"The Old Christian Way taught that until man faced the fact of his evil nature, he would forever be a prisoner of illusion and of those magicians who would enslave his energies--ostensibly in pursuit of utopia--but actually to the furtherance of the inner executive ideology of the secret elite.
This is the quotidian occult current, the initiate's hubris that the elite have a license to betray the utopian principles and high minded laws they advocate for the masses, because their "inner eye of insight" or their "direct illumination," licenses them to do so."
revisionisthistory.orgIn Secret Societies and Psychological Warfare deftly charts out the workings of the cryptocracy, a cadre of smoke screened power mongers who attempt to control the world via a series of orchestrated events such as the Kennedy assassination, the Manson and Son of Sam murders, 2001: A Space Odyssey (both book and movie), the gunning down of John Lennon, the Oklahoma City bombing and quite possibly the recent 9-11 tragedy as well. Employing a peculiar yet engaging brand of arcane hermeneutics, Hoffman sets out to unveil how these events have been mediated in ways which manipulate the consciousness of the masses, thus easily swaying the populace into obeying the dictates of what he believes is the Freemasonically controlled state. The author fortifies his argument by citing examples of mind control not only from popular culture movies such as Videodrome and Nightmare on Elm Street but also with some erudite references to secret societies and their unsavory intrigues as well. His take on Christopher Marlowe's plays Dr. Faustus and Tamburlaine as thinly veiled polemics directed at John Dee (whose code name was 007) and his role in the creation of the British Empire via a sophisticated espionage network is something that is rarely mentioned in most mainstream books covering the Elizabethan era. The official storyline which has been fed to us for all these centuries is that Marlowe died in a 'tavern brawl'. It is more likely, according to Hoffman, that he was assassinated by Ingram Frizer, one of Queen Elizabeth's espionage agents, for daring to expose the occult origins of her magical control of the empire. Secret Societies and Psychological Warfare is peppered with such historical gems throughout. It is these kind of references that make Hoffman's book so intriguing.
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