Phoenicians, British Druids & Nazis to Charles Manson & Satanic #Accelerationism w David Livingstone

2 days ago
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Phoenician druidic religion? David Livingstone, author of 'The Dying God', on how Jews in early Israel kept diverging from Judaism and veering towards paganism again

https://ordoabchao.ca/volume-five/black-order

In 1982, along with Charles Manson, Mason founded Universal Order, an organization that encouraged terror with notoriety, similar to that achieved
by the Manson Family.[81]

https://politicsthisweek.gn.apc.org/2025/11/not-the-bcfm-politics-show-presented-by-tony-gosling-265/

Siege became the official publication of this new group, which paid tribute to Adolf Hitler, Joseph Tommasi, Charles Manson, and Savitri Devi.[82] In the pages of Siege, Mason argued for sabotage, mass killings, and assassinations of high-profile targets to destabilize and destroy the current society, seen as a system upholding a Jewish and multicultural New World Order. Mason also started cheering on armed attacks by Communists, as well as black and other revolutionary racial nationalists, which were common in the 1970s and 1980s.[83] Order of the Left Hand Path In 1978, Bolton joined the National Front of New Zealand (NZNF), an initiative of John Tyndall of the British National Front, formed in 1977. Following a quarrel with other members of the Temple of Set, Bolton founded the Order of the Left Hand Path (OLHP) in 1990, based around the ideas of Nietzsche, Jung, and Spengler.[84] The creation of the OLHP was announced in through the first issue of a new magazine published by Bolton, The Watcher, named after the Fallen Angels of the Book of Enoch. “Our journal, Bolton explained in the first issue of The Watcher, is named in honour of the fabled Order of the Watchers who, under the leadership of Azazel, and at the instigation of Satan, rebelled against the tyrant-god Jehovah, descending to earth to establish familial relations with the ‘daughters of man’.” Citing Bakunin, Bolton identified Satan as “the first free-thinker and Saviour of the world.”[85] Between 1990 and 1992, Bolton published eleven issues of The Watcher. The first issues advertised books distributed by the Church of Satan and included several references to its founder Anton LaVey. Bolton, however, called for a new Satanism, to be founded instead on the philosophy of Friedrich Nietzsche. His case was developed in Bolton’s new magazine, The Heretic, which replaced The Watcher in 1992. The Watcher had dealt occasionally with political issues, mostly to criticize the official support for the so-called “Satanic Panic” that was developing in New Zealand and led in 1992 to Christchurch Civic Creche trial and the arrest of Peter Ellis, a child-care worker accused of sexually abusing children within the context of Satanic rituals. The Heretic, on the other hand, frequently dealt with political issues, fascism, and Nazism.

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