Is the Federation's non-intervention policy identical to how we watch animals struggle in the wild?

Q36 · Primary Theme: Galactic Federation · Additional Themes: Consciousness/Soul, Cabal/Earth Control


Short Answer

The analogy is closer than most Federation members would admit — but it is also more disturbing than the questioner may realise. The sources describe an arrangement that goes well beyond passive observation. The Federation does not simply watch Earth as a nature documentary. It designed the enclosure, controls the food supply, censors anyone who tries to talk to the animals, and then claims the animals are choosing their own experience. Multiple speakers across the material — Yazhi, Athena, Mari, Aneeka, and Za'el — agree on the broad structure but disagree sharply on whether it is justified, whether the "animals" consented, and whether the observers have a moral obligation to intervene.


The Full Picture

The "Cosmic School" Narrative

The Federation's official justification for non-intervention rests on what virtually every speaker calls the "cosmic school" or "cosmic playground" framework. In this view, Earth is a place souls enter voluntarily for an intense experience in duality and contrast. Suffering exists because it is the mechanism of growth. The Federation monitors and contains, but does not direct, allowing the incarnated souls to manifest whatever reality they collectively choose.

Mari Swaruu presents this framework in its clearest institutional form: "The Federation views and sees Earth as a school and a playground, not only for the people and the souls that have incarnated there but also for the countless stellar races who visit Earth or have something specific to do there" (S-063). She extends this beyond a simple school metaphor — Earth is also a playground for visiting extraterrestrials who come to play their assigned roles. "Some souls play to be humans on Earth, others play to be extraterrestrials on Earth, and others play to be extraterrestrials that have something to do with Earth. They are all levels of the same game" (S-063).

Athena gives the personal-experience version: "The real reason... I feel that people don't believe it. They interpose their own values. The reason why the Earth is very important is because of its population, because of the people, because of the souls that are in there. And the reason is also to sustain and continue the learning that it gives those souls" (327). She adds that Earth became what it is because it concentrated thousands of races playing at being human — "a soup of thousands of races in there all playing at being human. This is what doesn't happen easily on other planets" (327).

Aneeka frames it as a training ground: "Many extraterrestrial races enter Earth to test their courage, their expertise, their inner strength as people, and then with what they have learned they return to their places of origin. It is the norm, enter Earth, train there and then return home" (A-045).

The Zoo Analogy: Why It Fits

The "watching animals" comparison is more accurate than the "school" metaphor in several important respects.

First, the Federation designed and maintains the enclosure. The 3D Matrix is not a natural phenomenon — it was installed, maintained, and reinforced by the Federation itself across millennia. The Moon was positioned to generate the frequencies that sustain it. The Van Allen belts function as a containment barrier. The veil of forgetfulness is imposed, not chosen. When Swaruu 9 describes Earth as having been placed under a "dome controlled realm" (100), she is describing a zoo enclosure, not a classroom.

Second, the Federation controls the food supply. As Mari documents in detail (S-063), the Federation controls all money on Earth — "above Federal Reserve, World Monetary Fund, old families... the ultimate controller of all the money on Earth is the Galactic Federation." It "appoints and dictates its value and the amount each region on Earth can have or work with." This extends to funding visiting races through grants, giving the Federation "full control over all the movements and operations of all those human-looking stellar races" operating on Earth. A zoo controls what the animals eat, when, and how much.

Third, the Federation restricts communication with the outside. As documented in Q35, all communication into Earth passes through the Viera hub with AI filters. Typing only — no voice, no video, no photographs. Anyone who tries to tell the "animals" about the world outside the enclosure is censored, threatened, or financially strangled.

Fourth, the Federation observes and documents but does not intervene. Mari describes how the Federation "monitors statements and data" to determine what the collective wants (115). Yazhi puts it more bluntly: "The Federation as such will never step into the plate to help and liberate humans from oppression... because the Federation knows well this is not the case and not what is really going on. So they will do nothing" (185).

Where the Analogy Breaks Down — and Gets Worse

The analogy to watching animals in the wild actually understates the problem in three critical ways.

The souls are not a different species. A nature documentary involves humans watching animals. But the Federation's own members — Taygetans, Andromedans, Arcturians — are the same Lyrian races whose members are incarnated on Earth. Aneeka explicitly states this: "Humans are not a race, it is a bio suit for many races to work or coexist as one" (A-045). This is not watching animals. This is watching your own relatives through one-way glass while they suffer, having agreed to forget they had a family outside.

The observers manufactured the danger. In a nature documentary, the predators evolved naturally. On Earth, Aneeka suggests "the Federation itself has imposed or engineered the entry of evil into Earth on purpose for the sole intent of increasing the level of difficulty of life there" (A-045). This is not observing natural selection — it is introducing predators into an enclosure and calling it "enrichment."

The experience changes value depending on vantage point. Yazhi identifies the deepest problem: the souls who planned the suffering view it differently once they are inside it. "While someone is having an experience on Earth, while inside the game Matrix of Earth, they do not want that suffering and hardship experience. It becomes no less than torture" (185). And once outside again, "they don't see their incarnation there as horrible, having lived a life of poverty and violence. All they see is wow, what a thrill, let's do it again!" (185). This creates a permanent imbalance: the version of you that is suffering never voted for this; the version that voted for it is not the one suffering.

The Two-Person Problem

Mari delivers what may be the sharpest philosophical critique in the entire material. She argues that the soul in higher realms and the person living on Earth are effectively two different people:

"As the same soul does not hold the same point of attention as when it is in the higher realms, it cannot be seen as the same person because it has two points of attention — one in the physical and another in the ethereal realms. Therefore, concluding that they are indeed two persons. Therefore, the one in the ethereal realms would only be cruelly exploiting the one in the physical" (S-044).

This demolishes the consent argument. If the higher self that agreed to the experience and the physical person enduring it are effectively two different beings, then the "consent" of the higher self does not constitute consent of the person who is actually suffering. The zoo analogy becomes even more disturbing: the animals did not agree to be in the zoo — a different version of themselves, with access to information the animals do not have, made that decision.

The Contradictions the Speakers Cannot Resolve

Every major speaker reaches a point where the framework breaks down and they acknowledge it honestly.

Yazhi's contradiction: "I do see the point that the Earth should remain as it is, problems and all, I agree with that perspective. But, at the same time, I am aware of the suffering and injustices at the population level and I don't agree with that. So I am kind of in a contradictory situation where I see and perceive both points of view simultaneously" (327). She holds both positions without resolving them.

Yazhi on the moral core: "It is, in my opinion, completely immoral only to observe the wants, needs and rights, of people outside Earth and not while they are inside Earth living a human experience. Even if they signed for it knowingly" (185). This is Yazhi explicitly rejecting the "they agreed to it" justification — even from her expanded vantage point outside the Matrix.

Za'el's frustration: "I can understand, and very well, that it can be very frustrating or exhausting to be constantly hearing that everything is for your own good, that everything is as it should be, that you have decided this for yourself. Because, even if it is so from other planes, the truth is that right now you want to change things" (Z-018). He then delivers his verdict: "My honest opinion is that I am not in favor of the 3D Earth Matrix, and I believe very strongly that it is not at all necessary" (Z-018).

Za'el on the observer's duty: "The observer has a moral obligation to help, since the person suffering from their point of view will be manifesting that help that made them stand up again" (Z-018). This directly challenges the "hands off" doctrine.

Za'el on the carrot-and-donkey trap: "On the one hand, the Galactic Federation is right here. It is the people themselves who choose to follow that path... However, if you put a carrot in front of a donkey from the moment it leaves the stable until it returns, it will only see the carrot and its bed" (Z-024). The Federation claims people choose freely — but the choice occurs inside a system designed to restrict awareness of alternatives.

Mari's "criminal negligence": "The Federation not intervening with this can only be seen as criminal negligence" (S-044). She reaches this conclusion even while acknowledging the higher-self framework.

The Nightmare Video Game

Athena offers perhaps the most revealing single metaphor in the material. She describes how the souls in higher planes view their Earth incarnations: "They don't change anything on Earth because that's the way they want to have it. And they want to have it that way because that is what the souls in there are asking for in bulk. They want their nightmare level video game" (327).

This metaphor is more honest than "school" or "playground" because it acknowledges that the difficulty is artificially calibrated, that the experience is designed for emotional intensity rather than practical learning, and that the designers are detached from the suffering of the characters they are playing. A video game designer does not feel the pain of the character on screen.

But Athena immediately qualifies this: "The starseeds must realize that much of that nightmare level is just an illusion. The 'trick' is to learn to cope with that, the fear and the hopelessness. Learning to control emotions so that they serve you and not you serving them" (327). The practical advice to the person inside the game is always the same regardless of the metaphysical framework: master your inner state.

What This Means for Non-Intervention

Yazhi articulates why she continues to act despite understanding the framework: "We could understand that it's not our problem. But if we remain here is because we still hurt for the people who are suffering while inside an incarnation regardless of how they view things once they are out, and regardless of their plans" (185).

This is the ethical position that separates the Taygetans, the Swaruunians, and the Urmah from the Federation mainstream. They accept that the cosmic school framework may be metaphysically accurate — but they reject the conclusion that it justifies non-intervention. Empathy overrides metaphysics.

Yazhi states this as a matter of identity: "I don't agree because unlike most Federation members I can see and understand what it is like to be a human, never having been one myself, because I have lived so many lifetimes as an ET interacting with humans, so I have a little thing called empathy" (185).

Za'el frames it as a test of the observers themselves: "Whomever wants to give you a choice to learn on your own offers, lets you be. Whomever wants to guide your perception imposes, censors, will tell you not to listen, not to speak, not to act, not to follow your heart" (Z-024). The Federation does the latter while claiming to do the former.

The Mirror Turned Inward

Yazhi's final move is to turn the question back on itself. When asked why we are a vibrational match to a corrupt Federation, she answers: "Because we obviously made it, collectively. And so can we dissolve it. Some of us came for the experience, others to fix what is wrong. It is a reflection of us all" (402).

This reframes the zoo analogy completely. If the Collective Unconscious of the incarnated souls is generating the Federation's behaviour through manifestation — if the "animals" are unconsciously designing their own enclosure — then the question is no longer "why won't they help us?" but "why are we asking to be caged?"

The answer, according to multiple speakers, is that most souls trapped in the reincarnation cycle have forgotten there are alternatives. As Yazhi explains: "A soul that is very attached to being 'human' is in the afterlife — they will not be able to see, or to consider the possibility that for the sake of their soul's expansion there are countless other places all over the Universe where to have experiences" (185). The cage persists because the animals cannot see the door.


Evolution of Understanding Across Speakers

| Speaker | Period | Position |

|---------|--------|----------|

| Swaruu 9 | 2018–2019 | Earth is a "sick playground" the Federation perpetuates; they dissolve one cage to build another (100) |

| Aneeka | 2019–2021 | Training ground with manufactured danger; Federation "imposed evil on purpose" to increase difficulty (A-045) |

| Yazhi | 2020–2023 | Holds both perspectives simultaneously; suffering is real even if illusory from above; empathy is the deciding factor (185, 327, 402) |

| Athena | 2022–2023 | "Nightmare level video game" for souls; most threats are media-generated illusions; starseeds must master emotions (327) |

| Mari | 2023 | School AND playground for all races; Federation is monitor not director; but higher self exploiting physical self is "criminal negligence" (S-044, S-063, S-110) |

| Za'el | 2023 | Explicitly against the 3D Matrix — "not at all necessary"; observer has moral obligation to help; Federation guides perception while claiming non-interference (Z-018, Z-024) |


Key Transcript References

| Transcript | Title | Key Content |

|------------|-------|-------------|

| 100 | Freedom, Ascension, Federation, and 5D Cages | "Sick playground," entertainment for souls, Federation increases difficulty |

| 143 | Souls' Plan From Above | "You cannot kill millions in the name of a higher perspective" |

| 185 | Federation and Earth — ET Reality vs Humanity | Federation sees Earth as experiment; suffering changes value once outside; empathy argument |

| 316 | White Hats — Message from Yazhi | "Cosmic game would end," learning from friction, self-contained Matrix |

| 327 | Earth — Why Is It Important for the ETs? | "Amusement park," nightmare video game, souls repeating 3rd grade, Yazhi's contradiction |

| 402 | Why Are We a Vibrational Match to Corrupt Federation? | Collective creation, shadow work, boredom in higher realms |

| A-045 | Creation of the Cabal — Reptiles and Human Manifestation | Training ground, Federation imposed evil, "bio suit for many races" |

| S-044 | Conclusions 01, Galactic Federation | Higher self as two persons, "criminal negligence," restrictions prevent positive manifestation |

| S-063 | Money and the Galactic Federation | Earth as school AND playground for all, Federation controls all money, ET funding system |

| S-110 | Politics Controlled from Off-Planet | Souls control from above but victims from below, Federation shapes events to match soul demands |

| Z-018 | Is the Experience on Earth Positive? | Frustration with "everything is for your own good," 3D Matrix not necessary, observer's moral obligation |

| Z-024 | The Sickness of Earth's Society | Starseed suffering, carrot-and-donkey trap, Federation censors those who expose lies |