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How Lennon Led the Aquarian Conspiracy Revolution

Lennon’s Houdini Act made him a Hidden Imam and drew upon all the shadows of Oxford.

That which makes our politics obscure in effect renders us dishonest.

— Herbert Agar

It did no man ever any good whatsoever to cry out from this place.
~Martha Gellhorn

     Although, as a person who takes American Heritage seriously, I have trouble rendering the name Donald J. Trump to record, feeling foolish for some reason, cartoon, to understand what Trump and his Axis Within did to screwtape their way from Hollywood-on-high to the current bizarre aggrandizement means looking through the Kennedy mystery at the deal being struck between the “Liberalism” of Dan Rather and Hillary Clinton and their partners-in-arms Reagan and Obama.

      The 2015 Estulin book on Tavistock is a studied half-truth, a limited hangout, a very serious masquerade.  The body is encrypted for Tulsi (e-stuli-n) and Frank Herbert, Washington’s ecological councilor for African eccentric advising to the NAACP wisebeards, is indexed to 217, a well-known cipher for Two Virgins (TV) pussyball, that great moralizer, and this is telltale.  Lennon’s mythic Houdini is salient while Estulin tutters his mordant, demonic, deep, revealing half-truths. Herbert used fluxus conveyance in such passages about the krazilec typhoon struggle of the human soul as, “one of us had to do it and he was always the stronger of the two.”  This Axis cult misused Dr. King’s spirit as a Pied Piper to the AIDS afflicted with the ultimatum of a world of ash from the Trump and German Green Party (I donohue) cats game.

         In other words, the book is a tell all about what Lennon was up to while denying it.

         A series of identifiable strategies are posed simultaneously by the aggressor lobby, those perilous, imperial, Mason Illuminati mountebanks, above and beyond revenge semiotics like V + R Planning.  I’ll make a list of sorts:

  1.  Ark Yojimbo, feud deception for control by diplomatic posseur.
  2. Two Virgins Pussyball, or Degradation Dating Grapevines.
  3. Aw, ya Hit Me (transfer of blame by faking an attack).
  4. Taunting until taunted back to launch a slaughtering blow
  5. Blindside attack by unknown parties claiming they were insulted.
  6. Frankl’s notions of therapy (cowhooves therapy, we gitta de white, for example)
  7. Training the victims as loyalists
  8. Selling a doctrine
  9. Anti-Liberalism while Liberal leader refuse to defend us
  10. Failure to warn
  11. Refusal to Address.
  12. Fluxus stonewall
  13. Time Honored tactics like stalking terror.
  14. Outcome doctrine
  15. Ash Box (Cornering)
  16. Human Sacrifice
  17. Slave Labor
  18. Object gaming
  19. Gummo Doctrine
  20. Shocking Hippy facelying

         Seattle Warhol bitches came about following John Stockwell’s gravy train.  He posited that his observations of the performance value of torture victims came down to one sadistic ecstacy, they couldn’t break contact with their tormentors, they kept trying to reason with them, this wasn’t just little Jimmy gummo penning Night of the Lebus, but Latino women wrongly accused, cut to death and left on the sidewalks like a trembling faced naive idealist painted Sira Siran who For Unlawful Carnal Knowledge was dubbed deaf on grounds of Anti-American behavior.

        No one noticed.

        The normalization of the AIDS attack from failure to warn was to homogenize the afflicted into groupies from their they lisped let’s give the virus to that’n there who thinks it’s better than us and listen to its pretenses as we extrude.  I could go on, but Seattle is so vomitbag. If you really want to know this stuff, scour the android zone of http://storychecksout.org

Introduce Yourself (Example Post)

This is an example post, originally published as part of Blogging University. Enroll in one of our ten programs, and start your blog right.

You’re going to publish a post today. Don’t worry about how your blog looks. Don’t worry if you haven’t given it a name yet, or you’re feeling overwhelmed. Just click the “New Post” button, and tell us why you’re here.

Why do this?

  • Because it gives new readers context. What are you about? Why should they read your blog?
  • Because it will help you focus you own ideas about your blog and what you’d like to do with it.

The post can be short or long, a personal intro to your life or a bloggy mission statement, a manifesto for the future or a simple outline of your the types of things you hope to publish.

To help you get started, here are a few questions:

  • Why are you blogging publicly, rather than keeping a personal journal?
  • What topics do you think you’ll write about?
  • Who would you love to connect with via your blog?
  • If you blog successfully throughout the next year, what would you hope to have accomplished?

You’re not locked into any of this; one of the wonderful things about blogs is how they constantly evolve as we learn, grow, and interact with one another — but it’s good to know where and why you started, and articulating your goals may just give you a few other post ideas.

Can’t think how to get started? Just write the first thing that pops into your head. Anne Lamott, author of a book on writing we love, says that you need to give yourself permission to write a “crappy first draft”. Anne makes a great point — just start writing, and worry about editing it later.

When you’re ready to publish, give your post three to five tags that describe your blog’s focus — writing, photography, fiction, parenting, food, cars, movies, sports, whatever. These tags will help others who care about your topics find you in the Reader. Make sure one of the tags is “zerotohero,” so other new bloggers can find you, too.

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