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| Blood on the Altar by Craig Heimbichner |
| Review
...to reflexively discount "conspiracies," but why do nations spend billions on spies and counter-intelligence? Do armies publish their battle plans? Why do nations and businesses keep secrets? Do revolutions occur? Are revolutionary plans hatched in the open? Do the controlling events of history occur in the "free and open marketplace of ideas?" Did you imagine the US President is the boss and takes no instructions? Why are there secret societies? Are secret society members just aged frat boys playing dress up philanthropy? Why their obsession with the Talmud, Kabbalah, other Satanism, and rebuilding the Temple? Why were both 2004 major party presidential candidates members of the same secret society? Have "the left" and "the right" both been compromised? Is the political "center" the locus of truth and morality? Do prominent men engage in human sacrifice and overt Satanic worship? Are perversion and murder overlooked to protect fellow members of secret societies? In what way is the "intelligence community" under the command and control of the OTO, B'nai B'rith, and their subordinates in Freemasonry? What do science fiction movies and NASA have in common with secret societies? What secret rituals accompanied the testing of the first A-bomb and the space program? In what way has modernist Catholicism followed Protestantism, succumbing to subversion by secret socities? Has a "freeze and thaw" technique been used to subdue our horrified reactions to the sick realities when we are allowed to glimpse them? Are we more enlightened than our forebears or are we in a fugue? Need answers? Have a strong stomach? Give ear then to Mr. Heimbichner's excellent documentation of the techniques used to subdue us all, to condition us for the advantage of the Prince of the World and his powerful and wealthy minions. - Terry Dolorosa (Concord, CA USA) |
| Book Description What's beyond Freemasonry? That's the question investigators have pondered for decades and Craig Heimbichner furnishes fascinating answers as he probes deeply into the sooty arcana of the Ordo Templi Orientis --or "OTO" -- the higher secret society to which elite Freemasons emigrate as part of a process of occult succession. Blood on the Altar pursues the shape-shifting trail of this successor group, on the Left as the pillar of a libertarian ethos, avant-garde drug culture and radical hedonism; on the Right, as the pillar of aristocratic preference for authoritarian rule and classical culture. Heimbichner has deconstructed not just a Janus-faced secret society but a method of operation so deceptive, the reader can hardly believe that such audacious and far-flung duplicity and misdirection could possibly succeed for so long without exposure. But succeed it has, until now. The head-spinning trail of the OTO leads from the US government to the NASA rocket program, from the Hollywood film industry to Right-wing "patriot" groups, from the New Age craze for the Kabbalah, to an attempt to control the conservative enthusiasm for traditional liturgy. The OTO has marched from triumph after triumph, as the spectre of its "Great Beast", British Intelligence officer Aleister Crowley, cast its Thelemic spell over a double-minded populace alternately seeking freedom-and-contraint, sex-and-repression, magick-and-Christendom, science-and-superstition. "Blood on the Altar" shows the OTO to be the signature secret society behind the most dazzling--and puzzling-- charades of the modern Cryptocracy. |