This book restores the ability to trust your own perception in a world that profits from confusion and fear.”

A Book for Those Sensing a Deeper Shift in the World

We the People of the Land That Used To Be: Telos Revealed is not a book about escaping reality.
It is a book about understanding why reality itself feels increasingly unstable—and what actually creates security in a changing world.

At its core, this book explores the teachings attributed to Thoth on Universal Law—the principles by which civilizations rise through coherence, shared purpose, and ethical alignment, and fall through authoritarianism, corruption, and the loss of conscious responsibility.

These ideas are not treated as ancient abstractions.
Paula J. Davis connects them directly to modern history, including:

  • Humanity’s moral crossroads during World War II

  • The long-term psychological and societal impact of the atomic bomb

  • How fear-based power structures quietly reshape cultures over time

The book suggests that the consequences of these moments are far deeper—and more present—than we often realize.

Telos: A Counterpoint to Modern Civilization

Within this broader inquiry, Davis shares a personal and unexpected experience: the arrival of a guiding intelligence that revealed Telos, a hidden or unacknowledged civilization described as preserving knowledge of consciousness-based societal organization.

Telos is not presented as something readers must believe in.
It is offered as a mirror—a way of seeing what modern systems have largely abandoned:

  • Continuity of memory

  • Ethical stewardship

  • Inner coherence as the foundation of society

Whether understood as a literal place, a preserved civilization, or a symbolic archive of human potential, Telos represents an alternative model of stability—one rooted in consciousness rather than control.

Why This Matters Personally

Many readers recognize a quiet but persistent feeling:

  • Something is off.

  • The systems meant to protect us feel fragile.

  • Security feels conditional.

This book reframes that unease. It suggests that anxiety, burnout, and disorientation are not personal failures—but natural responses to living inside systems misaligned with human consciousness.

Readers gain:

  • Greater inner steadiness during uncertainty

  • Stronger intuition and discernment

  • Language to trust their own perception again

Why This Matters for Families

For families, Telos Revealed offers a way to speak honestly across generations—without fear-based narratives.

It supports conversations about:

  • Power, ethics, and responsibility

  • What kind of future is worth stewarding

  • Values that extend beyond economic survival

The book helps restore a sense of continuity—so wisdom, not fear, is what gets passed forward.

Why This Matters Professionally

Professionally, the book challenges the assumption that security comes primarily from income, status, or institutional approval.

As public disclosure around UFOs and non-human intelligence accelerates—something Davis was told would become unavoidable at governmental levels—the book suggests humanity is entering a broader reality than it previously acknowledged.

In this emerging world, the most stable individuals will be those who have developed:

  • Clarity of perception

  • Ethical grounding

  • Internal coherence

Readers often report improved leadership presence, stronger decision-making, and greater confidence as they stop outsourcing authority and begin operating from inner alignment.

A Different Kind of Security

At its heart, this book makes a stabilizing claim:

True cohesion and security do not come from bank accounts or control of resources—but from alignment with Universal Law and conscious responsibility.

In a world opening to greater realized reality, those who cultivate awareness, integrity, and inner stability will be best equipped to thrive.

We the People of the Land That Used To Be: Telos Revealed is for readers who sense that the future will not be negotiated through fear or accumulation—but through remembrance of who we are, what we have forgotten, and how civilizations endure.


We have it in our power to begin the world over again
— Thomas Paine, Common Sense
Portrait of a distinguished man in 18th-century attire, wearing a black coat and white cravat, against a dark background. The painting has an ornate brown frame.