Occult Features of Anarchism

Book #6 for 2024. (Bit of a turnaround from Tarzan?) I’ve always been intrigued by the ways in which occult thought and politics have intertwined over the centuries, and this give a reasonably good if brief overview of how medieval millenarian and heretic movements developed through the Renaissance, eventually blossoming into Freemasonry, and the book looks at how Weishaupt’s Illuminati took that into a political and revolutionary direction and inspired umpteen other groups in the nineteenth century to follow the Masonic pattern and use Masonry to further themselves. Theosophy was apparently big among anarchists in the later 1800s. I was kind of amused to see the famous A in a circle logo actually first appeared as a compass and level in the shape of a letter A, and to see that such figure as Proudhon and Bakunin were actual Masons (the latter espousing a Spinoza-esque sort of pantheism).

This historical stuff is good although perhaps not ideal for people coming to the subject completely new, it probably helps to have some prior knowledge. Also, I’m not sure how it really all ties in with Lagalisse’s real subject, or at least the one I think she cares more about, i.e. that anarchism since the 20th century has basically tried to ignore its theological and occult underpinnings, and this is leading it down something of a dead end where they’re more interested in looking like they have what she calls “good politics” than, you know, doing actual good. Which leads to the conclusion that maybe, just maybe, we shouldn’t be so automatically dismissive of conspiracy theorists:

…purveyors of “conspiracy theories” are often from subaltern groups, so the educated activists who generally state a nominal concern to “take lead” from “those most affected” by oppression should nominally allow for the possibility that the “conspiracy theorist” may actually be offering positioned insight. Beyond “tolerating” the theorist of conspiracy for the sake of reeducating him, activists’ own ideology suggests that they might listen for subversive social commentary amid unfamiliar exposition.

They might, but that doesn’t mean they’ll necessarily gain anything useful from it. Lagalisse writes about a Zapatista who put her onto the whole conspiracy thing in the first place, and how she managed to convince him THE JOOOOOOOOOOS aren’t really running the world, but I think she got lucky with that one; I’m not sure how much seriousness she thinks we should approach these people with before we realise the exercise isn’t as edifying for them or us as she seems to think it will be.

So a mixed result, I suppose, interesting but I also don’t know how much I agree with her own arguments or how well they mesh with the historical stuff. Still, short enough that I finished it in one night, so I’ll definitely give it points for not being any longer than it was…

One nation under chud

As I said the other day, I’m trying to be more positive on here, so here’s a good news story:

Former Rowan County, Kentucky clerk Kim Davis, the pentecostal evangelical Christian who made international headlines in 2015, has now been ordered to pay a total of more than $360,000 after refusing to issue a marriage license to a local same-sex couple that year, ignoring the U.S. Supreme Court’s ruling in support of marriage equality.
Davis, who once told supporters she is a “soldier for Christ,” was ordered by U.S. District Judge David L. Bunning on Tuesday to pay attorneys of the couple $260,104 in fees and expenses, the Lexington Herald-Leader reports. She previously was ordered by a jury to pay the couple, David Ermold and David Moore, a total of $100,000 in damages. In March of 2022 a federal judge found Davis had violated the couple’s constitutional rights.
While the elected county clerk, Davis was jailed for several days after defying a court order to issue marriage licenses to same-sex couples. Citing her personal religious beliefs, she had claimed she issued marriage licenses under “God’s authority,” and refused.
“The question is simple — did Davis knowingly violate the law? The answer here is clear — yes,” Judge Bunning wrote in 2022. “Ultimately, this Court’s determination is simple — Davis cannot use her own constitutional rights as a shield to violate the constitutional rights of others while performing her duties as an elected official.”

Granted, this is hardly good news for Kim Davis, but this really is the right way for this story to end; nice to know that at least some level of American government, however low, holds its people accountable if they refuse to uphold the law.

2025: illegal to be male, presumably

I don’t know how old this screenshot is, but I’m guessing 2018 if the first date mentioned in it is the year after that. Doesn’t say much for Corey’s predictive abilities, does it? For one thing, he was evidently writing this in the middle of the Drumpf era, and there was never any danger of any of those things being outlawed while he was running the shitshow… especially not white nationalism, if they outlaw that, that’d wipe out a large chunk of the Republican party.

As for Corey himself, it’s 2024 now and he’s still all of those things. Especially white.

The Jews didn’t steal anything from me; I was born in a Catholic hospital. Though Corey would probably find that just as bad. Seriously though, as a circumcised lad myself, few things irritate me more than the “intactivists” of the anti-circumcision movement, especially when they insist I should take personal offence at the absence of a piece of my body I never had in the first place AND I CAN HARDLY MISS SOMETHING I NEVER HAD TO BEGIN WITH CAN I… but also it leaves itself open for, let’s face it, rank antisemitism of the above sort. Which I feel ultimately underlies a lot of that movement anyway.

Then again, a few posts down his Twitter page, Corey does laugh at some libertarian chud whining about the restaurant he was dining at getting a surprise visit from health inspectors, because apparently the idea that inspectors should make sure that dining facilities aren’t breeding salmonella behind the ovens or something is abhorrent to him… so apparently Corey actually can recognise a genuine idiot worthy of pointing and laughing at sometimes? See, I actually said something good about him! I found a possible redeeming feature! I’m trying to be more positive on here where I can, so I found something good even about this otherwise clearly ghastly individual… sort of… didn’t I…?

Carlo Collodi is confused

I just found out why ads keep appearing in my Facebook feed, i.e. the browser extension, Fluff Busting Purity, I’ve been using to stop them from appearing wasn’t working… whether the thing just stopped behaving by itself or I neglected to actually install it after I started using Firefox rather than Chrome a few months ago (the latter being a distinct possibility) is something I don’t know; I always used my own properly chronological feed rather than the main FB page which barely knows what day it is, so I was never bothered by them until FB started fighting its way past the ad-blocking and FBP had to keep putting out new patches.

Anyway, they’ve been get more numerous of late and every time I see one I just curse and report it as spam, but I must confess that I actually was glad—before reporting it as the scam it surely is—that I was exposed to whatever the fuck THIS is:

How amazing is that? I mean, these things are usually bullshit, of course, but this has had an unusual degree of effort put into its bullshit. In the original version of Collodi’s story Pinocchio actually gets executed at the end, Collodi seems to have very much viewed him as a kind of warning about the sort of misbehaviour Pinocchio engages in. Admittedly I’ve never read the original, but I’m fairly sure the words “pineal gland” don’t occur in it and they certainly have piss all to do with the derivation of Pinocchio’s name. Really, the bullshit is above and beyond with this one; I almost had to admire it before blocking it.

If I fell…

The greatest thing on social media today has to have been the hypothetical skydiving Christian baby:

What, and I can’t stress this enough, THE FUCK

The good people of Bluesky saw this and, well, went to town on it, and I’ve collected my favourites here (keeping it behind a cut cos otherwise it’ll blow out the front page of the blog):

Continue reading “If I fell…”

Nature is healing

Jehovah’s Witnesses have evidently returned to door-knocking after the pandemic (having limited themselves to leaving letters in the mailbox during it), as I discovered when they rudely awoke me this morning. Given that we actually have a Kingdom Hall here in Matraville, I’m kind of surprised we don’t get more of them… and I’m not sorry that we don’t. I kind of liked the mailbox phase. I did appreciate that the letters were handwritten, and I appreciated even more that they didn’t disturb me in any way…

Or maybe not

Going through the archives again tonight, I found this:

I no longer remember if I took this screenshot myself or if I just found it somewhere else, but whatever. The date stamp on the file is 10/04/2017 and the video had evidently already been up for a year by that point…

…and that there is a fresh screenshot I just took from this clown’s YT channel, a full eight years after it was originally posted. I don’t think it’s in much danger of being banned somehow. For what it may be worth…

…here’s one of Dave’s more recent videos. Do you recall the NWO being announced on the 18th of last month? Me neither. I feel like we’re not dealing with one of the Lord’s more accurate prophets here…