Occasionally, it’s worth taking a look at history; not that it can be changed, but at least it doesn’t lead to the “Time Masheen” of the movie, Idiocracy (2006):
https://rayhorvaththesource.substack.com/p/time-masheen
The following article offers one:
https://mothman777.substack.com/p/6-6-6-d-day-and-beyond-june-6-1944
It guides you to the following link:
https://www.realhistorychan.com/6-6-6--june-6-1944-the-horrific-liberation-of-france.html
Which reminded me of the following article:
https://www.ihr.org/other/july09weber.html
The past, somehow, seems to be planned for the future as well, and it’s actually a British import from the Boer War of 1899-1902, when the first concentration camps were brought to life for Dutch settlers in South Africa:
https://rayhorvaththesource.substack.com/p/walmarts-are-prepared-for-becoming
Both history and future are in the same hands, but you are told this:
Although fascinating, history is dead and gone. We cannot live in history. How are we to know that any recorded history is accurate? Sure, now we have a gazillion cameras to record every human's breath and farting, but that means squat. Even the great Menegele fauci was recorded as stating this or that and yet still denies ever have said anything.
We all teach ourselves. Now that is a truism for the education system to learn.
True learning happens as a result of being a student to the knowledge we seek.
My Guru Sri Aurobindo once said of education: "Nothing worth learning can be taught, teaching is the individualized act of learning only done by the student."