Devious Poetry (part five)

The ankh is an Egyptian heiroglyph which means “life”, or “the key of life”. In fact, it is a magical symbol to wish life and health for someone, which explains how Isis was able to bring Osiris back from the dead.

The ankh is also a portal between life and death, which helps explain why goths love it so much, and why it was the perfect symbol for Death in The Sandman.

This symbol didn’t enter Western culture until the 1960s, specifically during the sexual revolution. It was made popular as a counterculture icon among that crowd for a reason. Kids didn’t wake up one day and decide to start wearing ankhs on their own. (And, to that same point, Aleister Crowley wasn’t placed on the cover of the massively influential Beatles album Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band album by accident, either.)

The industry brought that symbolism to the hippie movement in a calculated way. And, as we’ve learned, in the occult circles “life magick” is the idea of using your “orgonne” toward the conception of a child.

You know which part.

So, like with all the mystery religions, it once again boils down to sex magick. Because without God and without the greater fulfilment He brings, limitless promiscuity and self-indulgence is all ya got.

Just as how the Eye of Horus was designed after the human anatomy of the brain, the ankh is also based on… another piece of human anatomy.

And so the ankh is the perfect symbol for feminism and the matriarchy. When you see a someone in pop culture entertainment wearing this uterine symbol around his or her neck, it’s a pretty dang good indication that person is a feminist.

Next, to understand how many people are using this agenda against us, we need to look at Liber AL, “The Book of the Law”.

If you find this book in your local library, might not be a bad idea to burn it.

The first thing you should understand about this book is it is the central text of Thelema, just like the Bible is central to Christianity.

Aleister Crowley wrote this book in 1904 and published it in 1909 (although he claims a being named “Aiwass” wrote it through him).

And, just like we’ve been speaking about, Liber AL spoke of the coming of a “new stage in spiritual evolution” called the “Aeon of Horus”.

This is also the book that made famous the phrase “Do as thou wilt” (which you can see on many Satanist and witchcraft bumper stickers these days). In fact, “Do as thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law” is the central tenet of the religion of Thelema.

On the cover, you can see the twin snakes represented in their pillar form (Sun and Moon/Jachin and Boaz/Ida and Pingala).

And at the top we’ve got the Winged Sun of Thebes, which dates back to Mesopotamia and Assyria. This is the very same symbol as the knob of the caduceus and the wings on the Staff of Hermes.

And like with any celebrated occultist work that stemmed from Hermetic Qabalah, there are many examples of obscure numerology, such as the 10 different numbers and the 22 paths referring to the Sephirothic Tree of Life, and the DCLXVI written at the end of the (extended full) title of this book referring to 666, the number of The Beast.

You must remember that Crowley was a self-professed magus, and the art of the magus is to lie and lie some more. Crowley himself said something to this effect using a liar’s paradox, stating that a magus lies, and then followed it up with the statement that he is a magus. Thus, everything in this book should be taken with a grain of salt, yet should also be taken seriously as a threat to society.

“In the beginning doth the Magus speak Truth, and send forth Illusion and Falsehood to enslave the soul.” In other words, bait them with truth, then once you have gained their trust, lie to attain your secret goals. I hate to sound like a broken record, but that’s exactly what the news media, entertainment, and the government have done to us.

The original LIBER AL manuscript was sent to Karl Germer upon Crowley’s death, who was not only the executor of his will, but also the head of the Ordo Templi Orientis (O.T.O.). It is currently in the possession of the O.T.O., who I will get into in the next post.

But before we end this post, let’s take a look at the next lines of devious poetry:

Man’s knowledge doubles, it appears,
Just less than every couple years.
Man’s last two years more breakthroughs see,
Than all your previous history.

It’s said by twenty-seventeen
This doubling each half-second seen,
Here information’s flashpoint looms.
Its blaze reveals, as it consumes.

(Moore’s poetry cadence was sloppy in this section, so my inner-Editor kicked in and I fixed it a little as I transcribed.) None-the-less, what we have here is pretty straightforward, meaning-wise.

In these stanzas, Alan Moore is (perhaps ironically) referring to Moore’s Law, which was named after a different Moore (Gordon Moore). Gordon’s “law” is more an observation than scientific law, but it states the number of transistors in an integrated circuit doubles roughly every two years.

Given the explosion of the internet combined with advancements in computer processing and graphical processing, and the belief Thelemites have that “everyone is a star” and if you give people magick knowledge (a.k.a. “Enlightenment”), their “True Will” will spring forth from “unconscious intent” (ie: Rubes will do the will of the Thelemites subconsciously through the art of suggestion).

So I suppose by now, it’s starting to make sense why Alan Moore would be so interested in trying to subconsciously fill preteen minds with this information and hope that technology can disseminate it faster. He dispensed Crowleyan concepts to young minds because, logic dictates, that perhaps Alan Moore is a Thelemite himself.

And if you do some research, you’ll quickly find this is absolutely true. He makes no bones about it and the information is laid bare right on Wikipedia. He also happens to be a Marxist. He’s a self-proclaimed “ceremonial magician” and has even performed rituals using mind-altering psychedelics. Regarding this, he once said:

It’s frightening. You call out the names in this strange incomprehensible language, and you’re looking into the glass and there appears to be this little man talking to you. It just works.

-Alan Moore

He also once likened Christians to primates:

Monotheism is, to me, a great simplification. I mean the Qabalah has a great multiplicity of gods, but at the very top of the Qabalic Tree of Life, you have this one sphere that is absolute God, the Monad, something which is indivisible. All of the other gods, and indeed everything else in the universe, is a kind of emanation of that God.

Now, that’s fine, but it’s when you suggest that there is only that one God, at this kind of unreachable height above humanity, and there is nothing in between, you’re limiting and simplifying the thing.

I tend to think of paganism as a kind of alphabet, as a language, it’s like all of the gods are letters in that language. They express nuances, shades of meaning or certain subtleties of ideas, whereas monotheism tends to just be one vowel and it’s just something like ‘oooooooo’. It’s a monkey sound.

-Alan Moore

Boomers, this man was put in charge of your children’s entertainment many times, and most of you said nothing.

This idea he’s presenting in the second quote, that God is merely a “conglomeration” of many “supreme beings”, this concept comes directly from Freemasonic and Thelemic teachings.

So where do all these people come from, and how do they get involved in entertainment, the government, the fine arts, Hollywood, and other such influential establishments that help guide and transform our culture?

Just who are all these people willing to push forward the Thelemite agenda (even if they’re not aware of it), and how many of them are we dealing with? Who are all these “stars” subconsciously pushing all this stuff forward with their “True Will”?

Hm. Liber AL… “Liberal”. Gotta be a coincidence.

Published by Nick Enlowe

Fantasy novelist.