DECACS, Inc. and all its Initiatives

Archive for April, 2020

We Fell Asleep In One World

Greetings, Peace and Blessings to you, your family and loved ones. 
My name is Nana Baakan and I have a lot of questions about what is happening in our world today. 

I am going to upload a few videos over the next few days. I just want to share with you some of my questions and get your responses. 

Thanks to all my subscribers who stopped by and to new visitors by sure to subscribe.

The topic of Today’s video is “We Fell Asleep in a world, and woke up in another.”



We fell asleep in a world, and woke up in another.

Suddenly Disney is out of magic,

Paris is no longer romantic,

New York doesn’t stand up anymore,

the Chinese wall is no longer a fortress, and Mecca is empty.

Hugs and kisses suddenly become weapons and not visiting parents and friends becomes an act of love.

Suddenly you realize that power, beauty and money are worthless, and can’t get you the oxygen you’re fighting for.

The world continues its life and it is beautiful.

It only puts humans in cages. I think it’s sending us a message:

You are not necessary. The air, earth, water and sky without you are fine.  When you come back, remember that you are my guests, not my masters.” Anonymous

Something to think about.

How easily governments can change your reality.

How easily they can enforce new measures and attach different values.

How easily what once was considered wholesome and human acts of kindness have been relegate to acts of terrorism, fear and social injustice.

How soon we realize that our values are predicated by the dictates of supposed authority, and not from our own basic and human knowledge of what is right and what is wrong.

If we don’t learn anything from this, we learn that we are severely and unequivocally conditioned out of having any single independent thought.

And should anyone escape the conditioning, they will be quickly relegated to the pits of hell by the prevailing society and land in the dustbin of history.

Life will go on with reset after reset. Memories of what once was will be shrouded in a new conditioning that will categorically deny that a different world ever existed.


The reset will continue to condition the masses into one paradigm shift after another. And the people will continue to forget. It’s kinda sad.

Music:  Kevin MacLead, “Healing”This Video: https://youtu.be/LfUSp_qV2I4
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Contact: metaphysical.nana@gmail.com 

Universities Panic As Dorms Sit Empty: Recruiting, Tuition and Faculty Contracts In Limbo – Activist Post

Source: Universities Panic As Dorms Sit Empty: Recruiting, Tuition and Faculty Contracts In Limbo – Activist Post

By Tyler Durden

Colleges and universities across the nation are stuck in financial limbo at a moment that key staffing, faculty contracts, student recruiting, and donor revenue-related decisions are typically made for next year, and also as controversy erupts over refusal to refund student housing and campus activity fees. The $600 billion-plus higher education industry is expected to suffer effects of this spring’s campus shutdowns at least through next fall, given that everything down to  campus tours for potential recruits have been canceled, leaving open the crucial question of incoming levels of freshmen and tuition revenue for next year.

A case in point is as follows: “The financial meltdown prompted by the novel coronavirus puts record-high endowment values in jeopardy, along with the ability for donors to give. Princeton University canceled its reunion, which draws 25,000 to the Ivy League school,” according to Bloomberg.

It’s likely that a number of academic institutions will delay sending out contracts, usually done in April, for the following year — and some like Baylor University in Texas are already informing teachers and staff their contracts will reflect a freeze on raises through next year, meaning even the 2-3% annual raise to account for inflation will be cut.

But the state of limbo amid the national coronavirus economic “pause” has much deeper reverberations that could threaten the very survival of some higher-ed institutions: “Students and professors at universities aren’t the only ones wondering when schools will re-open. Bondholders and stockholders also have a vested interest in getting them back on campus,” Bloomberg reports this week.

Most schools have gone to a purely online and remote learning format for the rest of the semester; however, this has hit student housing managers and investors hard, also as questions linger over whether or not students can terminate their leasesBloomberg writes further:

Global Ratings cut its outlook for the private student housing sector to negative on Wednesday, citing expected challenges from the sudden and potentially prolonged decline in student housing occupancy and associated loss of rental revenue.

Wealthier schools such as Harvard, Brown and Princeton are expected to weather the storm with greater ease, with some already offering students housing credit and prorated refunds conditioned in their return to campus.

However, not every institution is able to promise such relief, also given much student housing is operated by outside companies and firms:

Student housing projects that are lower-rated or have “cash cushions” of less than 90 days are most at risk, Kazatsky said. Of 252 student-housing projects, 144 have cash-on-hand levels of less than a year and 32 have less than 90 days of cash available, he added. About 67% of those student-housing projects are backed by an entity not related to the university while the rest are supported by the colleges.

Some schools are evoking backlash by refusing any level of dorm or campus activity fee-related refunds altogether…………………………