David Icke, Fascism and Conspirituality
Feb 13
Written By David Livingstone - The Conspiracy-Conspiracy
Facebook has been targeting QAnon ads towards those interested in
alternative health, resulting in what academics have identified as
“Conspirituality,” a strange blend of the New Age movement and right-wing
conspiracy theories.[1] The merger of these seemingly paradoxical
influences can be traced back to David Icke, who has introduced into
conventional conspiracy theories a blend of New Age and Theosophical
ideas, which have long had a close relationship with fascism, and in
particular, Nazism. Effectively, through the influence of QAnon and the
advent of Covid-19, Icke’s message is gaining increasing appeal within
the New Age movement, who have adopted his right-wing conspiracy
theories, such that they have come to identify the Left as the enemy of
political and spiritual freedom. Merging their New Age beliefs, they hope
to prevent the advent of a “New World Order,” and to assist instead in an
“Ascension” to the utopian promises of the Age of Aquarius, which in
fact, is the true goal of the Luciferian and fascist conspiracy.
One of the major supporters of QAnon has been Major General Paul E.
Vallely. In 1980, Vallely wrote a MindWar article with Michael Aquino, a
former member of the Church of Satan who founded the Temple of Set.
Aquino’s satanic activity was connected to a pedophile and blackmail
network with ties to the White House. The operation was run by Edwin
Wilson, a member of Ted Shackley’s team of rogue CIA agents known as the
“Secret Team,” who were linked with the JFK assassination, the Golden
Triangle heroin trade and the Iran-Contra Affair.[2] According to John
DeCamp, author of The Franklin Cover-Up, Wilson’s operation was merely a
continuation of the one set up by Donald Trump’s mentor Roy Cohn during
the McCarthy era with Lewis Rosenstiel and J. Edgar Hoover.[3]
Nevertheless, Vallely backed QAnon, who claimed the existence of a
“Deep State” operated by a satanic pedophile network, who are supposedly
being opposed by a group within the government and military referred as
“white hats.” Vallely was interviewed by Mike Filip on AmeriCanuck
Internet Radio of Canada, on October 14, 2019, where he explained:
Q-Anon is information that comes out of a group
called ‘The Army of Northern Virginia.’ This is a group of military
intelligence specialists, of over 800 people that advises the president.
The president does not have a lot of confidence in the CIA or the DIA
(Defense Intelligence Agency) much anymore. So the President relies
on real operators, who are mostly Special Operations type of people. This
is where ‘Q’ picks up some of his information.[4]
QAnon is disinformation, deceiving those who suspect the world
around them may not be as it seems, but who may not be sufficiently
informed about the true nature of the conspiracy to discern the
deception. The reason for the conspiracy to have been able to proceed
unchecked for at least the last 250 years has not been attributable to
any lack of documentation or public exposure. Sufficient literature has
been produced to bring to light the activities of the conspirators and
their identities, including John Robison’s Proof of a Conspiracy (1797),
Augustin Barruel’s Memoirs Illustrating the History of Jacobinism, and
more recently Nesta Webster’s Secret Societies and Subversive Movements
(1924). So, we shouldn’t be overly enthusiastic about the proliferation
of “conspiracy theory” among the alternative media in recent
years.
There are many reasons for the inability of a significant enough
opposition to coalesce against the conspiracy, primary among them being
of course elite control of the media. However, the opposition that has
been able to form has been not been able to blossom into a broader
movement, largely because of internal disunity. Most disruptive is the
fact that, while the conspirators and the organizations they operate have
been for the most part identified, conspiracy researchers, due to their
different political affiliations, are not agreed as to their goals, and
therefore, the appropriate solution either.
Part of the reason for this confusion is what appears to be a
disinformation campaign to hijack any growing opposition to the
conspiracy. As I have revealed in my recent six-volume book, Ordo ab
Chao, the key modus operandi of the conspiracy has been to deploy what I
call a “conspiracy-conspiracy.” It is a deliberate attempt to cultivate
an errant interpretation of the conspiracy to create a controlled
opposition of naïve dissidents who are ultimately recruited into
inadvertently serving the conspiracy. The reason this happens is that is
those who are dismayed with the direction our societies have taken tend
to become desperate for change, and too ready to throw in their support
with anyone who appears to represent their interests. They look at a
leader’s words, not what they stand for, which makes them easily
duped.
The tactic dates back to at least the Enlightenment, and the
fomenting of the French and American Revolutions by rallying the masses
into believing they were fighting “tyranny,” in the person of the
aristocracy and the Catholic Church, or King George III of England. The
same tactic was employed by using the cause of communism to channel the
Russian people’s frustration against the state to bring about the
Bolshevik Revolution of 1917. Most importantly, the Nazis made use of the
notorious Protocols of Zion, which purported that the Russian revolution
was the outcome of a worldwide Judeo-Masonic conspiracy, to frighten the
Germans into accepting Hitler’s fascist dictatorship to prevent the same
happening to their country. This was despite the fact that the Nazis were
funded by the same bankers who funded the Bolsheviks.[5]
The key conspirator in this plot was a double-agent named Boris
Brasol, working simultaneously for the British and the Russians, who then
imported the same tactic to the United States.[6] During the 1930s,
Brasol maintained a wide array of contacts among right-wing Russians in
the United States, among them was “Count” Anastasy Vonsiatsky (1898
1965). Vonsiatsky was also associated with a textile magnate Wickliffe
Draper (1891 1972) Draper, who was fascinated by eugenics, and
sympathetic to the Nazis, founded the Pioneer Fund in 1937, “to advance
the scientific study of heredity and human differences.” According to a
1960 article in The Nation, an unnamed geneticist said Draper told him he
“wished to prove simply that Negroes were inferior.”[7]
Brasol became involved with the American branch of the Knights of
Malta, known as the Order of St. John of Jerusalem. Although it poses as
a Catholic organization, the order is a Masonic group that merely claims
to be the real Knights of Malta.[8] Also known as the “Shickshinny
Knights,” the group was headquartered in the small town of Shickshinny,
Pennsylvania. Father Peter Baptiste Duffee, or “Father Duffy,” linked
Brasol to an occult order called the Ancient and Noble Order of the Blue
Lamoo, which he claimed was a rogue branch of the Shickshinny Knights of
Malta and the ubiquitous Sovereign Order of St. John.[9] The Blue Lamoo
was said to be founded by “Atlantian Initiates of the Sun.” Membership
was limited to “Aryan People of all classes.” The purposes of the group
were to free Aryans from the “financial bondage of the Judeo-Mongols,”
and “To Unite Science and Religion, whereby the Aryans again may be
Supermen and Superwomen and establish the Aryan Race as the Christ Race
leading the World into the Millennium.”[10] This lore, Duffee insisted,
disguised the order’s true function as a “Nazi propaganda organization,”
which he linked to the better known German propaganda front, the Fichte
Bund, of which Brasol was allegedly a representative.[11]
Brasol was described as one of the principal advisers and the “brain
trust” of the America First Committee (AFC).[12] Founded in 1940 to lobby
to keep the United States out of World War II, the AFC represented a
confluence of right-wing organizations, including the Silver Shirts, the
German America Bund, the Ku Klux Klan, and was funded by the Nazis.[13]
The AFC and its successor organization, the American Security Council
(ASC) are considered the founding organizations of the Old Right.
The ASC, which has been referred to as the “heart” of the
Military-Industrial Complex, exploited the same fear of communism to help
justify the enormous military buildup to protect America’s “freedom,”
while simultaneously feeding directly into their profits.[14] Their
fascist agenda, known as corporatism, was disguised as a support of
neoliberalism, using the fear of communism to call for a reduction or
elimination of the role of government in the economy, a function that was
characterized by Friedrich Hayek as tantamount of “totalitarianism.” The
main objective, however, was to remove impediments to their further
profits through tax reductions, deregulation and privatization,
ultimately allowing the function of the government to be handed over into
their hands through private corporations.
The primary backers of the Old Right were the Regnery family, who
would serve as the godfathers of the American right for the remainder of
the century, up to and including the rise of the Alt-Right. ASC member
Henry Regnery, son of AFC founder William Regnery, founded the
conservative Regnery Publishing. According to E. Howard Hunt, the CIA
subsidized Regnery Publishing because of its pro-Nazi stance.[15] Regnery
Publishing did its part to promote libertarian economics, publishing
works of Friedrich Hayek, Lugwig von Mises, Alfred Jay Nock and Frank
Chodorov, who became editor of Human Events in 1951.
Regnery also had a hand in fanning the UFO phenomenon by publishing
ufologists like Jacques Vallée, whose work inspired Steven Spielberg’s
film Close Encounters of the Third Kind, and Josef Allen Hynek. In 1973,
betraying an interest in MK-Ultra, Regnery published Sybil, a book about
multiple personality disorder (MPD), later made into a film for
television starring Sally Field and Joanne Woodward.[16]
The Silver Shirts were founded by William Dudley Pelley (1890
1965), who was closely connected to the founders of the “I AM” Activity,
Guy and Edna Ballard.[17] The I AM” cult is what Christopher Partridge
has characterized as a “UFO religion,” all of which were influenced by
the works of Alice Bailey and Theosophy.[18] During his first telepathic
encounter, Ballard met St. Germain in a cave underneath Mount Shasta, who
showed him a television set that could receive transmissions from the
planet Venus.
Pelley was associated with George Hunt Williamson, one of the
original “Four Guys Named George” UFO contactees. Williamson who was
connected with the Council of Nine, the same group of “extraterrestial”
entities contacted by Andrija Puharich during his work on behalf of the
CIA.[19] Williamson was likely the first to propose the existence of a
government conspiracy to suppress knowledge of extraterrestrials, when he
wrote in UFO Confidential:
Many people have asked the inevitable question:
‘If visitors from other worlds are here, why doesn’t our government
inform us of such a momentous event?’ The reason is obvious… all
governments, yes all, are under the complete control of the
‘International Bankers’ who also control all money and thus create
depressions and prosperity whenever they want it. They want and need a
divided world so that wars may continue and their wealth steadily
increase.[20]
In 1953, I AM member Robert LeFevre, an associate of AFC founder
Merwin K. Hart, founded the Freedom School in Colorado Springs,
Colorado.[21] Notable teachers at the Freedom School, also known as
Rampart College, included Mont Pelerin Society members and godfathers of
the libertarian movement in the United States, such as Rose Wilder Lane,
Milton Friedman, F.A. “Baldy” Harper, Frank Chodorov, Leonard Read and
Ludwig von Mises. From 1957 to 1961 Chodorov, who spent World War II
working for Merwin K. Hart, went each year to teach at the Freedom
School.[22]
The Freedom School’s main financial support was provided Roger
Milliken, CEO of his family’s company, Milliken & Company, who is
known as a political godfather to the American conservative movement.[23]
Milliken was also the chief backer of the National Review, of William F.
Buckley Jr., Knight of Malta, member of Skull and Bones and former agent
of the CIA.[24] From the ASC evolved the John Birch Society, who through
their association with the National Review, helped give rise to the New
Right. Buckley and John Birch Society founder Robert Welch met in 1952
when they were introduced to each other by their mutual publisher, Henry
Regnery, who published the book the book that ignited Buckley’s career,
God and Man at Yale.[25]
Roy Cohn, who was legal counsel to Senator Joseph McCarthy during
the anti-Communist Senate investigations of the 1950s, later became a
member of the John Birch Society. According to a 1976 investigation by
the New York Assembly’s Office of Legislative Oversight, Birch Society
member John Rees’ Information Digest was supplying information to the
FBI, CIA, and the National Security Agency.[26] Despite these ties, the
JBS railed against the usual suspects of conspiracy theorists, such as
the Rockefellers, Rothschilds, Council on Foreign Relations, Trilateral
Commission and the Bilderberg Group.
The John Birch Society, which was closely associated with the Klan,
formed part of the cabal involved in the JFK assassination, working with
Shackley’s Secret Team and in coordination with Texas Oil tycoons, Sid
Richardson, Clint Murchison and H.L. Hunt, member of the Council of the
John Birch Society.[27] According to William Torbitt, the pseudonymous
author of Nomenclature of an Assassination Cabal, H.L. Hunt and Murchison
were the principal financiers of Permindex—a trade organization
headquartered in Basel, Switzerland, and a front organization for the
CIA—which orchestrated the JFK assassination.[28] The president of
Permindex was Prince Gutierez de Spadafora, whose daughter-in-law was
related to Hjalmar Schacht.[29] Clay Shaw, who was indicted by Jim
Garrison, represented the United States on the board of directors of
Permindex. According to Torbitt, the assassination was headed by Louis M.
Bloomfield of Montreal, and involved J. Edgar Hoover, Lyndon B. Johnson,
John Connally, Wernher von Braun, Gordon Novel, Guy Banister, David
Ferrie, Jack Ruby, Sergio Arcacha Smith, Lee Harvey Oswald and Ruth and
Michael Paine.
Cohn was also close to Lew Rosenstiel, who was part of a consortium
with underworld figures like Samuel Bronfman and Meyer Lansky.[30]
Rosenstiel’s fourth wife, Susan Kaufman, alleged that Rosenstiel hosted
lavish parties that included “boy prostitutes” that her husband had hired
“for the enjoyment” of certain guests, which included important
government officials and prominent figures in America’s criminal
underworld.[31] One of the “blackmail parties” was hosted by Cohn in 1958
at Manhattan’s Plaza Hotel, suite 233. Kaufman testified that young boys
were present and Kaufman claimed that Cohn, Hoover and her ex-husband
engaged in sexual activity with these minors.[32] Declassified New York
government files and research by a private detective corroborated that
Cohn was providing “protection” and that “there were a bunch of
pedophiles involved. That’s where Cohn got his power fromblackmail.” As
Berton Hersch observed, “Like scorpions investigating coitus, Roy Cohn
and J. Edgar Hoover would continue to circle each other with wary
fascination for decades.”[33]
John Birch Society was co-founded in 1958 by Robert Welch, with
Harry Lynde Bradley, co-founder of the Lynde and Harry Bradley
Foundation, and Fred C. Koch, founder of Koch Industries, and father of
the infamous Koch brothers, members of the CNP, a powerful and highly
secretive umbrella organization and networking group for American
conservative activists, founded in 1981. The CNP was described by The New
York Times as a “little-known group of a few hundred of the most powerful
conservatives in the country,” who meet three times yearly behind closed
doors at undisclosed locations for a confidential conference, “to
strategize about how to turn the country to the right.”[34] Like Kerry
Thornley, a friend of Lee Harvey Oswald and the founder of Discordianism,
Charles Koch also attended the LeFevre’s Freedom school, and was
converted to Libertarianism, when he was first exposed to Ludwig von
Mises and Friedrich Hayek. Charles Koch was a major funder and trustee of
the school by 1966.[35]
Jane Mayer is the author of Dark Money: The Hidden History of the
Billionaires Behind the Rise of the Radical Right, which in particular
discusses the Koch family and their political activities, along with
Richard Mellon Scaife, John M. Olin, and the DeVos and Coors families,
who work in tandem to influence academic institutions, think tanks, the
courts, statehouses, Congress, and the American presidency for their own
benefit. The Sarah Scaife Foundation was endowed and chaired by Richard
Mellon Scaife (1932 2014), an American billionaire, a principal heir to
the Mellon empire. Scaife’s mother Sarah was the niece of former United
States Secretary of the Treasury Andrew W. Mellon, an important supporter
of the fascist American Liberty League and a supporter of Hitler.[36]
Andrew’s son was Paul Mellon, who served with the OSS in Europe during
the war, and who was co-heir to one of America’s greatest business
fortunes, derived from the Mellon Bank. In 1957, when Fortune prepared
its first list of the wealthiest Americans, it estimated that Sarah
Cordelia Mellon, her brother Richard King Mellon, and her cousins Ailsa
Mellon-Bruce and Paul Mellon were all amongst the richest eight people in
the United States.[37] After the war, a number influential members of the
Mellon family maintained close ties with the CIA, and Mellon family
foundations have been used repeatedly as CIA fronts. During his tenure as
CIA director, Richard Helms was a frequent guest of the Mellons in
Pittsburgh.[38]
Paul Mellon and his wife created the Bollingen Foundation, which
financially supported the Eranos conferences, founded by by Olga
Froebe-Kapteyn and Theosophist Alice Bailey, and which had extensive ties
to representatives of the German Conservative Revolution which gave rise
to the Nazis.[39] As admitted by Michael Murphy, one of its founders, the
Eranos conferences served as one of the models for the development of
Esalen Institute.[40] According to Wouter Hanegraaff in New Age Religion
and Western Culture, in addition to the hippies, Esalen had been the
second major influence of the 60s counterculture and the rise of the New
Age movement.[41]
Paul’s sister Ailsa was married to David Bruce, also a former OSS
officer and later US ambassador to Great Britain. Sarah Cordelia’s
cousin, William Larimer Mellon Sr., the founder of Gulf Oil, was the
grandfather of William Mellon Hitchcock, who funded Leary’s LSD projects
at the family’s Millbrook Estate.[42] Hitchcock was sent by his uncle by
marriage, David Bruce, to meet with Dr. Stephen Ward to investigate the
rumors of Masonically-themed “black magic” parties at Cliveden House
connected to the Profumo Affair.[43] J. Edgar Hoover suspected, as did
others in American intelligence, that Kennedy may also have been one of
Ward’s clients.[44] Another of Ward’s girls was former Scientologist Mary
Anne MacLean, who with her husband Robert de Grimston co-founded the
Process Church of the Final Judgment, which was connected with the
Charles Manson murders.[45]
Reptilian Hypothesis
Ultimately, David Icke’s message like that of the New Age itself,
spells consequences with fascist overtones, foreboding a new holocaust
intended for the “fundamentalists” of Islam, Christianity, and Judaism,
who refuse to adapt their age-old faiths for the ecumenism of the New Age
movement. By example, according to New Age or occult interpretation, the
Atlanteans were destroyed because of their transgressions. Likewise,
despite their wishy-washy claims of universal brotherhood and tolerance,
the New Age warns of a coming “Ascension” when all those who resist the
transformation promised by the Age of Aquarius will be destroyed.
Betraying these same fascist tendencies, Alice Bailey warned, “…let us
never forget that its Life, its purpose and its directed intentional
destiny that’s of importance; and also that when a form proves
inadequate, or too diseased or too crippled for the expression of that
purpose, it is—from the point of view of the Hierarchy—no disaster when
that form has to go. Death is not a disaster to be feared; the work of
the Destroyer is not really cruel or undesirable… Therefore, there is
much destruction permitted by the Custodians of the Plan and much evil
turned into good…”[46] Similarly, according to David Icke:
I do not seek to hide the severity of this period
of fundamental change. It will be tough for every one of us… Many will
return to light levels (die) in the wake of the physical events and the
quickening vibrations. The Earth Spirit is already rising up the
subplanes, and through the years ahead she will progress through the
whole frequencies in her journey back to Atlantis and beyond... Those who
cannot quicken their own vibrations through love and balance will find
themselves out of synchronization with the environment around them. This
process is already apparent.[47]
In 1989, Icke began to feel a presence around him, and in 1990 a
voice told him to look in a bookstore at a particular section of books,
one of which was by Betty Shine, a psychic healer. When he met her, Shine
told him that she had a message for him from Wang Yee Lee, a being who
she said looked like a Chinese mandarin and had Socrates standing next to
him, that Icke had been sent to heal the Earth and that the spirit world
was going to pass ideas to him. Icke decided in 1991 to visit the
pre-Inca Sillustani burial ground near Puno, Peru, where he became
fixated at a certain mound in a circle of stones, and felt a number of
powerful sensations and new ideas began to pour into him. He described it
later as the “kundalini,” exploding up through his spine, activating his
brain and his Chakras, triggering a higher level of consciousness. He
returned to England and began to write a book about the experience, which
he titled Truth Vibrations. Icke wrote that he had been channeling for
some time, and had received a message through automatic writing that he
was a “Son of the Godhead,” interpreting “Godhead” as the “Infinite
Mind.”
As revealed in an excellent documentary by Chris White, called David
Icke Debunked, Icke claims to be imparted with insights from a spiritual
entity named Rakorski, who he also identifies with the name St Germain.
Rakorski is none other than Bailey’s Master Rakoczi, identified by Alice
Bailey as the Master tasked with establishing the Age of Aquarius. Icke
calls him the Lord of All Creation, saying that he is “directly
responsible for the changes the earth will undergo.” Essentially, Icke,
like other conspiracy researchers such as Jordan Maxwell, Michael
Tsarion, and Acharya S, is an ardent critic of the Illuminati, but
presents the myriad speculations of Theosophy as the truth being
suppressed. All his main teachings are Theosophical. His descriptions of
Atlantis in 1992’s Love Changes Everything are clearly indebted both to
Blavatsky and Bailey.[48]
Also derived from the tradition of Theosophy is the central theme of
Icke’s conspiracy theory, his reptilian hypothesis.[49] One of Icke’s key
sources is American author Zecheriah Sitchin. Born in Soviet Azerbaijani,
but raised in Israel, Sitchin received a degree in economics from the
University of London, and taught himself Sumerian cuneiform. However,
Sitchin wrote his books at a time when only specialists could read the
Sumerian language, and since then, sources such as the 2006 book Sumerian
Lexicon have made the language more accessible to non-experts. Sitchin’s
ideas have been rejected by scientists and academics, who dismiss his
work as pseudoscience and pseudohistory, and criticized for flawed
methodology and mistranslations as well as for incorrect astronomical and
scientific claims.
According to both Sitchin and Icke, humans are the result of a
genetic experiment carried out by a race of reptilian aliens called
Anunnaki. The Anunnaki are analogous to the Anakim of the Book of
Genesis, the “Fallen Angels” who supposedly intermarried with the female
descendants of Cain to produce a race of giants. The myth, which was
associated with the Jewish Kabbalah, contributed to the development of
the theory of Aryan race, whose civilization of Atlantis was supposedly
destroyed by the Flood, after which they fled to the mountains of
Asia.[50] There, according to Blavatsky, their influence resulted in the
rise of Tibetan Buddhism, a theory that particularly fascinated the
Nazis.[51] The same legend has contributed to the Ancient Astronauts
hypothesis, or “White Gods” theories, the belief that ancient cultures
like those of the Egyptians and the Maya of South America, were visited
by Caucasian civilizers who were ignorantly worshipped by primitive
peoples as “gods,” as popularized by authors like Graham
Hancock.[52]
However, as noted by Tyson Lewis and Richard Kahn, “while Icke draws
upon Sitchin’s ‘ancient astronomer’ theory, he develops it in favor of
his own New Age and conspiratorial agenda.”[53] Through the encouragement
of wars, genocide, sexual perversions, and black magic ritual and
sacrifice, Icke believes, the Anunnaki release large amounts of negative
energy, which is then absorbed by Anunnaki waiting in the fourth
dimension. Needing overseers of their human slaves, Icke claims that the
Anunnaki interbred with another alien race, commonly referred to as the
“Nordics” because of their blond hair and blue eyes. The resulting
“super-hybrids” are none other than the Aryans who inhabited
Atlantis.[54] Icke writes in The Biggest Secret, “The Brotherhood which
controls the world today is the modern expression of the Babylonian
Brotherhood of reptile-Aryan priests and “royalty’.” Their reptilian
characteristics, which “top-down control, emotionless ‘cold-blooded’
attitudes, an obsession with ritualistic behavior, and so on,” is
directly related to fascist militarism, technocratic rationalism, and
racism.[55] According to Icke, the Aryans, like their reptilian
forebearers, can also shape-shift, and have been Sumerian kings, Egyptian
pharaohs, and, more recently, American presidents and British prime
ministers, including George Washington and George W. Bush, and the Queen
Mother herself, who was “seriously reptilian.”[56]
Icke took his both his focus on extraterrestrials and the Protocols
of Zion from Behold a Pale Horse (1991) by William Cooper, who was
associated with the American militia movement. In the Robots’ Rebellion,
Icke refers repeatedly to the Protocols, claiming they were not the work
of the Jews, but of Zionists, and calling them the “Illuminati
protocols,” and defining Illuminati as the “Brotherhood elite at the top
of the pyramid of secret societies world-wide.” Icke’s endorsement of the
Protocols, in The Robots’ Rebellion and And the Truth Shall Set You Free
(1995) led his publisher to stop handling his books, which have been
self-published since then.[57]
Spotlight
A crowd of over 4,000 people filled the Gospel Tabernacle in Fort
Wayne, Ind., to hear Col. Charles Lindbergh address a rally of the
America First Committee on October 3, 1941.
According to Nicholas Goodrick-Clark, author of Black Sun: Aryan
Cults, Esoteric Nazism and the Politics of Identity, “it is clear from
Icke’s book that he is a transmitter of this information rather than its
originator. …Who is then guiding Icke and his New Age following toward
the beliefs of the millenarian-conspiracy cults?”[58] He remarks that
recent investigations by Matthew Kalman and John Murray of Open Eye
magazine suggest that far-right and neo-Nazi groups are exploiting Icke
to penetrate the Green and New Age movements.
Political Research Associates has described Icke’s politics as “a
mishmash of most of the dominant themes of contemporary neofascism, mixed
in with a smattering of topics culled from the U.S. militia
movement.”[59] Icke endorses or recommends antisemitic and far-right
publications such as Spotlight and On Target.[60] Spotlight was founded
by Willis Carto (1926 2015), who was associated with Merwin K. Hart,
one of the original founder of the America First Committee (AFC).[61] The
patriot movement is considered to have evolved from the John Birch
Society and its opposition to communism, the United Nations and the civil
rights movement, while an insurgent wing has been traced in origins to
the Liberty Lobby, founded by Carto in 1958, with promotion of themes of
White supremacy and anti-Semitism.[62]
The Liberty Lobby was run by a steering committee which included ASC
members General Charles A. Willoughby of the the Shickshinny Knights,
John Birch Society members Major General Edwin Walker and Robert J.
Morris, and Senator Strom Thurmond.[63] On the Liberty Lobby’s policy
board were Joseph P. Kamp, the founder of the Constitutional Education
League, Tyler Kent who was imprisoned in the Tower of London during World
War II for sharing information with the enemy while a member of the
American embassy staff, R.G. Johnson author of Patriots of Northern
Arkansas, Lt. Col. Frederick A. Kibbe the founder for the Florida
Minutemen, Archibald E. Roberts who served as the information officer for
General Walker and Lt. Gen George E. Stratemeyer.[64] Stratemeyer was a
member of the Military Affairs Committee of the Shickshinny Knights.[65]
Carto eventually became an adherent of Christian Identity, a racist
and white supremacist interpretation of Christianity.[66] Christian
Identity, which traces its origins to British-Israelism and the
pre-Adamite hypothesis first proposed by La Peyrère—Menasseh ben Israel’s
co-conspirator—offers a racist interpretation of Christianity where in
some cases non-whites are regarded to not have souls.[67]
British-Israelism, which gained influence in Britain during the
nineteenth century, before being imported to the United States, teaches
that many white Europeans are the descendants of the Lost Tribes of
Israel and God’s Chosen People, whereas modern Jews are Khazars and
impostors.[68] By the 1960s, when Christian Identity was established as
an important influence on the extreme right, the Khazar ancestry of the
Jews was firmly believed.
When ASC-connected Roger Pearson established himself in the United
States in the 1960s, he worked together with Carto in contributing to
publications of white supremacist and anti-Semitic literature, such as
Western Destiny, a Liberty Lobby publication. Pearson, a notorious
racialist, was a close associate Wickliffe Draper, founder of the Pioneer
Fund, which supported most of Pearson’s publishing ventures.[69] In the
late 1950s, Pearson founded the Northern League as an organization that
recruited ex-officers of the SS and promoted Pan-Germanism, anti-Semitism
and Neo-Nazi racial ideology.[70]
In 1961, Pearson founded Mankind Quarterly along with Robert Gayre,
Henry Garrett, Corrado Gini, Luigi Gedda, Reginald Ruggles Gates and Nazi
doctor Otmar von Verschuer, former director of the Kaiser Wilhelm
Institute, whose students included Joseph Mengele.[71] Mankind Quarterly
was published by the Advancement of Ethnology and Eugenics (IAAEE),
founded in Scotland in 1959, whose principal benefactor was Wickliffe
Draper, founder of the Pioneer Fund. The American branch of the IAAEE was
founded by Lord Malcolm Douglas, the brother of the host of Rudolph Hess
on his secret flight to Scotland in 1941. Hess sought to meet with the
British aristocratic circles known as the Cliveden Set, who were
sympathetic to Hitler. When Douglas and his wife Lady Douglas came to the
US, he helped establish a branch of the Military and Hospitaller Order of
Saint Lazarus of Jerusalem, a racist network based in Scotland.[72]
Nelson Bunker Hunt, his brother William Herbert Hunt and Senator Jesse
Helms, who also belonged to the Order of Saint Lazarus, were also members
of the IAAEE.[73]
From the beginning, Northern League and Mankind Quarterly were
allied with GRECE and Nouvelle Ecole.[74] GRECE, the Groupement de
recherche et d’études pour la civilisation européenne (“Research and
Study Group for European Civilization”), the leading organization of the
French Nouvelle Droite, was founded by de Alain de Benoist and others who
belonged to the World Union of National Socialists (WUNS), an an umbrella
group for neo-Nazi organisations across the globe, founded in 1962 by
George Lincoln Rockwell of the American Nazi Party.[75] Some of the
prominent names that have collaborated with GRECE include Arthur
Koestler, Hans Eysenck, Konrad Lorenz, Mircea Eliade, Jeune Europe
founder Jean-Francois Thiriart, Thierry Maulnier and Anthony Burgess,
author of A Clockwork Orange. Koestler had been an active agent of the
CIA, working closely with Bill Donavan and later Allen Dulles, and a core
founder of the CIA-front, the Congress for Cultural Freedom (CCF). In
1976, Koestler published The Thirteenth Tribe, to prove that the bulk of
Eastern European Jews were descended from the Khazars. Although Koestler
apparently wrote the book with the hope that he could demolish the racial
basis of anti-Semitism, the book was widely used by anti-Semites who
attempted to demonstrate that the European Jews were
imposters.[76]
GRECE member Raymond Abellio (1907 1986) was regarded as the
“Gnostic” inspiration of the Nouvelle Droite.[77] Abellio was the
pseudonym of French writer Georges Soulès, who was also the leader of the
synarchist Mouvement Social Révolutionnaire (MSR), which grew out of the
fascist Cagoule.[78] According to Guy Patton, author of Masters of
Deception, Abellio and his protégé French occult author Jean Parvulesco
(1929 2010), were part of a network that tried to create a New Europe,
ruled by a priest-king, whereby they exploited various modern myths, like
the Priory of Sion, which they exploited to exert their influence and for
money and power.[79]
Abellio was also a friend of Antoine Pinay, one of the original
founding members of the Bilderberg Group and of Le Cercle.[80] With ties
to the Bilderberg Group, the Knights of Malta, Opus Dei and all the
world’s leading intelligence organizations, Le Cercle served as the
umbrella organization of the Fascist International, composed of numerous
neo-Nazi organizations around the world. Le Cercle was co-founded in
1952-53 by Bildeberger Antoine Pinay, SDECE and BND agent Jean Violet,
and Otto von Habsburg, a Knight of Malta and also co-founder of the
Pan-European Union (PEU), with Richard Coudenhove-Kalergi, which gave
birth to the European Union. Le Cercle was one of the primary
organizations behind the CIA’s Operation Gladio in Italy, which
coordinated with fascist terrorists to carry out acts of terror that
would be blamed on the communists.[81]
In 1978, Pearson became the World Chairman of the World
Anti-Communist League (WACL), a right-wing organization with extensive
ties to the CIA and Sun Myung Moon’s Unification Church. The WACL emerged
in 1966, when the Asian People’s Anti-Communist League (APACL),
established in South Korea in 1954, merged with another fascist
organization, the Anti-Bolshevik Block of Nations (ABN), a co-ordinating
center for anti-Communist émigré political organizations from Soviet and
other socialist countries.[82] The ABN took its current name in 1946 and
claims direct descent from the Committee of Subjugated Nations, which was
formed in 1943 by Hitler’s allies, including the Organization of
Ukrainian Nationalists (OUN), founded by Stepan Bandera (1909 1959),
and the Ukrainian Insurgent Army (UPA).
The OUN split into two organizations: the less militant OUN-M, and
the more extremist group of Stepan Bandera, known as OUN-B, a clandestine
group financed in part by German intelligence. After the start of the
Axis invasion of the Soviet Union in 1940, the OUN-B in the person of
Yaroslav Stetsko (1912 1986) declared a short-lived Ukrainian
Government under the control of Nazi Germany, and pledged to fight as an
ally for Hitler’s “New Order.” Supported by the Nazis, the OUN-B formed
Ukrainian death-squads which carried out pogroms and massacres.
Nevertheless, during the Cold War western intelligence agencies,
including the CIA, covertly supported the OUN.[83]
Pearson also associated with the Philadelphia Society, established
in 1964 by Henry Regnery along with William F. Buckley, and to which
belonged many members who have exercised considerable influence over the
development of the neoconservative movement in the United States. Also
contributing to its founding were M. Stanton Evans and Milton Friedman.
Former Presidents of the Society include Edwin Meese, Midge Decter and
George H. Nash. Philadelphia Society meetings attracted hardline
conservatives and neoconservatives such as Heritage Foundation founder
Paul Weyrich, Erik von Kuehnelt-Leddihn, William Casey, Richard V. Allen,
Richard Pipes, Ernest W. Lefever and Frank Shakespeare. Notable speakers
at past meetings of the Society have included Vladimir Bukovsky,
Friedrich von Hayek, Henry Hazlitt, Irving Kristol, Norman Podhoretz,
George J. Stigler, George Gilder, Victor Davis Hanson, Eric Voegelin and
Paul Ryan.
When Joseph Coors—of the Coors beer empire and a supporter of the
John Birch Society—established the Heritage Foundation in 1973, he had
chosen Pearson as co-editor of the foundation’s publication Policy
Review. The Heritage Foundation is part of a network of right-wing and
neoliberal think tanks funded by charitable foundations and known CIA
fronts, who in turn are funded primarily by ExxonMobil.[84] These
included a number of other Rockefeller-affiliated foundations like the
Lynde and Harry Bradley Foundation, Sarah Scaife Foundation and John M.
Olin Foundation, who are also responsible for funding the Heritage
Foundation and the American Enterprise Institute. To this day, AEI’s
board is composed of top leaders from major business and financial
firms.[85] John Mearsheimer and Stephen Walt, in their controversial
bestseller, The Israel Lobby and US Foreign Policy, list the AEI as a
principal aspect of America’s powerful Zionist lobby, which is dominated
by American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC), the foremost
pro-Israel lobbying organization in the US.
The Heritage foundation was founded by Knight of Malta Paul Weyrich,
who worked closely with Franz Joseph Strauss, Bavarian head of state, a
longstanding fixture of Le Cercle and a very close friend and associate
of Third Reich banker Hermann Abs. Strauss was Chairman of the Christian
Social Union in Bavaria (CSU), which is represented in a common faction
with Adenauer’s CDU, called CDU/CSU. In 1953, Strauss became Federal
Minister for Special Affairs in Adenauer’s second cabinet. According to
T.H. Tetens, the British press once referred to Strauss as “the most
dangerous man in Europe.”[86] As head of the state government of Bavaria,
Strauss saw to it that funding was provided to the Organization of
Ukrainian Nationalists (OUN), which formed the ABN. When Strauss came to
the United States in the early 1970’s, Weyrich and Strauss’ Washington
representative, Armin K. Haas, planned his schedule, including Capitol
Hill appointments. Joseph Coors also helped Haas make new political
contacts in Congress.[87]
As detailed by Russ Bellant in The Coors Connection, Jesse Helms’
political operative Tom Ellis formed the Leadership Coalition for Freedom
Through Truth in 1987 with funding from the Pioneer Fund. Its board
included Richard Schoff, a North Carolina businessman, who was a generous
funder of the KKK.[88] Ellis was a member of The Conservative Caucus
(TCC), which according to Bellant, “is among the most radical of
reactionary groups in the US.” The TCC was funded by Coors and headed by
Joseph Phillips. The Caucus created the Citizens Cabinet Organization
Committee, which included Heritage president Frank Walton, Paul Weyrich,
Richard Viguerie and a number of leading members of the John Birch
Society, including its president Larry McDonald.[89] The TCC also shared
members with the United Council for World Freedom of Secret Team member
Major General John K. Singlaub, the American branch of the WACL,
financially supported by Joseph Coors. USCWF and the Nicaraguan Refugee
Fund, another Coor’s cause, helped fund the Nicaraguan contras.[90]
The Tower Commission revealed that also part of the Iran-Contra
funding network was the Western Goals Foundation, founded by J. Peter
Grace in 1979 and John Singlaub, and sponsored by Henry Regnery and
Nelson Bunker Hunt, son of H.L Hunt.[91] Western Goals was also
associated to Reinhard Gehlen, with whom they shared a connection with
the Order of the Knights of Malta (SMOM). J. Peter Grace was also
chairman of the Knights of Malta in the United States, as well as
belonging to the CFR, and key figure in in Operation Paperclip.[92]
Grace’s company, W. R. Grace & Company, was founded by Peter’s
grandfather, William Grace, who was a close associate of George de
Mohrenschildt. After the end of World War II, de Mohrenschildt moved to
Venezuela where he worked for Pantepec Oil, a company with abundant
connections with the newly created CIA, and owned by the family of SMOM
and Skull and Bones member, William F. Buckley.
Roy Cohn also became a principal figure in its intelligence
gathering operation the Western Goals Foundation. Like the Safari Club
created with the Saudis, Western Goals was set up to side-step
restrictions imposed after the Watergate and COINTELPRO revelations. As a
consequence, intelligence files passed into the hands of “retired”
officers and their most trusted operatives. Many of these officers, like
John Rees and Congressman Larry McDonald, were members of the WACL, the
John Birch Society and similar organizations, and joined Singlaub in
forming the Western Goals Foundation in 1979. Western Goals acquired a
reputation of acting as a “clearinghouse” for some police departments
whose intelligence-collecting functions were restricted by laws such as
the Freedom of Information Act.[93]
In 1979, Paul Weyrich, Paul Dolan, Richard Viguerie and Howard
Phillips persuaded rising televangelist Jerry Falwell to form the Moral
Majority in 1979, signaling the birth of the Christian Right.[94] Falwell
was a close ally of the ASC, and part of the ASC’s Peace Through Strength
campaign in 1983, along with ASC president John Fisher and General J.
Milnor Roberts. Falwell’s Religious Council of 56 included General Daniel
O. Graham and Clay Claiborne of the ASC, Larry McDonald of Western Goals
and Nelson Bunker Hunt. Fisher was described by the Religious Roundtable
as a “close friend,” as was Joseph Coors, who served on the board of the
American Security Council Foundation (ASCF) through the 1980s.[95]
Viguerie was also a member of the George Town Club, which was the
base of Edwin Wilson’s pedophile and blackmail operation.[96] During
Koreagate, Viguerie had been involved with South Korean lobbyist Tongsun
Park and the Korean CIA. In 1979, shortly after he retired from the CIA,
Ted Schackley’s associate Tom Clines moved the offices of EATSCO to 7777
Leesburg Pike, as tenants of Viguerie. “The reality is that 7777 Leesburg
Pike became the headquarters for the private CIA,” said former Cappucci
employee Mike Pilgrim.[97] The George Town Club was founded by Tongsun
Park with high-powered Washington lobbyist, Robert Keith Gray, whom John
DeCamp asserted was a specialist in homosexual blackmail operations for
the CIA. Together with ASC strategy board member General Robert
Richardson, Gray also served on the board of Consultants International,
one of Wilson’s front companies.[98] Gray’s personal secret that made
them vulnerable to requests from the intelligence community, it was a
secret history of homosexuality.[99] Gray was investigated in 1982 by a
House Ethics Committee concerning allegations of “using drugs and sexual
activity to lobby Congressman.”[100]
Gray was reported to have collaborated with Roy Cohn.[101] Cohn
admitted to NYPD detective James Rothstein that he was part of an
elaborate sexual blackmail operation that compromised politicians with
child prostitutes, carried out as part of an anticommunist crusade.
According to Rothstein, “Cohn’s job was to run the little boys. Say you
had an admiral, a general, a congressman, who did not want to go along
with the program. Cohn’s job was to set them up, then they would go
along. Cohn told me that himself.”[102]
Maury Terry, author of The Ultimate Evil, linked Cohn to the Son of
Sam serial killer. Terry gathered compelling evidence that the cult
behind the Son of Sam crimes was the satanic group known as The Process
Church of the Final Judgment which he also implicated in the Charles
Manson murders. Terry portrayed The Process as being the major player
behind a vast Satanic underground network that dealt in pornography,
drugs, and ritual murder. According to Berkowitz, The Process provided
children for sex at parties held by wealthy people in Westchester,
Manhattan, Connecticut, and Long Island. Berkowitz informed Terry that
one of these parties were held at Cohn’s house in Connecticut.
Additionally, two further witnesses maintained that occasionally present
at these parties were a Yonkers judge, at least two Westchester County
politicians, a high-ranking New York state politician, a celebrated but
later-murdered physician, a Nobel Prize-winning doctor, and two aides to
then-mayor of New York City Abraham Beame.[103]
Gray was the chairman and CEO of Hill & Knowlton, one of the two
biggest public relations firms in the world, with such blue-chip clients
such as AT&T, IBM, Xerox, and DuPont. CBS’s 60 Minutes has called
Hill & Knowlton. Notable clients of Gray & Company, which Gray
established in 1981 after leaving Hill & Knowlton, included Saudi
billionaire and Iran-Contra arms dealer Adnan Khashoggi, the government
of Haiti under Duvalier, American, the Teamsters Union, and Reverend
Moon. Gray also joined the board of the board of BCCI after its
acquisition of First American Bank. According to an affidavit filed by
Daniel Sheehan for the Christic Institute, when Edwin Meese, Vice
President Bush, CIA director Bill Casey, national security adviser Robert
McFarlane, and Oliver North were devising a strategy to circumvent
Congress to arm the Contras, they turned to Gray &
Company.[104]
Pearson was forced to leave Heritage after the Washington Post
exposed the racist and fascist orientation of the WACL. Pearson was
criticized for the presence in the WACL of neo-Nazis, war criminals, and
people linked to death squads and assassinations.[105] According to
William H. Tucker, he “used this opportunity to fill the WACL with
European Nazis—ex-officials of the Third Reich and Nazi collaborators
from other countries during the war as well as new adherents to the
cause—in what one journalist called ‘one of the greatest fascist blocs in
postwar Europe.’”[106] In that same year, Pearson hosted the 11th annual
conference of the WCAL, which included representatives of the
Gladio-linked Italian Social Movement (MSI), the Liberty Lobby and the
Nouvelle Ecole.[107] Pearson’s connection with other organizations
continued, and as late as 1986 Covert Action criticized his continued
association with James Jesus Angleton, General Robert C. Richardson and
other American Security Council members.[108]
The US chapter of WACL, the United States Council for World Freedom
(USCWF), was founded in 1981 by Singlaub. Singlaub, along with John Birch
society members like Cleon Skousen and J. Peter Grace were also members
of the Council for National Policy (CNP). Among CNP’s founding members
were: Tim LaHaye, then the head of the Moral Majority, Nelson Bunker
Hunt, Joseph Coors and Paul Weyrich. Members of the CNP have also
included Rev. Pat Robertson, Jerry Falwell, Senator Trent Lott, former
United States Attorneys General Ed Meese and John Ashcroft, gun-rights
activist Larry Pratt, Col. Oliver North and philanthropist Else Prince,
mother of Erik Prince, the founder of Blackwater USA. CNP members have
supported legislation proposed by the Church of Scientology, and John
Singlaub is also a member of the national policy board of the American
Freedom Coalition, a political organization with extensive ties to the
Unification Church.
On Target
Julian Amery (1919 1996), member of the Conservative Monday Club,
president of Le Cercle, and son of Leo Amery, who was designated by Lord
Alfred Milner to succeed him in guiding the Round Table group, also
helped draft the Balfour Declaration.
On Target is the magazine of the white supremacist group, the
“anti-semitic and white supremacist” British League of Rights, an
offshoot of the Australian League of Rights founded in 1971. In the early
1970s, the British League came under the direction of Don Martin, a
former member of the Australian Young Liberals. The General Secretary of
the British League was Conservative Monday Club member Lady Jane Birdwood
(1913 2000). Born Joan Pollock Graham, Birdwood was a far-right
political activist in the United Kingdom who took part in a number of
movements, and was described as the “largest individual distributor of
racist and antisemitic material” in Britain.[109] Through her work with
the Association of Ukrainians, she came into contact with such groups as
the Anti-Bolshevik Bloc of Nations (ABN) and befriended OUN leader
Yaroslav Stetsko.[110]
The Conservative Monday Club had links to Le Cercle president Brian
Crozier, who created his intelligence network The 61 with funding from
both the CIA and the Heritage Foundation.[111] According to David
Teacher, the “co-organisers” of the Cercle were “dissident veterans of
the Anglo-American intelligence community rogue agents”: Ted Shackley;
Nicholas Elliott, ex-senior man in MI6 whose close friends included James
Jesus Angleton, Kim Philby and Miles Copeland; Donald Jameson a veteran
of the CIA’s Directorate of Operations; and the leader of the group,
Brian Crozier, a British intelligence agent and journalist who succeeded
Jean Violet as chairman of Le Cercle in 1980.[112]
Crozier’s friend Frank Barnett of the National Strategy Information
Center (NSIC) persuaded Richard Mellon Scaife, who funded the Heritage
Foundation, to also fund a London-based CIA propaganda operation called
Forum World Features (FWF). In 1965, the CIA decided to use the CCF to
create a new propaganda outlet, the FWF, chaired by Crozier, which would
become one of the CIA’s main covert propaganda outlets. Initial control
of FWF ran via two CIA officers, one of whom was CCF President Michael
Josselson. The legal and financial infrastructure for FWF was provided by
one of the CIA’s “quiet channels,” millionaire John Hay Whitney, former
member of the OSS, former US Ambassador to Britain and future publisher
of the International Herald Tribune.[113]
The Monday Club was set up within the Conservative party in 1961 to
bring together defenders of South African Apartheid and White Rhodesia,
in opposition to the decolonization and immigration policies of Prime
Minister Harold Macmillan. A member and later patron of the Conservative
Monday Club was Julian Amery, prominent MP on the Conservative Right with
a long history of extensive intelligence, who succeeded Brian Crozier as
president of Le Cercle. Julian’s father Leo Amery, who was of Hungarian
Jewish descent, and also an active Freemason,[114] was designated by Lord
Alfred Milner to succeed him in guiding the Round Table group.[115] Leo
Amery also helped draft the Balfour Declaration. Julian’s brother, John
Amery, British Free Corps (BFC), a unit of the Waffen-SS made up of
British and Dominion prisoners of war who had been recruited by Germany.
John was eventually hanged for treason for his recruitment efforts and
propaganda broadcasts for Nazi Germany.
Julian Amery attended the founding conference organized by Arthur
Koestler in Berlin of the CIA-front, the Congress for Cultural Freedom,
and served on its International Steering Committee. At the time, Amery
was also one of the leading members of the Central and Eastern Europe
Commission of the European Movement.[116] Another Monday Club associate
was Amery’s Private Secretary as Housing Minister, Sir Winston Churchill.
Amery would also become a consultant to BCCI, which CIA assistant
director Robert Gates once referred to jokingly as the “Bank of Crooks
and Criminals.”[117] Julian was also a good friend of David Stirling,
founder of the SAS, with whom he helped orchestrate British involvement
in the North Yemen Civil War with Saudi funding.[118]
One of the Monday Club’s earliest members was Sir John
Biggs-Davison, a Conservative MP who had served on the PEU Central
Council with Otto von Habsburg and Florimond Damman, founder of the
Academie Européenne des Sciences Politiques (AESP) funded by Carlo
Pesenti, a close friend of Le Cercle founder Antoine Pinay. Also included
was George Kennedy Young, a Deputy Chief of MI6 who was involved with the
CIA’s Project Ajax, the coup against Mossadeq in Iran in 1953. Another
early member was Geoffrey Stewart-Smith, later a Conservative MP from
1970 to 1974, who had founded the Foreign Affairs Circle, the British
section of the WACL.[119]
By 1974, the British League of Rights became the British chapter of
the WACL replacing Geoffrey Stewart-Smith’s Foreign Affairs Circle, which
claimed to have left due to the Anti-Communist League’s
anti-semitism.[120] In 1975 the British League established an association
with the Britons Publishing Company. Although not officially connected,
the League of Rights had links to the neo-Nazi National Front and during
the leadership of John Tyndall articles that appeared in League of Rights
publications were regularly reprinted in Tyndall’s organ Spearhead.[121]
Tyndall was an admirer of Sir Oswald Mosley, a devotee of Aleister
Crowley and the founder of the British Union of Fascists.[122] Tyndall
was a former deputy to Colin Jordan of the neo-Nazi National Socialist
Movement in the early 1960s, and corresponded with Savitri Devi, renowned
exponent of “esoteric hitlerlism” and a founding member of WUNS. In 1963,
Tyndall eventually fell out with Jordan over Françoise Dior— the former
wife of a French nobleman and the niece of the French fashion designer
Christian Dior—who, though originally engaged to Tyndall, hastily married
Jordan who had been released from prison before him, to avoid being
expelled from Britain as an undesirable alien.
Nexus Magazine
Icke has been closely associated with antisemitic New Age
periodicals such as Rainbow and Ark Nexus, magazine which is financed by
far-right activists and affiliated with the National Front.[123] In his
book The Robots’ Rebellion (1994), Icke calls Nexus “incomparable” and
“excellent.” Nexus’ range of topics cover “prophecies, UFOs, Big Brother,
the unexplained, suppressed technology, hidden history and more.”
Although formerly concerned primarily with Green issues and Third World
causes, Nexus took up the subject of the U.S. Patriot movement under its
new editor Duncan M. Roads.
In 1989, Roads visited Mouamar Gadaffi in Libya. According to
Australian journalist David Greason, he is a close friend of Robert Pash,
a supporter of Libya and the Australian contact for the Aryan Nations
network in the late 1970s and distributed material of the Ku Klux Klan.
Alan Myers, of Australia’s Green Left Weekly, said that Pash was also
part of the Australian League of Rights.[124] In the late 1980s, Pash was
the Australian distributor for Gadaffi’s Green Book, and was in contact
with the National Front, acting as a conduit for their attempts to make
political contacts with the Libyan regime. Among Pash’s other
introductions to Libya is John Bennett, president of the Australian Civil
Liberties Union, and an associate of Holocaust denier David Irving and
Willis Carto. Bennet serves on the editorial committee of Carto’s Journal
of Historical Review.[125]
In the mid-1990, issues of Nexus have included the call by Linda
Thompson, self-proclaimed “adjutant-general” of the American militias,
for a march on Washington to arrest and try Congressmen for treason. Icke
appeared at a 1994 Nexus conference in Amsterdam at which Thompson was
billed as a star speaker. It was Thompson who produced the Waco video
that influenced Timothy McVeigh, the perpetrator of the Oklahoma City
bombing in 1995. Nexus distributes the video, and even produced a special
version for Europe.
Others influenced by Nexus’ pro-militia line were the leaders of the
Gladio-connected Order of the Solar Temple, a UFO cult that claims to be
based upon the ideals of the Knights Templar, and who referred to
articles in the magazine just before they committed mass suicide in
Switzerland on October 5, 1994.[126] The Solar Temple was founded in 1984
by Gladio-operative Luc Jouret with Joseph di Mambro, a member of the
Ancient and Mystical Order Rosæ Crucis (AMORC), founded in 1915 by Harvey
Spencer Lewis, derived from the Ordo Templi Orientis of Aleister Crowley,
the godfather of twentieth-century Satanism.[127] The Solar Temple was
officially recognized by Prince Rainier III of Monaco, member of the P2
Masonic lodge behind the Gladio operation, with his wife Princess Grace
Kelly becoming a member.[128]
In 1981, Jouret had become acquainted with Julien Origas, founder of
Renovated Order of the Temple (ORT).[129] Some reports have claimed that
Origas was a Nazi SS member during WWII.[130] Origas also reconstructed
the teachings his Renewed Order of the Temple (ORT) based on the I AM
Religious Activity. Origas’ idea of creating the ORT was embraced by
Raymond Bernard, Grand Master of AMORC and the organization’s leading
figure in France in the 1970s. All but two of the purported Grand Masters
of the Priory of Sion are also found on lists of alleged “Imperators” and
“distinguished members” of AMORC, and most of the names found in the
fictitious List of Priory of Sion Grand Masters originate from a document
compiled by Raymond Bernard, a friend of Pierre Plantard, who fabricated
the hoax.[131]
The ORT was closely associated with the Ordre Souverain du Temple
Solaire (OSTS), which was founded at the chateau of Arginy in the
Beaujolais region of France in 1952. OSTS’ origins date back to the so
called “Arginy Renaissance.” In 1952, the same year that Puharich made
contact with the Council of Nine, Breyer began to communicate with The
Nine at Arginy, identifying them with the souls of the nine founding
knights of the Knights Templar.[132] Breyer drew substantially on Alice
Bailey’s ideas, and Di Mambro himself used Bailey’s Great Invocation to
commence OTS ceremonies.[133] According to the Solar Temple, the star
Sirius was the home of a number of Ascended Masters, also known as the
Great White Brotherhood, who came to earth and inhabited
Agartha.[134]
Origas was also a member the “L’Ordre Vert” (Green Order) and the
Internationale Luciferienne (“Luciferian International”).[135] Andre
Wautier, a French author and Theosophist, claimed that in 1945 members of
the Thule Society and the Brotherhood Polaires founded a new Order, the
Green Order, whose adherents honor Lucifer, Mithra, Kali, and
Lilith.[136] On May 14, 1975, the representatives of the various
Luciferian associations were present in Brussels, made a pact with Lug to
prepare the advent of a “Luciferian International.”[137]
Nexus’ 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’ UK office, he eagerly displayed his copy of the Protocols of Zion,
as reported Matthew Kalman and John Murray, in a 1995 article for the New
Statesman & Society, and spoke admiringly of David Irving. As he
began to describe the “global conspiracy,” the authors explained, he
claimed to have helped Icke with a chapter in his forthcoming book, which
also called into question the facts of the holocaust.[138]
The editor of London-based New Age magazine Rainbow Ark has steered
Icke toward meetings with militant US patriots, and recommended
Bloomfield Books. The same editor has hinted at their manipulation of
Icke, by suggesting Icke wasn’t “ready for this yet,” referring to a
spoof document entitled Further Protocols, outlining plans of “secret
Zionism” for the “Goyim.”[139] Rainbow Ark maintains an influential
relationship with Icke, printing excerpts of his work and helping to
organize his lectures and meetings. The magazine betrays a wide range of
far-right links. In particular is Donald Martin, of the British League of
Rights who has published in Spearhead, the magazine of John Tyndall,
leader of the British National Party, who regards Martin as his ally in
opposing immigration.[140] In 2004, Tyndall joined in signing the
New Orleans Protocol, written by David Duke, former Grand Wizard of the
Ku Klux Klan. In an attempt to overcome the divisiveness that had
followed the death of William Pierce in 2002, Duke presented a unity
proposal for peace within the movement. His proposal, now known as the
New Orleans Protocol, pledged adherents to a pan-European outlook,
recognizing national and ethnic allegiance, but stressing the value of
all European peoples. The Protocol was signed by and sponsored by a
number of white supremacist leaders and organizations, including Don
Black and Willis Carto.
Aviary
Left to right: John B. Alexander, Permindex member Gordon Novel, and
John’s wife Victoria.
Vallely’s MindWar article, co-authored with Michael Aquino, argued
for the application of Psychological Operations (PSYOPS) and
“psychotronics” at the national level both in the target country and at
home. Their paper was inspired by an article written earlier in the year,
titled “The New Mental Battlefield,” by John B. Alexander, one of the
chief architects of the CIA’s remote viewing program known as Operation
Stargate. Vallely and Aquino wrote:
Psychotronic research is in its infancy, but the
U.S. Army already possesses an operational weapons systems designed to do
what LTC Alexander would like ESP to do except that this weapons system
uses existing communications media. It seeks to map the minds of neutral
and enemy individuals and then to change them in accordance with U.S.
national interests. It does this on a wide scale, embracing military
units, regions, nations, and blocs. In its present form it is called
Psychological Operations (PSYOP).
Alexander and C.B. Scott Jones are members of what is called “the
Aviary,” a group of intelligence and Department of Defense officers and
scientists involved MILABS operations—black operations by rogue
military-intelligence units who are said to stalk, harass, terrorize,
kidnap, drug, gang-rape and mind-rape innocent civilians, using hypnotic
mind-control programming to implant a false post-hypnotic “memory” that
the episode was an “alien abduction.”[141] Each member of the Aviary
bears a bird’s name. Alexander, the leader, is “Penguin” while Jones is
“Falcon” and Hal Puthoff is “Owl”. Others include Ron Pandolphi
(“Pelican”), who is a PhD in physics and works at the Rocket and Missile
section of the Office of the Deputy Director of Science and Technology,
CIA.
Alexander was director of the Advanced Theoretical Physics Working
Group (ATPWG), which also included United States Army Colonel Philip J.
Corso. SRI remote-viewer Hal Puthoff and Corso have both claimed that the
ATPWG “operated at the highest levels of government.”[142] Corso was a
former military intelligence officer under General Charles Willoughby,
ASC member, Shickshinny Knight and Black Eagle Fund conspirator
implicated in the JFK assassination.[143] In 1961, he became Chief of the
Pentagon’s Foreign Technology desk in Army Research and Development. In
this position, Corso claims to have supposedly been assigned to oversee
the reverse engineering material recovered from crashed alien spacecraft,
resulting in several technological breakthroughs, including accelerated
particle beam devices, fiber optics, lasers, computer chips and Kevlar.
With help from William J. Birnes, Corso published The Day After Roswell
in 1997, with a forward from Strom Thurmond. Their book claims that an
extraterrestrial spacecraft crashed near Roswell, New Mexico, in 1947 and
was recovered by the United States government who then sought to cover up
the evidence. The book concludes with reproduction of information about
Project Horizon, a 1950s US Army plan for bases on the moon.
Vallely has been close with former CIA director James Woolsey.
According to Jack Sarfati, Woolsey was working in 2001-2012 with Steven
Schwartz, a remote-viewer with links to the Institute of Noetic Sciences
(IONS).[144] Woolsey appears to be close to UFO cultist Joe Firmage,
Catherine Austin Fitts, and John Petersen, who all belong to the
Arlington Institute, non-profit think tank specializing in predictive
modeling of future events, that is, futures studies.[145] Petersen was a
naval flight officer in the United States Navy, and has worked at the
National War College, the Institute for National Security Studies, the
Office of the Secretary of Defense, and the National Security Council at
the White House. Firmage wrote an online book titled Project Kairos,
which claimed that aliens had occasionally contributed to human
scientific achievements, most recently in the 1947 Roswell crash. Fitts
blew the whistle on the missing trillions at the Pentagon and
collaborated with Michael Ruppert in exposing CIA drug
trafficking.
In 1999, Joe Firmage, quit USWeb, the US$2 billion company he
co-founded, to promote what he says could be “the most important news
event in 2000 years,” humanity’s potential rendezvous with
extraterrestrials.[146] Firmage produced a 600-page manifesto entitled
The Truth, posted on the Internet, which contained documents from a
source he called the “Deep Throat of Cyberspace,” which he claimed may
shed new light on UFOs and the Roswell incident, including what purport
to be memos on the subject from President Truman and scientists Albert
Einstein and Robert Oppenheimer.[147] Firmage also associated with John
B. Alexander. There are also indications that it was his money that was
used to finance the research of Robert and Ryan Wood on the Majestic 12
documents.[148]
And at Edgar Mitchell’s IONS, Firmage was offering presentations
with Daniel Sheehan and John Mack, an American psychiatrist known for his
interest in alien abduction.[149] Firmage provided a $1 million
contribution to the State of the World Forum, convened in 1995 by
Gorbachev, Sheehan and his best friend from Harvard Divinity School, Jim
Garrison, a member of IONS and president of the Esalen Institute’s
Soviet-American Exchange Program.[150] “Over the next 20 to 30 years, we
are going to end up with world government,” announced Garrison, “It’s
inevitable.”[151] The Forum called for the transfer of all armaments to
the UN, the initiation of global taxation, stricter population control
programs, and the elimination of nationalism and national borders.
Founding co-chairs included George Shultz, and Ted Turner, who brought in
CNN to provide the forum’s initial global live broadcast with Gorbachev,
Margaret Thatcher and George Bush. Jane Goodall joined as a co-chair in
1996. Financial contributions were provided by the Carnegie Corporation
of New York, the Rockefeller Brothers Fund, Archer Daniel Midlands and
NASDAQ. Participants included actor Michael Douglas, and New Age
personalities like Richard Baker, Abbot of the Crestone Zen Center, Jean
Houston and Ken Wilber.[152] David Rockefeller, Henry Kissinger, Zbigniew
Brzezinski and Maurice Strong were among the participants in
meetings.[153]
Fox News
Roy Cohn meeting with Rupert Murdoch and President Ronald Reagan at
the White House
Fox’s founder, Knight of Malta Rupert Murdoch, has also been a
member of the Cato Institute founded by the Koch brothers.[154] Murdoch
has a long history of lending the weight of his media empire to the
service of propaganda for CIA covert operations, beginning with the
silent coup against the government of Cough Whitlam in 1975. Murdoch was
also connected the activities of the Secret Team, particularly through
its connections to the CIA’s Nugan Hand and the US Navy’s super-secret
Task Force 157, which was organized by Henry Kissinger.[155] Although
some records relating to Murdoch remain classified, several documents
that have been released indicate that he and Richard Mellon Scaife were
considered sources of financial and other support for President Ronald
Reagan’s hard-line Central American policies, including the CIA’s covert
war in Nicaragua.[156]
Murdoch was also close personal friends with Roy Cohn, who first
introduced him to President Ronald Reagan in 1983. Cohn had one interest
when he brought Murdoch and Reagan together, “and that was that at least
one major publisher in this country… would become and remain pro-Reagan,”
he wrote in a letter to senior White House aides in 1987. The letter
noted that Murdoch then owned the “New York Post—over one million, third
largest and largest afternoon; New York Magazine; Village Voice; San
Antonio Express; Houston Ring papers; and now the Boston Herald; and
internationally influential London Times, etc.” According to Cohn, “Mr.
Murdoch has performed to the limit up through and including today.”
Michael McManus, the Deputy Assistant to the President, responded to Cohn
to share their “high regard” for Murdoch” and the appreciation they had
for the “importance of what he is doing.”[157]
In 1994, Murdoch described a plan to Reed Hundt, then chairman of
the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) under President Bill Clinton,
to launch Fox News as a radical new television network. Unlike the three
established networks, who catered to the same centrist audience,
Murdoch’s network would follow the model of the tabloids that he
published in Australia and England. Hundt told Jane Mayer, “What he was
really saying was that he was going after a working-class audience. He
was going to carve out a base—what would become the Trump base.”[158]
Hundt recalled the conversation. “This person’s made a huge mark in two
other countries, and he had entered our country and was saying, ‘I’m
going to break up the three-party oligopoly that has governed the most
important medium of communication for politics and policy in this country
since the Second World War.’ It was like a scene from ‘Faust.’ What came
to mind was Mephistopheles.”[159]
It was Reagan’s initial FCC chairman Mark Fowler’ deregulation of
the industry and approval of Murdoch’s acquisition of local TV stations
that allowed him to form his fourth major network: Fox.[160] In the
following decade, in 1996, Fox established the Fox News Channel, which
Murdoch boasts that he launched as a counterbalance to the “liberal bias”
of CNN. Murdoch hired former Republican Party media consultant and CNBC
executive Roger Ailes as Fox News’ founding CEO. Ailes was a media
consultant for Republican presidents Richard Nixon, Ronald Reagan, and
George H.W. Bush, and for Rudy Giuliani's first mayoral campaign. In 1987
and 1988, Ailes was credited along with Roger Stone’s associate, Southern
Strategy pioneer and master “dirty tricks” politics, Lee Atwater, with
guiding George H.W. Bush to victory in the Republican primaries and the
later come-from-behind victory over Michael Dukakis.
Dark Genius, an Ailes biography by Kerwin Swint, traces the history
of Fox News to Ailes’ involvement in a national conservative television
news network, Television News Inc. (TVN), funded by Joseph Coors to
counter the “liberal” media. TVN came into being around the same time as
the Heritage Foundation, and was founded by Coors, Jack Wilson and Paul
Weyrich. The project was designed to inject a far-right slant into local
news broadcasts by providing news clips that stations could use without
credit and for a fraction of the actual costs of production. Thus, Wilson
explained, TVN would “gradually, subtly, slowly” inject “our philosophy
in the news.”[161] The network was, in the words of a news director who
quit in protest, a “propaganda machine.”[162] Swint has shown that such
Fox News slogans and buzz phrases as “Fair and Balanced,” “We Report, You
Decide,” and “We’re an alternative to the ‘liberal’ media” were derived
from the mouths of TVN’s founders.[163]
Regnery Publishing
Alfred S. Regnery, the son of ASC member Henry Regnery, founder of
Regnery Publishing
The rise of the conservative “alternative” news sources can be
traced back to the founding of the newspaper Human Events in 1944,
Regnery Publishing in 1947 and William F. Buckley Jr.’s National Review
in 1955. But, according to Max Boot of the Washington Post, “it did not
become a mass phenomenon until the debut of Rush Limbaugh’s national
radio show, in 1988, followed in 1996 by the launch of the Fox News
Channel and the Drudge Report.” Those remain three of the most popular
outlets of the right, notes Boot, but they have been joined by radio
hosts such as Mark Levin and Michael Savage, authors Ann Coulter and
Dinesh D’Souza, and websites such as Breitbart, TheBlaze, Infowars and
Newsmax.[164]
Alfred S. Regnery, the son of Henry Regnery, became president of
Regnery Publishing from 1986 to 2003. Alfred has also served as chairman
of the Board of Trustees of the Intercollegiate Studies Institute (ISI)
and as trustee of the Philadelphia Society. In 1983, Edwin Meese asked
Alfred to informally head the administration’s anti-pornography campaign,
when he was in the Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention
(OJJDP). This was despite the fact that in 1976, Alfred and his wife
fabricated an incident which they reported to the police, claiming that
his wife, who was eight months pregnant at the time, “had been raped by a
white male and a black male and had been stabbed.” Shortly after the
alleged assault, the police searched Regnery’s home and found a cache of
pornography, including “several catalogues for various prophylactic
devices and erotica.” The police also reported finding “a book with
numerous color photos of various sexual gratification, including oral sex
and placing of objects into the vagina,” a German sex magazine, and a
copy of Penthouse. [165] In the 2000s, Alfred left his post as
president of Regnery Publishing to become the publisher of The American
Spectator. Alfred was succeeded by Alex Novak, son of Robert Novak,
infamous for outing CIA agent Valerie Plame.
One of Regnery’s publishing lines is the Politically Incorrect Guide
(P.I.G.) series, which present conservative commentary of issues such as
the American Civil War, the British empire, the Roman Catholic Church,
Islam, immigration, and climate change. Regnery Publishing has had over
60 books reach the New York Times bestseller list. Regnery has also
published Oliver North, Sarah Palin, Newt Gingrich, Ann Coulter, Michelle
Malkin, Robert Spencer, David Horowitz and Oliver Stone. Coulter was also
published in Human Events, which had also published the works of Murray
Rothbard, and other pioneers of the libertarian movement. Regular writers
for Human Events included Robert Novak, Pat Buchanan, as well as Newt
Gingrich, Paul Craig Roberts and Sean Hannity. Paul Craig Roberts has
contributed columns to Willis Carto’s American Free Press (AFP), which
continues in the spirit of the Liberty Lobby’s The Spotlight. The
magazine has also run columns by Joe Sobran, James Traficant, and Ron
Paul. Writers for the newspaper also include Michael Collins Piper and
James P. Tucker, Jr., a longtime Spotlight reporter known for this
coverage of the Bilderberg Group. AFP focuses on conspiracy theory,
nationalist economics, and anti-Zionism. It continues to promote
alternative theories to the 9-11 attacks and support presidential
candidates favoring individual liberty.
However, Regnery has been in the habit of creating bestsellers by
artificially boosting sales, a practice that is common among conservative
booksellers. SarahPAC spent $63,000 to purchase Going Rogue, and
according to a Federal Election Commission filing, America By Heart was
offered to donors with a $100 contribution.[166] Mitt Romney boosted
sales of his book by requiring various schools, think tanks, and
institutions to buy thousands of copies in exchange for his
speeches.[167] When Regnery published Mark Levin’s 2009 book, Liberty and
Tyranny, the Senate Conservatives Fund PAC spent $427,000 to buy copies
which they distributed to donors who gave them $25 or more to elect
conservative candidates.[168] The Conservative Books Club gave away
copies of Ann Coulter’s book Godless: The Church of Liberalism if you
bought two other books.[169] Regnery donates books to nonprofit groups
affiliated with Eagle Publishing, which also owns Regnery, and gives the
books as incentives to subscribers to newsletters published by Eagle.
Though Godless retails for $27.95, a free copy was available with a
subscription to Human Events, which publishes Coulter’s
articles.[170]
DisinfoWars
Together, this network cultivated bigotry through paranoia about
“political correctness” and “liberal bias” in the mainstream media, to
channel pent-up frustrations towards what they called the
“establishment,” to denounce “Big Government” in order to advance
neoliberal policies. This agenda culminated in the rise of the Tea Party,
a movement bankrolled by the Koch brothers and popularized by Fox
News.[171] According to Alex Jones, the Tea Party was started by him and
Ron Paul supporters.[172] The Tea Party was mobilized by the notion of a
conspiracy inspired by the writings of right-wing conspiracy authors like
Eustace Mullins, who was a guest on Alex Jones’ radio show
InfoWars.
Jones calls himself a paleoconservative, whose early sources were
the Patriot Movement, John Birch Society and the CNP. In an interview
with Joel Skousen, nephew of conservative author and commentator W. Cleon
Skousen of the John Birch Society, Jones claimed, “There’s a left-wing
CFR-funded conspiracy theory that says some group called the CNP runs
everything. It’s a total diversion… Absolutely, [Howard Phillips and
Richard Viguerie are excellent CNP mentor]. And Howard Phillips has been
fighting the New World Order forever.”[173] Although not openly
advocating racism against Blacks, Jones has nevertheless employed the
characteristic argument of the Klan, that political correctness denies
Whites the right to “defend” their own rights and their
“culture.”[174]
Jones has actually admitted on multiple occasions that he comes from
a CIA and army special forces family: “Let me just tell you something. I
grew up in Dallas, Texas, with my family doing things like, uh, helping
take in East German defectors, okay? Whenever I go to a family reunion,
half of the people in the room are former or retired CIA. And do you know
what they tell me? They tell me I’m dead on, a hundred percent absolutely
right.”[175] Jones claims that he’s often asked by recently retired
generals, or former special forces colonels, or current Delta Force
people—some of them have been on his show—they ask what intelligence
agency he’s with. While his answer is consistently no, Jones explains:
“On the other hand, I do have branches of different agencies actually
trying to couple with what we’re doing to resist the globalists. And I’m
not working with some agency in an official capacity taking orders. It
doesn’t work like that. It’s just people that also wanna resist this.
It’s like V for Vendatta where everybody doesn’t need to get orders.
They’ll just show up at the same time.”[176]
Alex Jones’ films Endgame: Blueprint for Global Enslavement and New
World Order have been produced by Disinformation Company. The bizarre
irony is that, in a Discordian sense, Disinformation seems to produce
just that: disinformation. Richard Metzger, who is inspired by Aleister
Crowley, and who maintains strong ties with the Discordians and chaos
magicians, founded the Disinformation Company to be a “magick business,”
and explained:
Magick—defined by Aleister Crowley as the art and
science of causing change in conformity with will—has always been the
vital core of all of the projects we undertake at The Disinformation
Company. Whether via our website, publishing activities or our TV series,
the idea of being able to influence reality in some beneficial way is
what drives our activities. I’ve always considered The Disinformation
Company Ltd. and our various activities to constitute a very complex
spell.[177]
In 2003, Metzger put together The Book of Lies, named after
Crowley’s book of the same name. Subtitled The Disinformation Guide to
Magick and the Occult, the book is basically an homage to William S.
Burroughs, and an anthology of occultism, chaos magic and technopaganism
that features almost the entire pantheon of its modern-day exponents,
including Robert Anton Wilson, Terence McKenna, Hakim Bey, Gary Lachman,
Mark Pesce, Genesis P-Orridge, Phil Hine, Erik Davis, Daniel Pinchbeck,
Tracy Twyman, and T. Allen Greenfield. Michael Moynihan contributed an
article titled, “Julius Evola’s Combat Manual for a Revolt Against the
Modern World,” as well as an exclusive interview, “Anton LaVey: A
Fireside Chat with the Black Pope.”
Alex Jones, like David Icke, has been a frequent guest on Art Bell’s
show on Coast to Coast AM, which featured the entire pantheon of
disinformers connected with the intelligence community. Starting in 1997,
Col. John B. Alexander became a key figure on Coast to Coast AM, which
became widely popular for its discussion of the conspiracies, paranormal
and UFOs. According to The Washington Post in its February 23, 1997,
edition, Bell was at the time America’s highest-rated late-night radio
talk show host, broadcast on 328 stations. According to The Oregonian in
its June 22 edition of the same year, Coast to Coast AM with Bell was on
460 stations. At its initial peak in popularity, Coast to Coast AM was
syndicated on more than 500 radio stations and claimed 15 million
listeners nightly.
Since 1998, Coast to Coast AM has been controlled by Clear Channel
Communications, founded by Lowry Mays and Red McCombs. Mays was a major
financier of the George H.W. Bush Presidential Library Foundation,
presided by Brent Scowcroft. McCombs, in March 2011, together with
Admiral Bobby Ray Inman, a former deputy director of the CIA and head of
the Office of Naval Intelligence (ONI) and the NSA, as well as John
Ashcroft, took over Erik Prince’s Blackwater. McCombs succeeded Prince as
chairman.[178]
The show featured the denizens of Project Stargate, including Ed
Dames, Richard C. Hoagland, Terence McKenna, Graham Hancock, Zecharia
Sitchin, Dannion Brinkley, David John Oates, and Robert Bigelow. Philip
Corso appeared with Alexander in 1997. Other guests associated with the
CNP and John Birch Society include G. Edward Griffin, Charles R. Smith,
CNP member Jerome Corsi, Jeffrey NyQuist, Joel Skousen, Malachi Martin,
Father Nicholas Gruner and William Jasper. Gruner, who denounced the “New
World Order” and its New Age “one-world religion,” has appeared in at
least one John Birch Society film. Rama Coomaraswamy was invited in 2006.
John Loftus was invited in 2005 and 2012. Catherine Austin Fitts has
appeared dozens of times on the show. Frequent guests included Robert and
Ryan Wood, whose research on MJ-12 documents was financed by Joe
Firmage.[179] Well-known JFK researcher Mark Lane, who became involved in
the Liberty Lobby. In 1978, Lane was evacuated from the Jonestown cult
premises, along with CIA agent Richard Dwyer, just before the mass
suicide began.[180] Dan Aykroyd was also a guest.
Center for Security Policy
According to John C. Haich, Dr. Richard Hoagland, an American author
known for his conspiracy theories about NASA, lost alien civilizations on
the Moon and on Mars, is an agent of influence for the Center for
Security Policy (CSP), where Paul E. Vallely serves as military committee
chairman.[181] In his position as FOX News military analyst from 2001 to
2007, Vallely unwaveringly promoted the US wars of naked aggression
against Iraq and provided the personal defense of Donald Rumsfeld in the
media as well as initiated a cover-up of the Valerie Plame affair.
Vallely has continued to serve in disinformation of all kinds. Vallely
and Woolsey shared membership on the neoconservative CSP, whose
activities are focused on exposing and researching perceived jihadist
threats to the United States. The CSP, which uses the ASC’s motto “Peace
Through Strength,” and which is funded by the Olin, Scaife, Carthage,
Bradley, and a few other right-wing foundations.[182] The CSP was founded
in 1988 by Frank Gaffney, a member of the CNP, who worked for Richard
Perle during the Reagan administration. Major weapons contractors such as
Boeing, General Atomics, General Dynamics, Litton, Lockheed Martin,
Northrop Grumman, Thiokol, and TRW have also provided financial
support.[183] CSP Advisory Council includes Heritage Foundation founder
Edwin Feulner, and neoconservatives Midge Decter, Jeane Kirkpatrick, Dick
Cheney, Douglas Feith, Richard Perle, Donald Rumsfeld, James Schlesinger,
Paul Wolfowitz and Daniel Pipes.[184] Also on the CSP Advisory Council is
Knight of Malta Joseph E. Schmitz, a former executive of Blackwater, the
infamous American private military firm founded by CNP member Erik
Prince.
Vallely and Woolsey have also been associated with the Intelligence
Summit, whose focus is on terrorism and jihad.[185] The Summit was
founded in 2006 by John Loftus, former U.S. government prosecutor and
former Army intelligence officer. He began working for the US Department
of Justice in 1977 and in 1979 joined their Office of Special
Investigations, which was charged with prosecuting and deporting Nazi war
criminals in the US. Loftus is an author of numerous books on the
CIA-Nazi connection including The Belarus Secret, Unholy trinity: how the
Vatican's Nazi networks betrayed western intelligence to the Soviets, and
The Secret War Against the Jews, both of which have extensive material on
the Bush-Rockefeller-Nazi connection.
The Intelligence Summit is a powerful, secret organization of top
intelligence officers from around the world. Several former CIA
directors, former Mossad chiefs, former MI6 heads, former US Air Force
Generals and other top intelligence officials are part of its leadership.
The Chairman of the Intelligence Summit is a top secret person, whose
identity is never revealed and his name withheld for security reasons.
The list of speakers and board members includes Richard Perle and another
notorious fabricator, Michael Ledeen.[186] The Advisory Council included
James Woolsey, John Deutsch, another former CIA director, and Robert
Spencer the director, Jihad Watch. In 2006, the Summit was exposed for
ties to the Russian mafia through the Summit’s long-time financier
Russian Zionist oligarch Michael Cherney, who has been repeatedly linked
with Solntsevskaya.[187] In 2003, Cherney founded the Jerusalem Summit,
attended by Richard Perle and Frank Gaffney, Ehud Olmert and Benjamin
Netanyahu.
In 2003, Gaffney wrote an article on alleged Muslim Brotherhood
infiltration for FrontPage magazine, the media arm of the David Horowitz
Freedom Center, established with funding from groups including the John
M. Olin Foundation, the Bradley Foundation and the Scaife
Foundation.[188] The center was founded by David Horowitz, whose works
are published by Regnery Publishing. From 195675, Horowitz was an
outspoken adherent of the New Left and a close friend Huey P. Newton,
founder of the Black Panther Party, but later rejected leftism and
founded Students for Academic Freedom to oppose what he believed to be
political correctness and leftist orientation in academia. Founded in
1988, the David Horowitz Freedom Center is one of the main organizations
that “helped spread bigoted ideas into American life,” according to the
Southern Poverty Law Center.[189] In 20142015, Horowitz provided
$250,000 in funding to the Dutch right-wing nationalist Party for Freedom
of Geert Wilders, who also inspired Anders Behring Breivik, the Norwegian
far-right terrorist who committed the 2011 Norway attacks.[190]
A fellow at the Freedom Center is Ben Shapiro, who was
editor-at-large of Breitbart between 2012 and 2016, and serves as editor
emeritus for The Daily Wire, which he founded, and hosts The Ben Shapiro
Show.[191] The social network Telegram has been an online gathering point
for supporters of the Canadian “Freedom Convoy” against Covid
restrictions, for influencers like Shapiro, to collect funds for the
protesters, while conservative media like Fox News in the US, and Rebel
News and the Toronto Sun in Canada, have been serving as the protest’s
media outlets.[192]
The David Horowitz Freedom Center has also supported Rebel News,
often cast as Canada’s version of Breitbart, founded in 2015 by former
Sun News Network personalities Ezra Levant and Brian Lilley.[193] In
1994, Levant enrolled in an internship arranged by the libertarian Koch
Summer Fellow Program in Washington, DC. He worked for the Koch-funded
Fraser Institute in 1995. In 1996, Levant worked with neoconservative
David Frum to organize the “Winds of Change” conference in Calgary, an
early attempt to encourage the merger of Reform Party of Canada and
Progressive Conservative Party of Canada. Though unsuccessful, the
conference opened the way for the formation of the Conservative Party of
Canada in 2003. Levant had supported Preston Manning’s United Alternative
initiative in 1999, and was one of the leaders of the movement to create
the Canadian Alliance as an attempt to broaden the party’s base.
Under Levant, who is Jewish, The Rebel has been accused of being a
platform for the far-right anti-Muslim ideology known as
counter-jihad.[194] Former Sun News reporter Faith Goldy later joined the
outlet. Gavin McInnes, founder of the far-right men’s organization Proud
Boys, was also a contributor. Many of The Rebel’s contributors announced
their departure or were fired following Goldy’s prominent coverage of
Unite the Right rally, and her interview with The Daily Stormer.
Alt-Right
Alt-right personality Lauren Southern—who worked for Rebel News
until March 2017—her fiancée Martin Sellner and Brittany Pettibone,
travelled to Russia in early June 2018 to meet with Russian ideologue
Alexander Dugin, known as “Putin’s Rasputin.” [195] Dugin was the true
architect of the alt-right. Dugin’s objective is part of a plan based on
his occult philosophy, of pitting Hyperborea, representing Russia and its
Eurasian allies, against Atlantis, represented by America and Nato.
Dugin, whose plan is to sow chaos wherever possible to undermine Western
hegemony, saw an opportunity to exploit America’s volatile race divide.
Where Dugin proposed various strategies for different countries in the
Foundations of Geopolitics on how to combat American influence or to gain
allies, he prescribed the need for the Russian special services and their
allies “to provoke all forms of instability and separatism within the
borders of the United States.”[196] Dugin adds:
It is especially important to introduce
geopolitical disorder into internal American activity, encouraging all
kinds of separatism and ethnic, social and racial conflicts, actively
supporting all dissident movementsextremist, racist, and sectarian
groups, thus destabilizing internal political processes in the U.S. It
would also make sense simultaneously to support isolationist tendencies
in American politics…[197]
A protegée of Raymond Abellio’s pupil, Jean Parvulesco, Dugin was
also a close friend of Gladio-operative Claudio Mutti, who joined GRECE
member Jean-Francois Thiriart’s Young Europe. Mutti was also a close
friend of Luc Jouret, who founded the cult of the Solar Temple.[198]
Mutti, was also appointed Emir in the notorious Murabitun Movement, a
crypt-Masonic and fascist organization founded by a Scottish convert to
Islam named Ian Dallas, a.k.a. Sheikh Abdalqadir al-Murabit.[199] Dugin
also works closely with Christian Bouchet, a high initiate of
Memphis-Misraim, who claimed to be the head of the OTO in France.[200]
Bouchet has been described as “one of the principal promoters of satanic
thought in France.”[201] Dugin is also associated with Kerry Bolton,
founder of the satanic Black Order, and the international distributor for
the English-based Order of Nine Angles (O9A).
Inspired by his mentors Jean Parvulesco and Raymond Abellio, Dugin’s
plan for accelerating the End Times expands on the Priory of Sion
aspirations of the reign of Nostradamus’ Grand Monarch, to be fulfilled
with the “Consecration of Russia” prophesied in the Third Secret of
Fatima. Stephan Chalandon and Philip Coppens, detail what connects
Abellio and Parvulesco’s synarchism, the Three Secrets of Fatima, and
their own vision for the future of Russia, and describing them as New
Agers building “An Age of Aquarius.”[202] Coppens is a Belgian author who
focused on areas of fringe science and alternative history and
connections between UFO cults and the extreme right. Coppens has been
featured on Nexus, Atlantis Rising, and New Dawn magazines and appeared
on many episodes of the History Channel’s Ancient Aliens series. He
served as the primary researcher for The Stargate Conspiracy, by Lynn
Picknett and Clive Prince, a book about the CIA’s remote-viewing program
Project Stargate.[203] Picknett and Prince are also authors of The Turin
Shroud, The Templar Revelation, and The Sion Revelation, the last of
which explores the connections of the Priory of Sion mythos and
synarchism.
Bolton extolled Dugin’s prescription for a “multipolar” world in an
article for New Dawn magazine, titled “Putin, Russia, & the Rise of a
New Era.” New Dawn, which hails itself as “The World’s Most Unusual
Magazine,” focuses on New Age topics, alternative medicines,
extraterrestrials, and “alternative news and views on global trends and
world affairs.” Their “About” page features endorsements from Philip K.
Dick, Jose Argüelles, and Dugin himself who described the magazine as:
“one of the best sources of realistic information on the state of things
in our world as it nears its inevitable and predicted end.”[204]
Referring to the prophecy of Nostradamus, Bolton notes that a commentator
in New Dawn magazine wrote, “the rise of Putin had mystical implications
that could impact on the world in an epochal way: Putin’s inauguration as
Prime Minister on 9 August 1999 occurred during the week of the solar
eclipse and the planetary alignment of the Grand Cross, ‘a highly
auspicious astrological event… traditionally held to be the end of an
epoch.’”[205]
Chalandon and Coppens’ article was published in the Occidental
Quarterly, a white nationalist and self-described “pro-Western”
publication sponsored by Henry Regnery’s nephew, William Regnery II.
Effectively, the alt-right was again a creation of the Regnery family,
which the Southern Poverty Law Center described as “a right-wing
publishing dynasty that wields tremendous influence among both mainstream
conservatives and far-right extremists.”[206] In 2005, with Samuel
T. Francis, William Regnery II founded the National Policy Institute
(NPI), a think tank dedicated to “promot[ing] the American majority’s
unique historical, cultural, and biological inheritance.”[207] The
founding of the NPI was supported with a grant from the Pioneer
Fund.[208]
Richard B. Spencer, the most popular figure in the alt-right
movement, attracted the attention Regnery, who eventually took over the
NPI. Until October 2016, Spencer was married to Canadian-Russian scholar
Nina Kouprianova, who has translated into English some of the articles
and books of Dugin, including The Fourth Political Theory and Martin
Heidegger, which was published by Spencer’s Radix. Both she and Spencer
have appeared on Russia Today, Putin’s propaganda arm, to defend Russian
actions in Ukraine. Spencer calls Russia “the most powerful white power
in the world” and admires Putin’s authoritarianism.[209] The preface to
Dugin’s Martin Heidegger was written by Paul Gottfried. The Occidental
Quarterly and Radix both publish articles by Kerry Bolton, founder of the
satanic Black Order, and the international distributor for the
English-based Order of Nine Angles (O9A). Although Jewish, Gottfried
described Bolton’s Thinkers of the Right: Challenging Materialism as “one
of the most enlightening studies of the interwar Right I’ve encountered
in years.”[210]
Prominent far-right figures in attendance at the Unite the Right
rally, that took place in Charlottesville, Virginia, from August 11 to
12, 2017, included Spencer, Gavin McInnes and the Proud Boys, entertainer
Baked Alaska, former Libertarian Party candidate Augustus Invictus, David
Duke, Identity Evropa leader Nathan Damigo, Right Stuff founder Mike
Enoch, League of the South founder Michael Hill, Red Ice host Henrik
Palmgren, The Rebel Media commentator Faith Goldy, Right Side
Broadcasting Network host Nicholas Fuentes, YouTube personality James
Allsup, former Business Insider CTO Pax Dickinson, Right Stuff blogger
Johnny Monoxide, Daily Stormer writer Robert “Azzmador” Ray, Daily Caller
contributor and rally organizer Jason Kessler, and Radical Agenda host
Christopher Cantwell.
Also attending Unite the Right rally was Swedish mining tycoon
Daniel Friberg, founder of Arktos Media, which connects the American
alt-right to their European counterparts.[211] Friberg is virtually
unknown in his native Sweden, but is regarded by British anti-fascist
magazine Searchlight as “one of the most influential figures in the
global far right.”[212] The name “Arktos” recalls the title of Dugin’s
esoteric publication, Arktogeya. Joscelyn Godwin wrote Arktos: The Polar
Myth in Science, Symbolism and Nazi Survival, referring to the primeval
homeland of the Aryans, identified with Thule and Agartha. Arktos is Ursa
Major, the most prominent constellation in the Northern Hemisphere.
According to Godwin, the four positions of the constellation,
corresponding to the four seasons of the zodiac, are symbolized by the
swastika.[213] The swastika is therefore also a symbol of the North Pole,
which since the Ancient Mysteries has been worshipped as a phallic
symbol, circled by the constellation Draco, or the Dragon, depicted by
the lion-headed depiction of Mithras.
Searchlight identified a direct link between Friberg and Richard B.
Spencer in the launch by the NPI and Arktos Media of a joint AltRight
website in January 2017, where Dugin is a regular contributor.[214]
Searchlight followed the progress of Putin’s subversion and alliance with
numerous far-right political groups in the United Kingdom, and has
concluded that those from whom the threat is most evident are the
Traditional Britain Group (TBG), Generation Identity, the Nazi Forum
groups, and Arktos Media.[215] TBG is a traditionalist radical
conservative political organization in the United Kingdom. Its President
is Lord Sudeley. The Vice President, Professor John Kersey, describes
himself as a “radical traditionalist and paleolibertarians.”[216] With
the death of its Patron, General Sir Walter Walker, the Western Goals
Institute (WGI) in London was wound up, and its Vice-President, Gregory
Lauder-Frost, founded the TBG in 2001 to continue much of the WGI’s work
in the UK.[217] The WACL also had ties to the WGI, a conservative
pressure group in Britain, which was founded in 1985 as an offshoot of
the US Western Goals Foundation. Lauder-Frost was also a former officer
of the Conservative Monday Club, which was connected to Le Cercle.
Lauder-Frost who read Modern History at Oxford, holds a PhD on “The Last
50 Years of Imperial Russia,” is an established expert on genealogy, and
was Publications Editor and Secretary-General of the international
Monarchist League.[218]
The TBG are inspired by Joseph de Maistre, authors of the German
Conservative Revolution, including Oswald Spengler, Ernst Jünger and
Martin Heidegger, and fascist luminaries like Corneliu Codreanu, and
Francis Parker-Yockey. Another more significant reference, cited very
regularly on their webpage and throughout other material developed, is
Julius Evola.[219] Searchlight has also exposed a connection between
Lauder-Frost and a Russian think-tank called Katehon, whose supervisory
board includes Leonid Reshetnikov, retired lieutenant-general of the
Russian Foreign Intelligence Service and Alexander Dugin.[220] TBG also
helped to promote a conference in 2013 that included Dugin, and featured
Alain de Benoist as a keynote speaker, titled “The End Of The Present
World Conference.” Oliver Lane, a TBG regular and close friend of
Lauder-Frost, is a journalist specializing in terrorism and
radicalization for Breitbart News.[221] The 2015 Annual Conference of the
TGB included John Morgan, Editor-in-Chief of Arktos Books.
Tucker Carlson
Tucker Carlson
Also jumping on the Covid-19 conspiracy bandwagon is Fox host Tucker
Carlson. But, instead of highlighting the real role of Bill Gates and his
collusion with the WHO and Big Pharma, it’s an opportunity, as usual, to
peddle neoliberal politics, by characterizing the imposed measures as
part of a left-wing agenda to expand the powers of the government.[222]
As of February 2017, Fox hit a ratings milestone in cable news by marking
15 years as the most-watched news channel, Nielsen data revealed. Fox
currently has 13 of the top 15 programs in cable news in total viewers
and seven out of the top ten programs in the 25-54 age demographic. The
O’Reilly Factor dominated all categories as the number one program in
cable news. Tucker Carlson Tonight was the number two and Sean Hannity
was number three.[223]
Carlson was converted to Stephen Miller and Jeff Sessions’ ideology,
which he described as “nationalist.”[224] The Trump platform was well
settled on long before Steve Bannon joined the campaign,” Roger Stone
told Carlson. “And it appears that [White House policy adviser] Stephen
Miller helped the president articulate it. But the agenda is Trump, the
drive to win is Trump. The populist campaign is all Donald Trump. Just
taking the title of chief strategist is a misnomer, at best,” said
Stone.[225]
Miller grew up in a liberal-leaning Jewish family, and received his
bachelor’s degree in 2007 from Duke University, and served as president
of the Duke chapter of David Horowitz’s Students for Academic Freedom and
wrote conservative columns for the school newspaper. While at Duke,
Miller and the Duke Conservative Union helped co-member Richard B.
Spencer with fundraising and promotion for an immigration policy debate
in March 2007, between the open-borders activist and University of Oregon
professor Peter Laufer and journalist Peter Brimelow, the founder of
VDARE, and fellow member of the H.L. Mencken Club with William Regnery
and Jared Taylor.[226]
Carlson founded the Daily Caller in 2010 with Neil Patel, former
adviser to former Vice President Dick Cheney and a member of the CNP.
Prior to that, Patel served as deputy of Scooter Libby. In October 2005,
Libby from his positions in the Bush administration after he was indicted
on five counts by a federal grand jury concerning the investigation of
the leak of the covert identity of CIA officer Valerie Plame Wilson. He
was subsequently convicted of four counts, making him the highest-ranking
White House official convicted in a government scandal since John
Poindexter, the national security adviser to President Ronald Reagan in
the Iran-Contra affair. President Donald Trump fully pardoned Libby on
April 13, 2018.
Carlson initially floated the idea for The Daily Caller in 2009 at
CPAC. He and Patel then officially announced its creation later that year
at a Heritage Foundation gathering. The Daily Caller News Foundation
receives funding from the Koch brothers as well as the Bradley
Foundation.[227] A Southern Poverty Law Center report claimed in 2017
that “The Daily Caller Has A White Nationalist Problem.” The report
stated that “the Daily Caller has not only published the work of white
nationalists, but some of its writers have routinely whitewashed the
Alt-Right, while one editor there is an associate of key Alt-Right
figures. Two Daily Caller contributors, including a senior investigative
reporter, were recently announced as speakers at the upcoming white
nationalist H.L. Mencken Club conference organized by Paul Gottfried, a
godfather of the Alt-Right.”[228]
Accelerationism
Bilderberger Peter Thiel’s CIA-backed Palantir is named after the
crystal ball used by evil lord Sauron in The Lord of the Rings
CNP member Steve Bannon, also an admirer of Dugin, has referred to
his publication Breitbart News as “the platform for the alt-right.”[229]
Breitbart was heavily funded by CNP member Robert Mercer, an American
computer scientist, a developer in early artificial intelligence, and
co-CEO of Renaissance Technologies, a hedge fund, who has collaborated
with the Koch brothers.[230] Together, Bannon and Mercer founded
Cambridge Analytica, which was used Facebook data to target with “fake
news” propelled by Russian hackers to insight racial tensions in support
of Donald Trump’s bid for the White House.[231] Documents seen by the
Observer detail Cambridge Analytica was involved with many other
right-leaning billionaires, including Rupert Murdoch.[232]
Assisting Cambridge Analytica in breaching Facebook data was the
CIA-backed Palantir, founded by Bilderberger and PayPal founder Peter
Thiel.[233] Thiel, who is openly gay, is a friend of Ann Coulter, who
dedicated her new book, Demonic: How the Liberal Mob Is Endangering
America, to him. In a 2009 article for the Koch brothers’ Cato Institute,
Thiel wrote of his commitment to “authentic human freedom as a
precondition for the highest good. I stand against confiscatory taxes,
totalitarian collectives, and the ideology of the inevitability of the
death of every individual.”[234] After Trump’s victory, Thiel was named
to the executive committee of the President-elect’s transition team. Many
of Thiel’s employees have been calling him “the shadow
president.”[235]
In September 2021, Tucker Carlson interviewed Silicon Valley
entrepreneur Curtis Yarvin, creator of the Urbit computing platform, a
proponent of doctrine of “neoreaction,” or NRx, an anti-democratic,
anti-egalitarian, reactionary philosophy, also adopted by Thiel.[236]
Linking up online with English author and philosopher Nick Land, Yarvin,
writing under the nom de plume Mencius Moldbug, helped develop the
doctrine of “neoreaction,” or NRx, essentially an argument that democracy
had outlived its usefulness. The movement is also known as the Dark
Enlightenment, a term coined by Land, in his essay of the same name. Land
has been described as the “father” of accelerationism, a set of ideas
which propose that capitalism and technological change should be
drastically accelerated to create further radical social change.[237]
Drawing on the work the postmodernists Gilles Deleuze, Felix
Guattari and Jean-Francois Lyotard, Land argued that capitalist
technological progress was transforming not just our societies, but the
individual, who is becoming less important than the techno-capitalist
system itself.[238] Accelerationism reflected a similar approach adopted
by Satanists, particularly the Process Church and Charles Manson. As
explained by Jean-Paul Bourré, in Les sectes Lucifériennes aujourd’hui
(“The Luciferian Sects Today”), the Luciferian orders sometimes have
different goals, but they all share in common the particular goal of
wanting to trigger the apocalypse necessary for the final transformation:
the acceleration of the events of the End Times, and the preparation of
an occult elite destined for the priesthood of the Luciferian
religion.[239]
Although the Process Church’s “processean” theology is considered
unrelated to the process theology of Alfred North Whitehead—who
influenced Deleuze—after its leader DeGrimston was removed by the Council
of Masters as Teacher, many former members of the cult joined Deleuze in
his leadership of the Anti-Oedipal movement of 1968.[240] Hinting at the
connection, Land explained in an email to Vox, “Modernity has Capitalism
(the self-escalating techno-commercial complex) as its motor. Our
question was what ‘the process’ wants (i.e. spontaneously promotes) and
what resistances it provokes.”[241]
Land was a lecturer in Continental Philosophy at the University of
Warwick from 1987 until his resignation in 1998. At Warwick, he and Sadie
Plant co-founded the Cybernetic Culture Research Unit CCRU. After the
CCRU split from Warwick in 1998, according to Andy Beckett, a journalist
who chronicled the CCRU’s in The Guardian, Land and his remaining
followers moved into a home in Leamington, where they were drawn to
numerology, HP Lovecraft, and Aleister Crowley, part of an obsession with
the occult that had flourished in the accelerationist ranks. “The CCRU
became quasi-cultish, quasi-religious,” explained former member Robin
Mackay. “I left before it descended into sheer madness.”[242]
Land has also “highly-recommended” the works of David Myatt’s
fascist Satanist Order of Nine Angles (O9A), whose international
distributor is adept Kerry Bolton, founder of the Black Order and
associate of Alexander Dugin.[243] On his blog and on Twitter, Land
describes Dugin as his “best enemy,” and also accepts Dugin’s appellation
of “Atlanticist,” par of Dugin’s Land and Sea dichotomy that pits the
West and NATO against his own ambition for his own anti-liberal Eurasian
empire. “We agree exactly about what the war is,” expands Land,
“We’re just on opposite sides of it.”[244]
Nevertheless, the accelerationalist dialectic plays a role in
inspiring both camps. Right-wing extremists and Neo-Nazis have been known
to refer to an “acceleration” of racial conflict through violent means
such as assassinations, murders, terrorist attacks, and societal
collapse, in order to achieve the creation of a white ethnic state.[245]
The inspiration for this racist variation of accelerationism is cited as
American Nazi Party and National Socialist Liberation Front member and
Charles Manson associate James Mason’s newsletter Siege, which paid
tribute to Adolf Hitler, Joseph Tommasi, Charles Manson, and Savitri
Devi.[246]
Although Siege stopped publishing in 1986, it attracted the
attention of some musicians associated with the industrial noise and
neofolk underground music scene, including Michael Moynihan and Boyd
Rice, a friend of Anton LaVey, founder of the Church of Satan.[247]
Although Siege stopped publishing in 1986, Moynihan edited Mason’s
newsletters into the book of the same name, published in 1993.[248] The
hashtag #ReadSiege became popular on “alt-right” social media, especially
as groups and influencers connected with the Neo-fascist and Neo-Nazi web
forum Iron March promoted the text.[249]
Mason’s works were republished and popularized by the Iron March
forum and its offshoot Atomwaffen Division, which has links to the
O9A.[250] Iron March, was the primary organizational platform for a
transnational neo-fascist accelerationist terrorist network whose
ideology is based in large part on Evola.[251] Iron March began as the
“International Third Positionist Federation” (ITPF) in 2010.[252] The
forum was founded Alexander Slavros, an Uzbek immigrant to Russia whose
real name is Alisher Mukhitdinov, who is similarly thought to be living
in a district “close to the Kremlin.”[253] Slavros claimed in a direct
message on Iron March that Alexander Dugin had once recruited him for the
Global Revolutionary Alliance (GRA), which espouses an apocalyptic vision
that humanity is at the verge of an end to “capitalism, resources,
society, nations, peoples, knowledge, progress,” which it blames on the
“global Western-centric world” and “the ruling class of
globalism.”[254]
Members of Atomwaffen, as well as many other similar groups, became
interested in the Base, founded by Rinaldo Nazzaro, who described himself
as a “former CIA field intelligence officer.”[255] Reports have revealed
that Nazzaro is an American who moved to Russia from New York in the late
2010s, and that he was once contracted with the Department of Homeland
Security, the Department of Defense and U.S. Special Forces.[256] The BBC
reported that Nazzaro was an FBI analyst and a Pentagon contractor.[257]
Vice News learned that Nazzaro was a Pentagon contractor who worked with
Special Operations Command (SOCOM), among a group that briefed special
forces officers on military targeting and counterterrorism efforts in the
Middle East in 2014. “[I did] multiple tours in Iraq and Afghanistan over
five years,” Nazzaro said in 2019.[258] However, according to US law
enforcement and intelligence sources, Nazzaro is “working for Russia and
operation a violent neo-Nazi, white supremacist organization directing
violent terror attacks on US soil from St. Petersburg,
Russia.”[259]
Alt-right personalyt Matthew Heimbach, another admirer of Dugin,
used the Iron March forums to recruit for the Traditionalist Workers
Party, which participated in the Unite the Right rally.[260] Prior to its
shutdown in 2017, Iron March been linked to several acts of Neo-Nazi
terrorism and violent militant groups such as the Nordic Resistance
Movement, National Action, Azov Battalion, CasaPound, and Greece’s Golden
Dawn, which has connections with Dugin. In addition to Azov, Atomwaffen
has ties to O9A. Atomwaffen distributes the magazine Musta Kivi and sells
the books of O9A and Kerry Bolton. Atomwaffen Division Finland “Siitoin
Squadron” (AWDSS) was formed after the Finnish government banned the
Nordic Resistance Movement (NRM) in 2019, following members of the
underground group embracing accelerationism and occultism.[261]
Representatives of the Suomen Vastarintaliike (“Finnish Resistance
Movement”), the Finnish branch of the NRM, visited James Mason in the
United States in 2019.[262]
Iron March forum and Atomwaffen Division, which since 2017 has been
linked to eight killings in the US and several violent hate crimes,
including assaults, rapes and multiple cases of kidnapping and
torture.[263] The network’s transition from activism to terrorism,”
explains H.E. Upchurche, “was facilitated by the introduction of violent
ritualistic initiation practiced derived from the writings of the Order
of Nine Angles, which helped to habituate members to violence as well as
to create a sense of shared membership in a militant elite.”[264] Since
the 2010s, the political ideology and religious worldview of the Order of
Nine Angles (O9A), have increasingly influenced militant Neo-fascist and
Neo-Nazi insurgent groups associated with right-wing extremist and White
supremacist international networks, most notably the Iron March
forum.[265]
The O9A encourages its members to adopt “insight roles” in
anarchist, neo-Nazi, and Islamist groups in order to disrupt modern
Western society.[266] According to Upchurch, it was most likely through
the influence of Ryan Fleming that Iron March was introduced to the O9A
ideology. Fleming subsequently went on to become a member of National
Action. In early 2021, Fleming, who had previously been convicted of the
sexual abuse of children, was jailed for unsupervised contact with
children.[267] Atomwaffen Division was closely associated with the
American O9A affiliate Tempel ov Blood. National Action was linked to the
O9A affiliate Drakon Covenant in the UK. Antipodean Resistance in
Australia was involved with Kerry Bolton’s Black Order and the Temple of
THEM. From 2010 to 2019, Haakon Forwald, head of the Norwegian branch of
Nordic Resistance Movement (NRM), was a devotee of a Scandinavian O9A
current known variously as the Misanthropic Luciferian Order, the Temple
of Black Light, and Current.[268]
The Iron March chat logs subsequently published by ProPublica
revealed that there are around twenty Atomwaffen cells across the United
States, and they also show members praising Oklahoma City bomber Timothy
McVeigh, Charleston church shooter Dylann Roof, and Norwegian mass
murderer and white supremacist Anders Behring Breivik.[269]
Eighteen-year-old Devon Arthurs, an Iron March user, killed his two
roommates and fellow Atomwaffen members in May 2017. Police found
neo-nazi literature, a photograph of McVeigh, and explosives in his home.
Arthurs converted to Islam and described himself as a “Salafist National
Socialist.” After he was arrested following a hostage situation, Arthurs
was determined unfit to stand trial. In December 2019, several experts
testified that Arthurs has schizophrenia and bipolar disorder, among
other conditions, experiences hallucinations and believes he can
communicate with the dead.[270] In January 2018, Atomwaffen member Samuel
Woodward was charged in Orange County, California, with the murder of
Blaze Bernstein, an openly gay Jewish college student.
Brenton Harrison Tarrant, the perpetrator of the Christchurch mosque
massacre that killed 51 people and injured 49 others during Friday Prayer
on March 15, 2019, embraced right-wing accelerationism in a section of
his manifesto titled “Destabilization and Accelerationism: tactics.”
Tarrant claims to have been the author of a 74-page manifesto titled The
Great Replacement, a reference to the “Great Replacement” and “white
genocide” conspiracy theories. Inspired by Tarrant and similar
accelerationist ideas, John Timothy Earnest was responsible for the
Escondido mosque fire at Dar-ul-Arqam Mosque in Escondido, California, in
March 2019. On April 27, before being identified as a suspect, Earnest
entered the nearby Chabad of Poway synagogue and opened fire, killing one
and injuring three others. “I support the Christchurch shooter and his
manifesto,” Crusius wrote before committing the El Paso Walmart shooting
that killed 23 people and injured 23 others. “The Hispanic community was
not my target before I read The Great Replacement.”[271]
[2] Jim Hougan. Secret Agenda: Watergate, Deep Throat and the CIA
(New York: Random House, 1984). p. 120.; David Livingstone. Ordo ab Chao,
Volume Four, Chapter 9: JFK Assassination; Chapter 11: The Golden
Triangle; Volume Five, Chapter 2: The Secret Team & Chapter 3: The
Reagan Doctrine.
[3] John DeCamp. The Franklin Coverup: Child Abuse, Satanism and
Murder in Nebraska (AWT, 1992), p. 179.
[5] David Livingstone. Ordo ab Chao, Volume Three, Chapter 3: The
Round Table & Chapter 14: The Brotherhood of Death.
[6] David Livingstone. Ordo ab Chao, Volume Three, Chapter 11:
Operation Trust & Chapter 13: The Aufbau.
[7] R.W. May. “Genetics and Subversion.” The Nation (May 14, 1960),
190: 421.
[8] Russ Bellant. The Coors Connection, (South End Press, 1988), p.
45.
[9] Brasol hearing, 32, FBI, File 100-15704, cited in Spence. “The
Tsar’s Other Lieutenant.” p. 698.
[10] “This Fascist Racket.” Jewish Telegraphic Agency (August 2,
1934).
[11] Richard Spence. “The Tsar’s Other Lieutenant: The Antisemitic
Activities of Boris L’vovich Brasol, 1910-1960, Part II: White Russians,
Nazis, and the Blue Lamoo.” Journal of Antisemitism (Vol 4 Issue #2
2012)
[12] Spence. “The Tsar’s Other Lieutenant,” Part II, p. 700.
[13] A. E.Kahn & M. Sayers. The Great Conspiracy: The Secret War
Against Soviet Russia. 1st ed (Boston: Little, Brown and Co.,
1946).
[14] David Livingstone. Ordo ab Chao, Volume Four, Chapter 7: Red
Scare.
[15] Yeadon & Hawkins. Nazi Hydra in America, p. 161.
[16] David Livingstone. Ordo ab Chao, Volume Five, Chapter 13:
Disclosure.
[17] Levenda. Unholy Alliance, p. 62.
[18] Christopher H. Partridge. UFO Religions (Routledge, 2003), p.
89.
[19] Gregory Bishop & Kenn Thomas. “Calling Occupants (The Giant
Rock Conventions).” Fortean Times 118 (January 1999).
[21] Turner. Power on the Right, p. 165.
[22] Editors’ Introduction to Chodorov’s Fugitive Essays: Selected
Writings of Frank Chodorov, compiled, edited, and with an Introduction by
Charles H. Hamilton (Indianapolis: Liberty Fund, 1980).
[23] Doherty. Radicals for Capitalism, p. 16.
[24] “Six Yale Societies Elect 90 Members.” New York Times (May 8,
1936).
[25] Alvin Felzenberg. “The Inside Story of William F. Buckley Jr.’s
Crusade against the John Birch Society.” The Atlantic (June 20,
2017).
[26] Interhemispheric Resource Center, GroupWatch, Western Goals
Foundation. Retrived from
http://rightweb.irc-online.org/groupwatch/wg.php; References: 5.
Letter from Sean Steinbach and Dominik Diehl, May 22, 1987. 8. Elton
Manzione, “The Private Spy Agency,” The National Reporter (Summer
1985).
[27] David Livingstone. Ordo ab Chao, Volume Four, Chapter 9: JFK
Assassination
[28] William Torbitt. NASA, Nazis & JFK: The Torbitt Document
& the Kennedy Assassination (Adventures Unlimited Press, 1996) p.
49.
[29] Brussell. “The Nazi Connection to the John F. Kennedy
Assassination.”
[31] Nicholas Faith. The Bronfmans: The Rise and Fall of the House
of Seagram (New York: Thomas Dunne Books, 2006), p. 66.
[32] Ibid.
[33] Burton Hersh. Bobby and J. Edgar: The Historic Face-Off Between
the Kennedys and J. Edgar Hoover that Transformed America (Basic Books,
2008), p. 88.
[34] David D. Kirkpatrick. “The 2004 Campaign: The Conservatives:
Club of the Most Powerful Gathers in Strictest Privacy,” New York Times
(August 28, 2004).
[35] Jane Mayer. “The Secrets of Charles Koch’s Political Ascent.”
Politico (January 18, 2016); Mark Ames. “Meet Charles Koch’s
Brain.”
[36] Yeadon & Hawkins. Nazi Hydra in America, p. 80.
[38] Lee & Shlain. Acid Dreams, p. 190.
[39] David Livingstone. Ordo ab Chao. Volume Three, Chapter 17:
Eranos Conferences; Volume Four, Chapter 15: The Esalen Institute.
[40] Hans Thomas Hakl. Eranos: An Alternative Intellectual History
of the Twentieth Century (New York: Routledge, 2014), p. 106.
[41] Wouter J. Hanegraaff. New Age Religion and Western Culture:
Esotericism in the Mirror of Secular Thought, (Boston, Massachusetts, US:
Brill Academic Publishers, 1996), pp. 3839.
[42] See Chapter 9: JFK Assassination; Chapter 13:
Counterculture.
[43] See David Livingstone. Ordo ab Chao, Volume Four, Chapter 13:
Counterculture.
[44] Anthony Summers. The Secret Life of J. Edgar Hoover
(1993).
[45] David Livingstone. Ordo ab Chao. Volume Four, Chapter 14: The
Church of Satan.
[47] Ibid.
[48] David G. Robertson. “David Icke’s Reptilian Thesis and the
Development of New Age Theodicy.” International Journal for the Study of
New Religions, 4, 1 (2013), p. 33.
[50] David Livingstone. Ordo ab Chao. Volume Two, Chapter 16: The
Aryan Myth.
[51] David Livingstone. Ordo ab Chao. Volume Three, Chapter 20:
Shangri-La (2021).
[52] David Livingstone. Black Terror White Soldiers (2013), p.
467.
[53] Tyson Lewis and Richard Kahn. “The Reptoid Hypothesis: Utopian
and Dystopian Representational Motifs in David Icke’s Alien Conspiracy
Theory.” Utopian Studies, 16, 1 (Spring 2005), p. 51.
[54] Icke. Children of the Matrix, p. 251.
[55] Cited in Tyson Lewis and Richard Kahn. “The Reptoid Hypothesis:
Utopian and Dystopian Representational Motifs in David Icke’s Alien
Conspiracy Theory.” Utopian Studies, 16, 1 (Spring 2005), p. 52.
[56] Icke. Children of the Matrix, p. 79; cited in Tyson Lewis and
Richard Kahn. “The Reptoid Hypothesis: Utopian and Dystopian
Representational Motifs in David Icke’s Alien Conspiracy Theory.” Utopian
Studies, 16, 1 (Spring 2005), pp. 45-74.
[57] Offley. “David Icke And The Politics Of Madness Where The New
Age Meets The Third Reich.”
[58] Goodrick-Clarke. Black Sun, p. 292.
[61] Foster & Epstein. Cross-Currents, p. 145.
[62] Stuart T. Wright. Patriots, politics, and the Oklahoma City
bombing (Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 2007). pp. 5455;
Matthew Lyons & Chip Berlet. Right-wing populism in America: too
close for comfort (New York: Guilford Press, 2000). pp. 288289.
[63] Constantine. Virtual Government, p. 11.
[64] Pearson. “Liberty Lobby Should be Scrutinized.”
[65] Coogan. Dreamer of the Day, pp. 606-608.
[67] Chester L. Quarles. Christian Identity: The Aryan American
Bloodline Religion (McFarland & Company. 2004) p. 68.
[68] Jeffrey Kaplan. Encyclopedia of white power: a sourcebook on
the radical racist right (McFarland & Company, 2000), p. 52.
[69] S.J. Rosenthal. “The Pioneer Fund Financier of Fascist
Research.” American Behavioral Scientist, 1995, 39(1), pp. 44-61.
[70] W.H. Tucker. Closer Look at the Pioneer Fund: Response to
Rushton (A. Alb. L. Rev., 2002), pp.161-3.
[71] Bellant. Old Nazis, the New Right and the Republican Party, p.
46.
[72] Ibid.
[73] Ibid.
[74] M. Billig. Psychology, racism, and fascism. (Birmingham: A. F.
& R./Searchlight, 1979).
[75] Nicola Lebourg. “The French Far Right in Russia’s Orbit.”
Carnegie Council for Ethics in International Affairs (May 15,
2018).
[76] Michael Scammell. Koestler: The Literary and Political Odyssey
of a Twentieth-Century Skeptic (Random House, 2009), p. 546.
[77] Bar-On. “The Ambiguities of the Nouvelle Droite, 19681999,”
pp. 333351, 2001.
[78] Philip Coppens. “Raymond Abellio: a modern Cathar?”
PhilipCoppens.com.
[79] Chalandon & Coppens. “French Visions for a New
Europe.”
[80] Guy Patton. Masters of Deception: murder intrigue in the world
of occult politics (Amsterdam: Frontier Publishing, 2009), p. 174.
[81] David Livingstone. Ordo ab Chao. Volume 4, Chapter 23:
Operation Gladio.
[82] Bob Fitrakis. “Reverend Moon: Cult leader, CIA asset, and Bush
family friend is dead.” Free Press (September 4, 2102).
[83] Per Anders Rudling. “The Return of the Ukrainian Far Right: The
Case of VO Svoboda.” Wodak and Richardson. Analysing Fascist Discourse:
European Fascism in Talk and Text (New York: Routledge, 2013). pp.
22935.
[85] “Leadership About AEI.” AEI (Retrieved 2012-10-04).
[86] Bellant. The Coors Connection, p. 2.
[87] Ibid., p. 2.
[88] Bellant. The Coors Connection, p. 54.
[89] Nicholas Ashford (August 6, 1981). “Reagan backs extension to
black voting Act,” The Times. p. 4.
[90] Betty Clermont. The Neo-Catholics: Implementing Christian
Nationalism in America (Clarity Press, 2009); “Christian Broadcasting
Network.” Southern Poverty Law Center (December 31, 1990).
[91] Yeadon & Hawkins. Nazi Hydra in America, p. 161.
[92] “Knights of Darkness: The Sovereign Military Order of Malta,”
Covert Action Bulletin (Winter 1986) Number 25.
[94] Peter Jesserer Smith. “Catholics Bid Farewell to Pro-Life Lion
Howard Phillips.” National Catholic Register (May 6, 2013).
[95] Bellant. The Coors Connection, p. 50.
[96] Jim Hougan. Secret Agenda: Watergate, Deep Throat and the CIA
(New York: Random House, 1984). p. 120.
[97] Trento. Prelude to Terror, p. 172.
[98] “The Qaddafi connection.” New York Times (June 14,
1981).
[99] Trento. Prelude to Terror, p. 226.
[100] Peter Dale Scott. Deep Politics and the Death of JFK
(University of California Press, 1996) p. 238.
[101] DeCamp. The Franklin Coverup, p. 179.
[102] John de Camp. “The Franklin Coverup,” (AWT, Inc, 1996) p.
179.
[103] Maury Terry. The Ultimate Evil: In Search of the Son of Sam
(Quirk Books, Apr 20, 2021), p. 539.
[104] Affidavit of Daniel P. Sheehan.
[105] “Anti-Semitism Charges Lead To Delay on Religion Prize.” New
York Times (April 19, 1988).
[106] William H. Tucker. The Science and Politics of Racial Research
(University of Illinois Press, 1996). p. 257.
[107] Coogan. Dreamer of the Day, p. 534.
[108] “The Checkered Careers of James Angleton and Roger Pearson,”
Covert Action, No. 25 (Winter 1986).
[110] Lowles. “A very English extremist.”
[111] Teacher. Rogue Agents.
[112] Ibid., p. 283.
[113] Ibid., p. 37.
[115] Quigley. Tragedy and Hope, pg. 581.
[116] Teacher. Rogue Agents.
[117] Jane Hunter. Israeli Foreign Affairs.
[118] Teacher. Rogue Agents, p. 305.
[119] Ibid.
[120] Peter Barberis, John McHugh & Mike Tyldesley (editors).
Encyclopedia of British and Irish Political Organizations (Pinter, 2000),
p. 177.
[121] Michael Billig. A Social Psychological View of the National
Front (Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1978), p. 117.
[122] Levenda. Unholy Alliance, p. 116.
[125] Goodrick-Clarke. Black Sun, p. 293.
[127] Tobias Churton. The Invisible History of the Rosicrucians: The
World’s Most Mysterious Secret Society (Simon and Schuster, 2009).
[128] David Carr-Brown & David Cohen. “Fall from Grace.” Sunday
Times, News Review (December 21, 1997).
[129] Introvigne. “Ordeal by Fire,” p. 25..
[130] Philip Coppens. “Knights of the Extreme Right.”
[133] George D. Chryssides. “Sources of Doctrine in the Solar
Temple.” In The Order of the Solar Temple: The Temple of Death (ed.)
James R. Lewis (Ashgate, 2006), p. 124.
[134] Ibid., p. 119.
[135] Marcel Roggemans. Geschiedenis Van de Occulte En Mystieke
Broederschappen (Lulu.com, 2010), p. 236.
[137] Jean-Paul Bourré. Les sectes Lucifériennes aujourd'hui
(Belfond, 1978), p. 99.
[138] Ibid.
[139] Kalman & Murray. “New-age nazism.”
[140] Goodrick-Clarke. Black Sun, p. 293.
[142] Joan D’Arc. Phenomenal World: Remote Viewing, Astral Travel,
Apparitions, Extraterrestrials, Lucid Dreams and Other Forms of
Intelligent Contact in the Magical Kingdom of Mind-at-Large (Book Tree,
2000) p. 156.
[143] Bevilaqua. JFK - The Final Solution, Kindle locations
159-164.
[144] Joël v.d. Reijden. “Cult of National Security Trolls: Art Bell
and Coast to Coast AM Analyzed” Institute for the Study of Globalization
and Covert Politics (August 31, 2014).
[145] Ibid.
[148] Joël v.d. Reijden. “Cult of National Security Trolls: Art Bell
and Coast to Coast AM Analyzed” Institute for the Study of Globalization
and Covert Politics (August 31, 2014).
[149] Joël v.d. Reijden. “Cult of National Security Trolls: Art Bell
and Coast to Coast AM Analyzed” Institute for the Study of Globalization
and Covert Politics (August 31, 2014).
[153] Joël v.d. Reijden. “Cult of National Security Trolls: Art Bell
and Coast to Coast AM Analyzed” Institute for the Study of Globalization
and Covert Politics (August 31, 2014).
[154] James Robert Compton. The Integrated News Spectacle: A
Political Economy of Cultural Performance (Peter Lang, 2004), p. 204;
Paul La Monica. Inside Rupert’s Brain (Peter Lang, 2009), p. 5; “Media
Sources: Distinct Favorites Emerge on the Left and Right.” Pew Research
Center (October 21, 2014).
[155] Joan Coxsedge, “Nugan Hand.” The Guardian: The Worker’s Daily.
Issue #1765 (February 15, 2017).
[156] Robert Parry. “How Roy Cohn Helped Rupert Murdoch.” Consortium
News (January 28, 2015).
[157] Robert Parry. “How Roy Cohn Helped Rupert Murdoch.” Consortium
News (January 28, 2015).
[158] Jane Mayer. “The Making of the Fox News White House.” The New
Yorker (March 11, 2019 Issue).
[159] Ibid.
[160] Lucia Graves. “Donald Trump and Rupert Murdoch: inside the
billionaire bromance.” The Guardian (June 16, 2017).
[161] Ibid.
[162] Ibid.
[163] Jack Shafer. “Fox News 1.0.” Slate (June 5, 2008).
[164] Max Boot. “Republicans are paying the price for their
addiction to their own media.” Washington Post (October 6, 2016).
[165] Murray Waas. “Al Regnery’s Secret Life.” New Republic (June
22, 1986).
[166] “America By Fraud: Sarah Palin Buys Her Way On To NYT
Bestseller List.” Politicus USA (December 2, 2010).
[167] Steve Benen. “A publishing mystery.” Washington Monthly
(December 28, 2010).
[168] Oliver Willis. “Mark Levin Claims ‘No Groups Buy My Books’ As
Conservative Group Buys His Book.” Media Matters (January 10,
2014).
[169] Sarah Ferguson. “CORRECTED: Ann Coulter: Plumping Her Sales
Figures?” Village Voice ( JUNE 15, 2006).
[170] Nomad. “Cooking the Books: How the Conservative Best Seller
Scam is a Free Market Hypocrisy.” Nomadic Politics (November 16,
2014).
[171] Associated Press. “Murdoch fund-raiser for Clinton creates
buzz.” NBC News (May 12, 2006).
[172] Mabel Stephens. “Alex Jones Ron Paul founded the Tea party and
the Koch brothers fund it.” YouTube (Sep 19, 2014).
[173] Joel V.D. Heijden. “Alex Jones of Infowars Admits to CIA and
‘Army Special Forces’ family; Supports Death Squads, Dictators, Drugs,
Disinformation… And the CNP.” Institute for the Study of Globalization
and Covert Politics (January 17, 2016).
[174] NWOTaser. “Alex Jones Rant: Shut-Up Racist, Shut-Up Nazi,
Shut-Up Cracker.” YouTube (January 18, 2011).
[176] Ibid.
[177] Mark Presce. “The Executable Dreamtime,” Richard Metzger ed.
Book of Lies: The Disinformation Guide to Magick and the Occult
(Disinformation Books, 2008).
[178] Joël v.d. Reijden. “Cult of National Security Trolls.”
[179] Ibid.
[180] Ibid.
[181] John C. Haich. “Do the Owls want to shut down Richard C.
Hoagland?”
[182] “Center for Security Policy.” MediaTransparency.org (accessed
February 24, 2018).
[183] Michelle Ciarrocca & William D. Hartung. “Axis of
Influence: Behind the Bush Administration’s Missile Defense Revival.”
World Policy Institute (July 2002).
[184] 2001 Annual Report of the CSP.
[185] Joël v.d. Reijden. “Cult of National Security Trolls: Art Bell
and Coast to Coast AM Analyzed” Institute for the Study of Globalization
and Covert Politics (August 31, 2014).
[186] Ron Jacobs. “Kenneth Timmerman’s Iranian ‘Democracy’ and the
‘Intelligence’ Summit.” MR Online (February 1, 2006).
[187] Ibid.
[190] Lee Fang. “California Nonprofit May Have Violated Tax Law By
Donating to Anti-Muslim, Far-Right Dutch Candidate.” The Intercept (March
3, 2017).
[191] Leily Rezvani. “Ben Shapiro to speak on campus after
Stanford admin criticized his collaborator’s visit in May.” The Stanford
Daily (October 18, 2019).
[194] Richard Warnica. “Inside Rebel Media.” National Post
(2018).
[195] Casey Michel. “Why is this Pizzagate truther meeting with a
Russian neo-fascist?” Think Progress (June 10, 2018).
[196] Aleksandr Dugin. Osnovy geopolitiki: Geopoliticheskoe
budushchee Rossii (Moscow: Arktogeya, 1997), p. 248.
[197] Ibid., p. 367.
[198] Jim Keith. Mind-control, World Control (Adventures Unlimited
Press, 1997), p. 193.
[200] Anonymous. “The metaphysical roots of world politics.”
[201] Bruno Fouchereau. “enquete sur des satanistes - Christian
Bouchet - NR - Profanation de tombes” The Vrai Journal.
[202] Stephan Chalandon & Philip Coppens. “Men of Mystery:
Raymond Abellio & Jean Parvulesco Their Vision of a New Europe.”
New Dawn No. 111 (November-December 2008).
[203] Brian Allan, et al. Ancient Code: Are You Ready for the Real
2012? (Reality Press, 2009), p. 46.
[205] Kerry Bolton. “Putin, Russia, & the Rise of a New
Era.”
[206] “William H. Regnery.” Southern Poverty Law Center (accessed
April 25, 2017).
[207] Ibid.
[208] Michael Wines & Stephanie Saul. “White Supremacists Extend
Their Reach Through Websites.” New York Times (July 5, 2015).
[209] Josh Harkinson. “Meet the White Nationalist Trying To Ride The
Trump Train to Lasting Power.” Mother Jones (October 27, 2016).
[210] Paul Gottfried. “Opening the Conservative Mind.” Taki’s
Magazine (May 19, 2009).
[211] Benjamin R. Teitelbaum. “White Nationalists Give Up Trying to
Be Respectable.” The Wall Street Journal (August 13, 2017).
[212] Tom Porter. “Meet Daniel Friberg, the Swedish mining tycoon
bankrolling the alt-right’s global media empire.” International Business
Times (March 6, 2017).
[213] Joscelyn Godwin. Arktos: The Polar Myth in Science, Symbolism,
and Nazi Survival (Kempton, IL: Adventures Unlimited Press, 1996), p.
146.
[214] Gerry Gable. “The growing Nazi axis.” Searchlight (May 8,
2017).
[215] Ibid.
[216] John Kersey. “Preserving the substance of a nation.”
Traditional Britain Group (October 2013).
[218] Ibid.
[219] Paul Jackson. “Traditional Britain: The New Revolutionary
Conservatives.” Searchlight (January 30, 2014).
[220] Gerry Gable. “The growing Nazi axis.” Searchlight (May 8,
2017).
[221] Ibid.
[223] “Fox News Channel Tops Cable in Total Day Viewers for Record
Eight Consecutive Months.” Fox News (February 2017).
[224] Ibid.
[225] Daniel Chaitin. “Roger Stone: Steve Bannon’s former ‘title of
chief strategist is a misnomer, at best’.” Washington Examiner (January
4, 2018).
[226] Tim Mak. “The Troublemaker Behind Donald Trump’s Words.” The
Daily Beast (January 19, 2017).
[228] Stephen Piggott & Alex Amend. “The Daily Caller Has A
White Nationalist Problem,” The Southern Poverty Law Center (August 16,
2017).
[229] Philip Elliott & Zeke Miller. “Inside Donald Trump’s
Chaotic Transition.” Time (November 18, 2016).
[230] Jane Mayer. “The Reclusive Hedge-Fund Tycoon Behind the Trump
Presidency.” The New Yorker (March 27, 2017 Issue).
[231] David Livingstone. Ordo ab Chao, Volume Six, Chapter 15: Big
Data.
[232] Carole Cadwalladr. “The great British Brexit robbery: how our
democracy was hijacked.” The Guardian (May 7, 2017).
[233] Nicholas Confessore & Matthew Rosenberg. “Peter Thiel
Employee Helped Cambridge Analytica Before It Harvested Data.” New York
Times (March 27, 2018).
[234] Peter Thiel. “The Education of a Libertarian.” Response
Essays, Cato Unbound (April 13, 2009).
[235] Eliana Johnson. “Donald Trump’s ‘shadow president’ in Silicon
Valley.” Politico (February 26, 2017).
[237] Andy Beckett. “Accelerationism: How a fringe philosophy
predicted the future we live in.” The Guardian (May 11, 2017).
[238] Zack Beauchamp. “Accelerationism: the obscure idea inspiring
white supremacist killers around the world.” Vox (November 18,
2019).
[239] Jean-Paul Bourré. Les sectes Lucifériennes aujourd'hui
(Belfond, 1978), p. 99.
[240] “Reviewing Religions: The Process.” Frontline.
[241] Beauchamp. “Accelerationism.”
[242] Andy Beckett. “Accelerationism: How a fringe philosophy
predicted the future we live in.” The Guardian (May 11, 2017).
[245] H. E. Upchurch. “The Iron March Forum and the Evolution of the
‘Skull Mask’ Neo-Fascist Network.” CTC Sentinel, 14, 10 (December 22,
2021), pp. 2737.
[246] H. E. Upchurch. “The Iron March Forum and the Evolution of the
‘Skull Mask’ Neo-Fascist Network.” CTC Sentinel, 14, 10 (December 22,
2021), pp. 2737; Nicholas Goodrick-Clarke. Black Sun: Aryan Cults,
Esoteric Nazism, and the Politics of Identity, p. 19.
[248] Ibid.
[249] Ibid.
[250] A.C. Thompson, Ali Winston & Jake Hanrahan. “California
Murder Suspect Said to Have Trained With Extremist Hate Group.”
ProPublica (January 26, 2018).
[251] Alexander Reid Ross & Emmi Bevensee. “Confronting the Rise
of Eco-Fascism Means Grappling with Complex Systems.” Center for Analysis
of the Radical Right (July 2020), p. 16.
[252] H. E. Upchurch. “The Iron March Forum and the Evolution of the
‘Skull Mask’ Neo-Fascist Network.” CTC Sentinel, 14, 10 (December 22,
2021), pp. 2737; Nicholas Goodrick-Clarke. Black Sun: Aryan Cults,
Esoteric Nazism, and the Politics of Identity, p. 29.
[253] James Bacigalupo, Robin Maria Valeri & Kevin Borgeson.
Cyberhate: The Far Right in the Digital Age (Rowman & Littlefield,
Jan 15, 2022), p. 113.
[254] Alex Newhouse. “The Threat Is the Network: The Multi-Node
Structure of Neo-Fascist Accelerationism.” CTC Sentinel (June 2021), p.
18.
[255] Bacigalupo, Maria Valeri & Borgeson. Cyberhate, p.
113.
[256] Alex Newhouse. “The Threat Is the Network: The Multi-Node
Structure of Neo-Fascist Accelerationism.” CTC Sentinel (June 2021), p.
21.
[259] Bacigalupo, Maria Valeri & Borgeson. Cyberhate, p.
113.
[260] Newhouse. “The Threat Is the Network,” p. 18.
[263] A.C. Thompson, Ali Winston & Jake Hanrahan. “California
Murder Suspect Said to Have Trained With Extremist Hate Group.”
ProPublica (January 26, 2018).
[264] Alexander Reid Ross & Emmi Bevensee. “Confronting the Rise
of Eco-Fascism Means Grappling with Complex Systems.” Center for Analysis
of the Radical Right (July 2020), p. 16.
[265] Upchurch. “The Iron March Forum and the Evolution of the
‘Skull Mask’ Neo-Fascist Network.”
[266] Jacob C.Senholt. “Secret Identities in the Sinister Tradition:
Political Esotericism and the Convergence of Radical Islam, Satanism, and
National Socialism in the Order of Nine Angles.” In The Devil's Party:
Satanism in Modernity. (eds.) Faxneld and Jesper Aagaard Peterse (Oxford:
Oxford University Press, 2013), p. 269; Connell Monette. Mysticism in the
21st Century (Wilsonville, Oregon: Sirius Academic Press, 2013), p.
96.
[267] Upchurch. “The Iron March Forum and the Evolution of the
‘Skull Mask’ Neo-Fascist Network,” pp. 32.
[268] Ibid., pp. 3233.
[269] A.C. Thompson, Ali Winston & Jake Hanrahan. “Inside
Atomwaffen as it celebrates a member for allegedly killing a gay Jewish
college student” ProPublica (February 23, 2018).
[270] Dan Sullivan. “Experts: One-time neo-Nazi charged in double
murder has autism, schizophrenia.” Tampa Bay Times (December 12,
2019).
[271] Beauchamp. “Accelerationism.”
And it came to pass, as he sat at meat with them, he took
bread, and blessed it, and brake, and gave to them.
31 And their eyes were
opened, and they knew him; and he vanished out of their sight.
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