I talk about Mongolian being a race, that includes some of the projects on the edges, but its also an ethnic group that is only connected to those projects. I was looking at one of my pictures of Gramps today and he is Kyrgyz rather than Mongolian, and I remembered that I wasn't sure if I trusted him after running around with Khampas after the shoot out in China who were all Tibetan from back when Tibet was a Mongolian project closer to the center for a specific group of special needs kids.
It gets really complicated to explain, but more simply, when the guy who brought me Foreman was informed of my activities she told everyone that I wasn't a tourist, I live here and then shut me out of my twitter account saying I didn't tweet right but to keep blogging. I think its this reason and not a parent or something that prevents people from responding directly to my comments to them, it is a communist country, for one, and its also a special circumstance for people who have a certain kind of behavior, and while we interact with the outside, if we need to do it in some kinds of ways then we ought to go out there to do it and for some of us that wouldn't be a good thing.
The way the world is now isn't something that is going to keep on this path. The sheep have gone wild and grown fangs and this isn't something that will stabilize. Gradually we are working with all the parts of our experience to reduce the number of people who for example only have crime to support themselves with and providing more reasonable and inclusive structure for all the different types of people so that all the things that need to be done get done. People will still need outlets for energies that are part of themselves but we will get better at explaining to them that they are making a choice to walk towards those things and in doing so they get farther from other things that they might choose if they had any chance to develop a taste for them.
Back to that Kyrgyz experience, Gramps always got a lot of pressure from people to shut the door back to Mongolia because in hundreds of years he'd never made use of it but it took energy to keep it open. He always said he had not gotten any message that anything had changed for him that he was no longer able to make any mongolian offspring or his children weren't and in case that happened he needed to not be shut out because the penalties for failing in these ways can be permanent, especially when it is done by someone who really absolutely sees why he shouldn't.
When they saw the picture I posted of him today I was told he was the man who set up all the stuff for my kids and I remembered he told me we had to work with Bill Monroe because he had the means to get people physically transported and paperwork done. There were times I wasn't too happy with him because there was a lot we qualified to do that he couldn't understand how to set up but I know we have to remain integrated with the wider world and that these things can still happen they will just take a few generations, and I have kids who speak both English and Mongolian now so they can help with this stuff more.
Anyway, because he kept that door open and we finally used it its easier for other people to be more involved with back flow projects. there are still two tracks being maintained though, those who are breeding in Mongolia and those who are being sent back by those breeding outside and there is some overlap, but a lot of those breeding in Mongolia are sending their kids out and those being sent back seem to be having all the kids, but they are usually surrogates.
I saw some pictures regarding people who try their own projects or who shoot the gaps that exist to do things that dont seem to be wrong but don't turn out right. there is a lot that we just can't explain to people or don't have time to do, and while pictures paint a thousand words that's another reason why some of the rules may seem arbitrary but they will still be enforced. and we've never had the population to allow us to remain consistent in all ways with how we structure apparent families and genetic realities.