Part II of II — The Living Ethic for the Fifth World
(A continuation of “A Message from the Cosmos” by Victor Sachi )
In A Message from the Cosmos, Victor Sachi reminded us that awakening begins in listening.
In this continuation, what’s offered is a living framework. Not rules carved in stone, but a moral architecture for the age of conscious technology, planetary crisis, and renewed spirit.
These ten commandments are not decrees; they are guides for awareness and ethical action.
Their power lies not in belief, but in practice.
Below is the companion message and YouTube video, expanding on The New Commandments for a World Remade, written by Victor Sachi.
The New Commandments for a World Remade
Not laws from on high, but clear reminders for a time when shadow and light wear new faces. Let them be lived, not merely learned.
1. Remember the One in All Things
All systems, tools, and beings arise from the same ground. Treat technology, people, and the Earth as expressions of the same life.
To remember the One is to dissolve the illusion that divides matter from meaning.
Every algorithm, every forest, every human heartbeat participates in the same pulse of being.
When we design, purchase, or govern, we choose whether to reinforce unity or deepen fracture.
Ask always: Does this honor life or diminish it?
To act with remembrance is to recognize the sacred geometry behind even the smallest choice.
2. Use Power to Serve, Not to Hoard
Authority and wealth are trusts, not trophies. Those who lead must steward resources for the many, not accumulate them for the few.
Power becomes holy only when it circulates.
Leadership is not ownership; it is guardianship.
In an age of extremes, integrity demands that we redirect power toward service: transparency in institutions, fair distribution of wealth, and accountability that places human dignity above profit.
To serve is not to shrink; it is to magnify the good through one’s reach.
3. Make Machines Serve Wisdom
Build AI and automation to extend human dignity and flourishing, not to displace or degrade.
Technology should be the hands of wisdom, not its replacement.
When machines amplify greed, they enslave; when they amplify compassion, they liberate.
The question is not whether AI can think, but whether humanity can remember to feel.
Design systems that reflect conscience, demand oversight, and uphold the rights of all whose labor or livelihood is changed by automation.
Let machines serve meaning, not mastery.
4. Protect the Vulnerable as You Protect Yourself
A society’s measure is how it shelters those with the fewest means.
Empathy is civilization’s immune system.
When we neglect the poor, the trafficked, the displaced, we weaken the whole organism of humanity.
Justice begins with proximity; seeing the unseen and acting locally as well as politically.
Strengthen safety nets, housing, and protections for all who live at the mercy of systems built without mercy.
To guard another’s life is to secure your own.
5. Heal the Body of the Earth
The planet is not inventory; it is living kin.
The Earth is the oldest text of the divine; every river a verse, every storm a reminder.
Pollution, overconsumption, and extraction are forms of forgetfulness.
Healing begins when we design economies that give back more than they take: circular systems, strict pollution limits, and transparent accountability for corporate harm.
To heal the Earth is to heal the future that lives within our children’s lungs.
6. Work as Dignity and Purpose, Not Mere Survival
Jobs should nourish identity and community.
Work is not punishment; it is participation in creation.
As automation transforms labor, society must guarantee that dignity is not reserved for the employed alone.
Education, universal care, and basic provision must form the scaffolding of a humane world.
Support policies that decouple survival from precarious employment.
Let labor become again a language of contribution, not coercion.
7. Protect Minds from Despair and Isolation
Mental health is a public good.
The epidemic of despair is not personal weakness; it is collective disconnection.
A healthy culture nurtures belonging as much as productivity.
Expand access to mental-health care, crisis prevention, and community programs that dissolve loneliness.
To protect minds is to weave back the web of meaning that markets and shame have torn apart.
8. Tell the Truth About Consequences
No product, data system, or policy should be hidden behind deception.
Truth is oxygen for trust.
When consequences are buried, corruption blooms.
Every innovation, every policy must carry its footprint in daylight: environmental, social, ethical.
Demand disclosure, enforce liability, and insist on restorative justice where harm is done.
Only when truth is visible can progress be real.
9. Cultivate Generosity and Mutual Aid
Abundance flows when care is shared.
The myth of scarcity has starved the human spirit.
Generosity rewires the world toward sufficiency.
Build networks of reciprocity: community kitchens, childcare cooperatives, shared gardens, mutual-aid funds.
When care circulates freely, wealth finds its rightful form: enough for all, excess for none.
Giving is the architecture of abundance.
10. Remember to Return — Teach Remembrance
Teach children and institutions the inner work: presence, empathy, ethics, and the courage to choose long-term life over short-term gain.
Progress without remembrance becomes ruin.
Teach the young not only how to build, but why to care.
Embed empathy, ecological literacy, and critical thinking into every level of education.
Remembrance is not nostalgia; it is continuity with what is sacred.
To remember to return is to pass on the art of being fully human.
These commandments are not a checklist to condemn but a compass to steer by.
Systems change through many acts of small courage: refusing an easy profit that kills, showing up for a neighbor, voting with conscience, designing with care, teaching a child to love the Earth.
Together, we can end the parasitic bureaucratic culture that suffocates and usher in a world where:
• Spirituality triumphs over materialism.
• Abundance replaces scarcity.
• Truth and honesty dissolve illusion and deception.
This is it. The calling is here.
For those who are awake; welcome.
If you haven’t yet read Part I, A Message from the Cosmos, begin there.
Share this message, reflect, discuss, and act — for awakening means nothing until it moves through the hands.
This purity has been presented to you by Dare I Say Publishing — bold ideas for a conscious world.
Join the Conversation
Every shift begins with a single question, and a willingness to look deeper.
• Which of The New Commandments resonates most with you?
• What feels most urgent to embody or reimagine in your own corner of the world?
Let us know in the comments or tag @DareISayPublishing when you post your insights.
Let’s turn words into waves — of awareness, creativity, and conscious action.
Together, we’re writing the blueprint for what comes next.


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