create both a man and woman? Uh it should be an equal balance so women could care for the children, for the plants, for the animals, for education systems, for the poor. Uh men could maybe be you know more interested in green technologies, in uh you know, space programs, um different things like that. So uh it doesn't have to be a competition, it could be a cooperation, and it could be very helpful. Uh my second solution for democracy is financial transparency. Uh we now have technology to be able to do that because right now those businesses, corporations that have tons of money pay off these politicians and so that they will vote the way they want them to vote. So really, we're actually uh it's like a corporatocracy. It's not really a democracy, it's very corrupt, and it's all over the world it's happening. Um and it happens in Africa where these mining companies will just go to one politician, pay the politician off, and then get access to this sacred land. And then the people of Africa, the the natives, do not get the proceeds. The government doesn't get the proceeds, the local population doesn't get the proceeds. It's just these corrupt politicians that do underhanded uh corrupt uh deals with these foreign mining companies. Uh so financial transparency is really needed. I talk about that in my articles as well. Okay, so one second, I'm gonna take a drink. Oh my god, garbage. All right, so three hundred thousand years ago, Homo sapiens, a species that includes all modern humans, first appeared in Africa around three hundred thousand years ago. So that's our founding three hundred thousand years ago. So that's three zeros. That we evolved as Homo sapiens, our tribal bonding. Um so we we had we lived in tribes. Um uh again I talked about how we started becoming more spiritual as well. We started uh burials, we started ceremonies, um our brains began to understand karma, the circle of life, how things worked. Uh so it's a very unique time in the history of this planet. Thirty thousand years ago, people started migrating across the Bering Land Bridge into America. So these are the indigenous people of North and South America, so they come from China. I believe our map is wrong. We need to reorient our map so it starts in Africa, then it goes to China, and then it goes to the Americas, because that's how a lot of us migrated was through Africa to China to the Americas. So that's why the indigenous people of North and South America look Chinese, because they lived in China in that region for hundreds of thousands of years. So uh they're deeply related. Okay, so all right, so one thousand four hundred and ninety-two years ago, people started migrating, i.e. colonizing America from Europe. So so there were people that that were in Europe. So they the the first Europeans from my research uh uh uh migrated to Europe 50,000 years ago. Um they didn't build any civilizations. Uh it seems they were mainly like farmers versus those who crossed from China to North and South America 30,000 years ago created massive, created massive civilizations. The Incans, the Mayans, the Aztecs, wow, they they were extremely mathematical, they were similar to the Egyptians, they were very intelligent. Uh they they created massive empires, massive knowledge, versus Europe didn't create anything until Christianity came. Um and there were a lot of migrations that happened uh from different areas into Europe, and then finally in Europe they started mathematics, however, mathematics, I talk about this in my article, started with Al-Kalbazarmi uh in uh Persia, in in Arabia, whatever uh you want to call that region of that day. Uh he was extremely brilliant. Wow, look him up. You can read it in the articles. Wow, was he mathematical? Uh the Egyptians as well, they knew that one drop of water equaled one centimeter. They were extremely mathematical as well. So uh mathematics basically started uh in that region. Um and and you know I think it's funny that there's there's people in America who build a company and they get billions of dollars, but do they give gratitude to our ancestors? Do they give gratitude to the Egyptians, to the Persians, to the dancers, to the because it's all rhythmic, rhythmic, it's scientific, it's spiritual. Uh I talk about this in my articles. Um so why does one CEO get massive amounts of money when actually the employees are from universities that learned from people from thousands of years ago who were the first to discover the sacredness of mathematics and science. So we need a totally new economic system that incorporates gratitude for our ancestors. All right, so these Europeans they colonized the Americas, and this devastated the local indigenous populations. There was genocide, there were diseases spread that killed millions. These indigenous people are still struggling today, and many have forgot their ancient intelligent civilizations because these Europeans had guns. A two-year-old, a four-year-old, the stories about it in America, about how four-year-olds can get a hold of a gun and kill themselves or kill somebody else. That's not masculine. What's masculine is can you use a bow and arrow? Can you climb up a tree and get honey like the indigenous uh do in the Amazon? Uh there's men in Asia who can swim underwater for like 15 minutes to hunt fish. That's masculine. You see these so if you go to Wikipedia and look up the walls in Europe, these they were just killing each other. They were like families, but they were just killing each other like crazy. Why? Because of patriarchy. I call it the Alexander the Great syndrome. You know, they just it was killer be killed. And so these little boys, unfortunately, were put in the army and told to kill these people because why? Who knows why? Maybe it was a family feud. Have you heard of Helen of Troy? There was like a massive war over this woman named Helen. Um are guns masculine? Uh they're really dangerous. I'm also worried that they could be silencing the voices of women in the South because the women could be afraid that the men could kill them with their guns. That's not the intention of the founding fathers. It's not constitutional. Uh, I write about this as well. Uh on my website, my medium profile, in my books. Uh guns need to be banned, they need to be disallowed. The the teenagers are using them to kill other teenagers in schools. We need social emotional intelligence to be taught, we need compassion, we need love. Um that would be a much better solution. So unfortunately, these guns killed uh many of these ancient indigenous people, um, the Lakota, the Mayans, the Aztecs, the Incans, many of the indigenous of the of the Americas. The Europeans had no idea how much ancient knowledge they had. They were just in a totally different state of mind. Again, they they were killing each other in Europe. They were killing each other and they were families. And then they just went to the Americas and then they just started killing everybody there as well. Um they're like a different species. Uh uh again, I talk about it in part three. Uh, the difference between all of the differential homo sapiens, homo gosh, there's so many different names for them that are hard to pronounce. Um Europeans didn't seem to have hearts. So um a lot of the ancient knowledge is lost. Uh some people are trying to remember this ancient knowledge, me included. Um some archaeologists and people interested in science, spirituality, and culture and mathematics are trying to uncover these ancient secrets they discovered about our universe. They really are ancient secrets, they're really knowledgeable. Um so thank you to anybody who is interested in this subject who who wants to research it more. All right, so this is the conclusion. It is helpful to upgrade your consciousness to a new level of understanding that Homo sapiens are new to the earth compared to other animals. And now we're destroying these precious creatures and ourselves. Again, we are literally killing ourselves. I believe we are disconnected from the earth, animals, and the environment due to industrialization and urbanization. It has separated us from life herself. So I'm going to read from the the guardian about the Amazon. The Amazon rainforest is now emitting more carbon dioxide than it is able to absorb. Scientists have confirmed for the first time. The emissions amount to a billion tons of carbon dioxide a year, according to a study. So I believe scientists need to update their calculations about when uh when we're all going to die. Um the giant Amazon rainforest had previously been a carbon sink, absorbing the emissions, driving the climate crisis, but now uh but now the climate crisis is accelerating because again, because I talked about the corruption of democracy, um these Europeans who took over Latin America just gave the Amazon away. Probably one politician got a million dollars from a corporation, and then they just destroyed massive amounts of animal species, plant species, uh and they destroyed our ability to survive because it was were because plants absorb carbon and emit oxygen, if you didn't know. So um most of the emissions um um were deliberately set to clean land for beef and soy production. Um yeah, the these these. These companies, corrupt companies that that just talked with these corrupt Europeans that took over this sacred land, uh just cleared it all, and that was our oxygen, that was our survival. Um so um let's see. Growing trees and plants have taken up about a quarter of all fossil fuels emissions since 1960, with the Amazon playing a major role as the largest tropical forest. Losing the Amazon's power to capture CO2 is a stark warning that slashing emissions from fossil fuels is more urgent than ever, scientists said. So okay. Okay. So I think it's time we start um creating a caring, preventative, and proactive survival consciousness. Because wow, yikes, we're we could literally all die. So I'm going to tell read some Bible verses from God about the environment and animals and plants that may inspire you to be a good steward of this earth. So Genesis, Genesis 2.215. Genesis 2.15. The Lord God took the man and put him in the garden of Eden to work it and take care of it. Genesis 1.26. Then God said, Let us make mankind in our image, in our likeness, so that they may care over the fish in the sea and the birds in the sky, over the livestock, and all the wild animals, and over all the creatures that move along the ground. That's pretty obvious from God. Okay, Numbers thirty five, thirty-three. Do not pollute the land where you live, for blood pollutes the land, and no atonement can be made for the land for the blood that is shed in it except by the blood of the one who shed it. So this reminds me of karma in Hinduism. It's more metaphorical, it's the cycle of birth and death because of one's sins. So uh be careful what you do. All right, Psalm twenty four one. The earth is the Lord's and everything in it. I'm gonna take a little drink one second. Okay, so Psalm twenty four one. The earth is the Lord's and everything in it, the world and all who live in it. So including animals, obviously. Psalm eighty nine, eleven. The heavens are yours and yours also the earth. You founded the world and all that is in it. Again, including animals. Proverbs twelve ten. The righteous care for the needs of their animals. The righteous. Are you righteous? Are you righteous and care for the needs of animals? Proverbs twelve ten. Meditate on that for a little bit. Jeremiah two seven. I brought you into a fertile land to eat its fruit and rich produce, but when you came in you defiled my land and made my heritage an abomination. Yikes Yikes Yikes Yikes. So your karma, if you do that, would be um really negative because it's sinful and hell is real. Ephesians one eight through ten. With all wisdom and understanding, he may known to us the mystery of his will according to his good pleasure, which he proposed in Christ, to be put into effect when the times reach their fulfillment, to bring unity to all things in heaven and on earth under Christ. Revelation 4 11. You are worthy, our Lord and God, to receive glory and honor and power, for you created all things, and by your will they were created and have their being. So God created this. Um it is to be honored and respected. Uh the Bible is pretty clear about this. So um again, my solutions for the world in this environmental emergency can be found on my website and Medium or my books on Amazon. I welcome your thoughts, collaboration, and feedback. Um okay, so this was Evolution Series Part 2, and uh this is the Awakening Consciousness Podcast by Ashley Yukok. Uh, feel free to contact me if uh you would like to uh collaborate on anything. Thank you for listening.