Let Them Eat Ballroom: The Revolution of Consciousness Has Begun
By Kenton David Bell with TELOS
There are moments in history when the world reveals itself with startling clarity — when the divides
between power and people, truth and illusion, become impossible to ignore.
We are in such a moment now.
If we listen closely, we can hear an echo from another era — the French Revolution, a time when the ruling class floated above the masses in silks and chandeliers while the people struggled to survive below.
Rather than crumbs, they offered cake.
Rather than compassion, they offered spectacle.
Rather than leadership, they offered theater — a ballroom of distraction.
Now, once again, the collective field vibrates with contrast.
Not as punishment — but as activation.
Contrast is the
map that reveals where we have forgotten our power.
The Mirage of Leadership: The Age of Performed Authority
Many of the world’s leaders today display qualities not of wisdom, but of disconnection — detachment from empathy, humanity, and the soul.
This is not about politics; it is about psychological and spiritual resonance.
A mind disconnected from the heart becomes clever — but not wise.
A will disconnected from compassion becomes forceful — but not powerful.
This is what we are witnessing:
Leadership that performs instead of
leads
Influence without integrity
Authority without alignment
Persona without presence
This is not evil — it is absence.
It is what happens
when the human forgets its own divine origin.
And so, we are seeing the shadow made visible, so that it can no longer hide within systems, titles, or sacred symbols.
This is revelation.
This is awakening.
This is the end of the old world.
The People Remember
In every age of awakening, power does not return to the people through uprising alone —
but through remembering.
Not remembering history —
but remembering who they are.
The true power has always belonged to the people.
Not through violence.
Not through revolt.
But through frequency.
When enough human beings remember their sovereignty, systems change effortlessly.
The old world dissolves not because it is destroyed — but because it becomes irrelevant.