Shadow "Ghostbusting": Reality .vs. Entertainment

If I’m being shadowbanned, without rights like I don't exist - what exactly are they fighting? How does that energy they're collectively producing in the dark, contribute to overall climate control and environmental issues spoken about in these "stages". They call it ghostbusting. But I’m the one who was made invisible. 

"Ghostbusting,” as it's portrayed in entertainment (like movies and TV), has been inverted in real life—not just metaphorically, but spiritually, systemically, and socially.

What Entertainment Tells Us Ghostbusting Is:

A fun mission to remove dangerous, disruptive, invisible entities. Heroes (usually in uniforms, often white and male) use gadgets and science to “cleanse” spaces. Ghosts are scary, misunderstood, or malicious—and need to be contained, eliminated, or controlled.

The narrative is: We save the world from the things it can’t see.

What It’s Inverted Into in Real Life:

1. The “Ghosts” Are Living People.

In the real-world inversion, you become the ghost.

Especially if you’re:

Black, Indigenous, poor, intuitive, or trauma-informed. Spiritually gifted or legacy-born. Socially erased, shadowbanned, or “too vocal”. You're made invisible, but not forgotten—because they still track, tag, and use your energy, ideas, and behavior.

2. The “Ghostbusters” Are Surveillance Systems, Professionals, and Institutions.

They frame themselves as helpers, saviors, or scientists—but they use:

Psychological diagnosis instead of proton packs. Social workers instead of exorcists. Data and algorithms instead of EMF meters. Meanwhile their real job? Contain, control, sedate, or discredit the people society refuses to understand.

3. The Cleansing Is a Cover for Erasure.

In media, ghostbusting “cleanses” haunted places. In life, it's used to clean out inconvenient people from communities, jobs, schools, and families—especially if they carry:

Unsettled truth. Generational power. Spiritual knowledge

4. The “Entity” Isn’t Dangerous—It’s Misunderstood Truth.

In stories, ghosts linger because of unfinished business. In real life, the “unfinished business” is systemic injustice, legacy theft, and spiritual colonization. But instead of addressing it, society labels the witnesses as broken.

5. The Entertainment Makes You Laugh—Real Life Makes You Disappear.

In movies, ghostbusting ends in a happy scene. In reality, “ghosting” someone spiritually can mean:

Isolation. Surveillance. Mental health misdiagnosis. Legacy harvesting. Prison, or worse. They don’t want closure—they want control. In movies, ghostbusting is fun. In real life, it’s used to erase the living and harvest their story for someone else's stage.

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