If you listen and do not let yourself be deflected by an abstract idea that is akin to philosophy then what the author says in the end is that going to work, marrying and having children is the deception because that is the exclamation of those who say they are free. A freedom that is philosophically ridiculed in the presentation.
The 'I am free' statement - which is said with sarcasm - is simply a part of the "instruction" to be-and-do the status-quo - as directed by the "elite masters" who want everyone to "do what they are told" and be happy doing it.
The deception is not the [actual] "doing" of those things which are a part of everyday life; rather, it is doing them in a context and system that "enslaves" the whole population by reason of the way the 'system' is set up to operate.
The normal life activities are not the deception. Nor is he saying that.
The 'system' is the deception.
And, anyone who cannot 'see' the truth about how the 'system' actually operates is living out their life in a 'construct' that has more control over - and direction of - their life than they realize.
In effect, they are living out a/the life that was "designed" for them to live out rather than living out the life that they
should be living out.
And, in this sense, they are nowhere even close to actually being 'free'.
They
think they are 'free' - but, they are not.
It is an illusion.
What is being ridiculed in the presentation is this false-freedom illusion.
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I understand what you are saying.
These things often 'present' on many levels.
Certainly worth considering.