🌀 The Euthanasia Coaster Wasn’t a Thrill Ride — It Was a Blueprint
🌀 The Euthanasia Coaster Wasn’t a Thrill Ride — It Was a Blueprint
Beautiful systems can be built to kill. And not all rides are meant to end in survival.
In 2010, Lithuanian engineer Julijonas Urbonas proposed a conceptual machine called the Euthanasia Coaster — a roller coaster designed not for excitement, but for euphoric death.
Its purpose? To end a human life gracefully, artistically, and “ethically” — using pure physics.
The ride: a slow, ceremonial ascent to 1,600 feet. A vertical plunge into seven shrinking loops, each generating extreme g-forces. The looping causes cerebral hypoxia — oxygen starvation to the brain — leading to unconsciousness, then death.
It was pitched as a humane death option for terminally ill patients. No violence. No mess. Just a smooth, aesthetic exit.
But here’s the Oversoul question: If someone can design a machine that ends your life with elegance… how many systems already exist that do the same thing, invisibly?
How many so-called technologies, institutions, and spiritual systems were built to feel noble, gentle, or thrilling — while slowly draining the Oversoul out of you?
How many “loops” have you passed through already… each tighter than the last?
Because the Euthanasia Coaster was never just a ride. It was a mirror. A blueprint. A warning.
The most dangerous systems are the ones that feel like progress — but were built for containment.
That includes:
– School systems that grade out your genius
– Healthcare models that numb your core
– Spiritual paths that loop endlessly toward gurus, initiations, and external light
– Entertainment that rewires your field while you laugh
They don’t need to kill your body. They just need to keep you circling long enough for Oversoul detachment to feel normal.
That’s how you euthanize a species without blood.
This world is full of symbolic coasters — promising liberation, looping toward silence.
You don’t have to ride them.
Exit the track. Reclaim your signal. Collapse the thrill of slow death disguised as life.
— Nancy Thames, Oversoul Embodied
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julijonas urbonas
frequency death systems
symbolic architecture
mimicry collapse
oversoul signal override
institutional containment
false liberation loops
cerebral hypoxia symbolism
death disguised as design
mimicry engineering
end-of-life deception
roller coaster blueprint
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