The New Earth and the Restoration of Truth: A Conversation for Awakening
- Bridget Ninness

- 4 days ago
- 19 min read

Standing at the Threshold of the New Earth
We are living in a time of extraordinary turbulence. Across the globe, old systems; political, cultural, economic and religious are unraveling under the weight of their own contradictions. What was once stable now reveals fragility; what was once unquestioned now draws scrutiny and yet, for all the noise of collapse, the deeper crisis remains largely unseen: humanity stands separated from truth, from Spirit, and from the living order of creation itself.
This separation is not merely intellectual or social. It is spiritual and relational. It fractures our connection to God, to each other and to the Earth that sustains us. It is a disconnection that distorts perception, clouds discernment and obscures the very principles that sustain life. It is not something that can be repaired by ideology, politics or superficial reform; it requires a return to what is real, what is lived, and what is aligned with the laws of creation.
At the centre of this fracture is the distortion of what once was the most radical, revolutionary truth: the Way of Yeshua HaMashiach. Yeshua came not to build institutions or enforce systems of performance and obedience but to restore alignment with God, with natural law and with the living world. His teachings called for discernment, integrity and a direct encounter with Spirit. Over centuries, however, His radical truth was filtered through structures of power, control and hierarchy creating what might be called false Christianity: a system that prioritizes outward conformity over inner transformation and that substitutes obedience for relational alignment.
The consequences of this shift are immense. A humanity disconnected from truth and Spirit is a humanity unmoored, vulnerable to deception, confusion and division. It is a world in which the principles of life are ignored, distorted or misapplied and in which the living Earth, the Divine Mother herself, is no longer treated as sacred, relational, and instructive, but as a resource to exploit or a backdrop for human ambition.
And yet, even in the midst of this fracture, there is remembrance. Across the globe, Indigenous cultures have carried knowledge of right relationship between humans, between humans and Spirit, and between humans and the Earth itself. Within this wisdom lies the voice of matristic culture, which honours life, women and the relational principles that sustain balance. This voice is essential now, as we stand at the threshold of a New Earth: a world that is not inherited from old systems, but cultivated through alignment, discernment and lived truth.
The purpose of this essay is to illuminate both the depth of the separation that has led humanity here, and the path of return. It is a call to awaken, to remember and to step into responsibility because the world that emerges next will be shaped not by the passing of old systems alone, but by the hearts, awareness and alignment of those willing to walk in truth.
Yeshua HaMashiach — The Living Way

Yeshua HaMashiach did not come to conform to the world’s expectations. He did not arrive to build hierarchies, enforce doctrines, or reward performative piety. He came to reveal a radical truth: that the Kingdom of God is not a structure, but a living reality that emerges in the hearts of those aligned with Spirit, integrity and the natural law of creation.
Every word He spoke, every parable He offered, pointed toward a life rooted in discernment and relationship. He spoke of sowing and harvesting, of seeds that fall into fertile soil, of trees known by their fruit not as metaphors alone, but as reflections of a universal law that governs life. Through these teachings, Yeshua showed that truth is not abstract or external; it is relational and embodied. It is seen in the alignment of thought, word and action. It is measured not by human authority but by the harmony it produces in creation, in community and in the soul.
Yet the radical nature of His teaching provoked opposition. The religious authorities of His day, those invested in control, status, and conformity saw His message not as life-giving, but as threatening. They could not perceive that His challenge was not rebellion for its own sake, but a call to return to alignment with God’s law: a law that cannot be legislated, performed or manipulated. It must be lived.
Over centuries, the revolutionary power of Yeshua’s Way was filtered, codified and institutionalized. Systems emerged that bore His name, yet often replaced direct encounter with God and creation with adherence to hierarchy, ritual and moral performance. Outward piety was valued over inward transformation. Compliance was rewarded; discernment was discouraged. Spiritual power became centralized and the living truth He embodied was abstracted into doctrine.
This shift has profound consequences. When the Way of Yeshua is reduced to conformity, the heart of humanity is disconnected from the Spirit that animates life. Moral structures replace relational understanding; faith becomes obedience rather than transformation. Communities are kept in line not by discernment, truth, or love but by authority, fear and control. In this disconnection, the world itself - human society, the natural world, and the web of life is pulled further from alignment.
Yeshua’s teachings were never meant to separate, to control or to dominate. They were meant to liberate. His words expose hypocrisy not to shame, but to illuminate truth. His miracles were not demonstrations of power over others, but revelations of the living order and God’s sustaining law. His life was a guide: to walk in integrity, to honor creation, to live relationally and to act in alignment with the divine.
Understanding this is critical now, because humanity cannot create the New Earth from a place of distortion. To rebuild in alignment, we must first recognize where the separation occurred. We must see how systems - religious, political, cultural - have obscured living truth. We must understand that spiritual authority divorced from discernment, from the Earth and from relational law is no longer a guide; it is part of the fracture.
Those who seek the Way today are called to return, not to institutions or ideologies but to the living reality that Yeshua taught: a truth that is relational, experiential and rooted in Spirit. To follow Him is not to perform, but to embody. It is to learn discernment, to act with integrity and to walk in alignment with the laws of life, both visible and unseen.
This is the foundation of what can be called the New Earth: a world restored to alignment, not through control or ideology, but through truth lived in hearts, communities and creation itself. The Way of Yeshua is not distant; it is present wherever hearts open to see the living law, where courage allows discernment over conformity and where alignment replaces separation.
In this sense, Yeshua remains as revolutionary today as He was two thousand years ago. He challenges not just false authority but the very patterns of thought, perception and action that obscure truth. In understanding His Way, humanity can begin to see how the fracture that has long separated us from Spirit, from each other and from the Earth itself may finally be healed.
Separation from Natural Law and Creation

The fracture of humanity is not only spiritual; it is profoundly relational. It reaches beyond our connection with God or Spirit to the very foundation of life itself - the Earth, the living web of creation and the natural laws that govern existence. When humanity loses sight of these principles, the consequences ripple outward: societies crumble, communities fragment and the world itself suffers.
The Earth is not inert. She is alive, relational and teaching. Her mountains, rivers, forests, and skies are not merely landscapes to be conquered they are expressions of divine law, reflections of the principles that sustain life. The cycles of growth, decay and regeneration are instructions written into creation. Every seed that germinates, every river that flows, every pattern of the seasons is a mirror of truth, a reminder of order and a call to alignment.
Yet modern humanity has, in large part, forgotten this. We have extracted the Earth’s resources without listening, polluted her waters and soils and imposed artificial rhythms upon her cycles. The consequences are now unmistakable: climate upheaval, ecological collapse and the loss of biodiversity. These are not merely environmental crises. They are spiritual ones. They are visible reflections of an invisible separation: humanity out of alignment with truth, with Spirit, and with the living order.
This disconnection also manifests in human relationships. Societies built on abstraction rather than experience, on hierarchy rather than relational law, fail to teach discernment, responsibility and care. When the living law of creation is ignored, people are no longer able to see the consequences of their actions. They become entangled in illusions of power, control and entitlement. The separation from natural law mirrors a separation from moral and spiritual law because all are interwoven.
The loss of connection with the Earth is particularly poignant because it is also a loss of relational memory. Indigenous cultures have long understood the Earth as a living teacher, a guide and a sacred partner in life. She is Mother, nurturer and sustainer. Her rhythms are a model for balance, her cycles a reflection of life’s inherent interdependence. To disregard her is not merely to harm the environment. It is to sever the thread that links humanity to wisdom, to ancestors and to Spirit itself.
This is where the voice of matristic culture becomes crucial. Women, as bearers of life and keepers of relational knowledge, have historically been central in maintaining alignment with natural law. Their guidance, grounded in observation, experience, and care ensures that the cycles of creation are honoured and that communities live in harmony with the Earth. When that voice is silenced or ignored, the patterns of disconnection deepen and humanity drifts further from its true path.
The separation from natural law is also a separation from truth itself. Yeshua’s teachings continually pointed to creation as a living classroom. The seeds sown, the fruit produced, the inevitability of harvest all were lessons in cause and effect, alignment and consequence, life and death. When humans fail to see these lessons in the world around them, they remain spiritually blind, vulnerable to deception and prone to repeating destructive patterns.
To understand this separation is to recognize its urgency. Humanity cannot create the New Earth while remaining detached from the living law of creation. The Earth’s voice, like the voice of Yeshua, is a guide. She teaches that life is relational, that every action carries consequence, and that restoration is possible but only through alignment, care and humility.
Reconnection requires more than ideology or abstraction. It demands observation, reverence and engagement with the living world. It demands listening to the Earth, following her rhythms, and honoring her instructions. To disregard this is to perpetuate the separation that has caused both spiritual and ecological collapse, ensuring that humanity’s next chapter is built on the same fractures as the last.
The call is clear: to restore balance, humanity must return to natural law. To rebuild the New Earth, we must recognize that the Divine Mother is not an optional idea but a living presence one that teaches, guides and sustains. Alignment with her law is alignment with truth, with Spirit and with the relational order that upholds life itself.
Indigenous and Matristic Wisdom — Remembering the Living Law

Across the Earth, there are those who have never forgotten. Indigenous peoples, from every continent, have carried knowledge of the relational, living law of creation for generations. This knowledge is not theoretical; it is embodied, practiced and remembered in every ceremony, every story, every relationship with the land, water and sky. It is a wisdom that honors life itself as sacred and recognizes that humanity is not separate from creation but an integral part of its ongoing unfolding.
Central to this wisdom is the understanding that life is relational. Every action reverberates through the web of existence. Every choice carries consequence, not only for the individual, but for community, for land, for future generations. Indigenous law, often mischaracterized by outsiders as superstition or ritual, is in fact a sophisticated system of alignment - an applied knowledge of cause and effect, of stewardship and of relational responsibility. It teaches that to harm the Earth is to harm oneself; to heal the Earth is to heal the community; and to walk in integrity is to walk in alignment with Spirit.
Within this wisdom lies the voice of matristic culture, a voice that has been systematically silenced or suppressed by patriarchal, imperial structures. Women, as the bearers of life and guardians of relational knowledge, hold a unique and indispensable perspective. Matristic culture understands that creation itself is nurtured, maintained and restored through balance, care and attentiveness. It values life-giving processes over dominance, relational understanding over abstraction, and lived integrity over imposed authority. In Indigenous and matristic systems, women are not subordinate; they are co-creators, teachers and keepers of the sacred law that sustains communities and ecosystems alike.
The loss of this voice in mainstream society has contributed to the fractures we now experience. Without the matristic perspective, humanity has favored extraction over care, hierarchy over relationality and ideology over lived wisdom. Communities have become disconnected from the land, from Spirit and from each other. And yet, even where this wisdom has been suppressed, it survives through stories, ceremony and memory encoded in the land itself.
This survival is a reminder that restoration is possible. To rebuild in alignment, humanity must listen. Not superficially, but with the humility and attentiveness required to understand practices that are not ours by adoption but ours to learn from as lived, embodied truth. The Indigenous voice does not offer ideology; it offers guidance rooted in centuries of observation, trial and experience. It teaches that the Earth speaks, that women’s perspectives are essential to life’s continuity and that living law is inseparable from creation itself.
Consider, for example, the cycles of seasonal change observed by Indigenous peoples across the globe. These are not merely times of planting or harvesting; they are instructions, reminders of alignment with the rhythm of life. They teach patience, attentiveness, cooperation and respect. They show that human action is always nested within larger patterns of natural law. Ignoring these lessons has tangible consequences: environmental collapse, social fragmentation, spiritual disconnection. Attuning to them restores balance and nurtures resilience.
Furthermore, matristic wisdom emphasizes relational responsibility. Decisions are made not only for immediate benefit but with awareness of impact across generations and species. The wellbeing of the community, the land, and the unseen spiritual forces are inseparable from the wellbeing of the individual. This perspective challenges the dominant worldview, which often prioritizes power, accumulation and short-term gain over the long-term health of life itself. It teaches that leadership is not domination, but stewardship; that authority is not enforced but recognized through integrity and relational understanding.
Indigenous and matristic knowledge is also deeply intertwined with the spiritual.
Ceremonies, songs, dances and rituals are not simply cultural expressions; they are practices that maintain alignment, convey memory and sustain the laws of life. They connect human hearts to the Earth, to Spirit and to ancestors. In a world fractured by separation, these practices become beacons, guiding those willing to listen back into alignment with living truth.
The restoration of this wisdom is essential for the New Earth. Without it, attempts to rebuild risk replicating the very patterns that have caused disconnection, exploitation and collapse. The Indigenous and matristic voice reminds humanity that the New Earth is not built in abstraction, ideology, or hierarchy, it is grown through relationship, alignment and lived integrity. It teaches that humanity’s role is not to dominate, but to steward; not to perform, but to embody; not to control, but to align.
To heed this voice requires humility, courage and discernment. It demands that those seeking alignment confront their own assumptions, let go of the illusion of separation and embrace the principle that life is relational and sacred. It requires learning from those who have carried knowledge faithfully, without appropriation, without abstraction and with the recognition that living truth is inseparable from the land, from Spirit, and from the web of life itself.
In restoring the Indigenous and matristic voice, humanity does more than recover knowledge; it recovers memory, integrity and the possibility of balance. This wisdom becomes the compass for navigating the collapse of old systems and for co-creating a New Earth that is resilient, sacred, and aligned with both Spirit and creation.
Consequences of Separation

The separation from truth, Spirit, and the living law of creation is not abstract; it manifests with profound and tangible consequences. Humanity experiences these fractures on multiple levels - spiritually, socially, and ecologically - and the threads of disconnection are tightly interwoven. To ignore them is to risk repeating patterns that have led to collapse across civilizations and cultures.
Spiritually, separation dulls discernment. When truth is filtered through hierarchy, ideology, or external authority rather than encountered directly, people lose the ability to perceive the living law that governs life. Moral confusion takes root. Fear and obedience replace integrity and courage. Communities are led by appearances rather than insight and the subtle guidance of Spirit is ignored. This spiritual disorientation leaves individuals vulnerable to deception, manipulation and the seduction of systems that promise order while deepening separation.
Socially, the consequences are equally profound. Disconnection erodes trust, empathy and relational cohesion. Societies built on domination rather than stewardship foster competition instead of cooperation, hierarchy instead of relational responsibility, and control instead of mutual accountability. Communities fracture, families struggle to maintain generational continuity and shared understanding of purpose and ethics diminishes. Separation becomes systemic, embedded in institutions, cultures and even the most intimate human relationships.
Ecologically, the results are stark and undeniable. Humanity’s detachment from natural law and from the living Earth produces environmental collapse, resource scarcity and the disruption of ecosystems. Rivers run dry, forests fall, and species disappear. Climate upheaval, soil degradation, and mass extinctions are not only scientific crises. they are reflections of spiritual and relational disalignment. The Earth, once a teacher and partner, responds to human actions with imbalance, reminding us that life cannot be separated from the law that sustains it.
This separation also intensifies cultural and racial distortions. When systems of belief prioritize control, hierarchy, and selective piety, they foster the erosion of identity, the loss of memory and the weakening of cultural resilience. Peoples who have carried wisdom and stewardship are marginalized, dismissed or appropriated. The very voices capable of guiding humanity back to alignment - Indigenous and matristic teachers - are often silenced, misrepresented or ignored. Without them, humanity loses access to the practical and spiritual tools needed to restore balance.
History offers countless examples of these consequences. Civilizations that disconnected from the natural world and spiritual law eventually collapsed. Wealth accumulated without stewardship, cities expanded without balance and cultural memory eroded. The cycle repeated itself because the separation was not merely external, it was internal, embedded in thought, action and perception. The same pattern repeats today on a global scale: spiritual blindness, social fracture and ecological devastation intertwine, producing a crisis that threatens the very possibility of a sustainable, living world.
Yet these consequences are not punishment. They are mirrors. They reflect the underlying reality that separation always carries cost. The disconnection of the heart produces the disconnection of the world. The loss of relational wisdom produces the loss of harmony in society and ecology. The distortion of truth produces fragmentation at every level of existence and in recognizing these consequences, humanity is offered clarity: the fractures are not inevitable; they are indicators of where alignment must be restored.
This is why restoration is urgent. The New Earth cannot emerge from disconnection. Spiritual insight, relational integrity, ecological stewardship and cultural memory must all be re-engaged. Humanity must learn to perceive, respect and integrate the living law that has always existed. Every action, every decision, and every relationship matters. There is no neutrality. Separation manifests whether we choose awareness or not and only deliberate alignment can reverse the trajectory.
The consequences of separation are both grave and instructive. They show the cost of disconnection, illuminate the patterns that must be healed, and reveal the voices, Indigenous, matristic and spiritually awakened that can guide humanity back to truth. To ignore them is to risk repeating history. To heed them is to step onto the path of restoration, responsibility, and the co-creation of a New Earth grounded in alignment, integrity and the living law of creation.
The Threshold of the New Earth

Humanity now stands at a threshold. The old systems. the Empire of control, hierarchy and abstraction are unraveling and the patterns that have defined civilization for millennia are being exposed as unsustainable. Yet collapse alone does not create the New Earth. Transformation requires more than the passing of the old; it requires conscious alignment with truth, relational law and the living world that sustains life.
The New Earth is not an idea or a utopia conjured from hope. It is a reality cultivated through alignment, discernment and action rooted in Spirit. It emerges when humanity remembers the principles that have always governed life: relational integrity, stewardship of the Earth, care for one another and adherence to the laws of creation that are evident in both the physical and spiritual worlds.
This threshold is critical. Humanity cannot simply discard the old systems and assume that the New Earth will arrive fully formed. To walk into the New Earth requires active participation, a deliberate turning of hearts and minds toward alignment. It requires acknowledging where separation has occurred, confronting illusions and cultivating a lived relationship with truth. Every decision, every act, every choice now matters more than ever because the trajectory of the coming era will be determined by the cumulative alignment or disconnection of those willing to walk in discernment.
At the centre of this transformation is the recognition of the Earth as living, sacred and instructive. The Divine Mother is not optional, symbolic, or abstract; She is present and teaching. Her rivers, forests and skies are more than scenery. They are guides, mirrors and partners in the co-creation of life. Aligning with her cycles, listening to her rhythms and honoring her law is not merely ecological practice; it is spiritual discipline. It is a recognition that creation itself is imbued with truth and that the patterns of life cannot be ignored without consequence.
Equally vital is the restoration of the Indigenous and matristic voice. These traditions carry the wisdom of alignment, relational responsibility and the sacred management of life. They show that the New Earth cannot emerge from patriarchal hierarchy, ideological control, or abstraction. It emerges from relational stewardship, from communities rooted in care, from practices that honor both women and men as co-creators and from recognition that humanity is inseparable from the web of life. Without these voices, any vision of the New Earth is incomplete and vulnerable to repeating old fractures.
The threshold is also a test of discernment and courage. Many will be tempted to construct superficial solutions, to cling to old ideologies, or to impose control under the guise of restoration. The New Earth cannot be legislated or performed; it must be lived. It must be grown from the ground up, cultivated in hearts, communities and ecosystems aligned with living law. Every act of awareness, every alignment with truth and every relational restoration contributes to the collective reality that is forming.
This is why the present moment is both perilous and sacred. It is perilous because the patterns of disconnection are deeply embedded and the consequences of inaction are severe. It is sacred because humanity now has the opportunity to co-create a world in alignment with Spirit, with Earth and with relational truth, a world in which the fractures of the past can be healed, and the legacy of separation transformed into memory, guidance and wisdom for generations to come.
The threshold of the New Earth is not merely a future to hope for; it is a present to step into. It demands awareness, courage and the willingness to act in alignment with the living law. It requires listening to the Earth, restoring Indigenous and matristic guidance and walking in the radical Way that Yeshua HaMashiach taught. Above all, it calls humanity to remember that we are not separate from creation, from Spirit, or from one another. We are relational beings, and the New Earth will emerge only where this truth is lived, embodied and honored.
Path of Return

If humanity is to step fully into the New Earth, the path forward is not found in ideology, imitation or abstract hope. It is found in lived alignment with Spirit, with the Earth and with the relational law that governs life. The Path of Return is both simple and demanding: it requires awareness, courage and the discipline to walk truth in every action.
The first step is discernment. Humanity must recognize where separation has occurred; in thought, in belief, in behavior and see the consequences clearly. This is not a task of judgment but of honesty: acknowledging where distortions have taken root, where hierarchy or ideology has replaced relational integrity and where disconnection from the Earth and from Spirit has become normalized. Discernment allows the individual and community to see clearly what must be restored and what cannot be carried forward.
The second step is humility. True restoration requires surrender, not to external authority but surrender to the living law, to the guidance of Spirit and to the wisdom of the Earth. It requires listening to the Indigenous and matristic voices that have preserved alignment through centuries of challenge. Humility allows us to learn without appropriation to embody knowledge without dominance, and to integrate ancient wisdom with the lived reality of our time.
The third step is relational action. Reconnection is not abstract; it is expressed in care, stewardship and integrity. This includes repairing relationships with the Earth: protecting waters and soils, respecting ecosystems, honoring cycles of life and cultivating practices that sustain rather than exploit. It includes restoring relational integrity within communities: listening deeply, honoring others’ voices, cultivating cooperation over competition and placing shared responsibility above self-interest. It includes acting in alignment with the truth of Yeshua’s Way: embodying honesty, compassion, discernment and courage in every choice.
The fourth step is remembrance. Humanity must remember that it is not separate from creation, from Spirit or from ancestral guidance. The New Earth arises from memory: the memory encoded in land, in stories, in ceremony and in relational law. Practices such as ritual, observation of natural cycles and conscious engagement with the living world allow the heart to remember what the mind may forget. Through remembrance, humanity aligns not only with the past but with the present and the future understanding that the actions of today shape the world of tomorrow.
The fifth step is integration. The Path of Return is not a series of isolated acts but a holistic way of living. Spirituality, ecology, culture and daily life cannot be separated. To restore alignment, individuals and communities must integrate discernment, humility, relational action and remembrance into all spheres of existence. This creates coherence between thought, word and deed, fostering harmony within and around us.
Finally, the path requires courage. Returning to truth is rarely comfortable. It involves confronting illusions, rejecting convenient falsehoods and challenging systems that have long benefited from separation and control. It demands the courage to act even when others resist, to speak even when it is unpopular and to live in alignment even when it requires sacrifice. Yet courage is rewarded not with fleeting success but with the deep satisfaction of living truthfully, relationally and in harmony with the living law.
The Path of Return is open to all who seek alignment but it is not uniform. Each individual, community and culture will navigate it according to their gifts, responsibilities and context. What unites all who walk this path is a commitment to truth, relational integrity and respect for the living Earth. This path restores what has been fractured, heals what has been wounded and cultivates the conditions in which the New Earth can emerge.
To walk the Path of Return is to step fully into responsibility as a sacred privilege, not as burden. It is to recognize that every action, every relationship and every choice carries weight and it is to understand that through alignment with Spirit, Earth and the wisdom of Indigenous and matristic guidance, humanity can finally co-create a world in which separation is healed, truth is lived and life flourishes.
Opening the Conversation

The journey outlined in this essay is not a prescription. It is not a manual or a set of rigid rules. Rather, it is an invitation, a call to awaken, to reflect and to engage in a conversation that has been long overdue. The fractures that have separated humanity from Spirit, from relational law, and from the living Earth cannot be repaired through doctrine, ideology or obedience alone. They require dialogue, remembrance and the courage to question inherited assumptions.
This conversation is urgent, especially for those whose faith has been shaped by distorted interpretations of Christianity. When the radical, revolutionary Way of Yeshua HaMashiach is filtered through hierarchy, control or abstraction, the heart loses sight of truth. Piety becomes performance, obedience replaces discernment and separation is normalized. To reclaim alignment with living truth requires courage to recognize distortion, to step outside inherited structures, and to listen to voices long marginalized: Indigenous, matristic and those who remember relational law without appropriation.
The stakes could not be higher. Humanity stands at the threshold of a New Earth. Old systems are collapsing and the consequences of inaction are evident in social fragmentation, spiritual disorientation and ecological disruption. Yet this threshold is also sacred and filled with possibility. If we listen deeply, act courageously and align with the living law of Spirit, Earth, and relational truth, we can co-create a world in which the fractures of the past are healed, and the principles of life, justice and integrity are restored.
This is not a task for a single individual, culture or tradition. It is a collective responsibility, requiring engagement across communities, generations and disciplines. It demands humility, discernment, relational action and remembrance. It requires that we honour the Divine Mother, the natural world, the Indigenous and matristic voices and the revolutionary Way of Yeshua as guides, rather than abstractions to be performed or controlled.
Let this essay serve as an opening. Let it provoke reflection, dialogue and awakening. Let it remind humanity that the New Earth is not a distant hope. It is a present possibility, shaped by every action, every choice and every heart willing to live truthfully and relationally. The conversation must begin now and those who are ready to listen, to learn and to act may be the ones who guide humanity across this threshold into a world restored to alignment, balance and sacred truth.



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