Saturday, October 30, 2010

Halloween is Christmas for Satanists


Richard Evans said ...
The significance of Halloween today isn't whether or not it was a day of mass human sacrifice by the Druids, derived from the Phoenician sacrifices to Moloch, even though it certainly was.

What we must understand about Halloween in modern times is that it's a mass magickal operation.  To understand that, we must understand how an occult magic operation works.

The late 20th century customs of Halloween especially in the United States may as well have been composed and directed by Aleister Crowley.   Crowley wrote rituals in the form of dramatic plays.  The actors would take on the the character of a god or goddess, or demons the magickian sought to invoke. 

It's really very simple.  By acting like the thing, you become the thing.  Crowley combined masquerade with Kabbalist invocations of demonic personality traits. He embedded them in dramatic scripts and in song lyrics.

It doesn't even matter if a participant is aware they're to become possessed, they only need to be persuaded to act out and hear the words.  This in fact is the how behavioral engineering has been done through the Hollywood movies, television shows and music industry.

Halloween has become a multi-billion dollar industry.  Halloween as we know it didn't exist in 1950.  Before 1966, it was  benign pointless excuse for children to parade door to door collecting free candy and an annual re-run of "It's the Great Pumpkin Charlie Brown." 

However, the 1966 Madison Avenue marketing blitz called "The Year of the Monster" glamorized Halloween as a 'lifestyle'.

The blitz included a plethora of gory toys, glamor sustained through television shows and movies, including two prime time sitcoms, "The Adams Family", and "The Munsters".  Halloween as we know it was created by interests which we now identify as 'Illuminati' and Satanic.

Anton La Vey (Howard Levey) inaugurated the Church of Satan in 1966.  This wasn't coincidental.  La Vey's cult photos were disseminated in the major magazines.  La Vey thus was providing that Mardis Gras, Halloween image as a lifestyle.  The engine of conversion was sex  - let's be honest, any Satanists out there.  Halloween graduated from benign harvest celebration into a Sex and Death festival.   Sex and Death = Thanateros. Don't tell me that mix of costumes I saw at the grocery store last night dressed either as zombies, or SM sluts, (and I saw two cross dressing males)  isn't a merger of sex and death.

6 comments:

Cés said...

Sex & Death

Intellectual Insurgent said...

Mike Adams wrote a hilarious commentary about U.S. holidays in general.

This is year 3 that we have managed to keep Baby Girl away from Halloween. Hoping that, by the time she notices, she'll think it's as wierd as we think it is.

Our neighbors and friends, and even my Dad, though, look at us like we have three heads when we explain that we don't take our kids trick or treating. Still can't wrap my head around taking my kid, in the cold, to panhandle for garbage poison I would never allow her to eat.

And one of our neighbors is still a bit offended because we turned down an invitation to her Halloween party because we didn't think it was appropriate to have our daughter in a house that had images of hanging dead bodies and demons.

So glad this "holiday" is over.

Intellectual Insurgent said...

By acting like the thing, you become the thing.

Indeed. That's probably why Heath Ledger "overdosed" on antidepressants and died after becoming the Joker.

Denmark Vesey said...

"Hoping that, by the time she notices, she'll think it's as wierd as we think it is." II

Brilliant meme control

Sasha said...

I took my little one trick-or-treating in the mall. Let him put on the costume he picked out. He requested that I make a happy face on the carved pumpkin. He got a few pieces of candy (that, aside from 2 M&M's after dinner, I won't allow him to eat) It's more symbolic than anything.

When we got home last night, I couldn't help but feel sad that Halloween for him is not like the Halloween I grew up with. When we went shopping for his costume, I went into a Halloween store and I had to carry him because the displays terrified him. Maybe as a child, I was unaware of it, but I seem to recall a more innocent and fun time. Yes, there was always the horror and scary aspect, which I enjoyed, but it just seems different now.

Anonymous said...

Are you advocating that we conduct ourselves so as not to unknowingly open ourselves for demonic possession? Thought you were a bit wiser than that DV. Why not just vilify Halloween for what it really is? Just one more example of leading the sheep from pasture to pasture, keeping them occupied so they won't think about the fact they are being prepared for the slaughter.