Wednesday, 6 April 2011

NASA & Astro Theology


If the Nuremberg trials were all about separating the production line workers from the Nazi cream, then Project Paperclip was all about the schizophrenia of smuggling in the top Nazis into the United States to work with Jet Propulsion Laboratories and NASA. Take that Nazi and U.S. military industrial complex shotgun wedding with its SS occult DNA. Splice that black magic gene with occult master Aleister Crowley who was close friends with Jack Parsons of JP Laboratories fame and we have a marriage of unsettling history and destiny. Given that occult obsessed Hitler envied Aleister Crowley's reputation as the most evil man in the world and a reasonable question can be asked of the whole Govcorp complex?

Did occult Nazism win the second world war by stealthy transfer of ideological black magic DNA from the third Reich to create a fourth Reich in the United States? 

Given that Aleister Crowley ordained Jack Parsons as his successor and NASA's obsession with astro theology the answer is uncomfortable. Just don't expect that to appear on a NASA press release or mainstream mass media channel near you. That would interrupt the ball game wouldn't it.


Richard Hoagland not only does a great job of chronicling the history but is particularly talented at pointing out the bewildering number of coincidences on a cosmic scale. His eye for noting synchronised timing and locations between celestial bodies and historic events is unsurpassed. Throw in a little ritual sex magic (and Ron L Hubbard who stole Parsons wife) and it's a piece of history in motion that blows minds.

Feel Your Way (Credo Mutwa)


I recall reading somewhere that it's not what the story brings to you but what the reader brings to the story. It's an important point. There's no point listening to a story teller without being able to suspend disbelief and then, in this instance, only at the end can we make a judgement. One that like the Rubiks cube above I intend to feel my way through.

It seems to me that Credo Mutwa enjoys both being listened to and telling his story. I was delighted to hear an African telling this because it's the Dogon tribe who to my knowledge were the first to talk of an alien visitation to our planet many thousands of years ago. I loved listening to his story of our ability to communicate telepathically before the extra terrestrials taught us how to speak in order that we mine the monatomic gold they need. In the beginning was the word is an important sticking point to me from lots of different areas I'm researching. This includes from evolutionary biology to 3D metamorphic language transformation in the future.

But there's one point where I feel Credo Mutwa is being extraordinarily candid. Homosexuality in Africa is a life threatening persuasion. Africa is broadly speaking deeply homophobic and after his blood and semen extraction by aliens, followed by forced sex, his discovery that he had turned bisexual is both too odd an admission to make and one that is potential harmful to his well being. He reveals this both guardedly and with a soft of shame. It's a small point from the story, but one that is said in the same manner as the rest of his tale. 

There's a few more hours to finish this interview by David Icke and I don't want to formulate any thoughts till the end but the simple fact that I'm continuing is in itself validation of the content so far. David is a fabulous interviewer simply by virtue of letting the man speak. 

Tuesday, 5 April 2011

Arizona Wilder




Even if 1% of what Arizona Wilder says is authentic the world is a whole lot different than any of us could conceive. I dont apologise for avoiding traditional fact checking as the volume of content I'm reviewing simply doesn't leave time. To compensate I'm learning to rely on every contextual detail I can draw on and an increasing library of body language, tone and demeanour. 


Half the time wasters have a story that is largely backed up by what I've learned but the 10% disinfo creates a lot of work to figure out things effectively. If there's one comment about Arizona Wilder it feels like her obvious trauma is an explanation for the nature of her story, but that is a vastly different story than being a time waster. I don't believe she is though it's worthwhile reading this account of her story so you can make your own mind up.