JFK Discourse 2
Post-Election 2024 (November 7, 2024)
Excerpts from a 20-page message
President Kennedy begins this Discourse with
“My Fellow Americans” and states,
“I come on bended knee. I wish now to serve humbly.”
Throughout the Discourse, he shares many personal feelings and thoughts about himself and his family members—the “Kennedy Clan.”
“Why am I sharing all these more intimate details about my time on Earth? Because the audience of this discourse and letter is primarily there—on Earth.
You can perhaps benefit from hearing about the stress and strain of a man who often felt on top of the world but was, in my cave and in my mind, conflicted in my actions and speech regarding my external policies against the procedures of how I lived.”
He seeks to impart the wisdom he’s gained from deep reflection and sometimes wistful hindsight:
“What has been forgotten is the unwritten code of human ethics.
I realize that my political stances and ethics were not of the highest quality or fabric. Currently, my voice is one you cannot hear but can only read. Yet I have grown in knowledge and substance here, as one does. I have changed!
As I mentioned in my first discourse, coming here [Spirit world] on the stage of our lives, we step onto the “judicial floor,” where we are the judges of our lives. This engenders humility. Epiphanies. Sadness. Jubilations. And reflective moments of one’s pathways as they have traveled through Earth life.
My sorrow and wistfulness arose when the caliber of goodness in the actions and thoughts I saw on playback here was not easily detected as I lived them, nor were they necessarily something I corrected going forward. Unable to see how short life would be for me, I plunged forward more with that cavalier attitude I mentioned before.
May this give you pause for thought.”
JFK acknowledges the world’s need for greatness and asks what the future might bring for the Trump family clan:
“The world needs greatness, no doubt.
Without eyes on the materialism of earthly life, there are so many greater needs for heart settlement across the globe.
This cannot come through military force. It cannot come through greed in any form. So, turning our eyes to the upcoming installment of American history:
I, as you also, might also question—
—is there a Trump Clan?
“What will the Trump family/clan legacy be? What will be its elixir? Its core?
Will it be filled with genuine love for the characters on the world stage now? …
Will people speak of a heavenly “clan” gathering of Trumps in the future, one that had marks of true greatness in Earth’s history records?
What will they find when each arrives in these lands?
How will their clan see their lives on Earth spent in service?
What will they do in reunion with one another?
And what will they focus on once they are no longer on the Earth’s stage?
There is Light within each of them. We can and do recognize this.”
JFK beseeches then President-elect Trump to experience “God-ness” within himself:
“I implore you not to study God, or Supreme Energy, or consciousness—or whatever words you find most fitting—from a theological viewpoint, but instead to experience God-ness—with inimitable, unfathomable love—within yourself.
Doing that, how might you then see the world?
How might you feel and think about the world and its creation?”
The former president speaks from his experience and historical perspective about the great potential of America and what it needs from its president to help fulfill that potential:
“The nation of America is poised to be among the nations bringing this knowledge and building a grid for a more nonviolent world. It has to start now.
The new presidency needs to build upon and solidify the existing foundation with thoughtful consideration of human dignity and not focus on the destruction of people or land.
It also needs to recognize the importance of its actions, both domestically and abroad, to align with the intention of peacebuilding and peacekeeping.”
President speaks about his own family after his election and of the Kennedy “curse” not being a “curse” at all.
And, he spoke with such compassion regarding how his family members dealt with the tragedy of their sister, Rosemary:
“Rosemary’s life was a catalyst for each of us to be of service. Her mental anguish and the unfortunate circumstances related to living with intellectual disabilities brought us together as a family, often in silence! It was a topic we didn’t often discuss—certainly not openly. Not even much around its edges.
We wondered how we could have blatantly ignored this beautiful soul. Since we have reacquainted ourselves with each other here, I see much more clearly that her life was meant to be an inspiration to include people from all walks of life, to focus on a person’s abilities, not their disabilities. To be compassionate. To see one’s the soul of a person. These lands bring clarity that, on Earth, hasn’t risen above disparaging remarks that notice and alienate because of differences.”
Our words are neither a finger wag nor a royal wave. None of us is royalty, even if there are journalists who may equate different eras with certain things.
With undeniable regret for not having a greater focus on good governance, President Kennedy ended this 20-page discourse by saying:
“Our words are neither a finger wag nor a royal wave. None of us is royalty, even if there are journalists who may equate different eras with certain things.
In the Light, we all have radiance.
Not to challenge a lightsaber fight but to merge the Light for the emergence of something we will continue to call courageous governance, leading to universal consciousness and ever-growing, ever-expanding evolution.”