The war in Ukraine and the collective consciousness of the world

Question: How has the war in Ukraine affected the collective consciousness of the world? What changes can happen in the world after the war?


 Answer from the Ascended Master Saint Germain through Kim Michaels. This answer was given during the 2022 Ukraine Webinar

Well, this is, of course, a very broad question that would take hours upon hours to give a detailed analysis of, but what we can say is that there has been a very widespread awakening in the collective consciousness. You see this in all nations but the easiest way to see it is in the democratic nations, who have realized that they have to change their attitude and their approach to Russia. And not only that but also to those who are deliberately seeking to destroy or undermine democracy, including China. This is something that in the coming years you will see a very big shift. If you want to see a parallel you can see how there was an enormous shift after the 9/11 event in 2001.

I am not saying that everything that happened afterwards was ideal as we have commented on several times before. But what will happen, what is happening is, of course, that the democratic nations have realized a very simple thing – they cannot trust anything that Putin or his government says. However, you can also see in the collective consciousness that many other nations have had the same realization. There may be nations who are not democracies who are in some ways sympathizing with Putin’s quest to take democracy down a little bit and reduce the influence of the West, but they still realize that they cannot trust anything that Putin or his government says, not even written agreements. Because Putin has demonstrated that he will violate agreements that he has entered into on a whim, literally with no logical rational reason but just because he feels like it, for whatever reason.

This is something that has shifted in the collective consciousness. Even in China you see a growing awareness of this. Of course, China has never been a friend of Putin despite what Xi Jinping said earlier this year or in earlier times. China looks at what is in their interest and they only stand by Russia to the extent that it benefits them or that they think it benefits them.

But you will also see that there has been an abrupt awakening that the world order that many nations thought had been established after the Second World War, can in fact be threatened. And when I say world order I do so deliberately in order to challenge people to discern. I am, of course, not talking as Putin when he talks about a world order that is dominated by the West and where the West is using power and that he is going to force a new world order where the West is not the only power. I am talking about a world order where there were nations that trusted each other to the point where they knew that they would not be attacked by other nations.

And this is something that is not just the case for democratic nations. There are other nations who have had this sense that they could build a better future inside their own nation and they would not suddenly be destroyed by a neighbor who would come in and conquer them and take them over. There has been this sense in many nations, not only democracies, that the age of barbarism and plunder and conquest was over. And this, of course, has been threatened now where many nations have woken up and have realized that there are specific leaders, specific countries in the world who can be a threat to this world order. And that if they are allowed to succeed then it will threaten not only the peace but also the prosperity that has been rising in most nations.

You actually see quite a number of countries who have stepped back and begun to evaluate their relationship to Russia and to China based on the war in Ukraine and China’s unwillingness to denounce it and separate themselves from Russia. And you may not see this on an official level yet. You may not see them talk about this but I can assure you that in the collective consciousness it is very much there. There is great upheaval that is causing all nations to re-evaluate. You will even see that some of the former Soviet republics who have so far had a close relationship to Russia are stepping back and wondering if Putin could invade their nations next and what they can do to avoid it.

In the coming years this will begin to find its way from the identity, mental and emotional levels into the physical. And you will see that in essence, to use a popular expression, Putin has dug Russia into a hole that it will be very difficult for Russia to dig itself out of even in the post-Putin phase. There are, of course, many other ramifications of this, such as the determination you see in Western Europe to become independent not only of Russian energy but of fossil fuels in general, and to invest more heavily than before in alternative energy sources and even renewable energy. This is also something that you will see in the coming years where there will come a point where no country in Europe will import oil and gas from Russia or from the Middle East.

 

Copyright © 2022 Kim Michaels