Jiang tells the class to keep asking why Virgil is not punished for his crimes and why hell is structured this way, treating the imbalance as a deliberate interpretive problem.
Topic brief
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Crime
A transcript-matched topic anchored by excerpts such as "...that Virgil is not, he's not punished at all for his crimes and why is hell structured the way it is? Yes."
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Topic Scope And Freshness
A transcript-matched topic anchored by excerpts such as "...that Virgil is not, he's not punished at all for his crimes and why is hell structured the way it is? Yes."
Key Notes
Jiang says the greatest crime in the world is to corrupt God's message for one's own political ends.
Jiang says intelligence, crime, and science operate above the nation-state through elites grouped as transnational capital, secret societies, and elite families.
Jeffrey Epstein is introduced as an operator of the system who worked for the Rothschilds, secret societies, and capital while being embedded in science, crime, and intelligence.
In the Malimo ritual passage, sleeping while the ritual is underway is described as one of the greatest crimes.
In the Malimo ritual world Jiang describes, the greatest crime is not killing someone but sleeping during the religion.
Timestamped Evidence
"...that Virgil is not, he's not punished at all for his crimes and why is hell structured the way it is? Yes."
"...for him. Okay. God wants to forget about him because his crime was so great. It is the greatest crime in the world to..."
"...that will solve the issue, all right? Okay. So, because intelligence, crime, and science are above the nation -state, okay? You need other mechanisms..."
"...then you have the elite and then you have science intelligence crime"
"...as well as a capital and he is embedded in science crime and intelligence okay and again the evidence is something called the epstein..."
"...malomo was singing was in progress. Apparently, one of the greatest crimes that a pygmy can commit, if not the greatest, is to be..."
"...again mention the missing men. So in this world, the greatest crime you can commit is not to kill someone but to sleep during..."
Relevant Lectures And Readings
Jiang turns late Inferno and early Purgatorio into a struggle over imagination itself.
Dante's Hell is not just a ladder of sins in this lecture.
Jiang turns the Epstein files into a theory of war: social reality is a cave, the dollar is a consciousness trap, empire survives by looking invincible, and the exposed parasite network is already fighting...
For most of human history, Jiang argues, humans were peaceful, egalitarian, and artistic because the forest, animals, ancestors, and spirit world were not scenery.
Related Topics
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