
Larken and Amanda Rose return to Outer Limits of Inner Truth to discuss the philosophy of self ownership, the illusion of authority, and their new book and live event, both titled Approaching Humanity. Larken is the author of The Most Dangerous Superstition, and together the Roses catch listeners up on their work at the Rose Channel, including the Candles in the Dark seminar that teaches people how to reach friends and family with the message of liberty without arguing or debating, along with the deep library of talks and exclusive content they offer subscribers. They then lay out the heart of Approaching Humanity, an event set for July 18th in the Sedona or Prescott, Arizona area, featuring speakers including Patrick Smith of the Disenthrall channel and James Corbett joining remotely from Japan. Where their earlier work focused on tearing down the belief that authority can ever be legitimate, this new project flips the approach and describes the positive vision instead, painting a picture of how people might treat one another and organize in a world that does not hand its judgment and conscience over to a ruling class.
The conversation moves through the central argument Larken and Amanda return to often, that the world’s problems are driven less by a handful of genuinely malicious people and more by the enormous number of well meaning people who fund, obey, and enforce on their behalf, and that the only power the few hold is the power the many agree to give them. They point to a cultural shift already underway, citing the public pushback police now face online, the recruitment struggles of police and military, and ordinary people questioning authority out loud for the first time, which they believe plants doubt even in those who never speak up. Together with host Ryan, the Roses explore why so many people choose what they call familiar injustice over unfamiliar freedom, the fear of imagining life behind door number two, and how the final section of the book, the Unbound World, sketches what voluntary cooperation could look like. The discussion closes on more personal ground, including Larken’s own near death experience and how it made him a fearless speaker, along with references to David Icke, economist Martin Armstrong, and historical examples like Iceland and indigenous societies that functioned without centralized rule.
Website: https://therosechannel.com/
Keywords: Larken Rose, Amanda Rose, The Most Dangerous Superstition, Approaching Humanity, voluntaryism, self ownership, the illusion of authority, liberty movement, Rose Channel, Candles in the Dark, James Corbett, Patrick Smith, individual sovereignty, near death experience, statelessness, David Icke, Martin Armstrong