Tag: aldous huxley

Gnosis 04: Robert Forte – MKULTRA,  Michael Pollan and The Modern Marketing of Soma.

Gnosis 04: Robert Forte – MKULTRA, Michael Pollan and The Modern Marketing of Soma.

The history of religion contains the entire spectrum of human experience, including the most beneficent concepts and experience of enlightenment, God, universal intelligence, and so on. It also includes the most malefic realms of humanity: occult mind control, subjugation of populations, exploitation of our good nature, rationales for genocide, war, human sacrifice, and other perversions. The history of psychedelics is no different.”

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Thoughts on Predictive Programming, Pharmakeia and Religious Dogma

Thoughts on Predictive Programming, Pharmakeia and Religious Dogma

It seems to me that the nature of the ultimate revolution with which we are now faced is precisely this: That we are in process of developing a whole series of techniques which will enable the controlling oligarchy who have always existed and presumably will always exist to get people to love their servitude. This is the, it seems to me, the ultimate in malevolent revolutions shall we say, and this is a problem which has interested me many years and about which I wrote thirty years ago, a fable, Brave New World, which is an account of society making use of all the devices available and some of the devices which I imagined to be possible making use of them in order to, first of all, to standardize the population, to iron out inconvenient human differences, to create, to say, mass produced models of human beings arranged in some sort of scientific caste system.

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Pleasure vs. Pain in Programmed Society – Jon Rappoport

Pleasure vs. Pain in Programmed Society – Jon Rappoport

Via Jon Rappoport of NoMoreFakeNews.com by Jon Rappoport December 19, 2019 (To join our email list, click here.) “In experiments on mice, scientists rewired the circuits of the brain and changed the animals’ bad memories into good ones…The researchers said they were able to do the opposite as well—change a pleasurable memory in mice into one associated with fear.” (Kevin […]

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