by Peter Koenig,Global Research:

Brave New Worldis a famous line from Shakespeare’s play “The Tempest”: “O, brave new world, that has such people in it!”

A “Brave New World” is not what Aldous Huxley described in his 1932 dystopian novel, of a fully controlled but happy society. Instead,it is a world where people live together in peace and harmony, can express themselves freely, and are able to maintain their cultural sovereignty and economic independence.

Such a world requires another level of awareness than what we have today.It supposes a conscious value system, where money is no longer the god of all wealth, stardom, and wellbeing.

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It means a world that is de-digitized, with a takedown of tens of millions of health harming 5G antennas worldwide; a world where all-controlling smart phones are disappearing; a world where Starlink and other disguised satellite control programs are disabled; a world where climate engineering is a crime and must stop; a world where health policies are a matter of local autonomy, and where decisions over your body are your personal sovereign right; and a world where simply the truth prevails — the truth and nothing but the truth.

We must all recognize from deep inside our souls that today’s sense of “wellbeing” has been highjacked and indoctrinated with our Western value system for at least the past several hundred years.

It is encouraging, though, that we have today a few countries that have adopted a different set of values to account for their economic and spiritual wellbeing. Two come to mind, Bhutan and the South Pacific Island of Vanuatu. Both have developed a happiness index, instead of the linear all-round (worldwide) economic measuring stick of Gross Domestic Product (GDP). In Bhutan, their wealth index is called “Gross National Happiness” (GNH).

Vanuatu, instead, is consistently recognized on the “Happy Planet Index” (HPI), and has frequently ranked at the very top of the global HPI, which measures how efficiently nations deliver long, happy, and sustainable lives rather than purely focusing on economic output, i.e., the linear GDP measurement, the never-ending growth dimension, an in-your-face absurdity. The HPI was developed in 2006 by a London-based think tank, theNew Economics Foundation. It is not yet officially recognized like GDP or the UN-created Human Development Index (HDI).

What is important, however, is that an increasing number of countries in Europe and even the United States are quietly studying what makes people happy and content, and identifying the key ingredients of societal well-being. Such well-being, much like the political principle of neutrality, serves as a foundation for peace and harmony.

Source: SGT Report