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Lt. Col. Michael Aquino Admits To "UFO" Technology Cover-Up [Whistleblower Testimony]

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posted on Oct, 3 2013 @ 11:56 PM
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reply to post by maquino
 


Thanks for your advice. Obviously, I wouldn't write a "wacko" letter to anyone. Maybe, seeing responses here, that isn't so obvious. But if that's the consensus, maybe that really isn't about me, either, seeing as how I've got some responses which seem wacko as to they're being way out of the box for what's been written here.

Thanks, Mr. Aquino. I know perfectly well how to write what you suggest. However, I don't need to. You see, I've had my own up close and personal experiences already. I have no need of a FOIA request or any other "proof." I'm the living, walking proof, unfortunately.

But thanks for your advice anyway.



posted on Oct, 4 2013 @ 12:17 AM
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tetra50
Thanks for your advice. Obviously, I wouldn't write a "wacko" letter to anyone.

I did not mean to sound condescending or to ridicule whatever beliefs or impressions you may have. What I'm saying is that at the JKF Special Warfare Center at Fort Bragg, for instance, there's a full-time Public Information Office whose sole purpose is to respond, as directly and conscientiously as possible, to public inquiries. They try to do their best, so just give them a chance.

PIOs get all kinds of letters. I've seen one written in crayon on a torn-off piece of paper bag, possibly by someone who wasn't allowed to have anything sharp to write with.
But assuming that's not you, you should expect a serious answer to a serious letter. If you don't, you could post both your letter and the response here, and then I'll eat virtual crow if need be.

Caveat too that if you ask about something classified, you may get anything from a redacted letter to a form letter to no letter, depending upon the subject. They're pretty much restricted in these topic areas. But you might also be surprised at how much of your inquiry doesn't bump into classified info.



posted on Oct, 4 2013 @ 12:57 AM
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reply to post by tetra50
 


Actually, I live in Canada, so I am free from the FEMA concentration camps and New World Order police state. Unless you have information to prove otherwise. It's okay to watch some comedies and think about the happy things in life, if you can. I was only trying to help you because I felt bad that you were so upset. Of course, that only made you MORE upset...



It's okay, we are experiencing some major thread drift and moderators on ATS have been informed. Thanks.



posted on Oct, 4 2013 @ 02:31 AM
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reply to post by tetra50
 



To quote a long lost poet, "No one here gets out alive." Maybe that'll awaken your lost empathetic nodes.

No, not really but it does make me think about one of my favorite doors songs.

Five to one, baby, one in five.
No one here gets out alive, now.
You get yours, baby, I'll get mine.
Gonna make it, baby, if we try.


Just remember, they got mind control devices, but we got the numbers.


You do the Greatful Dead a disservice, truly, claiming status as a deadhead.

You don't know the half of it. I once hallucinated so bad that I thought they actually sounded good!



Mind control is funny?

It's funny, you know. It's a good story, it's funny, you're a funny...nevermind.


Then, I guess, you don't oft experience it. And shouldn't comment on me, as I've not commented on you.

You first replied to me about my "love fest" comment to mr Aquino which had nothing to do with you and then you attempted to hurt my feelings about how I couldn't read and stuff. I count that as a comment about me.

I also consider slinging stupid insults at people a sort of attemp at "mind control". What are you trying to accomplish otherwise? You want to either hurt someone's feelings or make them mad. Correct? I was married to a psychologist who attempted mind control on me like this to the nth degree.

You see, it only has control over you if you let it.



That's the way it works, with empathy. If you don't know what I'm talking about, then maybe you should keep your judgements to yourself

I have no clue what you are talking about can you point out where I "judged" you?



Btw, nothing I wrote was directed at you, anyway. You flatter yourself.

I'm confused. Didn't you just go on whole diatribe about about how I'm basically a non empathetic dead head with a supposed open mind and how I do the band a disservice by claiming to be a dead head? I'm pretty sure that was directed at me. Even so, I'm pretty sure it has nothing to do with me either.


Wow, Zeta...so you're the only one cool enough to extrapolate wisely...Ken Kesey and the dead? Acid?
No, that MKUltra leads to this...
it's just, you know, funny. It's a funny story.



posted on Oct, 4 2013 @ 03:08 AM
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tetra50



What makes you think I read any of it in the first place?

reply to post by ZetaRediculian
 


I guess you didn't, because otherwise, you would have seen two posts before yours, I pointed out there was nothing funny about it,

Well it's funny in a funny kind of way.


and then you say there's nothing funny about it...it lookes scary and mean to you. Then you go on to apologize for mind control being funny to you.
it is confusing. It just looks scary and mean in a funny way. You know how sometimes things seem funny but aren't really funny? Like some of my posts or Aquino's jokes. It's sort of like that but not really.



Hmmm. At least make some sense, here, please. Strange, how when you start posting relevant links, all kinds of folks come out of the woodwork with irrelevant, nonsensical stuff thrown every which way.

Weird isn't it?



But maybe I've misjudged you, for I haven't really been reading much of what you're writing, either.
you seemed to have commented on just about everything I have posted in the last page or so. And why would you judge me at all? I thought you said...

"If you don't know what I'm talking about, then maybe you should keep your judgements to yourself"

So you can judge me but I can't judge you? But then I never judged you in the first place.



posted on Oct, 4 2013 @ 03:39 AM
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** ATTENTION ALL **

Can we please get back to the actual topic and further away from the off-topic and personal bickering.

Thank you.



posted on Oct, 4 2013 @ 07:49 AM
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Ohai, are we on speaking terms again? Yay.


maquino

It's Ahnenerbe,


My bad, eek sprecka cline doitchee.


and it did not supervise the Wewelsburg.


But both were supervised by Himmler, and all of it fell unter the Thule umbrella.


Unfortunately for them, however, they then got assigned to handle the infamous concentration camp "medical" experiments, which is what got attention during the Nürnberg war crimes trials. Couldn't exactly pass themselves off as National Geographic.


Yes, how unfortunate for them. You're not doing yourself any favors, Mr. Aquino.

Vedanta (you know, the primary source for the Thulies) boils down to two things, neither of them very pretty.

1. A self-reinforcing caste system that favors a generational elite, and
2. The myth of eternal return.

Anyways, I notice no one's been able to nail you down on the subject of ID entities, so let's go ahead and bring Vedantic cycles into the mix with a fairy tale I've been batting around lately:

The Black Sun (an ID intelligence complex) comes around at the end of the Age to harvest humanity when the population has reached maximum density, or when we've achieved an apex of cultural development-- boom, gulp.

Game over, back to the beginning again, at least until the next feast.

Or, humanity is an in vitro ID complex, the flowering intelligence of the planet itself-- and to an extradimensional predator, a tasty egg to be cracked open and sucked dry every several thousand years, most delicious just before it hatches.

Fairy tales may be fun, but do they get us any closer to an understanding of the Control System?



edit on 4-10-2013 by Eidolon23 because: broke-ass link



posted on Oct, 4 2013 @ 10:33 AM
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reply to post by Eidolon23
 


The Black Sun... very interesting, I think you are onto something here. Did you ever read Whitley Strieber's book '2012: The War For Souls'? As mentioned earlier in this thread, Whitley figures heavily in the UFO abduction world [and potential long-term PsyOps]. While he is most infamous for his book Communion, he has gone on to host an internet radio show about the occult and conspiracies, as well as continue to write horror/science-fiction novels which are allegedly based on his own experiences. The alien phenomenon depicted in these novels is of a sinister nature, and is very proactively culling the population in "The War For Souls". The aliens in this book zap the souls out of entire groups of people, who then become mindless automatons.

Author, researcher and psychedelic explorer, Daniel Pinchbeck, came onto Whitley's show in 2010 and challenged him on his negative projections, suggesting that injecting such a meme into the collective was reckless and harmful.

Alien Dreamtime: My Fight With Whitley Strieber


The fight began as I explained my hypothesis about 2012, noting aspects of our current world that are unsustainable and will have to change drastically if we are going thrive, or even survive, as a species. I found that Strieber kept harping on the negative aspects of the situation, proclaiming that the Internet was about to be overtaken by corporate interests, and so on. He also stated that there was going to be a huge “die-off” of the human species in the immediate future. He reiterated that this was “definitely going to happen,” and that he “believed” it.

I argued that nobody knows what is going to happen in the future, that at the moment the earth is managing to support the human population, and if we utilized our resources better, incorporating new techniques and alternative energy technologies, we might not have to experience a massive, traumatic die off at all. Strieber continued to assert that this “die-off” was a fact – that he had done “the math,” and there was no way around it. As far as I know, Strieber is not trained as an evolutionary biologist, and even if he was, experts are continually proven wrong. Personally, I have experienced a series of miracles in my life, beginning with the improbable fact of my birth into this body with 100 trillion cells and as many synaptic connections as there are stars in the universe, so I stick by the perspective that anything is possible. This seems the most accurate position one can hold.

According to the thesis I developed in 2012: The Return of Quetzalcoatl, we are now learning that consciousness and intention have actual effects on physical reality. Therefore, if we focus our intention on negative outcomes, we may help to bring those outcomes into manifestation. Strieber has no basis to proclaim that a massive die off is imminent, since none of us are given to know the future ahead of us, and conditions change constantly. He is acting as a “prophet of doom” when he proclaims this, not a realist. He is projecting the negative, shadow aspects of his own psyche into the collective consciousness of his audience, on a daily basis. Instead of fear-mongering, he could be utilizing his public platform to spread information on plans that would ameliorate the effects of climate change and peak oil, restore wilderness areas to offset the species extinction crisis, and so on.



The discussion then turned in a different direction. I noted that, from my reading of Strieber’s work, I suspected that Strieber was influenced by the force that the visionary philosopher Rudolf Steiner called “Ahriman,” the evil spirit who pulls humanity down into minerality, materiality, sterile technology, and extinction. As I also noted in 2012, I told Strieber that I thought he had been manipulated by alien entities that do not have the best interests of the human species at heart. Communion is ultimately the story of Strieber’s seduction by those entities he calls the “visitors” often known as the Grays. He notes that he was going to call the book “body terror,” but changed the name to “Communion” when one of them told him to do this, speaking through his wife, while she slept. He also describes how the visitors were able to make him drink a bitter substance, by feeding it to him at different junctures over time. As anyone knows who has studied fairytales and fables, to drink the potion of the other world is to become entranced and overwhelmed by the beings that inhabit it.

On a subliminal or subconscious level, Strieber appears to have made a Faustian pact with these Mephistophelean entities, and unfortunately he is helping disseminate their negative and destructive frequency into human culture and consciousness, at this point in time. The worldwide phenomenon of the alien abduction narrative suggests the possibility that these entities have a plan – that they are actively preparing a deviated future scenario for their human victims. They appear to be fixated on human reproduction and genetic material. Some researchers have suggested that the visitors are a cloned species that has reached a limit of “replicative fading,” and require human genetic material to restore their depleted stock. They are highly cunning and manipulative, and it may be that we have to develop a far more sophisticated model of “contact” between our realm and that of other beings who may not be only extra-terrestrial, but other-dimensional.

edit on 4-10-2013 by corsair00 because: (no reason given)



posted on Oct, 4 2013 @ 10:59 AM
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Coincidentally, Whitley Strieber's radio program for this weekend features Peter Levenda and his new book 'The Dark Lord'.




Friday October 4, 2013
The Dark Lord: Understanding Evil's Secret Code
Today we take a look at the inner workings of evil. Peter Levenda, author of the epic Sinister Forces about the influence of the occult and secret Nazi power on the US government, returns to Dreamland with an astonishing new book, the Dark Lord, which cracks the code of the notorious occultist Aleister Crowley and reveals secrets that to this day have a deep hold on our country and its political life.

Think evil's 'not real?' Think it isn't out there? You're putting yourself exactly where it wants you to be! Listen and learn...


The Dark Lord: Understanding Evil's Secret Code



posted on Oct, 4 2013 @ 12:35 PM
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Eidolon23
But both [the Wewelsburg and the Ahnenerbe] were supervised by Himmler, and all of it fell unter the Thule umbrella.

The Thule Society indeed inspired Nazi mythology, but I think it would be more accurate to say that the Nazi Party absorbed it rather than was controlled by it. The roots of "all this go much further back than Thule. From an earlier commentary of mine:


Heinrich Heine, 1834
When once the restraining talisman of the Christian cross is broken in Germany, then the fury of the ancient warriors, the berserk rage of which the Nordic poets sang, will surge up again. The old stone gods will rise from long-forgotten ruins and rub the dust of a thousand years from their eyes; and Thor with his giant hammer will leap up and smash the Gothic cathedrals. And when that crash comes, it will be like nothing heard before in history.

The “mainstream” of the Western magical tradition may be said to have a Mediterranean origin: Egypt, Mesopotamia, Greece, and Rome - and the later syntheses of these ancient cultures through the Medieval, Renaissance, and Enlightenment eras.

In marked contrast to the Mediterranean tradition is the school of thought which originated in the northern areas of Europe and Scandinavia: the Nordic or Germanic tradition. Most notable in this tradition, of course, is its lack of features either derivative of Judæo/Christianity or prior to and prototypical of it. The Germanic metaphysics developed in an alien environment, remained largely isolated from the Mediterranean influence during the Roman Empire, and were suppressed rather than assimilated during the Christian centuries which followed.

It was in the late 19th century CE that this ancient Germanic tradition returned to play more than a mere mythological part in European affairs. It is perhaps not surprising that it surfaced during the Second Reich of Kaiser Wilhelm I and Otto von Bismarck. Until their unification by Prussia, the Germanic states had been weak and unstable in comparison to the larger nation-states of the continent. Periodically ravaged by foreign armies, Germany had earned the unenviable title of the “battleground of Europe”.

The 19th century heralded the onset of a new movement in European culture: Romanticism. It was a reaction to and a rejection of the methodical, practical - but just as often frustrating and stifling - scientific materialism which had resulted from the industrial revolution. In its original, more transcultural sense, Romanticism implied uninhibited individualism. In German, however, it gripped the imagination to a somewhat deeper degree:


Gustau Pauli, in Dehio’s Geschichte der deutschen Kunst (1919-1934)
Romanticism is Germanic and reached its purest expression in those territories which are most free from Roman colonization. Everything that is regarded as an essential aspect of the romantic spirit: irrationalism, the mystic welding-together of subject and object, the tendency to intermingle the arts, the longing for the far-away and the strange, the feeling for the infinite and the continuity of historic development - all these are characteristic of German Romanticism, and so much so that their union remains unintelligible to the Latins. What is known as Romanticism in France has only its name in common with German Romanticism.

Crucial also to German Romanticism were the concepts of dynamism and life-worship. The former term represents an urge towards constant movement and evolution, whether intellectual, artistic, or social.

German Romantic life-worship was not love and respect for the phenomenon of life per se, but rather a compulsion to exercise one’s own life - to “really live” rather than to simply exist. Again this is commendable, but as with dynamism it can be dangerous in excess - when one’s “rage to live” interrupts and consumes the lives of others.

The uncanny attraction of the Third Reich - Nazi Germany - lies in the fact that it endorsed and practiced both dynamism and life-worship without restraint and to a world-shaking degree of success:


Herman Rauschning, The Revolution of Nihilism (1939)
This irrational element in National Socialism is the actual source of its strength. It is the reliance on it that accounts for its “sleepwalker’s immunity” in the face of one practical problem after another. It explains why it was possible for National Socialism to attain power almost without the slightest tangible idea of what it was going to do. The movement was without even vague general ideas on the subject; all it had was boundless confidence: things would smooth themselves out one way or another ... Its strength lay in incessant activity and in embarking on anything so long as it kept things moving ... National Socialism is action pure and simple, dynamics in vacuo, revolution at a variable tempo, ready to be changed at any moment.

Similarly the life-worship of the Third Reich was not what the “Mediterranean” mind understands by this term. The “life” is the life of the state, or more precisely the Volk (perhaps best translated as the “soul of the people”). The individual achieves self- realization as, through his efforts, he contributes to the strengthening of this “soul”.



posted on Oct, 4 2013 @ 01:11 PM
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reply to post by corsair00
 


Neat, corsair00, I was had not run across that before. I largely agree with Pinchbeck.

Coincidentally, I have been on a Levenda tear lately. He's the Neal Stephenson of the occult, and while I may be appalled at his omissions and additions; he is one hell of a storysmith.

Thanks.



posted on Oct, 4 2013 @ 01:25 PM
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reply to post by maquino
 


Huh. It is my impression that records of the Gallic religion are spotty at best, and mostly come to us by way of Roman historians. What can be conjectured is that the Gauls scrambled together Druidism and Mithraism (definitely Mediterranean in origin), with a dash of Nordic mythos for flavor. Also, that even by the standards of the day, their sacrificial rites wouldn't be out of place in contemporary torture porn films.

Can't find the passage, thought it was in the Golden Bough, but should some poor bastard flake the bark from a sacred oak? A small incision would be made in the abdomen; a loop of intestine teased out and nailed to the tree. The victim would then be driven round the oak, his entrails spooling on the trunk as a replacement for the bark.

Stuff like that.

Also, the dynamism of the Reich had more to do with the influx of investment and the mobilization of the populace into a wartime economy.

Oh, I almost forgot. How about them ID entities, then?



edit on 4-10-2013 by Eidolon23 because: Like nailing jello to the wall.



posted on Oct, 4 2013 @ 01:43 PM
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Here ya' go, maquino, this ought to give you a Wewelsburg woody.

SPOILER ALERT: It ended badly for those with an "uncanny attraction" for "dynamism and life-worship".

www.liveleak.com...

Your revisionist history--as seen by your total misinterpretation and fictional account of Set--is at work yet again in your mind with such romantic notions of the Nazi mythology.



edit on 4-10-2013 by The GUT because: (no reason given)



posted on Oct, 4 2013 @ 03:12 PM
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Eidolon23

Michael Aquino
Unfortunately for them, however, they then got assigned to handle the infamous concentration camp "medical" experiments, which is what got attention during the Nürnberg war crimes trials. Couldn't exactly pass themselves off as National Geographic.

Yes, how unfortunate for them. You're not doing yourself any favors, Mr. Aquino.

The Ahnenerbe was originally an organization for academic archæologists. Nazi Germany had organizations for everything down to racecar drivers. The original professors and field researchers tapped for the Ahnenerbe probably felt themselves lucky to have worldwide carte blanche to go exploring, even for strange stuff.

Universities live in a world of grants and contracts, many of them governmental. The researchers so funded are often somewhat lax in considering motives and consequences of those writing the check. Someone above just mentioned that the Veterans Hospital research program in which Kesey met '___' etc. turned out to be MKULTRA-funded. The Manhattan Project scientists were fascinated by the opportunity they had for breakthrough physics, and only later began to have qualms about what they'd created. In the 1980s the CIA & DOD wrote $20M checks to be jerked around by that "remote viewing" silliness. Today the University of California operates the Lawrence Livermore nuke laboratory, and DARPA is funding that contractor who's building robots that do have more than a passing resemblance to those in Terminator.


Vedanta (you know, the primary source for the Thulies) boils down to two things, neither of them very pretty.

1. A self-reinforcing caste system that favors a generational elite, and
2. The myth of eternal return.[/url]

Bloodline social stratification has been the norm worldwide until fairly recently, e.g. the Enlightenment; it's hardly unique to Vedanta, nor is the concept of reincarnation.

If you don't like the former, then you have to decide where to draw the line, e.g. property inheritance & etc. Go to the limit and you wind up with the Terror of the French Revolution and anarchy, which can also be unpretty.

I don't believe in reincarnation, but I haven't seen it turn adherents into werewolves either.


Anyways, I notice no one's been able to nail you down on the subject of ID entities, so let's go ahead and bring Vedantic cycles into the mix with a fairy tale I've been batting around lately:

The Black Sun (an ID intelligence complex) comes around at the end of the Age to harvest humanity when the population has reached maximum density, or when we've achieved an apex of cultural development-- boom, gulp.

Where did you come up with this reference to the "Black Sun"? The reason that I'm curious is that I never bumped into this term until the commotion caused by my Wewelsburg Working made the poor old castle a pop-occult mecca, and one of the things that attracted attention was a design in the center of the Grail Hall floor, which became nicknamed the BS. Since then numerous crazy cults have arisen around it, along with pendants, baseball caps, and T-shirts. The Kreismuseum Wewelsburg Museum and I both scratch our heads about this: It's nothing more than an abstract, artistic design. It's not runic. It's not echoed anywhere else in SS insignia or symbolism. The original W plans don't mention it. It looks somewhat like the insignia of the medieval Westphalian Vehm, which was a sort of vigilante justice system in the area back in more lawless times, but that's just my guess.


Or, humanity is an in vitro ID complex, the flowering intelligence of the planet itself-- and to an extradimensional predator, a tasty egg to be cracked open and sucked dry every several thousand years, most delicious just before it hatches.

I rather like the idea of planetary cycles, though not in this chicken-farm sense. Lots of ancient mysteries that simply don't jibe with the conventional notion that civilization just began 5K years ago. Got $15 lying around, pick up a copy of Arktos and see what you think. I've never been comfortable with the wobble in Earth's axis, for instance; irregularities & imbalances always make me think that the applecart was upset at some point. I would like to reach out and set it right again, but haven't found a convenient place to stand to do so.



posted on Oct, 4 2013 @ 03:39 PM
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corsair00
Coincidentally, Whitley Strieber's radio program for this weekend features Peter Levenda and his new book 'The Dark Lord'.

Peter's a very pleasant & bright fellow who has been having fun with occult-accented conspiracy theory for years. He grappled with "Nazi occultism" in Unholy Alliance but found himself floundering in a much bigger swamp extending from the old Golden Dawn to contemporary skinheadism. We spent a couple of days together visiting the Nevada Test Site, where we stood in the middle of the Sedan Crater, and also kicked the tires of Predator & Reaper drones at nearby Creech AFB.

Photos were verboten at both of these facilities, but one thing that amused me in a sort of black-humor way was the remains of a school desk sitting randomly in the nuked landscape of the NTS. I remember back in the 1950s when we were told to dive under our classroom desks in the event of an atomic attack. I guess it wouldn't have worked.



posted on Oct, 4 2013 @ 04:15 PM
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Eidolon23
It is my impression that records of the Gallic religion are spotty at best ...

Check out the many books by Stephen Flowers, aka Edred Thorsson, concerning ancient North European history (the field of his Ph.D.) and mythology. Cf. Temple of Set Reading List Category #24, appended to Black Magic.


Oh, I almost forgot. How about them ID entities, then?

You lost me; what's an "ID entity"?



posted on Oct, 4 2013 @ 04:25 PM
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The GUT
Your revisionist history--as seen by your total misinterpretation and fictional account of Set--is at work yet again in your mind with such romantic notions of the Nazi mythology.

I am satisfied with the care and quality of my historical research, all of which I have documented and referenced as appropriate. You are certainly at liberty to believe anything reassuring to your prejudicial worldview, of course.



posted on Oct, 4 2013 @ 11:25 PM
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reply to post by maquino
 


I think she is trying to determine what sort of entities you invoke - whether interdimensional or ultraterrestrial, spiritual, elemental etc. I also assume that people are curious about what types of things you usually want to accomplish when you perform named and unnamed rituals. Whether they be in strange crypts or elsewhere. Like if you are trying to find lost items or look into the future etc. I guess a lot of that is written up in Black Magic?


I remember back in the 1950s when we were told to dive under our classroom desks in the event of an atomic attack. I guess it wouldn't have worked.


Jesse agrees with you...
edit on 5-10-2013 by corsair00 because: (no reason given)



posted on Oct, 5 2013 @ 04:31 AM
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maquino
You lost me; what's an "ID entity"?


Good lord, Mr. Aquino, have you been driven to the last extremity? Playing dumb?

Let me see if I can thread this out:

There are no dimensions beyond the fourth, yet you experienced a (shades of Aiwass) Revealing concerning an extra-human, disembodied agency responsible for the sapiens sapiens spark.

(I'd be more inclined to credit something like this.)

You frequently cite Altered States, which can only lead one to assume that the extra-human source is... humanity itself?

K.

And what does Thorsson have to do with the Gauls? Just because a regime picks up a strong story and runs with it does not mean that it is true, nor that they have an ancestral claim to it. What it looks like, is a privileged group who feels queasy about sharing trying to establish a false claim to a cultural heritage that has nothing to do with them or current sociological conditions. It's nostalgia on steroids.


edit on 5-10-2013 by Eidolon23 because: What's next? Drinking from horns while toasting Nyarlathotep?




posted on Oct, 5 2013 @ 04:46 AM
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Oh yeah, Black Sun.

The Thule theology is derived from Theosophy is derived from Vedanta.

Take the solar symbol, reverse it, paint it black.

A virulent new egregore is born, riding off the resonance of the mythforms it devoured.



Agh, and how could I neglect this: the Cult of Set in Conan the Barbarian is dedicated to the worship of? Yeah, the Black Sun.


edit on 5-10-2013 by Eidolon23 because: Thulsa Doomed.



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