Architects of Deception is a book by Jüri Lina that provides an insight into the hidden network behind past and present events. Lina has collected information and rare documents from many sources to create a record of the devastating activities of secret societies, including the Knights Templar, Illuminati, and Freemasons. The book is based on the archives of the famous and powerful French Grand Orient Lodge, captured in June 1940 and later made public by the Russians. Lina writes that 300 Jewish banking families have used Freemasonry as an instrument to subvert, control, and degrade the Western world and force their “New World Order” through fear, war, and terrorism, as well as other means. The book is considered one of the most informative and revealing books on Freemasonry and secret societies by a committed and courageous researcher.
Ken Wilber is an American theorist and writer on transpersonal psychology and his own integral theory, a four-quadrant grid that encompasses all human knowledge and experience. He is the founder of Integral Institute, a think-tank for studying integral theory and practice, with outreach through local and online communities such as Integral Education Network, Integral Training, and Integral Spiritual Center. Wilber's integral theory is a synthetic metatheory that describes existing theory in a systematic way. Integral psychology is psychology that is inclusive or holistic rather than exclusivist or reductive, and values and integrates multiple explanations and methodologies. Integral Life Practice (ILP) applies Wilber's Integral model through nine modules of personal practice. Wilber's multiplex projects brought together dozens of the world's leading transformative spiritual practitioners from all major religious traditions to apply Integral Psychology to their traditions to reform and update their authentic transformative practices and teachings.
The Round Towers Or The History Of The Tuatha De Danaans by Henry O'Brien (1808-1835) was published in 1834. The book was controversial at the time because O'Brien claimed that the round towers which were a common feature of early Irish Christian monastic sites were in fact built by pre-Christian pagans.
This book is for all those who feel that the military industrial complex is attempting to control our lives, our financial affairs and our belief structure. The evidence is overwhelming!
Discredited in his time, Nikola Tesla was made out by business competitors and the government to be nothing more than a kook. Nonetheless, the same conspirators later duplicated and possibly even stole many of Tesla's most fabulous inventions which could soon change the course of history as well as our lives!
Why were the Allies worried about an atom bomb attack by the Germans in 1944? Why did the Soviets threaten to use poison gas against the Germans? Why did Hitler in 1945 insist that holding Prague could win the war for the Third Reich? Why did US General George Patton's Third Army race for the Skoda works at Pilsen in Czechoslovakia instead of Berlin? Why did the US Army not test the uranium atom bomb it dropped on Hiroshima? Why did the Luftwaffe fly a non-stop round trip mission to within twenty miles of New York City in 1944? This book takes the reader on a scientific-historical journey in order to answer these questions. Arguing that Nazi Germany actually won the race for the atom bomb in late 1944, the book then goes on to explore the even more secretive research the Nazis were conducting into the occult, alternative physics and new energy sources. The book concludes with a fresh look at the Nazi Legend of the UFO mystery by examining the Roswell Majestic-12 documents and the Kecksburg crash in the light of parallels with some of the super-secret black projects being run by the SS. This book is must-reading for the researcher interested in alternative history, science, or UFOs.
Bloodlines of the Illuminati is a unique book, rich in detail, providing a devastating expose of the people and families who are The movers and shakers of the United States and the entire world.
The Dictionary of Demons starts with a simple premise: names have power. In medieval and Renaissance Europe, it was believed that speaking a demon’s true name could summon it, compel it, and bind it.
Occult scholar Michelle Belanger has compiled the most complete compendium of demonic names available anywhere, using both notorious and obscure sources from the Western grimoiric tradition. Presented alphabetically from Aariel to Zynextyur, more than 1,500 demons are introduced, explored, and cross-referenced by theme and elemental or planetary correspondence. This meticulously researched reference work features fascinating short articles on demonology and a wealth of woodcuts, etchings, and paintings depicting demons through the ages.
"Morals and Dogma" is a book of esoteric philosophy published by the Supreme Council, Thirty Third Degree, of the Scottish Rite, Southern Jurisdiction of the United States. It was compiled by Albert Pike and first published in 1871. The book is a collection of 32 essays that provide a philosophical rationale for the degrees of the Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite. The lectures provide a backdrop for the degrees by giving lessons in comparative religion, history, and philosophy. It is a must-read book for anyone interested in history, philosophy, ethics, and esotericism. The book was traditionally given to the candidate upon his receipt of the 14th degree of the Scottish Rite, but this practice was stopped in 1974. It has not been given to candidates since 1974.1 "Morals and Dogma" is also the title of a ritual by Deathprod.
This is a complete and unedited translation of Volume Two of Mein Kampf, in modern and highly readable American English. This is the first such effort since the 1940s, and it far surpasses all existing versions. This edition includes section headings, helpful footnotes, bibliography, and useful index.
Mein Kampf is the autobiography and articulated worldview of one of the most consequential leaders in world history. It is also one of the most maligned and least understood texts of the 20th century. A major problem in the Anglophone world has been the poor state of English translations. Both the Mannheim and Murphy editions are poor efforts, awkwardly phrased, and replete with archaic British wording; they are simply painful to read. This new translation is clear, lucid, and highly readable and yet true to the original. And, unlike every other edition, this version has authentic section headings embedded in the text, which serve to both organize Hitler’s ideas and to parse long sections of text into manageable units.