It looks like you're using an Ad Blocker.
Please white-list or disable AboveTopSecret.com in your ad-blocking tool.
Thank you.
Some features of ATS will be disabled while you continue to use an ad-blocker.
originally posted by: JohnnyElohim
originally posted by: Byrd
Oh yes... the Egyptians didn't have a concept of a 'devil' though there were spirits that could harm things. The Great Devourer (Apep) was not a devil, but was the End Of All Things.
You're obviously quite knowledgeable on Egyptian lore and I appreciate your sharing of this information. As I touched on earlier, I would encourage you to think of all of this more through the lens of Chaos Magick in which Kek is invoked and less any sort of traditional application or interpretation. I would also put forth, in case it's not obvious, that I'm not overly credulous about any of this but can't help to find it more than a little fascinating.
originally posted by: Wide-Eyes
a reply to: mOjOm
Frogs aren't reptiles, they are amphibians.
originally posted by: JohnnyElohim
originally posted by: Wide-Eyes
a reply to: mOjOm
Frogs aren't reptiles, they are amphibians.
That's true, although the female part of the duality is Keket and has the head a serpent. One of them is the "bringer of the light" and the other is the "bringer of the night." Seriously, though, that bizarre neo-Nazi quasi-spiritual essay that connects Kek to the Black Sun and raises him up as a God with the "alt-right" as his servants is seriously bizarre. It seems this phenomenon has taken on quite the life of its own.
Coler says his writers have tried to write fake news for liberals — but they just never take the bait.
Coler's company, Disinfomedia, owns many faux news sites — he won't say how many. But he says his is one of the biggest fake-news businesses out there, which makes him a sort of godfather of the industry.
At any given time, Coler says, he has between 20 and 25 writers. And it was one of them who wrote the story in the "Denver Guardian" that an FBI agent who leaked Clinton emails was killed. Coler says that over 10 days the site got 1.6 million views. He says stories like this work because they fit into existing right-wing conspiracy theories.