How to Overthrow the Illuminati

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Re: How to Overthrow the Illuminati

Postby solace » Tue Sep 03, 2013 1:47 pm

A more pertinent question might be whether one thinks it is useful to ever use the likes of Shamir as a good source to support one's views. I say Hell, no.
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Re: How to Overthrow the Illuminati

Postby slimmouse » Tue Sep 03, 2013 2:00 pm

solace » 03 Sep 2013 17:47 wrote:A more pertinent question might be whether one thinks it is useful to ever use the likes of Shamir as a good source to support one's views. I say Hell, no.


I guess a lot of that ultimately depends on how their views interact with your own?

I suppose you know where thats leading me solace. I seem to know very little about you, other than what is obvious from your posting - namely that you appear accutely opposed to anything which in your mind approaches any kind of Jew hate.

You never actually answered my previous questions, but Im pretty sure thats how you would define anti semite.

You sound almost as obsessed with the whole things as Shamir, AD, Atzmon, Dershowitz and OKeefe.

On Edit. Hell, I forgot the despicable David Duke. And I really mean that, Solace.
Last edited by slimmouse on Tue Sep 03, 2013 2:03 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: How to Overthrow the Illuminati

Postby American Dream » Tue Sep 03, 2013 2:02 pm

solace » Tue Sep 03, 2013 12:47 pm wrote:A more pertinent question might be whether one thinks it is useful to ever use the likes of Shamir as a good source to support one's views. I say Hell, no.


I would never cite him as a reputable source and his diatribes against "them"- the "Masters of Discourse" the "Illuminati" etc., I consider to be racist swill. Just as I consider the garbage that is spewed here about "Rothschild Zionism" and the like as racist swill also. I know that slim (and maybe Searcher) will say something to the effect of, "I've got nothing against the Jews- it's those few who are manipulating them- that I object to" but racist swill is racist swill.

None of the defenders of Icke, Shamir, Atzmon are as dumb as they sometimes present themselves to be, nor as disinterested or "neutral".
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Re: How to Overthrow the Illuminati

Postby solace » Tue Sep 03, 2013 2:11 pm

slimmouse » Tue Sep 03, 2013 2:00 pm wrote:
solace » 03 Sep 2013 17:47 wrote:A more pertinent question might be whether one thinks it is useful to ever use the likes of Shamir as a good source to support one's views. I say Hell, no.


I guess a lot of that ultimately depends on how their views interact with your own?

I suppose you know where thats leading me solace. I seem to know very little about you, other than what is obvious from your posting - namely that you appear accutely opposed to anything which in your mind approaches any kind of Jew hate.

You never actually answered my previous questions, but Im pretty sure thats how you would define anti semite.

You sound almost as obsessed with the whole things as Shamir, AD, Atzmon, Dershowitz and OKeefe.

On Edit. Hell, I forgot the despicable David Duke. And I really mean that, Solace.


Jesus H Christ. I would have thought anyone in their right mind would be opposed to anything that approaches Jew hate. Or racist swill as AD puts it. Color me surprised to find someone thinks there is something wrong with me for feeling that way. :shock:
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Re: How to Overthrow the Illuminati

Postby solace » Tue Sep 03, 2013 2:13 pm

"racist swill is racist swill."

Exactly.
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Re: How to Overthrow the Illuminati

Postby slimmouse » Tue Sep 03, 2013 2:17 pm

Good for you, Solace.

Now get on that damn phone, and try to stop your pig ignorant , lying, humanity hating congress from blowing up a ton more innocents, at both your own personaly philosophical and financial expense.
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Re: How to Overthrow the Illuminati

Postby Searcher08 » Tue Sep 03, 2013 3:04 pm

American Dream » Tue Sep 03, 2013 5:27 pm wrote:In other words, slim and Searcher will never say what they really think but they desperately want to derail this thread...


Not only did I say what I really think, I said it twice IIRC the first time you actually agreed with me, but came back with what I found baffling stuff about 'devils in the details'.

What is it that I really think, AD? Because when I myself tell you, you ignore it (or in this case AGREE with it, THEN ignore it!!!)
How would YOU react if someone said that to YOU?
Cos to me, it's as patronising as fuck. You might have heard me mention that before.

I REALLY think the project of handing out a three dozen page pamphlet written like a PoliSci term paper to 'youth in the hood' is patronising and (with a delicious irony) deeply elitist BS that *distracts* from the fact that there ARE extremely powerful resource rich elites with occult values. 25% of your target audience unable to read it because of it's language level.

In fact the more I think about it, the more it sounds like Ali G.

And you screaming the house down about Israel 'who gives two shit about him because I sure as heck dont' Shamir (and no doubt with yet more anti-Semites and far Right nasties to follow) doesnt convince me of anything other than you are obsessed with playing 'Six Degrees of David Icke' - which for you includes Ron Paul and The Zeitgeist Movement, which as far as my mental maps go, is entering barking mad loony tunes fruitcake parody territory.

Ultimately, all of this stuff is about you and the mental catchment area of anti-semitism.
Surprisingly, some people can make their own mind up. Personally, I find it about as respectful of my independence of thought as a doorbanging Jehovahs Witness desperate to shove The Watchtower in my mitts.
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Re: How to Overthrow the Illuminati

Postby American Dream » Tue Sep 03, 2013 3:22 pm

Another hero of the fight against "The Illuminati"-surprise!- he's a racist too:


http://leavingalexjonestown.blogspot.co ... soner.html

Wednesday, November 9, 2011

Fritz Springmeier, "political prisoner"?

On Halloween, Alex Jones conducted a Skype interview with Fritz Springmeier, who was released from prison in March. You can watch the full interview on Infowars, but here's the first part:



I have written about Fritz Springmeier many times in passing. He has appeared at least once on this blog ("Al Gore and the Suitcase of Blood"), several times on Swallowing the Camel, and quite a few times on blogs dealing with "Satanic panic".

It would be exhausting and rather pointless to detail his entire career here, but if you're unfamiliar with Springmeier, here are some details you may want to know:

Born in 1955, he used the name Victor Earl Schoof until legally changing it to Fritz Springmeier in 1987.

He says he attended West Point, but did not.

He professes to be a very religious man, and once ran a sort of Christian lay ministry (he is not an ordained minister, and does not have any theological training).

In 1997 he allegedly circulated a strange "affidavit", accusing several other Christian ministers, including Alex Jones's mentor Texe Marrs, or trying to sabotage this ministry. "Several people have told me my ex-wife is controlled by demons and given her life to Satan," he wrote of his second wife, Gail.

To his mind, every religious tradition outside of the Judeo-Christian is basically Satanism. This includes ancient Egyptian beliefs, Theosophy, and any form of occultism. Oh, and Jehovah's Witnesses. And the Catholic Church. In a 1996 Prophecy Club lecture, Springmeier said every human on Earth is tracked from birth to death by Jesuit priests.

His conspiracy writing and lectures have been a huge influence on David Icke. Much of Springmeier's misinfo has made it into Icke's books. For example, the Belgian castle called Chateau Amerois is referred to by both Springmeier and Icke as the "Mothers of Darkness" castle, in which the elite hold ghastly Satanic rituals and slaughter children.

In the early '90s, he became deeply interested in the subject of government mind control programs, and trained himself to be a deprogrammer of women who allegedly survived "Project Monarch", a supposed offshoot of MK-ULTRA*. He ended up leaving his second wife and young son for one of these women, Cisco Wheeler. Together they authored books and gave lectures on Illuminati mind control techniques. Their best-known work is the massive book The Illuminati Formula Used to Create an Undetectable Mind Controlled Slave.

Cisco Wheeler, like all alleged Monarch victims, was deliberately programmed to have multiple personalities (Dissociative Identity Disorder). One of her alter personalities was a cat.

Springmeier's take on history is, um, creative. In the Prophecy Club lecture cited above, he declared that Hitler was descended from the Rothschilds. You'll see more of his unique interpretations of history later in this post.

He really, and I mean really, hates The Wizard of Oz. He's convinced it's a Satanic parable used in the mind control programming and ritual torture of young children. He thinks the same of every film, book, and TV show that appears to reference Oz in any way (for instance, the movie K-Pax).

In his book Bloodlines of the Illuminati, Springmeier attempted to identify the 13 families that have controlled the world for centuries. His M.O. was to tick off lists of prominent people with the same last name, without bothering to ascertain if they were actually related to one another, then link them to the Illuminati by the most tenuous connections. For example, reporter Robert Collins was implicated simply because he had the surname Collins and because the Illuminati "control the press" (Springmeier provided no evidence that the Illuminati does, in fact, control the press). Likewise, he tied serial killer Ted Bundy to the Bundy/McBundy families, and explained that his sadistic sociopathic condition is quite typical of Illuminati members, even though Bundy's name came from a working class stepfather.

In the '80s, he vociferously defended "former Illuminati member" John Todd long after Todd's stories were shown to be fraudulent. The late Mr. Todd was a "Christian" con artist posing as a former Satanist. He was also a convicted rapist. Though he had a long history of complaints against him for propositioning teenage girls, and faced related criminal charges several times, Springmeier insisted that Todd's rape conviction was a frame-up by (who else?) the Illuminati. At one point, he even claimed that Todd had been abducted from prison and murdered by Illuminati agents in 1994. This was not true. Todd was released from prison in 2004, was remanded into custody as a dangerous sex offender, and died a natural death three years later. Now, Springmeier uses the same cry of frame-up in reference to his own criminal activities.

In their book Deeper Insights Into the Illuminati Formula, Springmeier and Wheeler state that the Illuminati has been creating "synthetic humans" (made partly from cows) since the 1970s.

In 2001, he and his third wife, Patricia, were arrested for having a marijuana grow op in conjunction with a white supremacist, Forrest E. Bateman, Sr. Bateman was convicted in 1989 of racially intimidating a high school student in Forest Grove, Oregon, and three years later he appeared on the state police's Ten Most Wanted list for firearm offenses and assault connected to skinhead activities. And now we get to the heart of the matter...


Image

Kooky as he was, and annoying as his continuous stream of nonsense could be, I had no reason to suspect that Springmeier was in any way a violent man. So I was shocked in 2002, when Springmeier was indicted on charges of planting a bomb in an adult video store and robbing a bank in Damascus, Oregon, years earlier.

Here's what happened: On the afternoon of October 8, 1997, a propane bomb exploded in the Fantasy Adult Video Store in Damascus. No one was injured.

Roughly ten minutes later and six miles away, a man in camo fatigues, later identified as Forrest Bateman, Sr., walked into the Damascus branch of Key Bank of Oregon and demanded cash from a teller, firing his assault rifle at the ceiling to intimidate bank employees and patrons into complying with his demands. He exited the bank with a mere $6000.

The bombing and robbery went unsolved until 2001, when police discovered the pot operation Springmeier, his wife, and some friends were running.

Springmeier and Bateman were arrested after deputies of the Clackamas County Sheriff’s Office seized fifty marijuana plants, bomb-making materials and illegal weapons**, and Army of God literature from Bateman’s home in Sandy, Oregon, in February. Anthony Huntington (Bateman's housemate), Patricia Springmeier, and a woman named Jennifer Williams were also arrested. Bateman already had outstanding warrants against him for of assault and illegal possession of an assault rifle.

The FBI was brought into the case because of the weapons and Army of God literature, which indicated possible terrorist activities.

Anthony Huntington turned out to be the weakest link in the robbery chain. Faced with serious prison time for weapons and drug charges, he confessed his own role in planning the 1997 bombing and bank robbery, and gave up the names of his co-conspirators, including Springmeier and Bateman (most reports hint there was at least one other man involved, but no other co-conspirators are named). The drug and weapons charges were dropped and replaced with charges related to the bombing and robbery.

Batemen pled guilty and was sentenced to 9 years in prison. Springmeier pled not guilty, was convicted, and received the same sentence as Bateman. Huntington, for his testimony against Bateman and Springmeier, received a reduced sentence for his role in the bombing and robbery. He was released in 2005.

It should be noted that the longest prison term was served not by Springmeier, but by Bateman. Bateman was released from prison in September, a full seven months after Springmeier.

In my opinion, these three guys got off easy: Five and nine years are ridiculously short sentences for two violent crimes that could easily have resulted in fatalities.

Image

Now here's where the "political prisoner" part comes into play. Springmeier claims total innocence in this affair. His story is that he knew Huntington only from Bible study. He knew nothing about the bombing, he knew nothing about the robbery, and the whole thing was a frame-up. He has even said he has an alibi: He was working at a print shop in Eagle Creek, a town ten miles from Damascus, exactly when the robbery occurred. But his boss refused to confirm this, he says, because Springmeier had once offended him by criticizing Billy Graham.

According to Fritz, he was framed for a variety of reasons: He helped people leave the Illuminati, he published his mind control research, he exposed an "entire community" of Illuminati members in Bend, Oregon (forcing them to sell their homes and move elsewhere).

He insists there was no evidence against him (both he and Jones betray a total lack of understanding of just what circumstantial evidence is, and how powerful it can be when used properly). He claims the three witnesses who testified against him at trial were bribed, though he presents no evidence of this. Not even circumstantial evidence.

Hard information about the case is scanty. Most of the original news articles have been taken down, and Internet searches just bring up the same small amount of info provided by Springmeier's supporters (you'll find dozens of re-posts of Henry Makow's essay "How Fritz Springmeier Was Framed", which will not tell you how Fritz Springmeier was framed; it's simply more of Makow's usual "the Illuminati did everything and that's the end of it" b.s.).

It is not known to me precisely why Springmeier was growing pot, nor why he decided to take part in a bank robbery. The authorities seem to think he and his buddies were "fundraising" for even more sinister activities, such as bombing abortion clinics or federal buildings. It's entirely possible, however, that Springmeier just wanted some cash.

In spite of his association with the racist Bateman, I have found no evidence that Springmeier is directly involved with organized racist or racial separatist groups. His wife maintains that he is not a racist.

He does have some peculiar ideas about Nazis and Jews, though. In Deeper Insights Into the Illuminati Formula, he and Wheeler contend that the Nazi concentration camps were established not because the Nazis wanted to confine and exterminate citizens they deemed non-Aryan, but simply to perform mind control experiments on children. The racial supremacy thing was just a "cover". And he espouses conspiracy theories that Jewish people essentially control the world. In Bloodlines of the Illuminati, he and Wheeler wrote, "Since the core of the conspiracy of power is Jewish, the attitude of those allied with it hinges on their attitude toward the Jewish people." They also stated that Oliver Cromwell was "financed by Jews, and helped the Jews gain power in England."

It has been widely reported that Springmeier penned literature for the Christian Patriot Organization, an allegedly white supremacist group that operated an illegal warehouse bank in Oregon. I have found no evidence of this.

Is it possible that Springmeier was framed? Sure. Not likely, but certainly possible. Given the dearth of reliable, readily available info on the case, it's difficult to discern exactly what happened here. To reach an opinion on the case, you have to rely heavily on hearsay and on Fritz's word.

I choose not to believe Springmeier because he is not credible. He already had a criminal record (for parental abduction), and was engaged in drug-related activity, before the bank robbery charges were filed. He hung around with a skinhead bank robber, which is creepy any way you look at it. He believes - or wants us to believe - that fake Illuminati cowpeople walk among us, and that Auschwitz was more a science lab than a death camp. There's just no reason to take his his word for anything. Springmeier is one odd, shady dude.

Alex Jones has a history of supporting incarcerated people who were definitely not persecuted, yet insist they were. Remember Ed and Elaine Brown, the elderly New Hampshire couple who decided that paying income tax is for fools, and were duly convicted (after an armed stand-off) of not paying their taxes? They cried foul from prison, and Alex Jones put them on the air to share their story with the world. What he did not share with the world were the couple's various allegations that Freemasons, Zionists, Illuminati members, and Jesuits had framed them. That would have seemed silly to most of his listeners, because it's fairly obvious that Freemasons and priests don't give a flying crap about a couple of goofy senior citizens in rural New England who don't feel like paying their taxes.

The same goes for Springmeier, of course. The Powers That Be aren't particularly interested in persecuting small-town Oregonians who publish underground books full of weird mind control instructions, quirky religious beliefs, and warnings about synthetic cowpeople. If they did, Alex Jones wouldn't have many guests left.

I know I'll be getting a shitstorm of emails about this, along the lines of "You don't know if Fritz is innocent or not!". Yeah, well, Jones doesn't know either. In the opening of the video, he makes it clear that he based his opinion of Springmeier's sincerity on vibes: "I didn't get any bad vibes from him, and I know that that's always the real signal." Somehow, I don't think that would stand up in court.

Also, Jones has been selling Bloodlines of the Illuminati, and it would certainly not be to his benefit to admit that he's been hawking the wares of a convicted bomber and bank robber, would it?




* H.P. Albarelli, Jr., spent nearly two decades researching the CIA and its mind control programs. He uncovered startling new evidence, but he found no evidence of Monarch, nor any comparable program. However, he did locate a man who admitted "the Monarch Project" was something he invented.

** According to one report: a machine gun, a grenade launcher, an assault rifle, a sawed-off shotgun, 3000 rounds of ammunition, ammonium nitrate, homemade C4 explosives, six homemade grenades, dynamite blasting caps, primers, fuses, black powder, and 200 timing devices, as well as a bizarre "suit of armor" made out of ceramic bearing an Army of God patch
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Re: How to Overthrow the Illuminati

Postby Searcher08 » Tue Sep 03, 2013 3:24 pm

American Dream » Tue Sep 03, 2013 6:02 pm wrote:
solace » Tue Sep 03, 2013 12:47 pm wrote:A more pertinent question might be whether one thinks it is useful to ever use the likes of Shamir as a good source to support one's views. I say Hell, no.


I would never cite him as a reputable source and his diatribes against "them"- the "Masters of Discourse" the "Illuminati" etc., I consider to be racist swill. Just as I consider the garbage that is spewed here about "Rothschild Zionism" and the like as racist swill also. I know that slim (and maybe Searcher) will say something to the effect of, "I've got nothing against the Jews- it's those few who are manipulating them- that I object to" but racist swill is racist swill.

None of the defenders of Icke, Shamir, Atzmon are as dumb as they sometimes present themselves to be, nor as disinterested or "neutral".


You seem to be a real defender of the Rothschilds, AD
They are Zionists, btw Empirically, using the observation skills of my eyeballs, the Israeli Supreme Court building is full of Masonic symbolism. Pyramid with all-seeing eyes and all that.
Have you ever been to their website? Have you ever visited their archive?
Cos all I ever here from you about them is cryptic metaphors about me 'needing to pay more attention to the forest rather than the trees'.
For someone who wanted empirical data, to me anyway, you appear to get bored with it when it points away from your position.

As for your comment:
I know that slim (and maybe Searcher) will say something to the effect of, "I've got nothing against the Jews- it's those few who are manipulating them- that I object to" but racist swill is racist swill.


Your continued 'mind-reading' of what I happen to think or feel is extraordinary to me.
It is also as patronising and retarded as fuck; a statement I seem to be making a lot.
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Re: How to Overthrow the Illuminati

Postby American Dream » Tue Sep 03, 2013 3:38 pm

Worth a revisit:

Conspiracy Theories During Black Power, and After It

Image
NEWARK RIOTS, JULY 1967

At the height of the rebellions of the 1960s, millions of black people were rebelling against U.S. capitalism. The revolts were huge: in the summers between 1965 and 1968, every major city in the country experienced a rebellion. People looted goods and distributed them for free. They raided National Guard armories and battled the police in the streets. As the struggle developed, millions of people began to question why black people experienced oppression and exploitation, and who the enemies were.

Black communists like the Panthers identified the enemy as white supremacist capitalism, and aimed to unite workers of all races against this system. Others like Ron Karenga (the inventor of Kwanzaa) fell back on wrong explanations similar to Illuminati theory. They saw black people as a united group, regardless of whether they were rich or poor, and they thought all black people were in a war against all white people. The Nation of Islam invented a myth of black superiority. It taught its followers that whites were created thousands of years ago by a black scientist named Yakub, in a lab accident. Now, with the help of the NOI, blacks were out to regain their rightful place as the superior race on earth. This story had no basis in science or history, but it provided one explanation for black oppression, and who the enemy was.

Another part of the black power movement turned to anti-Semitism. Many black people saw small business owners exploiting black customers, and banks refusing to loan to blacks, and some of these people were Jews. In “Black Art,” the most famous poem of the Black Arts movement, Amiri Baraka wrote that blacks needed “dagger poems in the slimy bellies / of the owner-jews.” Louis Farrakhan of the Nation of Islam also embraced anti-Semitic rhetoric at this time.

These black artists and activists mistook the immediate appearance of their oppression for the whole thing. Yes, black people were exploited by petit-bourgeois business owners and bankers. Yes, many of these folks, (but not all of them) were Jewish. But they exploited black people because they were business owners, not because of their religion. Behind these individuals lay a bigger global capitalist system, which exploited black people too. But black militants couldn’t put their finger on this, so instead they blamed the bankers and small shop owners who were in front of their faces. Like in the 1800s, anti-Semitism in the 1960s served as a populist myth, which hid class differences within the black community. Poor and working class blacks could have united, and collaborated with other poor people, to oppose the ruling class. They could have fought the black business owners who who later became police chiefs and mayors. Instead, they united with black business owners and politicians, against a made-up “Jew” enemy.

Image
BLACK MAYOR WILSON GOODE OVERSAW THE POLICE BOMBING
OF THE BLACK RADICAL MOVE ORGANIZATION IN 1985


By the mid-1970s, the black liberation movement had been mostly defeated. The rebellions had been put down with armed force, and the revolutionaries were dead or imprisoned. U.S. capitalism adopted reforms to take the steam out of the movement. Black mayors were elected in cities across the U.S. New careers opened up for black professionals. There had always been black business owners and middle class people. But legal segregation and white mob violence kept them living with, and servicing, the black working class. Now many of the legal and social barriers holding down the black bourgeoisie and middle class were removed. They quickly rose socially and economically, and left the black poor behind.

Like all capitalists, black capitalists sought profits over people, black or otherwise. Like all politicians, black politicians looked after their own interests, and their constituencies came second. The black mayors elected in the 1970s soon directed the crackdowns on the black movement itself. In Philadelphia, black mayor Wilson Goode oversaw the bombing of the MOVE organization, a black radical group, in 1985. The actions of the black capitalists and politicians confused the black movement, because they thought they had been fighting alongside the black business owners, capitalists, and politicians.

Black revolutionaries like Fred Hampton, who might have opposed these developments, were imprisoned or killed off. As a result, younger generations weren’t exposed to the idea of class war between black workers and the black and white ruling class. Other black revolutionaries helped black politicians run for office, or became academics, and stopped talking about revolution. Internationally, the national liberation movements in Africa, Asia and Latin America came to an end. The theories of revolution coming from these struggles lost popularity. All this left a political void in poor and working class black communities. Black people had made it into positions of political and economic power, but racist oppression and exploitation continued for poor and working class black people. How could one explain this reality?

Illuminati theory flowed in to fill this gap. It was similar to other conspiracy theories that had been used before. It said the black elite had made it because they were part of a secret group of rulers, or had cut a deal with the devil. It said poor and working class black people were still oppressed, because these rulers were super-powerful. And the trend deepened in the 1990s.

Illuminati Theory in the “New World Order”

Illuminati theory resurged all over the U.S. in the early 1990s. Before Russia collapsed and the Cold War ended, most people felt big events could be explained by the conflict between U.S. capitalism and Russian state socialism. Every national liberation struggle in the Third World had to pick between these two sides. But everything changed with the end of the Cold War and the growth of globalization. In 1990, George Bush Sr. called the fall of Russia and victory of the U.S. a “new world order”. This phrase was adopted by a variety of conspiracy theorists, as an umbrella term to link conspiracy theories together.

Conspiracy theorists began to publish “superconspiracy” theories, which tied every existing conspiracy and urban legend to the Illuminati storyline. Some of these conspiracies involved UFOs, Satanists, or secret government plots to colonize space. The most famous “superconspiracy” book is Behold a Pale Horse, written by William Cooper in 1991. Behold a Pale Horse brings together a huge range of different conspiracy theories in one big web, including the Illuminati, Jewish bankers, the Protocols of the Elders of Zion, UFOs, and more.

Many of these theories were used by poor and working class whites. Whites were confused and angry about the impoverishment they experienced with factory closings and globalization, and the growing status of non-whites in U.S. society. They said the government was coming with silent black helicopters to take away their guns. They said the government was planning to unleash murderous black gangs on the population. They said white gun-owning citizens who were loyal to the U.S. Constitution would have to defend themselves. These theories became very popular in groups like the Michigan Militia that appeared in the 1990s.

Some whites were clearly racist, and opposed to the changes of the 1960s. But others were experiencing increased oppression and exploitation as poor and working class people, and were angry about it. Just as black people in the 1960s blamed Jews for their oppression, poor white people in the 1990s blamed people of color–and the Illuminati–for their situation. In both cases, the analysis of these groups was incorrect, and it led them to fight the wrong enemy, instead of building solidarity with other poor and oppressed people. Despite their conservative flavor, these new Illuminati theories became popular in the hood. They spread through self-published books, and with the growth of the internet, through websites and videos.

From the 1980s through the 2000s, Illuminati theory broke out of its traditional audience. Instead of appealing to elites threatened by mass movements, Illuminati theory now appealed to the black poor and working class, and others in the hood. People in the hood started to talk about the Illuminati, the Bilderbergs, the antichrist, and more.

Image
IN 2010, FEDERAL AGENTS IN MICHIGAN RAIDED THE HUTAREE MILITIA,
AN ARMED GROUP THAT WAS PREPARING FOR A MILITARY BATTLE
AGAINST THE ANTICHRIST.



Image
AFTER THE MURDER OF TRAYVON MARTIN IN 2012,
RAPPER KILLER MIKE CALLED ON BLACKS TO ARM THEMSELVES,
IN CASE OF AN ENVIRONMENTAL CRISIS
OR THE END OF THE MAYAN CALENDAR.

It may seem strange that the same theory would appeal to both white ultra-conservatives and poor black people. But really, this “strange bedfellows” situation has a long history. At multiple points in history, white supremacist and black nationalist movements have linked up. In the 1920s, Marcus Garvey met with members of the Ku Klux Klan, to discuss to how to separate whites and blacks through Garvey’s “back to Africa” scheme. In the 1960s, the Nation of Islam held similar talks with the Klan. In South Africa in the 1980s, during the collapse of apartheid, Zulu nationalists met with the white supremacist AWB group, to discuss how to split the country into separate white and black nations.

The overlap between these movements is based on their shared populist logic. Both white supremacists and black nationalists believe whites are fundamentally different from blacks. Both believe they need to separate from each other, given certain conditions. (White supremacists think, if they can’t dominate blacks, they might as well ship them back to Africa. Black nationalists think, if white people won’t accept them, they might as well form their own separate nation.)

Illuminati theory is just one more example of this strange overlap. In Illuminati theories, poor people in the hood see banks and the political elite as their enemy, and they tend to embrace “black businesses” as a way to uplift the community, just like the black power movement of the 1960s. White conservatives use Illuminati theory to target the same enemies (as well as people of color), and embrace the U.S. constitution as a way to unite with white political and economic elites. You can see this trend in conspiracy shows like Alex Jones’ Infowars.

Illuminati theory presents the same danger as white supremacist and black nationalist theories. It will tend to support populist movements that unite poor white people and poor black people with their respective ruling elites, instead of building a movement for the destruction of white supremacy and the liberation of all poor and working people. Illuminati theory also presents a second danger: it simply fails to provide an accurate explanation of oppression and resistance.



http://overthrowingilluminati.wordpress ... illuminati
"If you don't stand for something, you will fall for anything."
-Malcolm X
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Re: How to Overthrow the Illuminati

Postby American Dream » Wed Sep 04, 2013 12:41 pm

http://rosecityantifa.weebly.com/1/post ... lvert.html

Portland 9/11 Truth Alliance Hosts Right-Wing Bomber Courtesy of Citybikes President, Tim Calvert
09/09/2012

This Sunday, September 9, the Portland 9/11 Truth Alliance plans to host a potluck and gathering at Sellwood Park in Oregon. In its event announcement, the 9/11 Truth Alliance mentions that this gathering will feature “an extra interesting participant.” The participant in question, Fritz Springmeier, is an individual deeply connected to antisemitic, white nationalist, and militant anti-choice organizing. Springmeier is an extreme-Right activist who served a nine-year prison sentence for a bank robbery with a neo-Nazi accomplice, Forrest Bateman. Springmeier and Bateman also bombed an adult video store. This year’s 9/11 Truth Alliance gathering at Sellwood Park is the second time that the Alliance has hosted Fritz Springmeier, having also featured Springmeier as a key speaker at a September 2011 “Continuing Education for Dissident Citizens” event held at Sellwood Community Center, the same year that Springmeier was released from prison.

The Springmeier events fit with the overall politics of the Portland 9/11 Truth Alliance. The Alliance has previously organized support for other racist extreme-Right organizers, as our organization for example pointed out in 2009 when the 9/11 Truth Alliance hosted self-described "white separatist" Valdas Anelauskas in Portland, and when a few months later the Alliance sent a contingent to support the Portland tour stop of notorious Holocaust-denier and Naziphile, David Irving. A central organizer for the Valdas Anelauskas event in 2009, Tim Calvert, has recently stepped up his activism with the 9/11 Truth Alliance once again. Calvert’s activism involves both organizing of events for far-Right speakers, and also his own spreading of antisemitic propaganda. Rose City Antifa believe that a key factor enabling Calvert’s activism is the support he receives from his workplace at Citybikes Workers’ Cooperative, as well as the apathy and tacit acceptance of large segments of the regional co-op movement towards Calvert’s Judeophobic organizing.

Rose City Antifa aim in this report to provide some context about Fritz Springmeier and Springmeier’s associations, as well as to discuss the politics of the 9/11 Truth Alliance and Tim Calvert’s return to public far-Right activism. We hope that the information we provide here is used to finally take the president of Citybikes Workers’ Cooperative to account, after more than three years of negligence and denial within Citybikes and the broader West Coast co-op movement about Calvert’s anti-Jewish agitation.

Image
Springmeier speaks before the Portland 9/11 Truth Alliance,
9/10/2011



Fritz Springmeier

Fritz Springmeier is an Oregon-based conspiracy theorist and author of such books as Bloodlines of the Illuminati. Springmeier’s works attempt to draw attention to what he perceives as massive conspiracies for global domination by hidden cabals and their “Illuminati” bloodlines. Springmeier’s research focuses in particular on family names such as the Rothschilds, commonly used as stand-ins for “the Jews” within antisemitic conspiracy discourse. However, Springmeier is far from shy about his beliefs concerning Jewish power, arguing for example that “the core of the conspiracy of power is Jewish” in Bloodlines.

With politics such as these, Fritiz Springmeier once fit right in within the Christian Patriot Association (CPA), a racist group once headquartered in Boring, Oregon. The CPA itself fell apart with the conviction of six of its members on fraud charges in 2002, these charges stemming from a warehouse bank operated by the CPA. In earlier times, however, the CPA was a major force on the Oregon far-Right for over a decade. Prominent members of the CPA such as Jeff Weakley of God’s Remnant Church also promoted “Christian Identity” theology, arguing that white Europeans and Euro-Americans are the true chosen people of scripture, with modern Jewish people being imposters. Springmeier himself is favorable towards some varieties of Christian Identity thought, arguing that many Identity adherents operate under a “Christian perspective and place themselves under the authority of God.”

Within the Christian Patriots Association, Springmeier also met Forrest Bateman. Bateman was at one point a bonehead (racist pseudo-“skinhead”) who in 1989 was convicted of racially intimidating a high school student in Forest Grove. In 1997, Springmeier and Bateman both took part in a bank robbery, which they were later arrested and convicted for. The October 1997 bank robbery involved a diversionary pipe bombing of an adult video store to draw away police attention prior to the hold-up of a Key Bank branch. The Damascus, Oregon robbery netted just $6000. The choice of an adult video store as a diversionary bombing target is reminiscent of the earlier targeting of adult businesses in the Pacific Northwest by The Order/Silent Brotherhood neo-Nazi terrorist group during the 1980s.

Springmeier and Bateman were not linked by investigators to the Damascus bank robbery until several years after the incident. In February 2001, a property near Sandy, Oregon was raided, with 50 marijuana plants, grow equipment, plus a significant haul of weapons seized. Forrest Bateman and two other people were arrested following the raid. Also seized during this raid was a binder marked “Army of God, Yahweh’s Warriors.” The Army of God is an anti-choice terrorist group responsible for arsons, bombings and assassinations targeting abortion providers. Fritz Springmeier himself was arrested following a later raid on his Corbett residence on March 1, 2001, and both Springmeier and Bateman were indicted the following year as information surrounding the 1997 armed bank robbery came to light in the aftermath of the raids. With the end of the Bateman and Springmeier trials, additional information about the contents of the “Army of God” binder found in 2001 also surfaced--according to one report, the binder contained a list that could have been targets for terrorist actions.

Springmeier supporters complain that their hero was simply a target of sinister forces who wished to shut him up about Illuminati mind control. The Portland 9/11 Truth Alliance gave Springmeier his first public speaking event following release from federal prison; a video of Springmeier’s rambling speech recorded by event attendee Joe Anybody is available online.

Tim Calvert


Image
Tim Calvert represents the 9/11 Truth Alliance at a January 2011 protest in Portland
(image captured from Youtube clip.)


While another member of the 9/11 Truth Alliance with his own long history of anti-Jewish activism--Tim Titrud--used his email to announce the 2011 “Continuing Education for Dissident Citizens” event at which Fritz Springmeier gave his presentation, Citybikes president Tim Calvert was also deeply involved. Calvert himself gave a presentation early at the Sellwood Community Center event, and a phone number used by Calvert was displayed on the Portland 9/11 Truth Alliance website in promoting the 2011 Sellwood event. Rose City Antifa has also confirmed with Portland Parks & Recreation that the renter of space at Sellwood Community Center for the 9/11 Truth Alliance events in September 2011, as well as the person reserving space in Sellwood Park for the 9/11 Truth Alliance event on September 9 this year, is Tim Calvert.

Calvert has been highly public about his involvement with the Portland 9/11 Truth Alliance over the last couple of years. Earlier, in 2009, Calvert had attempted to put some distance between himself and the 9/11 Truth Alliance, after Calvert was criticized for his central role in organizing a speaking event for racist Valdas Anelauskas in Portland. Calvert issued a pseudo-apology after that event was criticized by anti-fascists. In his response to what he called a “smear campaign,” Calvert made a point of acknowledging “the Holocaust” only as one of many “horrors of WWII”--a line which is itself congruent with Holocaust-denial--and also suggested that Valdas Anelauskas had “good points.” Around this time, Calvert also withdrew from the Laughing Horse Books collective, where he had initially attempted to host Anelauskas and where he had also earlier supported attempts by the 9/11 Truth Alliance to host homophobic and anti-choice extremist Mary Starrett at the venue. Citybikes itself responded to news about Calvert’s antisemitic activism by first issuing a statement applauding Calvert and criticizing antifascists. The Citybikes co-op subsequently issued a revised statement retracting their initial attack, stating that it had not been approved by every member of the co-op, and stating that they recognized the need for communication. That same month, the Portland 9/11 Truth Alliance sent a group to support a Portland appearance by Holocaust-denier David Irving. Calvert, in the spotlight because of his politics, did not attend the Irving event.

Calvert soon publicly joined back up with the same Portland 9/11 Truth Alliance, however. Within a few months Calvert had talked with Willamette Week reporter James Pitkin for a smear piece on Rose City Antifa, Calvert characterizing himself and others in the Portland 9/11 Truth Alliance as victims of a shadowy campaign rather than as individuals taken to account for hosting a hardcore antisemite. The following year, a joint Pacifica Forum-Portland 9/11 Truth Alliance flyer distributed against the 2010 Anti-Racist Action conference in Portland identified Tim Calvert as “one of us” and alleged that Rose City Antifa was complicit with “Zionists.” Calvert identified himself yet again as a Portland 9/11 Truth Alliance member in January 2011, when a video posted on Youtube provided his organizational affiliation.

Apart from the Springmeier appearances, some other Portland 9/11 Truth Alliance guests whose appearances Calvert has promoted in recent years are Jim Fetzer, Leuren Moret, and Susan Lindauer. Jim Fetzer is a conspiracy theorist who publicly denies that he is an antisemite while recycling antisemitic myths such as those of “dancing Israelis” on 9/11/01, as well as promoting writings by antisemitic propagandists such as Benjamin Freedman. Leuren Moret is an anti-nuclear activist who believes that the 2011 major Japan earthquake and subsequent nuclear crises were actually caused by “tectonic nuclear warfare” on behalf of a “banker”/“British” conspiracy. (London bankers is yet another antisemitic shorthand, similar the use of “Zionists” when describing a global conspiracy.) In an online video Moret fulminates about conspiracies by the “Rothschilds,” whereas in yet another she describes depleted uranium as “Zionist extermination.” Susan Lindauer is best known for being accused of conspiracy on behalf of the Iraqi government under Saddam Hussein. While perhaps not as rabid an antisemite as Fetzer or Moret, Lindauer argues that there was “Mossad complicity” in the 9/11/01 attacks, and she has also been featured on a number of antisemitic and white nationalist websites.

In his presentation of September 10, 2011--at the 9/11 Truth Alliance event Calvert booked and where Springmeier would later talk--Tim Calvert made his own politics clear once again. Calvert’s presentation, allegedly on the topic of “Critical Thinking,” is also available online, having been recorded and then circulated by videographer Joe Anybody. Calvert discusses the US media as being controlled by special interests, the example provided by Calvert being an NPR journalist who Calvert believes ought to have disclosed that she was married to an Israeli citizen and that she lives in Israel--this is a rather obvious attempt to invoke the “dual loyalties” antisemitic myth, and to suggest that the special interest in question behind the US media is a “Zionist”/Jewish one. Calvert then proceeds to cite as his support Alison Weir, the president of the Council for the National Interest infamous for pushing the modern blood libel that there is an Israeli conspiracy to harvest the organs of Palestinian children.

Calvert’s presentation rambles about the Tavistock Institute, a UK institution who Calvert believes has its roots in a broader Jewish attempt (ostensibly because it is linked to a nephew of Freud) to manipulate British public opinion against Germany enough to pave the way for World War and for the WWII air bombings against German civilian targets. In Calvert’s topsy-turvy world, WWII therefore becomes a narrative about Jews attacking Germans, not the other way around. With such remarks about Tavistock etcetera behind him, Calvert then makes the following characterization: “Rose City Antifa, otherwise known as the anonymous Zionist hit squad trained by Tavistock and resembling most closely Israeli settlers in the West Bank of Jerusalem. We all become Palestinians in Gaza when the Zionists declare you the enemy.” It is clear from such commentary that Calvert is not interested in any actual criticism of Israeli state policies, but rather that he believes in a massive Jewish conspiracy with worldwide reach which caused everything from Britain’s entering into World War II to antifascists now criticizing Calvert. This is extreme antisemitism, thoroughly consistent with Calvert’s political direction for over half a decade.

Immediately following Calvert’s 2011 presentation at the Sellwood Community Center space he booked, another panel featured 9/11 Truth activists discussing what they considered as “false flag” operations. Tim Titrud spoke out about “false flag” reports of anti-gay violence, singling out Matthew Shepard, who was tortured and murdered by two homophobic men in 1998. In Titrud’s repulsive logic, he paints right-wing Christians as the true victims of a queer conspiracy to rob them of their right to be bigots. Richard Frager contributed some conspiracy theories about the JFK assassination. Ramping things up, Cathie Bell then talked about “Zionist” control of Congress, and about how the 2011 mass murder by Anders Behring Breivik in Norway was actually a “false flag”/mind control operation orchestrated by Israel to punish Norway for siding with the Palestinians. The footage of Calvert’s political associates is available online as well.

Calvert, Citybikes and the Co-op Movement

In 2009, Rose City Antifascists warned of antisemitic agitation by Tim Calvert and the Portland 9/11 Truth Alliance. We asked Citybikes, allegedly a business that is part of the progressive community, to hold Tim Calvert accountable for his hateful activism by firing the promoter of Holocaust deniers and “racialists”. Citybikes stood by Calvert. While Citybikes retracted their initial clear statement of hostility to antifascists, the cooperative then replaced this with an alleged commitment to dialogue which of course led to them putting the issue aside and doing nothing. Tim Calvert subsequently felt confident to host yet another batch of far-Right speakers over the following three years, including Springmeier whose proximity to white supremacists and the Army of God has been documented. Citybikes Workers’ Cooperative continued to put food on Calvert’s plate. Calvert continued and escalated his antisemitic activism while remaining firmly ensconced in the presumed progressive co-op community.

Tim Calvert has stated why he believes that the cooperative movement is important from the position of his politics. In his online book review of William Sutton’s Wall Street and the Bolshevik Revolution--a book alleging that financial cabals were behind the Bolshevik Revolution--Calvert writes that “my take on ‘leftest’ [sic] ‘progressive’ social movements would have been greatly altered” had he been exposed to this conspiracy book earlier: “Now it is clear that resistance to the New World Order must begin by breaking from as many connections you have with it as possible and that includes work, consumption and leisure. Controlling Local Markets is the only sure way of breaking from the globalists.” Calvert here argues that movements such as the co-op movement are important as a way of resisting a vast global conspiracy, the same conspiracy that Calvert elsewhere describes as “Zionist.” The Co-ops are important to Calvert because he now sees them as a tool of independence from Jewish control.

In general, the co-op movement on the West Coast has stood with Calvert. Many attempts were made by genuine anti-racists within the Western Worker Cooperative Conference (WWCC) to discuss Calvert’s activities and to educate about antisemitism. Some members of the WWCC were sympathetic, but Calvert was never formally asked to leave the WWCC Board. The WWCC Board formally refused to discuss any reprimand for Calvert. Calvert nonetheless resigned from the Board of his own free will in early 2011, having never been censured. The clear majority position within WWCC leadership was that Calvert’s star power within that community trumped his questionable political trajectory. In fact, Calvert’s clout in these circles enables him to more effectively recruit and gives his proto-fascist leanings both cover and credibility. The WWCC website continues to pay tribute to Calvert as a conference founder, stating nothing about Calvert’s extreme politics.

The WWCC stance demonstrates how co-op politics are not necessarily the same thing as anti-oppression politics. Even when anti-oppression politics are given lip service within the West Coast co-op movement, antisemitism generally is overlooked, considered as unimportant, or viewed as just a smear label unjustly applied across the board to critics of the Israeli state. Rose City Antifa has seen antisemitism be a common focus for various strains of far-right organizers to rally around, as in the Pacifica Forum where pseudo-intellectuals, conspiracy theorists, anti-choicers, and neo-Nazis would network around their shared hatred of Jews. We also view antisemitism such as Calvert’s, which comes cloaked in Leftist trappings (anti-globalist language, anti-capitalist rhetoric, etc), as an entry point for some to an increasingly racist, sexist, and homophobic world view. Coded antisemitic talk about the “bankers” can be a palatable prelude to later indoctrination in the extreme Right. Our organization’s experience has been that despite the good intentions of scattered individuals within it, opponents of antisemitism should expect no solidarity from the WWCC or the West Coast co-op movement in general.

Rose City Antifa sees it as politically important to work with those committed to turning the tide within the regional co-op movement over the long term. In the meantime we strongly condemn the support Citybikes and the co-op movement have extended to Tim Calvert, support that has translated to more Jew-haters and extreme-Right organizers being welcomed in Portland.
"If you don't stand for something, you will fall for anything."
-Malcolm X
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Re: How to Overthrow the Illuminati

Postby seemslikeadream » Wed Sep 04, 2013 12:51 pm

Ok ...here's the deal...and since AD has decided to once again shove this thread in my face ..I decided to post this now instead of waiting any longer

I am NOT anti-semitic...PERIOD

There are NO anti-semites posting at RI that I am aware of.....PERIOD

I RESENT TO THE MAX the vicious... cunning.... deceitful way one person (and crew following in his footsteps) here has continued to label me and a couple of my very good long time Rigorous Intuition friends as raving anti-semites because of some of the things they occasionally read and post here. This board is known for Jeff's extreme adherence to no censorship rule which I admire to no end. The rules are clear (we do not need them repeated in every thread) and I for one have never seen anyone post the hatred that is forbidden....if there was I'm sure it was nipped in the bud by our fantastic mods. No one or two members of RI should be in charge of deciding what else should be posted here no matter how much they do not like it....if what they post is against the rules the mods would and should take care of it...no one should be scaring people off of here with their judgement of what should be read or posted at RI. NO one should be allowed to bullie people away because they post stuff they personally don't like....LEAVE THAT UP TO JEFF AND THE MODS

I have been posting on the internet for over 10 years now...40,000 posts at Democratic Underground...713 posts at Democratic Warrior....10,000 posts at Progressive Independent (later discovered to be a phony web site set up for who knows what really)...10,000 posts here at RI SINCE IT'S INCEPTION. That's 60,000 posts in 10 years..I have NEVER once posted anything that would be considered anti-semitic (in 60,000 posts I may have made an honest mistake or forgotten a post or two....I am not perfect and I am not the smartest person in the world so I may have inadvertently made an error and I regret that) I have NEVER posted under another name EVER.....I have never changed my name EVER.

I RESENT TO THE MAX that some one would come here and search all 60,000 of my posts on the internet to catch me in a lie... come up with 3 cases (questionable author that is all) and then say BUSTED!....Someone that has a post count of less than 100 RI posts.....has no record of THEIR OWN POSTS ON ANYTHING STANDING IN JUDGEMENT OF ME...Of course my life on the net is an open book and one is free to research it and publish the results but to then accuse me of being a raving anti-semite because of three posts is unbelievable.... juvenile.... absurd... insane... cruel.... hurtful... deceitful and down right mean spirited. Why was this done? Why go to so much trouble to try and destroy my standing here at RI? What is their agenda? If I may be so bold as to ask that question.

I am here for 2 reasons.....I come here every day to read what others post here for there are the most brilliant folks anywhere posting at RI and then I am compelled to post most everything I read on the internet that is of interest to me...I figure some one else here would like to see and sometimes I would like to know their opinion on some article ....NO OTHER AGENDA NO OTHER REASON.

In coming here every day for almost 10 years I began to.. ..about 6 years ago.... resent seeing a new thread started every other month (basicly on the same subject) on the front page like a beacon shinning in the night.... WARNING TO EVERY ONE NO ANTI-SEMITES ALLOWED... I find this ridiculous...absurd....bizarre... annoying and unnecessary ....if Jeff or the mods think it paramount then it should be pinned to the top...but since in 10 years they have not seen fit to do that...why in the world do we have to be bombarded with this shit? Why is it necessary? There aren't any anti-semites here and I have not seen any reason that anyone like that would start posting here and if they did they would soon be banned. No one here constantly posts the stuff that is routinely warned about in these OP's....why are these warnings needed ....why does the RI community have to constantly be subjected to the barrage of ominous...cautioning...monitorial OP's?


So there is the reasoning why I went off with all the caps...red letters... foul language.....I just had enough..I was pissed and was willing for THE FIRST TIME IN TENS YEARS to do something that would get me banned ....I never in ten years have been so mad as hell ..though it's been building for awhile I always had in the past controlled it.....So it was worth it for me to risk being taken out for a time to ruin my track record of 10 years to say exactly how much this angered me and to do it in a street fighting way.

In my mind I can think of 5 people here that do not like me..maybe there is more but they have not made that known to me...maybe there are more folks here that do not like what I post about but I bring a varied amount of stuff ..certainly not one note OP's..I have no agenda but a crazy obsession with reading...listening to anything and everything I can get my hands on and I share that ...sorry to those who think I post way too much...using RI as my personal blog :) ...if it's against the law or it pisses you off here let someone know.

Now I have said my peace and I am done with all of this....if one wants to continue this stupid saga...agenda...be my guest but I will no longer read or take part in the nonsense....no matter how baited I will certainly ....no doubt be.


Yours truly...very inquisitive... reading everything I can get my hands on...probably post most of it...what you see is what you get.... and as always
SLaD
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
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Re: How to Overthrow the Illuminati

Postby American Dream » Wed Sep 04, 2013 1:04 pm

This stuff is really deep and problems exist on so many fronts:


The Emergence of Conspirituality

by Charlotte Ward and David Voas

http://www.informaworld.com/smpp/content~db=all

Abstract
The female-dominated New Age (with its positive focus on self) and the
male-dominated realm of conspiracy theory (with its negative focus on global
politics) may seem antithetical. There is a synthesis of the two, however, that
we call 'conspirituality'. We define, describe, and analyse this hybrid system
of belief; it has been noticed before without receiving much scholarly
attention. Conspirituality is a rapidly growing web movement expressing an
ideology fuelled by political disillusionment and the popularity of alternative
worldviews. It has international celebrities, bestsellers, radio and TV
stations. It offers a broad politico-spiritual philosophy based on two core
convictions, the first traditional to conspiracy theory, the second rooted in
the New Age: 1) a secret group covertly controls, or is trying to control, the
political and social order, and 2) humanity is undergoing a 'paradigm shift' in
consciousness. Proponents believe that the best strategy for dealing with the
threat of a totalitarian 'new world order' is to act in accordance with an
awakened 'new paradigm' worldview.


Introduction
The growth of industry, cities, and administrative structures has led to the
separation and specialisation of social institutions. Individuals themselves
occupy distinct roles (in the family, workplace, and community) that may no
longer overlap. This social and personal fragmentation has caused conventional
religion to become disconnected from everyday life. Alternative ideologies are
available, however, offering holistic worldviews that contest the political
pragmatism, economic rationalism, scientific empiricism, and social dislocation
characteristic of the modern age. Examples include the Romantic movement that
began in the late eighteenth century and the counter-culture of the 1960s.

In this article we focus on two forms of holistic thought that are increasingly
prevalent in the contemporary period. One is what has variously been labelled
the New Age, alternative spirituality or the holistic milieu (Heelas and
Woodhead). These groups embrace the idea of a person as an integrated whole,
with mind, body, and spirit subject to a common set of principles. The second
ideology is conspiracy theory. Here one finds a denial of contingency, the
discovery of patterns in events that might otherwise seem to be random, and the
attribution of agency to hidden forces (Aaronovitch).

A hybrid of conspiracy theory and alternative spirituality has appeared on the
internet. The existence of such a synthesis has previously been noted in
passing (Barkun; Goodrick-Clarke), but no detailed account has yet been given
of what, for the sake of convenience, we call 'conspirituality'.1

Barkun identifies three principles found in nearly every conspiracy theory: a)
nothing happens by accident, b) nothing is as it seems, c) everything is
connected. Similar principles are fundamental to much New Age thought and
alternative spirituality. These worldviews make public and personal life
respectively seem less subject to random forces and therein lies part of their
appeal.

Notwithstanding these shared principles, there is a wide gulf between the
ordinary understandings of conspiracy theory and the holistic milieu. The
former is male-dominated, often conservative, generally pessimistic, and
typically concerned with current affairs. The latter is predominantly female,
liberal, self-consciously optimistic, and largely focused on the self and
personal relationships. It is therefore far from obvious how a confluence of
these two streams could be produced.

We argue that conspirituality is a politico-spiritual philosophy based on two
core convictions, the first traditional to conspiracy theory, the second rooted
in the New Age:

1. A secret group covertly controls, or is trying to control, the political and
social order
(Fenster).

2. Humanity is undergoing a 'paradigm shift' in consciousness, or awareness,
so solutions to (1) lie in acting in accordance with an awakened 'new
paradigm' worldview.


Conspirituality is a web movement with diffuse leadership and constantly
shifting areas of interest. In the nature of the case it is difficult to
estimate its influence, but it seems clear that many millions of people have
been exposed to this material, a substantial number of whom apparently
subscribe to its tenets.

In what follows we describe conspirituality and its formation, starting by
examining the parent sectors and then considering their merger. We focus on the
US and the UK. While our aim is primarily descriptive—to point to the existence
of an important branch of contemporary spirituality that is little
recognized—we also offer some hypotheses concerning its origins, current
appeal, and future prospects.

Methods
Because conspirituality appears to be an internet-based movement with a
relatively modest presence in 'real life', web ethnography is the method of
choice. The first author gathered information over three years of participant
observation, both online and at lectures and conferences. Web sites were
continuously tracked and developments noted. Hyperlinks connecting web sites
permit a type of snowball sampling, supplemented by web searches to identify
sites that are not well connected with others dealing with related topics. As
many web links and leads as possible were followed up. We believe that we
gained a comprehensive overview of the area as it relates to the US and UK.

Given the considerable range of providers (of ideas, advice, and leadership)
available, there is naturally a concern that the examples mentioned below may
not be representative of the movement as a whole. We have endeavoured to use
one or more of the following criteria in choosing which to cite: a)
demonstrable commitment to the movement's core convictions; b) high levels of
popularity, which could be confirmed by independent means; c) extent of
cross-referencing by other recognized providers; d) suitability to illustrate
particular points.

The exclusive focus on British and American English language sites and hence on
issues of Anglo-American concern is a potential source of bias. Conspirituality
is a global movement; we are aware of sites in other languages and providers
from other cultures but were unable to assess their content and scope.
References to web sites are provided to document the phenomena described.

Background information from other sources can also be helpful and Wikipedia
entries are included in the secondary material. In so doing we are simply
offering the view from the ground. What matters in this context is not what
experts regard as the best or most accurate profile of a particular personality
(for example), but what ordinary web users find when they search for
information.

New Age Spirituality
How one defines the New Age is not important for present purposes, but we will
adopt Melton's characterisation (as summarised here by Barkun):

[The New Age] includes the following elements: mystical individual
transformation; an awareness of new, non-material realities; “the imposition of
(a) personal vision onto society”; and belief in universally invisible but
pervasive forms of energy. (Melton qtd in Barkun 32) Hanegraaff has mapped the
boundaries of the New Age and the Kendal Project quantified it (Heelas and
Woodhead), but the web continues to expand it. Recent additions extending the
idea that humanity is shifting consciousness are 'lightworkers', 'starseeds',
and 'indigo children'.2 (These terms describe different types of
predestination, special talents or psychic abilities.)


The New Age remains largely feminine (Houtman and Aupers; Heelas and Woodhead).
Although some aspects of New Age thought and practice—for example, those
related to ET channellings or political change—have some kinship with
conspiracy theory, the New Age seems largely incompatible with that realm. As
an illustration it is worth considering Diana Cooper, successful within the
sectors of channelling, healing and “personal growth” (Hanegraaff 42). Cooper,3
“visited by angels” since the 1980s, has written 23 books, founded World Angel
Awareness Day and a school4 that, by 2006, had trained over 400 teachers—mainly
women5—to “spread the light of angels”. Channelling, healing, and meditations
feature prominently on her web site. Subscribers are taught that to meet energy
head-on generates resistance and that what is resisted persists; negative focus
attracts or energises negativity; criticism mirrors critics' flaws; pointing
the finger promotes 'polarity'.

On politics, Cooper's web site advises, “Give no energy to fear, darkness and
mass hysteria. Instead focus on the good, the wise and great, so that it
expands.”6 She writes that “there is a huge backlog of resistance to progressive
policies (like the gun lobby)”, but “There are things that we can do to offer
grace to clear the karma of America”. On Obama's election, she says, “The wave
of excitement in the US and throughout the world sent a wave of energy out,
which pushed Earth onto its ascension pathway.” She states that she does not
belong to any religion but acknowledges them all. As for conspiracy theory,

We have all chosen to incarnate at an exciting time when civilization as we
know it is ending and the new being founded. There will be changes and you can
look at these as frightening or an opportunity for service and growth… Be
careful what you read on the internet. If it is spreading doubt and fear move
on to a site of love and light.


The New Age Belief in a Shift in Consciousness
Much has been written about New Age beliefs in a shift (Kemp 190; Hanegraaff
107) and about the New Age's 'globalisation' and its methods (Rothstein;
Holloway). Marilyn Ferguson's book The Aquarian Conspiracy contributed to the
popularisation of beliefs in a 'new paradigm' and New Age organisations such as
the Club of Budapest7 and the Wrekin Trust8 claim to examine evidence of a
shift. Global communications, too, reinforce perceptions that a shift is
occurring, as audiences can listen on the web to Madonna discussing her
“spiritual awakening”,9 Rabbi Michael Laitman—whose web site currently ranks
within the top thousand most popular Israeli sites—urging humanity to awaken
via Kabbalah10 or New Ager Eckhart Tolle and Oprah Winfrey (who have declared
their intention to awaken people en masse through their partnership11) saying to
millions of Oprah viewers, “There's a shift happening in humanity, a shift in
consciousness, happening now”.

This rhetoric is echoed by others outside the New Age. The New Spiritual
Progressives,12 a peaceful activist movement, say that

In every faith there is a struggle happening right now between those who hear
God speaking as the force of power and domination and those who hear God
speaking as the force of healing, transformation, love and
generosity.13


Political film maker Velcrow Ripper says on his 2008 documentary
Fierce Light:

Sparked by what Gandhi called “soul force”, and Martin Luther King called “love
in action”, millions are discovering the power of taking positive, peaceful
action that comes from the heart, driven by the understanding that we're all in
this together. [i]Fierce Light
captures this inspiring zeitgeist, which is being
called the largest global movement in history.14
[/i]

Conspiracy Theory
The term 'conspiracy theorist' tends to be used pejoratively. Since the advent
of the worldwide web, however, the realm of conspiracy theory has gained shape,
prominence, and even respectability. Unlike the spiritual milieu, this remains
a largely male enclave of political and scientific foci. Few good quantitative
studies have been conducted, but “American conspiracy theorists seem to be
primarily a white phenomenon; and primarily a white male phenomenon” (Ramsay
36). Of the 40 or so notable theorists who were listed on Tinwiki,15 only one
is female. In that respect, this area is typical of political activism: “that
women generally have lower levels of interest in politics than men is a well
rehearsed political fact” (Campbell and Winters 53). Activism should not be
confused with ideology or casual participation, however. Just as voter turnout
is similar among men and women, belief in conspiracy theories divides evenly
between the sexes (Goertzel 733).

An examination of the history of conspiracy theory suggests that in recent
decades it has contained four main sectors, all of which overlap and continue
to develop:

1. speculation about specific episodes
Was Diana, Princess of Wales, assassinated? Was 9/11 an 'inside job'? Barkun
(6) calls these “event conspiracies”. Most people are exposed to these theories
(even through the conventional media) and are likely to speculate to some
degree: the main difference between now and 1963, when Kennedy was
assassinated, is the web.

1. bio- and geo-conspiracies
The terms 'bio-conspiracies' and 'geo-conspiracies' are used here to describe
the large areas of conspiracist belief surrounding manipulation of the natural
world. The following examples are far from exhaustive: have diseases been
manufactured? Have cancer cures and free energy technologies been suppressed?
Is water fluoridation dangerous? Are we given the truth about genetic
engineering? Is weather manipulation possible? Most people come across these
ideas in the conventional media and from hearing about movements such as the
campaign against the use of the artificial sweetener aspartame.

1. X-Files-type conspiracy theory (Ramsay 28)
In Britain and the US, the 1950s saw the formation of UFO groups and the
expansion of counter-cultures such as science fiction fandom. Ramsay usefully
describes subsequent major influences by decade: in the 1960s, the publication
of books such as Psychic Discoveries behind the Iron Curtain; in the 1970s, the
appearance of celebrity psychics, writer Erich von Dniken, and the film Close
Encounters
; in the 1980s, fascination with channelling, mind control, and alien
abduction. (Many of these interests overlap with the New Age.) Since then
conventional media and the web have further popularised and expanded these
topics.

1. the radical right's belief in a shadow government/New World Order (NWO).
Barkun (6) categorises this sector as systemic or super-conspiracy. In recent
decades, political activists in America, such as Pat Robertson and Lyndon
Larouche, have publicly espoused belief in a sinister 'New World Order'
(Robertson; Pipes). The idea that secret societies of 'Illuminati' are
conspiring to establish a NWO stretch back to at least 1797, when John
Robinson's book Proofs of a Conspiracy against all the Religions and Governments
of Europe was published in Britain. Before the arrival of the web, this sector
appeared to be dominated in the Western world by the (American) Christian
Patriot16 movement and the Militia, the core of which formed in the 1970s. It
consists of right wing or Christian/cult groups preparing for Armageddon or
protecting themselves against the NWO, spurred by event conspiracies such as
the destruction of the Branch Davidian compound at Waco in 1993. The Militia's
popularity has peaked17 and the Patriot movement has grown:

The most distinctive feature of militia groups is that they are armed,
sometimes with war weapons. […] Their membership is overwhelmingly white,
Christian and predominantly male. […] the patriots, while including traditional
racist, anti-Semitic hate groups, have a much broader ideological constituency,
and this is exactly one of the reasons for their new success. Namely, the
ability to reach out across the ideological spectrum to unite all sources of
disaffection against the federal government
.
(Castells 91)

But as the web facilitates the spread of information, the Christian right may be losing any
monopoly it once might have held, or appeared to hold, over NWO theories. Web
videos of Louis Farrakhan addressing the Nation of Islam and Muammar Gaddafi
addressing the UN on conspiracist topics are easily accessible; Muslim18 and
Jewish19 NWO conspiracist web sites are springing up and other religions are
also represented.

Within much of this 'radical right' sector of conspiracy theory, New Age
spirituality is seen as a Satanic or 'Luciferic' threat.20 Recent areas of
concern include Oprah Winfrey's partnership publicising New Age teachings with
spiritual teacher Eckhart Tolle:21 Tolle's pacific assertions that the global
situation arose from the collective mind's insanity enraged those who felt he
was promoting inaction in the face of the enemy22 and Winfrey's backing of
Obama confirmed to some that all three are Illuminati insiders.23 Longer
standing concerns include New Age channellers being demon-possessed or having
voices beamed into their heads by government mind-control projects.24

The Emergence of Conspirituality
Despite the shared views mentioned above that nothing happens by accident,
nothing is as it seems, and everything is connected (Barkun 4), the New Age and
conspiracy theory seem to have little in common. It is therefore a surprise to
discover that hybrid worldviews have developed and seem to be thriving. British
author and activist David Icke anticipated conspirituality in 1996:

When I meet people who are investigating the conspiracy but are not into the
spiritual, I find people full of paranoia, full of fear … because they can't
see the spiritual solutions… When I meet so many people in the New Age area … I
often find people who, so often, think that if you address the negative, then
that's really bad. You must only address the positive… But if you don't address
the negative, either the negative gets more negative or stays as it is. What
you don't do is change it.
25

Conspirituality appears to be a means by which
political cynicism is tempered with spiritual optimism. It curbs the
belligerence of conspiracy theory and the self-absorption of the New Age. The
following examples illustrate this counterpoise. The first, taken from a 2007
online course in 'transformation', has a New Age weighting:

If you are not aware of the deep politics and hidden agendas taking place
behind the scenes on this planet, you may find parts of the educational
information to be somewhat disturbing. Please don't despair about this … even
the dark or negative forces out there are all a part of the cosmic dance. If we
ignore or abandon these forces, we reject a part of ourselves, as we are all
interconnected. The course provides lots of support and inspiration on how we
are already transforming these challenging places in our lives and world.26


The second is weighted towards conspiracy theory. It was taken from the Zeitgeist
Movement,27 a web site promoting global activism28 connected to Zeitgeist the
Movie,29 a 2007 web movie.30 Zeitgeist alleges, among other things, that
organised religion is about social control and that 9/11 was an inside job. The
producers claim that the movie has been viewed 100 million times.31

The elite power systems are little affected in the long run by traditional
protest and political movements. We must move beyond these 'establishment
rebellions' and work with a tool much more powerful: We will stop supporting
the system, while constantly advocating knowledge, peace, unity and compassion.
We cannot “fight the system”. Hate, anger and the 'war' mentality are failed
means for change, for they perpetuate the same tools the corrupt, established
power systems use to maintain control to begin with. […] This could be called a
'spiritual' awakening.32


Conspirituality appeared on the web in the mid 1990s. It
had offline precursors: some members of the 1960s33 and 1970s counter-culture,
the New Age, and other movements undoubtedly shared its two core convictions.
In 1987, the print-based NEXUS Magazine started publishing articles on
spirituality and conspiracist topics; the editor writes:

NEXUS recognises that humanity is undergoing a massive transformation. With
this in mind, NEXUS seeks to provide 'hard-to-get' information so as to assist
people through these changes. NEXUS is not linked to any religious,
philosophical or political ideology or organisation.34


Goodrick-Clarke cites NEXUS as an example of how “the 'alternative' movement, with its suspicion of
powerful government, big business and orthodox medicine, has proved susceptible
to conspiracy theories” (289). From NEXUS's statement, we may conclude that the
'alternative' movement, which Goodrick-Clarke defines as holding “alternative
concerns with health, environment and right livelihood” (289), has also proved
susceptible to ideas of a 'shift' and may thus be providing audiences for
conspirituality. We examine these audiences later.

The First Generation—before 2001
Conspirituality's formation divides into two stages or generations.
First-generation providers started work offline in the early to mid-1990s and
then moved online to develop web sites in parallel with offline activity.
Successful first-generation providers include David Icke, David Wilcock, and
Steven Greer.

David Icke's web site, registered in 1996, ranks in the top 10,00035 most
popular global sites (by comparison, according to Alexa, an independent web
monitoring service, in August 2009, Hello! magazine ranked 20,724, The Guardian
newspaper 278, and the UK Labour Party 186,270). Icke's 20 books blend
conspiracy theory with spirituality. He is notorious for alleging that a shadow
government harbours the bloodlines of an ancient race of reptilian
extraterrestrials. The solution is for audiences to raise their consciousness
and awaken to love as a unifying, transcendent force. Icke writes extensively
about his spiritual awakenings and says, “We are on the cusp of an incredible
global change” (x).

American David Wilcock, who established his web site in 1998, describes himself
as a “professional lecturer, filmmaker and researcher of ancient civilizations,
consciousness science and new paradigms of matter and energy”.36 Wilcock's web
video lecture, “The 2012 Enigma”, was rated Google's Number One Viewed in
December 200837 and his site ranks in the top 50,000 most popular global web
sites. He writes that the shadow government is losing its grip; audiences
should prepare for a mass awakening in 2012, after which the regime will
founder. Wilcock writes about his spiritual awakenings and contact with
extraterrestrials and says,

The energetic transformation of our entire solar system is now under way, and
we are already feeling the effects… I am amazed at how many people blatantly
worship the negative elite with their fear… As long as we hate, fear, loathe
and distrust them, we are ensuring they still have a job acting as the
projection of our own hatred, fear, loathing and distrust… of
ourselves.38


American UFO researcher Steven Greer claims to have reached “over a
billion people”39 via conventional media and that he has briefed the Obama
administration40 and others on the truth about UFOs. Greer organised the
Disclosure Project, a 2001 initiative presenting evidence of UFOs, ETs, and
'black projects'.41 He writes that a 'rabid dog' shadow government, keeping
secrets even from presidents and CIA directors, has suppressed free energy
technology. Greer talks about his spiritual awakening and contact with
extraterrestrials. In 2006, he wrote (42, 234):

We live in a world where people polarise around either an impractical New Age
spirituality and pacifism or a traditional “us versus them, let's kill
everybody we don't understand” mindset… A certain sinister manipulation is
evident to many people. I don't have the luxury of putting all that information
aside and thinking that it's a conspiracy theory. I know it to be true… These
covert special interests want to unite and control the world through fear,
rather than uniting the world through peace and hope… We live in a time of
these extremes: very dark and very bright. We live in the time of
transformative change.


Many factors influenced audience receptivity to
first-generation conspirituality. By 1998, 82% of Americans felt the need to
experience spiritual growth (Gallup and Lindsay), while “extremely large
numbers” (Barkun 91) had been exposed to New World Order conspiracy theories
and believed the government was withholding the truth about UFOs.
Conspirituality web radio stations such as News for the Soul (established in
1997) and Red Ice Creations (formed in 2001) had sprung up to publicise
providers. In the UK, journalists such as Jon Ronson were humanising conspiracy
theorists, New Agers, and other alternative thinkers with good-natured
documentaries.

The events of 11 September 2001 were pivotal to the uptake of conspirituality.
Many people who had never held conspiracist beliefs rationalised the tragedy as
an 'inside job' designed to propagate war: in 2003, one third of Germans under
thirty believed that the US government was behind 9/11 (Knight) and at least
one opinion poll in 2006 suggested that more than a third of Americans believed
the same.42 By 2007, Texas Congressman Ron Paul43 and film director Aaron
Russo44 were publicising the 'New World Order'. In 2008, Japanese MP Yukihisa
Fujita45 lobbied the Diet on this matter and in 2009, actor Charlie Sheen called
upon Obama to reopen the 9/11 investigations.46 Millions of people find sense in
these theories.

The Second Generation—from 2002
We identify 2002 as the year second-generation conspirituality started. This
was not just because the events of 9/11 and increasing political
disillusionment were generating extra demand: by 2002, the web and access to it
and its sub-cultures were sufficiently developed to accommodate
conspirituality's expansion. Web-site building had been simplified and the
blogosphere (the network of blogs on the internet) was growing.

The 2003 war in Iraq generated still more demand: worldwide, millions marched
'for peace' rather than 'against war'. By 2004, theories about apocalyptic
events in 2012 were spreading, further uniting New Agers anticipating a shift
with conspiracy theorists and others believing a variety of scenarios. In 2005,
more than 2,000 people attended a talk by David Icke in London. In November
2010, conspiracist radio presenter Alex Jones's site ranked in the top 500 most
popular websites.47 Providers now use Facebook, Twitter, and other social
networks. It is said that an Obama avatar was recently spotted wearing a New
World Order T-shirt in the web-based virtual world of Second Life. The web
continues to develop and support alternative viewpoints.

John Perkins is an example of a second-generation conspirituality provider. His
2004 autobiography Confessions of an Economic Hitman48 was on the NY Times
bestseller lists for 70 weeks.49 Perkins exposes the shadowy US 'elite
corporatocracy', for which he once worked to destabilise smaller countries
economically. He suggests that corporate networks could be transformed to
positive purposes, stressing that many shadow government employees are 'human,
with children and grandchildren' and, despite the financial rewards,
'desperate' for the excuses protestors offer to do the right thing.50 Perkins,
who experienced a 'personal epiphany' on visiting Ground Zero, states:

We have entered one of the most important periods in human history, the Time
of Prophecies. We have the opportunity to lift ourselves to new levels of
consciousness. This time was foretold over the past centuries around the world.
Now it is up to us—you and me—to make it happen.51


A shamanic practitioner, Perkins has written books on 'personal and global transformation'.52

Project Camelot,53 another second-generation provider, offers a platform for
shadow government whistle-blowers. Its site reports ten million unique hits
since it formed in 2006. Run by a two-person team consisting of Bill Ryan and
Kerry Cassidy, Project Camelot displays a collection of video interviews
offering different views on the shadow government and the shift, including
interviews with Icke, Wilcock, and Greer. More than 1,300 site visitors have
signed its 'pledge' to end secrecy;54 a brief count indicates a ratio of three
men to one woman. This probably reflects conspirituality's wider gender ratio.
Conspirituality has spread from being a scattering of single, first-generation
providers to a large chain. It is now part of the spiritual supermarket:
clients shop around, settling upon the outlets whose interpretations of the two
core convictions best suit their own opinions and tastes.

Key Themes
Change, or transformation, is a key theme conspirituality has adapted from its
parent sectors. Clients seek to expose—depose—a shadow government. Ideas that
others are becoming 'awake and aware', or shifting in consciousness, lend
encouragement. Humanity is shifting into a new paradigm. People are 'awakening
to the truth' (we are all connected); 'remembering who we really are'
(infinitely powerful spiritual beings); 'seeing the illusion' (our
projections); 'saying no to tyranny' (assuming personal responsibility—the
shadow government exists because we allow it to). Stories of spiritual
awakenings, some dramatic, others gradual or momentary, are commonplace. The
awakening process, being subjective, is impossible to define accurately, but
providers and clients agree that this is 'a time of transformation'.

Some awakenings—such as David Icke's55—involve 'seeing' the shadow government.
These can go through two stages:56 coming to terms with the situation and
realising one's responsibility to help change it. But the continuing existence
of war and inequality demonstrates that traditional means of change—via
political protest, for example—have proved ineffective. These, along with
denial of the truth (that things need to change) belong to the 'old paradigm'.

Central to the 'new paradigm' is 'becoming the change you wish to see in the
world
' (a quotation by Mahatma Gandhi frequently encountered): the inner self
must change before the outer world can. 'Spiritually conscious' ideals include
self-responsibility and independent thought—detaching from the 'mind control
matrix' by giving up TV and chemical additives, rejecting consumerism, and
anticipating earth changes. Non-violent action includes spreading information,
engaging in non-cooperation and peaceful resistance.

The forms of non-violent activism are highly varied. A UK example specific to
conspirituality is 'The Love Police', a group that tours London with a
megaphone, drawing public attention to situations considered repressive and
hugging people as they are moved on. Videos are posted on YouTube. Another
example is 'The People's United Community' (TPUC), which advocates 'lawful
rebellion' on the basis of a clause in the Magna Carta allowing citizens to
ignore the law if they feel they are being unjustly governed. TPUC states that
it is neither for nor against politics or religion, it stands for “the truth of
love and the love of truth”.57

Unification is another key theme. Social networking sites such as Facebook are
used in conjunction with the global alternative and conventional media to
publicise campaigns. The New Age concept of 'Oneness' is frequently
encountered: Icke says that he loves the shadow government because “we are all
One” (490). Hip hop artist KRS-One raps,

You can love your neighbourhood without loving poverty … there's no reason to
fear the New World Order … but first you got to unify, stop this negativity,
control your creativity.58


Non-violent revolutions demand unity. Providers claim
safety in numbers—high public profiles confer protection. People must 'join the
dots to see the truth'—the shadow government is too well-hidden to see without
combined research.

Revealing 'truth' is an additional theme that runs through the movement.
Providers and audiences ascribe power to truth. They support whistle-blowers,
campaign for governments to end secrecy, and expose and publicise suppressed
evidence. KRS One says the shadow government “can't do nothing to a person who
stands with the truth … so stop the violence, stop hating yourself, seek peace,
restore women to their rightful place”.59

Matt Bellamy, lead singer of the internationally successful band 'Muse', is
influenced by Icke and other providers and is credited in turn as an
inspiration by best-selling author Stephenie Meyer. Bellamy says that
love-based resistance “in the Gandhi sense” is the most powerful, but having to
resist “kicking a few shop windows in” is frustrating.60 In interviews he says
he is an 'atheist'; nonetheless lyrics from his track Uprising, from Muse's
number one (September 2009) album The Resistance encapsulate conspirituality:

Interchanging mind control
Come let the revolution take its toll
If you could flick a switch and open your third eye
You'd see that
We should never be afraid to die
(so come on)


Criticisms of Conspirituality
Barkun (96) suggests that the radical right's NWO theories reached the
mainstream via UFO literature and expresses a concern that the left might adopt
them. Goodrick-Clarke, too, suggests that “The US militias, conspiracy cults,
and New Age cultural pessimism represent varied strands of popular radicalism
that are deeply hostile towards liberalism in modern politics and society”
(289). He writes, “The endemic spread of conspiracy theories in the New Age
milieu is a disturbing phenomenon” (299) and argues that the degeneration of
New Age “open anti-authoritarian egalitarian” outlooks into anxious myths “of
hostile elites and hidden threats” is down to “cultural pessimism” and
political disillusionment. This trend, he fears, could lead to neo-Nazism.
(ibid)

Conspirituality providers and audiences would argue that racism and
anti-Semitism are part of the old paradigm, not the new. David Icke says,

We need to drop the ludicrous, childish labels of Jew and Gentile and Muslim
and all this illusory crap and come together in the name of peace and justice
for all. There is not a Jewish injustice or a Palestinian injustice, there is
simply injustice.61Proponents of conspirituality might, however, admit to
cultural pessimism and political disillusionment. As public distaste at war
continues to grow—according to 2009 polls, two in three Britons want British
troops to leave Afghanistan and one in three want them out immediately62
—for
many, mass consciousness seems to be shifting and non-violent new paradigm
solutions are the best way forward.

Conspirituality's Appeal
Conspirituality obviously appeals to clients who already believe in, or
suspect, the existence of a shadow government and a shift. As Goodrick-Clarke
suggests, some of these clients will originate from within the 'alternative'
movement. To build on his definition we may look to the notion of 'Cultural
Creatives' (Ray and Anderson)—people who are spiritually and politically
idealistic and imaginative. Ray and Anderson claim that 50 million American
adults fall into this category. Moreover,

60% of Americans identify with two or more themes of the new social movements:
Greens, Women's Lib, Civil Rights, Peace, Jobs and Social Justice, Gay Lib, the
Planetary problematique, Complementary and Alternative Medicine, etc. (Ray
56).63


Conspirituality could appeal to some Cultural Creatives.64 The
counter-culture of the 1960s and 1970s may be an attractive model: Icke
promotes music from that era on his web site and discusses his ayahuasca
awakening; KRS One lectures internationally about the history of the hip hop
movement; Wilcock writes about Woodstock. The extremes of conspirituality will
deter many, but the middle ground is extensive: mass audiences bought
Confessions of an Economic Hitman, downloaded Zeitgeist the Movie, and listen to
Muse.

Providers have credentials and appear credible to many, despite promoting
beliefs that often seem bizarre to non-subscribers. They are trustworthy
accomplices, having succeeded in acceptable 'real world' careers. David Icke
was a professional footballer, BBC sports commentator, and Green party
politician, while Bill Ryan of Project Camelot was a management consultant and
his counterpart Kerry Cassidy a film maker. Steven Greer worked as the director
of the A&E department of a North Carolina hospital. Jacques Fresco, inventor of
Zeitgeist the Movie and movement, is an architect. John Perkins was a government
official.

Conspirituality's wide and free subversive range accommodates many voices and
much of interest. A research paper about David Icke says:

Icke has tapped into the utopian longings of the masses in a potentially
liberatory way. Right-wing fanatics, leftist conspiracy buffs, New Agers,
college students, and an increasingly dissatisfied and questioning public the
world over have found something deeply provocative in Icke that cannot simply
be explained away as manifestations of a collective false-consciousness,
clinical paranoia, or, as Freud would say, group hypnosis. (Lewis and Kahn
70)


Conspirituality's success also lies in its flexibility. There is no
requirement to 'join'—involvement is free and user led: to listen to a
programme regularly, revisit a What's New page or attend a conference implies
affiliation—as loose or as committed as the client decides, to a wider group.
Providers extort people to do their own research. There is no pressure to do
anything but accept, reject or adapt information according to the client's
belief threshold. It accommodates all grades and shades of belief: David Icke
gives voice to anti-New Age writings and Jean Hudon, director of the Earth
Rainbow Network,65 promotes New Age channelling, yet both remain within the
conspirituality category. The flexibility of definition that surrounds its two
core convictions is such that most subscribers are able to agree—and to agree
to differ. Costs are minimal and the entertainment value is high, as the
possibilities of the web are maximised.

The events of 9/11 exposed many to conspirituality. As rumours that it was an
inside job undertaken to start a War on Terror spread via the web66—and
continue to spread—some will have found providers, such as Icke who received
publicity for his predictions that the shadow government would undertake a
'false flag' operation around 2001 to provoke a war with Islam, more appealing
than conventional political commentators or the radical right. Surfers would
have shopped around. Those who encountered conspirituality, but had not
previously held New Age beliefs in a shift, might have focused instead on
providers' political interpretations or transposed ideas of a shift into
concerns about 'earth changes' or 'waking up to what was going on'. They might
also have been attracted, at a time of crisis, by the optimism intrinsic to
core conviction 2 (concerning a mass shift in consciousness).

Conspiracist beliefs are now commonplace.67 Cynicism about the conventional
media has increased: 59% of Americans under thirty rely on the internet for
news rather than television68 and 64% of American internet news users believe
the mainstream is biased.69 Even so, the conventional media accommodate
conspiracism:70 Harper notes a growth in popular conspiracist literature.

Michael Moore's 'politically charged'71 2004 film Fahrenheit 9/11 went on
general release and won an award at the Cannes Film Festival. In 2009, Fox News
interviewed academics about the presence of nano-thermite in the dust at Ground
Zero,72 Guardian readers followed the harassment of a reporter covering the
Athens Bilderberg meeting,73 and reports of crop circles and declassified UFO
information were widely circulated.

Thus, with interest in conspiracist topics, web news, and spirituality growing,
the future looks bright for conspirituality. If the holistic milieu grows, this
sector is likely to benefit:

Many New Age authors are decidedly ambivalent about the role played by human
action in the coming of the New Age … many New Agers apparently realise that
this view may easily breed passivity, and therefore emphasize the importance of
the human contribution. (Hanegraaff 250)


Discussion
The formation of conspirituality offers much of theoretical interest. We
suggest some perspectives for further investigation. Barkun's notion of
'improvisational millennialist' belief systems may help explain how the New Age
and conspiracy sectors could merge:

Such odd conceptual structures are apt to contain elements from more than one
religious tradition, together with ideas from the New Age, occultism, science
and radical politics. These combinations do not appear “natural” since the
elements often come from seemingly unrelated domains, such as conspiracy
theories and fringe science, or from domains that appear to be in opposition,
such as fundamentalist religion and the New Age. (32)


Barkun quotes Stephen O'Leary, noting that “The discourses of conspiracy and apocalypse … are linked
by a common function: each develops symbolic resources that enable societies to
address and define the problem of evil
” (10); millennialism describes the
mechanism for the defeat of evil which conspiracy theory has located.

Barkun extends Campbell's concept of the cultic milieu to include five
varieties of 'stigmatized knowledge' (forgotten, superseded, ignored, rejected,
suppressed) that, he suggests, constitute the appeal of conspiracy theory. They
might also constitute for some the appeal of certain sectors of the New Age—for
example, Theosophy—and all of conspirituality.

Conspirituality could be called a web movement, as the web is central to its
importation of political and spiritual ideology into the mainstream. Providers
such as Project Camelot and Zeitgeist the Movie originated on the web; their
presence outside it is only just starting to grow. The concept and dynamics of
a 'web movement' do not seem to have been explored by scholars, but it is clear
that the internet greatly assists the diffusion of innovation (Rogers).

Innovators have updated or simplified existing super-systemic conspiracy or New
Age models to be disseminated by opinion leaders. As web sites became easier
to access and build, transmission and adoption were facilitated. The virtual
social networks created by web users make it possible to spread ideas very
widely and very quickly.

When exploring religion online, Larsen talks about 'outsider' surfers who
particularly like to use the web, seeing themselves as a minority or having
experienced discrimination. Helland observes that “the Internet accommodates
those religions and groups who wish to be religious outside the control of an
organised religious institution” (23). Conspirituality might constitute a
genuine 'unofficial' online religion (Helland; McGuire), as opposed to religion
online. Its 'clergy' would abhor this definition, but mystery, revelation, and
prophecy are intrinsic to it.

Conspirituality could also be seen to fit into Wallis's 'world-accommodating'
category of religious movement: the world-affirming, cultic New Age and the
world-rejecting, sectarian conspiracy milieux have merged into a
world-accommodating—arguably mainstream—hybrid. Its providers display aspects
of charismatic authority (Weber), for example, claiming to have exclusive
access to secrets from whistle-blowers or through contact with
extraterrestrials.

In terms of social semiotics, language is a leveller. Terms such as 'NWO',
'oligarchy', 'shadow government', 'negative global elite', 'Illuminati',
'corporatocracy', 'military industrial complex', and so on are interchanged to
convey the user's view or taste. By virtue of the vocabulary they use, a
teenage rap musician interested in spirituality shares common ground with
someone who believes that 9/11 was an inside job. The multiple meanings of
these terms provide practical benefits: flexibility of definition confers
inclusiveness. For example, the terms 'shift' and 'waking up' can refer to
psycho-spiritual or socio-political processes, relative or objective.

Conspirituality unites its supporters despite their differences, permitting
self-determination within a wider movement.


Acknowledgements
Referees of the [i]Journal of Contemporary Religion offered valuable comments on an
earlier version of the paper. [/i]

Notes
1. Clients might reject the label 'conspirituality', seeing their political
beliefs as factual rather than 'paranoid' (Hofstadter) and disliking New Age
associations, but this movement is large enough to warrant a name.
Conspirituality, a word invented by a 'spiritually conscious, politically
charged' Canadian hip hop group, describes it succinctly.
2. Wikipedia. “Akiane Kramarik,” Available at:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Akiane_Kramarik, access date: 30 March 2009.
3. Diana Cooper home page at: http://www.dianacooper.com, access date: 30 March
2009.
4. Diana Cooper School home page at: http://www.dianacooperschool.com/, access
date: 30 March 2009.
5. Diana Cooper School home page. “Questions and Answers.” Available at:
http://www.dianacooperschool.com/index.php
access date: 30 March 2009.
6. Diana Cooper home page. “Questions and Answers” Available at:
http://www.dianacooper.com/index.php
access date: 30 March 2009.
7. Club of Budapest at: http://www.clubofbudapest.org/mission.php, access date:
9 September 2009.
8. Wrekin Trust at: http://www.wrekintrust.org/ourvision.shtml, access date: 9
September 2009.
9. The Guardian. “Madonna Sheds Ray of Light on Meaning of Life in Israeli
Paper.” Available at:
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access date: 9 September 2009.
10. B'nai Baruch Kabbalah Research Centre at:
http://www.kabbalah.info/engkab/openeng.htm, access date: 9 September 2009.
11. Oprah Winfrey and Eckhart Tolle home page. “About Eckhart Tolle.” Available
at: http://www.opraheckhart.com/, access date: 30 March 2009.
12. Spiritual Progressives home page at: http://www.spiritualprogressives.org/,
access date: 9 September 2009.
13. Spiritual Progressives. “All Faiths.” Available at:
http://www.spiritualprogressives.org/art...int, access date: 9
September 2009.
14. Scared Sacred home page at: http://www.scaredsacred.org/, access date: 9
September 2009.
15. Tinwiki home page. “Conspiracy Theorists.” Available at:
http://www.tinwiki.org/wiki/Categ..._Theorists, access date: 21 June,
2009.
16. Wikipedia. “Christian Patriot Movement.” Available at:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chri..._movement, access date: 9
September 2009.
17. Wikipedia. “Militia Movement.” Available at:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Militia_movement, access date: 9 September 2009.
18. The Wakeup Project home page at: wakeupproject.com/Index.asp, access
date: 30 March 2009.
19. Henry Makow. “Zionism: A Conspiracy against Jews.” Available at:
http://www.savethemales.ca/000482.html, access date: 4 April 2009. Youtube
video. “Pallywood”. Available at: http://www.youtube.com/watch
access date: 30 March 2009.
20. Constance Cumbey. “My Perspective: What Constance Thinks.” Available at:
cumbey.blogspot.com/, access date: 30 March 2009.
21. Oprah Winfrey. “Are You Ready to be Awakened?” Available at:
http://www.oprah.com/article/opr...t_marketing,
access date: 30 March 2009.
22. Henry Makow. “Staying Sane in an Insane World.” Available at:
http://www.rense.com/general80/insane.htm, access date: 30 March 2009.
23. Educate Yourself, “Photographic Evidence that Barack Obama is a
Human/Reptilian Hybrid, Part 1.” Available at:
educate-yourself.org/cn/bara...8.shtml, access
date: 30 March 2009. Youtube video. “Don't Drink the Kool Aid: Oprah, Obama and
the Occult.” Available at: http://www.youtube.com/watch access
date: 30 March, 2009.
24. Unexplained. “Psychotronic Weapons; Brain Manipulation at a Distance.”
Available at: istina.rin.ru/eng/ufo/text/360.html, access date: 30 March
2009. Educate Yourself. “The Illuminati Formula to Create an Undetectable Total
Mind Control Slave.” Available at:
educate-yourself.org/mc/illu...p.shtml, access date: 30 March
2009.
25. Valerian, Val. “Interview with David Icke.” Leading Edge Magazine (Brigham
Young) 1996. Available at:
http://www.bibliotecapleyades.net/bigg....htm, access date: 30
March, 2009.
26. Transformation Team. “Membership Process.” Available at:
http://www.transformationteam.net/memb...cess, access date: 30 March
2009.
27. The Zeitgeist Movement at:
http://www.thezeitgeistmovement.com/joo....php access date: 9
September 2009.
28. The Zeitgeist Movement. “QandA about the Venus Project.” Available at:
http://www.thezeitgeistmovement.com/joo....php
access date: 9 September 2009.
29. Wikipedia. “Zeitgeist the Movie.” Available at:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zeit...reception, access
date: 9 September 2009.
30. Zeitgeist the Movie home page at: http://www.zeitgeistmovie.com/, access
date: 9 September 2009.
31. Zeitgeist the Movie. “General Q&A.” Available at:
http://www.zeitgeistmovie.com/q&a.htm, access date: 1 October 2009.
32. Facebook. “The Zeitgeist Movement.” Available at:
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33. Wikipedia. “Counterculture of the 1960s.” Available at:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coun...the_1960s, access date: 9
September 2009.
34. Wikipedia. “Nexus Magazine.” Available at:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nexus_(magazine), access date: 9 September 2009.
35. Alexa web monitoring service. “David Icke Website Statistics.” Available at:
http://www.alexa.com/siteinfo/davidicke.com, access date: 31 October 2010.
36. Divine Cosmos home page at: divinecosmos.com/, access date: 9
September 2009.
37. Divine Cosmos. “2012 Enigma Movie Hits Number One 12/1!” Available at:
divinecosmos.com/index.php
access date: 30 March 2009.
38. Divine Cosmos. “US Airways '333' Miracle Bigger than we Think.” Available
at: endnoteswebaddress
url="divinecosmos.com/index.php
access date: 9 September 2009.
39. Disclosure Project. “2002 Update.” Available at:
http://www.disclosureproject.org/Updat...2.htm, access date: 9 September
2009.
40. Youtube video. “Obama Briefed to the UFO Topic by Steven Greer.” Available
at: http://www.youtube.com/watch access date: 9 September 2009.
41. Disclosure Project home page at: http://www.disclosureproject.org, access
date: 9 September 2009.
42. Scholars for 9/11 Truth and Justice. “Perception and Propaganda: Media
Analysis of 9/11. Public Opinion Polls.” Available at:
stj911.org/perception/m...ml#nyt_cbs06, access date: 30 March 2009.
Scripps Howard News Service. “Third of Americans Suspect 9-11 Government
Conspiracy.” Available at: http://www.scrippsnews.com/911poll, access date: 30
March 2009.
43. Youtube video. “Ron Paul Talks about the NOW.” Available at:
http://www.youtube.com/watch access date: 30 March 2009.
44. Youtube video. “Freedom to Fascism.” Available at:
http://www.youtube.com/watch access date: 30 March 2009.
45. Youtube video. “9/11 Investigation Demanded by Yukihisa Fujita.“ Available
at: http://www.youtube.com/watch access date: 9 September 2009.
46. Telegraph web site. “Charlie Sheen 9/11 Claims.” Available at:
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/new...ink.html,
access date: 9 September 2009.
47. See Alexa web monitoring service. “Infowars.com Statistics.” Available at:
http://www.alexa.com/siteinfo/infowars.com#, access date: 26 October 2010.
48. Koul, Stelios. “Apology of an Economic Hitman: A Documentary by Stelios
Koul.” Available at: http://www.hitmanapology.com/, access date: 30 March
2009.
49. Perkins, John. “NY Times Best Selling Author John Perkins.” Available at:
http://www.economichitman.com/pages/...y.html, access
date: 30 March 2009. Youtube video. “2007 Interview with John Perkins.”
Available at: http://www.youtube.com/watch access date: 30 March
2009.
50. Videosift video. “John Perkins: America's Secret Empire.” Available at:
http://www.videosift.com/video/Joh...et-Empire, access date:
9 September 2009.
51. John Perkins at: http://www.johnperkins.org/about.htm, access date: 9
September 2009.
52. Wikipedia. “John Perkins.” Available at:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John..._(author), access date: 9 September
2009.
53. Project Camelot home page at: http://www.projectcamelot.org, access date: 9
September 2009.
54. Project Camelot. “Round Table.” Available at:
http://www.projectcamelot.org/round_table.html, access date: 9 September 2009.
55. Project Camelot Youtube video. “Project Camelot Interviews David Icke.”
Available at: http://www.youtube.com/watch access date: 30 March
2009.
56. Youtube video. “Alex Jones, George Humphreys, 9/11 and the Awakening.”
Available at: http://www.youtube.com/watch access date: 9
September 2009.
57. TPUC Youtube video. “Tpuc.org Glastonbury Gathering.” Available at:
http://www.youtube.com/watch access date: 9 September 2009.
58. Youtube video. “Hip Hop and Freemasonry: The New Age and Military Agenda.”
Available at: http://www.youtube.com/watch access
date: 30 March 2009.
59. Youtube video. “Alex Jones Interviews KRS One.” Available at:
http://www.youtube.com/watch access date: 9 September 2009.
60. Musewiki. “NME Article on The Resistance.” Available at:
http://www.musewiki.org/New_album..._article), access date: 9
September 2009.
61. David Icke. “Time to Tell the Truth about Israel without Fear of the Mind
Police.” Available at: http://www.davidicke.com/content/view/19027/, access
date: 30 March 2009.
62. Populus polls. “Afghanistan Survey.” Available at:
http://www.populuslimited.com/itn-ne...9.html, access
date: 9 September 2009.
63. Cultural Creatives. “The New Political Compass.” Available at:
http://www.culturalcreatives.org/Libra...3.pdf, access
date: 30 March 2009.
64. Wikipedia. “Cultural Creatives.” Available at:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cult...Creatives, access date: 30 March 2009.
65. Earth Rainbow Network home page at: http://www.EarthRainbowNetwork.com,
access date: 30 March 2009.
66. Scripps Howard News Service. Hargrove, Thomas. “Third of Americans Suspect
9-11 Government Conspiracy.” Available at: http://www.scrippsnews.com/911poll,
access date: 21 June 2009.
67. Scripps News at: http://www.scrippsnews.com/node/28533, access date: 9
September 2009.
68. The PEW Research Centre. “Internet Overtakes Newspapers as News Source.”
Available at:
people-press.org/report/47...ws-source,
access date: 9 September 2009.
69. The PEW Research Centre. “Internet News Audience Highly Critical of News
Organisations.” Available at:
people-press.org/report/34...nizations,
access date: 9 September 2009.
70. BBC News at: news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk_po...233682.stm, access
date: 9 September 2009.
71. Movieweb. “Fahrenheit 9/11.” Available at:
http://www.www.movieweb.com/news/NE...vxsbWzy, access date: 30 March 2009.
72. Youtube video. “Richard Gage on Fox TV.” Available at:
http://www.youtube.com/watch access date: 9 September 2009.
73. The Guardian. “Charlie Skelton's Bilderberg Files.” Available at:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/se...rg-files, access
date: 9 September 2009.


References
* 1. Aaronovitch, David (2009) Voodoo Histories: The Role of the Conspiracy
Theory in Shaping Modern History Jonathan Cape , London

* 2. Barkun, Michael (2006) A Culture of Conspiracy: Apocalyptic Visions in
Contemporary America U of California P , Berkeley

* 3. Campbell, Colin (1972) The Cult, the Cultic Milieu and Secularisation.
Sociological Yearbook of Religion in Britain 5 , pp. 119-136.

* 4. Campbell, Rosie and Winters, Kristi (2008) Understanding Men's and Women's
Political Interests: Evidence from a Study of Gendered Political Attitudes.
Journal of Elections, Public Opinion & Parties 18 , pp. 53-74.

* 5. Castells, Manuel (2004) The Power of Identity. Volume 2 of The Information
Age: Economy, Society, and Culture Blackwell , Oxford

* 6. Dawson, Lorne, and Douglas E. Cowan, eds. Religion Online: Finding Faith
on the Internet. New York: Routledge, 2004

* 7. Fenster, Mark (2008) Conspiracy Theories: Secrecy and Power in American
Culture U of Minnesota P , Minneapolis

* 8. Ferguson, Marilyn (1980) The Aquarian Conspiracy: Personal and Social
Transformation in the 1980s Penguin Putman , New York

* 9. Gallup, George and Lindsay, Michael (1999) Surveying the Religious
Landscape: Trends in US Beliefs Morehouse , Harrisburg, PA

* 10. Goertzel, Ted (1994) Belief in Conspiracy Theories. Political Psychology
15 , pp. 731-742.

* 11. Goodrick-Clarke, Nicholas (2003) Black Sun: Aryan Cults, Esoteric Nazism,
and the Politics of Identity New York UP , New York

* 12. Greer, Steven M. (2006) Hidden Truth, Forbidden Knowledge Crossing Point
, Afton, VA

* 13. Hanegraaff, Wouter J. (1996) New Age Religion and Western Culture:
Esotericism in the Mirror of Secular Thought Brill , Cologne

* 14. Harper, David (2008) The Politics of Paranoia: Paranoid Positioning and
Conspiratorial Narratives in the Surveillance Society. Surveillance & Society 5
, pp. 1-32.

* 15. Heelas, Paul and Woodhead, Linda (2005) The Spiritual Revolution: Why
Religion is Giving Way to Spirituality Blackwell , Oxford

* 16. Helland, Christopher. “Popular Religion and the World Wide Web: A Match
Made in (Cyber) Heaven.” Eds. Lorne Dawson, and Douglas E. Cowan. Religion
Online: Finding Faith on the Internet. New York: Routledge, 2004. 23-36

* 17. Hofstadter, Richard. “The Paranoid Style in American Politics.” Harper's
Magazine, November 1964: 77-86

* 18. Holloway, Julian (2000) Institutional Geographies of the New Age
Movement. Geoforum 31 , pp. 553-565.

* 19. Houtman, Dick and Aupers, Stef Vincett, Giselle , Sharma, Sonya and Aune,
Kristin (eds) (2006) The Spiritual Revolution and the New Age Gender Puzzle: The
Sacralisation of the Self in Late Modernity (1980-2000). Women and Religion in
the West: Challenging Secularization pp. 99-119. Ashgate , Aldershot

* 20. Icke, David (1999) The Biggest Secret: The Book that Will Change the
World Bridge of Love Publications , Ryde

* 21. Kemp, Daren (2003) New Age: A Guide. Alternative Spiritualities from
Aquarian Conspiracy to Next Age Edinburgh UP , Edinburgh

* 22. Knight, Peter (2008) Outrageous Conspiracy Theories: Popular and Official
Responses to 9/11 in Germany and the United States. New German Critique 35 , pp.
165-193.

* 37. Larsen, Elena. “Cyberfaith: How Americans Pursue Religion Online.” Eds.
Lorne L. Dawson, and Douglas E. Cowan. Religion Online: Finding Faith on the
Internet. New York: Routledge, 2004. 17-22

* 23. Lewis, Tyson and Kahn, Richard (2005) The Reptoid Hypothesis: Utopian and
Dystopian Representational Motifs in David Icke's Alien Conspiracy Theory.
Utopian Studies 16 , pp. 45-75.

* 24. McGuire, Meredith (1987) Religion, the Social Context Wadsworth ,
Belmont, CA

* 25. Melton, Gordon J. (1992) Encyclopedic Handbook of Cults in America
Garland , New York

* 26. O'Leary, Stephen D. (1994) Arguing the Apocalypse: A Theory of Millennial
Rhetoric Oxford UP , New York

* 38. Ostrander, Sheila, and Lynn Schroeder. Psychic Discoveries behind the
Iron Curtain. London: Bantam, 1971

* 27. Perkins, John (2004) Confessions of an Economic Hit Man Berrett-Koehler ,
San Francisco

* 28. Pipes, Daniel (1997) How the Paranoid Style Flourishes and Where it Comes
from Free P , New York

* 29. Ramsay, Robin (2008) Politics and Paranoia Picnic Publishing , Hove
* 30. Ray, Paul H. “The New Political Compass”. Available at:
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* 31. Ray, Paul H. and Ruth Anderson, Sherry (2001) The Cultural Creatives: How
50 Million People are Changing the World Three Rivers P , New York

* 32. Robertson, Pat (1992) The New World Order Thomas Nelson , Nashville
* 39. Robinson, John. Proofs of a Conspiracy against All the Religions and
Governments of Europe Carried on in the Secret Meetings of Freemasons,
Illuminati and Reading Societies. New York: Forman, 1798

* 33. Rogers, Everett M. (2003) Diffusion of Innovations. 5th, Free P , New
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* 34. Rothstein, Mikhail (2001) New Age Religion and Globalization Aarhus UP ,
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* 36. Weber, Max. Theory of Social and Economic Organization. Glencoe, IL: Free
P, 1947
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Re: How to Overthrow the Illuminati

Postby MacCruiskeen » Wed Sep 04, 2013 1:43 pm

Oh ffs, "Conspirituality" again. Complete with 36 footnotes. You have copied-and-pasted that godawful screed before, quite recently too, and it doesn't improve with repetition.

AmericanDream wrote:This stuff is really deep


Deeply shallow, profoundly superficial, and abysmally reactionary. It is a solemnly stupid potpourri of tendentious and thoughtstopping conflations, all in the service of entrenched power. It is worse than a waste of time.
"Ich kann gar nicht so viel fressen, wie ich kotzen möchte." - Max Liebermann,, Berlin, 1933

"Science is the belief in the ignorance of experts." - Richard Feynman, NYC, 1966

TESTDEMIC ➝ "CASE"DEMIC
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Re: How to Overthrow the Illuminati

Postby American Dream » Wed Sep 04, 2013 1:54 pm

Also related:

http://www.sourcewatch.org/index.php/Ra ... k_magazine


Rainbow Ark magazine


London-based New Age magazine Rainbow Ark.

Matthew Kalman & John Murray in their 1995 article ‘New-Age Nazism’ (published in the New Statesman & Society, 23 June) noted:

"Recent issues have targeted the same Jewish bankers, "Illuminati" and suchlike, and it has printed a fair amount of Icke material. It helped organise a lecture he gave at the Glastonbury festival and other meetings.

"Rainbow Ark, despite operating in the New Age milieu, was launched from the flat of a well known right-wing racist propagandist, Mary Stanton. It was used by the National Front during one election as its press office. Stanton was also questioned by MI5, who were investigating the appearance of her address on a list of international contacts for the anti-Semitic far right. In the launch issue of Rainbow Ark, the three largest donors are gratefully thanked for gifts of pounds 250 and over: Mary Stanton, Anthony Chevasse and a Mr Bloom. Above is an advertisement seeking volunteers for Stanton's "Free Society to Save the Planet".

"Chevasse is intimately involved with Rainbow Ark. Little is clear about him except his interest in the right-wing economic theories of C. H. Douglas, who was attracted to the Nazis. The key organisation pushing Douglas' ideas is the British League of Rights, headed by Don Martin. Martin is an important figure in the far-right. His writing has appeared in the British National Party's paper, Spearhead. One lecture he gave, organised by Rainbow Ark, was picketed by anti-fascists. The magazine's editors clearly have close ties to Martin - one says they meet him periodically for briefings.

"An idea of Martin's beliefs can be derived from his mail-order firm, Bloomfield Books. This services the far right with more than 700 of their favourite books and magazines - including the 100,000-plus circulation anti-Semitic Spotlight, another source used continuously by Nexus, as well as Icke. The books include the usual Nazi favourites: Did Six Million Really Die? and so on.

"BNP leader John Tyndall calls Martin and the organisations he runs "allies". The British League of Rights, for example, seeks among its aims: "To oppose large-scale immigration of alien peoples, and to work for the maintenance of a homogenous community." Martin is also a friend of Lady Jane Birdwood, who has a criminal record for promoting racially inflammatory material. His organisations are known for their avoidance of publicity in their own right and an often high-level involvement in campaigns by other organisations. Martin is known also for taking over groups. One, the British Federation for European Freedom, was turned into the British arm of the ultra-rightwing World Anti-Communist League, a franchise later taken over by the pro-apartheid Western Goals...

"Public meetings organised by Rainbow Ark in May gave an Australian ex-stockbroker, called (pseudonymously) Peter Celine, an opportunity to expound a typical Icke/Nexus narrative of bankers, freemasons, Illuminati et al, along with his call for rebellion and the formation of five-person cells. When asked where to find such "suppressed information", he explained that he had been pointed to Donald Martin's Bloomfield Books by Rainbow Ark's editor.

"Anna Hall, editor of Rainbow Ark for its first 11 issues, insists: "During the time I was editor, nothing which could be labelled fascist, racist, anti-Semitic or Nazi in content was published." In common with many committed green activists, she seems to have been unaware of the wider beliefs of some of the people she was dealing with - such as her British Israelite landlady, Mary Stanton.

"In Australia, its country of origin, the far-right links of Nexus are quite well-known following media exposure. Editor Duncan Roads has been forced onto the defensive over his printing of militia articles. Roads is himself very interesting. He stepped into the advertising department of Nexus from the Rotting Stone-funded alternative magazine Simply Living. On Australian radio recently, he was asked if the holocaust took place: he said he remained "open-minded"...

"Nexus's British agent, who, like the Rainbow Ark group, was at the launch of Icke's book, unselfconsciously provided further shocking details of this growing anti-Semitic propaganda network. Sitting in Nexus's UK office, he eagerly displayed his copy of the Protocols, and spoke admiringly of the revisionist historian David Irving. There were no gas chambers at Auschwitz, he said.

"As he began to describe the "global conspiracy", he said he'd helped David Icke with a chapter in his forthcoming book, calling into question the facts of the holocaust. The Jewish Chronicle got confirmation that the chapter existed from Icke's Bath-based publisher Gateway Books. Gateway has now dropped the book - its money-spinning star author apparently unwilling to make significant excisions. The book is now to be published in Cambridge by Bridge of Love, with the title changed from The Robot's Guide To Freedom to . . . And The Truth Shall Set You Free. "I am struggling to find a publisher for my next, now completed book, because they are all in the toilet after reading the contents without the need of a laxative," veteran Icke-watcher David Black was told in May. On an advertising flyer for the book, the name Sam Masters is given and a Cambridge address. "Bridge of Love" is, of course, simply David Icke and Masters, his assistant. The 500-page book is due out in mid-August.

"The response to Icke by anti-fascists has been slow, with initially only a few anti-fascists in the Green Party and from Green Anarchist magazine appearing to take seriously his success in promoting a potentially racist and Nazi doctrine. He was banned from speaking at the Green Party conference in 1994.

"However, as far back as 1991, Icke-watcher David Black had warned where Icke's logic could lead. Noting the roots of his New Age thinking in the mystical teachings of Theosophy developed by Madame Helena Blavatsky, he warned: "Blavatsky's fantasies were readily taken on board by the disillusioned nationalist romantics who pioneered Nazism in Germany." Indeed, the Nazis took the group's symbol, the swastika, and made it the emblem of the Nazi party. Later Theosophists like Alice Bailey promoted an intense anti-Semitism. In 1947, she called the Jews "a very cruel and aggressive people". She even identified the Jews as the world's worst problem, stating - in the immediate aftermath of the holocaust - that "there is no other problem like it in the world today". The holocaust was simply Jewish karma for their "depths of human evil".

"Rainbow Ark has a similarly frightening theory: "When a person has strong hatred of another race, their higher self often (karmically) makes sure they incarnate in that race to balance them out, thus many of the worst kind of Nazis have already incarnated in Jewish bodies, explaining therefore some of the fireworks which are going on and will go on in Israel." In other words, many Jews are Nazis reincarnated...

"As far-right watcher, Larry O'Hara, says: "This is a worrying phenomenon. A demoralised left seems to have forgotten many of the lessons it should have learnt from history. The fact is, many of the ideas articulated in magazines like Nexus are hostile to the US-dominated New World Order, and murderous political police, the FBI and others, for good reason. We need to differentiate very carefully between what is valid and what isn't." But above all, we must make the green and New Age movement aware of the racist and neo-Nazi thinking that is trying to masquerade under its banner." [1]

References
↑ jiscmail New-Age Nazism, organizational web page, accessed June 9, 2013.
Last edited by American Dream on Wed Sep 04, 2013 1:59 pm, edited 2 times in total.
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