
I said the same thing after the election last year. Just have to get the Bernie Bros on board.
"Bannon aims to lead a populist revolt of underprivileged people against the elites – he is taking Trump’s message of a government by and for the people more literally than Trump himself dares to do."
Aristocrats of the Soul shared Edgar Kerval's post.
Jack Parsons' rituals took place in the area, and Crowley supposedly called Devil’s Gate one of the seven portals to hell. Another rumor--the gates are kept locked not to keep people out, but to keep something in.
Just opened this April. Though it's called the Buckland Museum, it includes a trident wand, ceremonial bowl and oil lamp owned by Aleister Crowley, a box in which Buckland trapped a demon in 1970, and pieces from Anton LaVey and Israel Regardie.
Here's Hans-Hermann Hoppe’s speech, dumbed down for the common man (link to the speech in the article). The actual speech is well-worth a listen; some interesting points about both libertarianism and the AltRight.
The author of Neuromancer includes some thoughts about Guénon, Evola, and Pepe trolls in an interview about his latest book.
"Both these guys, Guénon and Evola, were obviously total hipsters (in the original sense of the term). Subculturalists, unmistakably. With-it dudes. Whatever “it" was."
"Then I remembered reading this Aleister Crowley book a few years ago. ... “The Wake World” is a very bizarre fairy tale and it is supposed to be an allegory for the various spheres of consciousness....
The opera is about this girl’s journey through an enchanted palace where she goes to all these different rooms and these bizarre vivid and extremely psychedelic things happen."
As the Thelemic community debates over whether to support free speech or “hate” speech, I can’t help but wonder which position Crowley would take.
Aristocrats of the Soul shared a link.
Thank you, Tucker Carlson Tonight, for reporting on the Yulin dog meat festival. All cultures are not the same!
From last month ... on populism, the upcoming elections in France, the "ideology of merchandise," and his intense work schedule.































