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by Kyle Griffith
War in Heaven introduces a completely new and revolutionary conception of the
nature of spiritual reality. The material in it was dictated to me by automatic writing,
but WiH contains more explicit, detailed spiritual information than most modern
channeled books and it is much more militant and controversial in tone. Some readers
of the pre-publication edition of War in Heaven were disturbed or frightened by it, and
a few attacked the book as evil and satanic. However, a larger number of readers
hailed it as a major breakthrough in cosmological theory.
War in Heaven is not a typical New Age channeled book, and I am not a typical
New Ager, though I helped to found that movement in the Sixties and Seventies.
I was raised as a traditional occultist, and my primary goal in life has always been to
develop my skills as a psychic and magician. However, I also possess past-life
memories that have caused me to develop into a very different kind of occultist from
my relatives who were Freemasons, Rosicrucians, Spiritualists, or Theosophists.
I have been aware since 1946, when I was four years old, that my soul was
deliberately sent to this planet by an advanced extra-terrestrial civilization to assist
Earth people in dealing with a major crisis in their spiritual evolution. For this reason,
I’ve studied UFOs and related subjects as seriously as I’ve studied psychic and
spiritual phenomena, and the relationship between the two has always been obvious to
me.
The same applies to conspiracy theories – I have known all my life that unseen
forces really do manipulate the course of human history, and my response has not been
fear or anger, but rather a desire to help any of these agencies whose ethical and
political goals seem similar to mine. I’ve been a left-wing anarchist and a member of
the counterculture since the late Fifties, and I’ve grown more politically and socially
radical with age. In the late Sixties, my spirit guides suggested that I call myself a
Spiritual Revolutionary, and I’ve been doing so ever since.
However, I didn’t become fully conscious of what the term meant until 1983,
when I made a breakthrough in personal awareness about spiritual reality. In July of
that year, after several years of intensive magical and intellectual preparation, I asked
my spirit guides: “Tell me the Great Secret, the theory that explains the true nature of
gods and human beings and the relationship between them.” The reply that I received
by automatic writing didn’t surprise me, but I was absolutely astonished by it just the
same. The spirits seemed to be trying to dictate a completely new and revolutionary
cosmology: a view of spiritual reality with moral, social, and political implications
that most people would consider literally unthinkable.
I eventually became able to record the messages in clear and explicit English. It
took me over five years, and thousands of hours of grueling labor, to receive all the
spirit-dictated information for War in Heaven and write it into a book. The review on
the next page will give you an idea of what WiH is about and why I am advertising it
as “The most controversial channeled book of the century.”
- 3 -
REVIEW and COMMENT
Mike Rhyner review
Here is an excerpt from Mike Rhyner’s review of War in Heaven in the
February 1989 issue of Critique:
“War in Heaven is based on messages channeled from a group of extraterrestrial
disembodied spirits who call themselves the Invisible College. They say that your
soul is nourished on psychic energy generated during life, and when you ‘die,’ it lives
off the energy stored up during embodiment. There are also spiritual beings that the
Invisible College calls the Theocrats, the ‘bad guys,’ who do not reincarnate but
instead get the energy needed to sustain their souls by sucking the energy from other
souls: psychic vampirism and spiritual cannibalism.
“The Theocrats are the creators of certain forms of organized religion, which
claim that you will have eternal life in Heaven when you pass over. They create an
illusion of this Heaven in your mind by posing as gods, meanwhile giving you the
after-death state that you expect, whether it is a Heaven or Hell or an eternal orgy. For
instance, if you expect to go to ‘Rock ‘n’ Roll Heaven’ and worship at the feet of Elvis
Presley or Jimi Hendrix, they will create this illusion for you. However, there are
techniques you can use to avoid Theocratic entanglement after death, which are
described in War in Heaven.
“Before I read War in Heaven, the more I studied various spiritual systems, the
more disillusioned I became. My main paths had been Theosophy and its descendants,
and the study of channeled messages of all kinds, particularly those from ‘Ascended
Masters’ and ‘Space Brothers’. Each book I read in these fields claimed to teach the
work of highly evolved beings, yet each contained glaring contradictions of the others.
Then I read War in Heaven and found out why these contradictions occur – the authors
don’t have an adequate theoretical frame of reference to correctly interpret the
messages they channel, even though much of the raw information is perfectly valid.
“War in Heaven contains a revolutionary yet completely logical cosmology
which provides such a frame of reference, and has answered questions that couldn’t be
answered by any other spiritual system that I studied. Reading it did cause more
questions to crop up in my mind, but most of them are answered by the time I finished
the book. The author says that the purpose of War in Heaven is to help readers make a
major ‘Breakthrough in Consciousness,’ and after reading it, I know what he means.
It may well be the most important book ever published.”
Colin Wilson comment:
The following is from a letter by Colin Wilson, dated 2/15/89:
“War in Heaven arrived while I was in California last year, and when I got back,
I had so many letters to write that I didn’t have a chance to read it properly. I have
just done so and find it an absolutely absorbing and fascinating piece of work. If I had - 4 -
received it fifteen years ago, not long after I’d written The Occult, I would have
thought that it was all wildly imaginative. But since then, I have learned a great deal
more about this whole field of the paranormal, and a lot of what you say seems to me
to make a great deal of sense. Anyway, very many thanks indeed for your kindness in
sending me this extraordinary piece of work.”
Jay Kinney review:
And here is an excerpt from a review by Jay Kinney that was included in the
Preface of the first printing of WiH in 1988. It originally appeared in Gnosis #6, and
was written about the pre-publication edition of the book, which was circulated in
1987 under the title of Spiritual Revolution, but it describes War in Heaven equally
well.
“This self-published book is among the most fascinating, and most troubling,
books I’ve read in some time. It is fascinating because it consists of channeled (i.e.
automatically written) material that is not only clear and pointed but also flies in the
face almost all other channeled teachings. And it’s troubling because to take Spiritual
Revolution (SR) seriously entails entering into a topsy-turvy worldview that most of us
would normally consider to be highly paranoid.
“Briefly put, the material in SR claims to emanate from a group of disembodied
spirits informally called the ‘Invisible College.’ As one might guess from its name,
this group says it was the force behind the development of groups such as the
Freemasons and Rosicrucians. More surprising, however, is its claim to also have
influenced the rise of the civil rights movement, the spread of LSD, the anti-war
movement, and even rock’n’roll. So far so good: if this were all, one could peg the
‘Invisible College’ as the hippest bunch of inner plane guides around, whispering
bright ideas in the ears of the unsuspecting. However, there’s more.
“The group is apparently engaged in a ongoing struggle against another
powerful conglomeration of inner plane spirits it calls ‘the Theocrats’. These types
are apparently the ones behind most world religions, and, in fact, hang around
churches and other places of worship soaking up the psychic energy that devout
believers beam their way in prayer. These fiends are fond of meeting the newly
deceased as they reach ‘the other side’ and ushering them into an illusory Heaven
where their souls are gobbled up by the top Theocrats. In other words, according to
SR, spiritual traditions, which teach love of God, and ultimately, union with the divine,
are really scams run by the inner plane Theocrats to rip off psychic energy and souls.
SR spells all this out in far more detail than I have space for here.
“Considering that most channeled messages sound like their spirit authors have
been cribbing from each others’ notes, SR’s revelations about a “War in Heaven”
stand out as decidedly unique… Spiritual Revolution is a startling book that makes one
re-examine all of one’s spiritual assumptions… Considering that SR’s thesis undercuts
the spiritual moorings of world civilization, there ought to be some heated discussions
to come. - 5 -
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Forward.....................................................................................................2
Reviews and Comments ..........................................................................3
Part One: A Breakthrough in Spiritual Consciousness
Chapter 1: The Search for Spiritual Reality....................................6
Chapter 2: The Shaver Mystery ...................................................13
Chapter 3: Conspiracies ................................................................19
Chapter 4: The Sixties...................................................................26
Chapter 5: Religions and Revolution............................................33
Chapter 6: Passport to Paranoia ...................................................40
Chapter 7: The Invisible War .......................................................48
Chapter 8: The Breaking Point ....................................................54
Chapter 9: The Breakthrough ..................................................... 62
Part Two: Theocracy
Chapter 10: The Theocrats .......................................................... 68
Chapter 11: Theocratic Bands ..................................................... 74
Chapter 12: Religious Mind Control ........................................... 80
Chapter 13: Soul, Mind, and Consciousness ...............................85
Chapter 14: Electronic Mind Control ..........................................91
Chapter 15: The History of Theocracy ........................................96
Chapter 16: The Invisible College ............................................ 102
Chapter 17: Satan and Buddha .................................................. 108
Chapter 18: The Age of Reason ................................................ 117
Chapter 19: A Revolution in Consciousness ............................ 124
Chapter 20: The Aquarian Age ..................................................129
Part Three: The Second Breakthrough
Chapter 21: Hitch Hiking Spirits ...............................................133
Chapter 22: Elementals ............................................................. 140
Chapter 23: Gods .......................................................................146
Chapter 24: The Fifth Stage of Theocracy ................................ 152
Chapter 25: The Technology War ............................................. 159
Chapter 26: The Last Days ....................................................... 165
Part Four: The Spiritual Revolution
Chapter 27: Toward a General Breakthrough ........................... 171
Chapter 28: The Spiritual Revolutionary Movement ................ 176
Chapter 29: Spiritual Politics Today ..........................................182
Chapter 30: The End and The Beginning ..................................188
Appendix A: Summary – A Revolutionary Cosmology ..................... 192
Appendix B: A Symbol for the Spiritual Revolutionary Movement....194
Appendix C: Summary ........................................................................195
- 6 -
Part One: A Breakthrough in Spiritual Revolution
Chapter 1: The Search for Spiritual Reality
Part One is called “A Breakthrough in Spiritual Consciousness” because it
summarizes the evolution of my personal beliefs about the nature of spiritual reality
over a period of about twenty years, from the Sixties up until 1983, when I made the
breakthrough that allowed me to receive and understand the channeled messages
presented in Parts Two and Three of War in Heaven. I made this breakthrough not by
learning facts about spiritual phenomena on the intellectual level, but by achieving a
state of awareness and open-mindedness that enabled me to receive what my spirit
guides were actually trying to communicate to me, rather than what my prejudiced and
brainwashed conscious mind wanted to hear.
It may be difficult for the majority of people who read this book to identify with
the viewpoint from which I’m writing it. My psychic experiences, beginning with my
earliest memories from childhood, are just as real and important to me as my
experiences in the physical world. I’ve been reading minds, communicating with
spiritual beings, and practicing psychic healing literally all my life. I believe in these
things on exactly the same level as I believe in my ability to speak the English
language, so it’s not easy for me to communicate with people who do not instinctively
realize that such things are real.
Whenever I can, I give accounts of my personal psychic experiences to explain
why I formed particular spiritual beliefs. Some readers of the preliminary version of
this book, published in 1987 under the title of Spiritual Revolution, dismissed these
narratives as “lies and garbage.” Others said things like “It has the ring of truth to it,
even though it contradicts almost every other spiritual book I’ve ever read.” You’ll
just to have to make up your own mind. All I’ll say at this point is that War in Heaven
contains no deliberate lies, and I’m neither smart enough nor crazy enough to have
hallucinated it all.
I also want to make it clear that I really don’t care if readers say they accept or
reject the theories in this book. My purpose is not to gain followers for a narrow
ideology, but to assist certain people in making the same breakthrough I made If you
are one of these people, you may not even know it until long after you’ve finished the
book and the ideas in it have penetrated deep into your subconscious.
However, I will also offer evidence to convince the reader’s conscious intellect
that what I’m saying is scientifically true, whenever I can do so without interfering
with my primary purpose, which is to present an extremely complex and revolutionary
theory about spirituality. Let me start by explaining why I believe that there is
sufficient empirical evidence to convince any truly open-minded person that telepathy,
spirit-communication, reincarnation, and many other psychic and spiritual phenomena
actually exist. Colin Wilson, one of the most rational and pragmatic of the twentieth-
century philosophers, has come to a similar conclusion, as shown by the following
excerpt from his book The Occult (1971): - 7 -
“It was not until two years ago, when I began the systematic
research for this book, that I realized the remarkable consistency of the
evidence for such matters as life after death, out-of-the-body
experiences (astral projection), reincarnation. In a basic sense, my
attitude remains unchanged; I still regard philosophy – the pursuit of
reality through intuition aided by intellect – as being more relevant,
more important, than questions of “the occult.” But the weighing of the
evidence, in this unsympathetic frame of mind, has convinced me that
the basic claims of “occultism” are true. It seems to me that the reality
of life after death has been established beyond all reasonable doubt. I
sympathize with the philosophers and scientists who regard it as
emotional nonsense, because I am temperamentally on their side; but I
think they are closing their eyes to evidence that would convince them
if it concerned the mating habits of albino rats or the behavior of alpha
particles.”
Let’s use the evidence in support of reincarnation as a starting point. There are
thousands of past-life memory cases on record, described in hundreds of different
books. Some of them are undoubtedly hoaxes or have explanations other than
reincarnation, but many more seem to have been proven valid with physical evidence.
For example, young children have demonstrated the ability to speak a foreign
language that their parents are sure they have never even heard in their present
lifetime. Other subjects traveled to places where they said they had lived during a
previous life, described objects they had hidden, and then found them.
Colin Wilson’s The Case for Reincarnation (1987) presents an impressive
amount of this type of evidence, and Reincarnation: A New Horizon in Science,
Religion, and Society (1984), edited by Sylvia Cranston and Carey Williams, presents
even more. In my opinion, these two books, all by themselves, contain sufficient
empirical evidence to prove the validity of reincarnation beyond reasonable doubt to
anyone with a truly open mind. On the basis of this kind of published evidence alone,
and leaving my personal past-life memories out of it, I am as ready to argue with
anyone who denies that reincarnation is a scientifically proven fact as I am to dispute
an assertion that the Sun revolves around the Earth.
Although I’ve never talked to anyone who was able to verify his or her past-life
memories with hard physical evidence comparable to that described in the books, my
conversations on this subject with hundreds of different people have still yielded some
valuable information. I’ve talked to dozens whose past-life memory accounts seem
historically accurate. Without exception, these people said they had lived before in the
quite recent past, and had possessed conscious control over their psychic abilities.
Some said they had been American Indians with shamanic training; several had been
Hindus skilled in Yoga; and others recounted past lives as Chinese or Japanese
students of the martial arts. The majority, however, had been ordinary Americans
with low-level occult training in the Rosicrucians, the Theosophists, the Spiritualist
movement, etc.
The more I talked to some of these people, the more evidence I found that their
past-life memories were genuine. They had learned difficult mechanical skills, - 8 -
complicated intellectual knowledge, or even a whole foreign language, with an ease
that mystified their teachers. Some of them also reported being criticized by their
instructors for instinctively doing things in a manner that is now considered obsolete,
but was standard practice fifty or seventy years ago. No single case of this type is
conclusive proof of reincarnation by itself, but hearing dozens of such accounts face-
to-face is very impressive.
I also once had a psychic experience that I feel is excellent first-hand evidence
for reincarnation. It is especially valuable because it does not involve past-life
memories like most of the other evidence, but direct psychic observation of the
reincarnation process. Here is how I described it to one of my correspondents:
“I’ll tell you why I personally believe in reincarnation absolutely
and completely. I have ‘seen’ it happen. I have stood by the crib of a
newborn baby and psychically observed high-level spirit guides
approach and assist a soul in entering the infant’s body. Before, I got
the same vibes I get from an ape in the zoo, after, the vibes of a human
baby. It was a very clear-cut psychic experience, and similar to a more
common, but sadder, experience you may have had yourselves: being at
the bedside of a dying person and psychically perceiving the soul
depart from the body. That’s the real reason I believe in reincarnation
so strongly, and all the inferential evidence in books is pale beside it.”
Ironically, my own past-life memories aren’t of much use in providing proof of
reincarnation. They are extremely vivid and occur to me frequently, both in dreams
and as flashes of memory when I’m awake; but there is no way to verify them with
factual evidence, because they are not memories of a past life on Earth. The people in
them, including me, are slightly different anatomically from Earth people, and the
setting seems to be an advanced technological society much different from anything
I’ve ever seen described in science fiction.
The general impression is that the society lives underground or on a space
station of some kind, not on the surface of a planet. The people seem to live entirely
indoors in an endless series of inter-connecting rooms, and the “doors” connecting
them may be teleportation devices. There are almost no artifacts of any kind visible in
most of the scenes, not even furniture: people just sit or recline in mid-air. Maybe it’s
done with anti-gravity devices. All of the machines seem to be hidden away, and there
are no physical control panels. Apparently, everyone is hooked up telepathically to an
elaborate computer system, and people operate the equipment just by thinking.
However, when someone does this, images of machines and control panels seem to
appear in mid-air.
I still have vivid memories of dreaming about such things when I was only three
or four years old. When I put the childish picture-memories and emotions into adult
words, they go something like this: “I dreamed that I was turning into a machine. No,
not a mechanical man. I was part of a big machine, like a factory, and it kept getting
bigger and bigger, and I knew I was supposed to control it with my thoughts, but I just
didn’t know the right things to think.” These flashes of memory have been very
important to me all of my life, because they often contain instructions for controlling - 9 -
and using my psychic powers or other mental faculties that I have trouble accessing
with my conscious mind alone. They are probably the single most significant factor
that helped prepare me for the breakthrough in spiritual consciousness that led to the
writing of this book.
I’ve talked to a number of people who also seem to remember past lives on other
worlds, and read books on the subject by Brad Steiger, Ruth Montgomery, and others.
Here’s what George C. Andrews had to say about it in Extra-Terrestrials Among Us
(1986):
“The concept of reincarnation implies a latent ability to regress back to former lives,
and thus to restore the long-dormant far memory of experience and information
accumulated during previous incarnations to conscious awareness. A substantial
number of those who have worked on activating this latent ability find that their past
lives include incarnations as extra-terrestrials. This occurs so persistently that it has
become a commonly accepted belief among those engaged in such work that extra-
terrestrials from many different points of origin have incarnated on Earth during this
crucial all-or-nothing climax of human history. Some of those who remember
previous existences as extraterrestrials also become aware of specific missions they
were born to carry out during the present terrestrial incarnation.”
Here’s a summary of my beliefs about reincarnation prior to my breakthrough in 1983.
First, most of the well-documented, really plausible past-life memory accounts seem
to involve a previous life that ended fifty years or less before the person’s present
incarnation. Some people claim they have lived dozens or hundreds of lives over
many centuries; but I’ve never seen an account of this type that contained solid
supporting evidence, such as intimate knowledge of the language spoken during the
past life. My conclusion from the available evidence about reincarnation was that
very few people remember more than the last of their past lives in enough detail to be
useful, and that spirits don’t stay on the astral plane for more than a few decades
between earthly lives.
Second, the evidence also suggested that only people who were practicing
psychics in their last incarnation seem to have vivid, conscious past-life memories in
this one. Practically every well-documented account of a past life that I’ve seen
includes descriptions of conscious psychic activity: telepathy, mediumship, prophetic
visions, faith healing, divination, etc. The psychic activities may have been the result
of deliberate training, or they may have been spontaneous, but they are always there.
Third, reincarnation may not be as common as most reincarnationists assume.
The Eastern religions teach that all human beings reincarnate after death except a few
of the most spiritually advanced, which pass to a higher plane of existence. Most
Westerners who believe in reincarnation at all have also accepted the idea that it is a
universal phenomenon.
In fact, I used to believe this idea myself, and sometimes used it in arguments
with Christians. They would say, “You only live once, and then you are judged and
consigned to Heaven or Hell for eternity.” I would reply, “No, we all live over and
over again through reincarnation. When the soul reaches a high enough state of
development, it may pass to a higher plane, but everyone else just keeps living life - 10 -
after life on Earth. This is a lot fairer than the system you’re describing, because
people always get a second chance.”
However, the more I learned about reincarnation as described in the strongest
past-life memory accounts, the less I came to believe that everybody who dies
reincarnates. The only thing the evidence demonstrates clearly is that a few people,
probably less than one percent of the population, remember a past life well enough to
prove it. Many more, maybe a tenth to a quarter of the population, have subconscious
past-life memories that can be accessed by hypnotic regression or other techniques.
Some New Agers claim that everybody can learn to remember past lives, but I’ve
never felt they even come close to proving it.
In the last few years before I made my breakthrough, I admitted to myself that
the available evidence wasn’t adequate to determine what percentage of the population
reincarnates or what happens to the souls of people who don’t. I did sometimes
speculate that having conscious control over their psychic powers might help people
reincarnate, but I found this line of reasoning distasteful. In the absence of real
evidence, it seemed elitist and self-serving, so I didn’t pursue it. However, having an
open mind on the subject prepared me to accept the truth when my spirit guides finally
told it to me.
Whether reincarnation is common or rare, accepting that it exists at all obliges
one to start looking for information about the soul, the entity that transfers from one
body to another to carry the past-life memories. Like the nineteenth-century
Spiritualists and many other occultists, I postulated that the soul is composed of
specialized forms of matter and energy presently unknown to physical science. This
hypothesis is quite vague, of course; but it lays a foundation for finding out more
about the nature of the soul by scientific methods of investigation.
I will next discuss the evidence that some disembodied human souls are active
and conscious on the astral plane and can communicate with the living by telepathy.
There is even more evidence available in published literature to support this
hypothesis than there is to support reincarnation. The organized Spiritualist
movement of the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries produced enough spirit-
dictated books to fill a small library, and the modern Channeling movement is
generating still more. I admit that some of these are either conscious hoaxes or
creations of the author’s own imagination, but I am convinced that many are genuine
communications from spirits.
Because it’s difficult to tell genuine channeled books from fakes and products of
self-delusion, I recommend works based on scientific investigations of Spiritualist and
Channeling movements. Such investigations often employ methods similar to those
used by the reincarnation researchers mentioned earlier. For example, a medium will
obtain information from the spirit of a deceased person that no living person could
know, and the investigator will try to verify it with empirical evidence. Most public
libraries contain a few books of this type, and I’ve read several hundred that each
contain sufficient evidence to prove that the dead survive and communicate with the
living. - 11 -
Cases where the spirit of a murder victim has passed enough information to a
medium to identify and convict the killer are actually quite common. This information
often includes detailed instructions for locating physical evidence: weapons, clothing,
and especially the body itself. Dozens of such cases are reported in the newspapers
every year, and hundreds more are known within the occult community but kept quiet.
This is especially true in small towns and rural areas, where psychics routinely help
the police solve crimes, and the cops quietly defend them from persecution by
religious fanatics. This fragile relationship depends on secrecy, so stories with
headlines like “Psychic Locates Murder Weapon” don’t appear in the papers as
commonly as they should.
If you start looking for cases like these in books, magazines, or newspaper files,
you’ll find the evidence extremely impressive. The same applies to cases where
spirits told mediums the sites of treasures buried by deceased people, hidden wills and
other papers, etc. I feel there is sufficient evidence in any large library or bookstore to
convince anyone who’s reasonably unbiased of the reality of contact between the
living and the spirits of the dead.
If you do start reading to find such evidence, here’s something else to look for at
the same time. The spirits who pass information to mediums about events that
happened while they were alive very often seem so senile, childish, paranoid, or
otherwise in distress, that it is difficult and painful for the medium to communicate
with them. The authors of mediumistic literature often don’t emphasize these negative
details, but they are there if you look for them.
Since the nineteenth century, Spiritualists and other occultists who practice
mediumship have deliberately concealed a lot of important information about the spirit
world when they write accounts of their communications with the dead. This is done
with the best of motives: to keep from frightening the public, and to avoid giving
support to Fundamentalist charges that mediumship involves contact with demonic
forces. Most of the literature still gives the reader a misleading impression of what it’s
actually like to receive messages from the spirit world at a séance, by automatic
writing, or through mechanical aids such as Ouija boards.
Did you ever wonder why practically all mediums communicate with the
majority of spirits indirectly? Both the old-fashioned Spiritualist mediums and the
New Age channeling mediums have spirit guides who assist them in finding and
communicating with other spirits, but very few are willing to tell you bluntly why they
have to operate this way. The reason is very simple: most spirits on the astral plane
are in mental states that we’d label as insane or feeble-minded in a living person.
They mumble in baby talk or rave like schizophrenics. Their thoughts ramble and get
lost in time like those of a person with Alzheimer’s disease. They contradict
themselves as if their memories had been scrambled up with the contents of someone
else’s mind. And above all, they act sick, drunk, or drugged. Some say they are in
severe pain; others are frightened; still others are calm, but it’s the sickly calm of a
person who has taken a heavy dose of morphine or Thorazine.
If you’ve experimented with Ouija boards, there’s an excellent chance you’ve
spoken to spirits in this condition. And though the mediumistic literature does - 12 -
mention frequent contacts with “lost souls,” “earthbound spirits, “entities from the
lower astral,” etc., it rarely describes them in detail or reveals that the vast majority of
spirits the mediums contact are in this category. The plain truth is that if you’re going
to accomplish anything at all as a medium, you have to work through a spirit guide.
A spirit guide is simply a spirit on the astral plane with sufficient mental
stability and psychic powers to communicate easily with a particular medium, and
who is willing to form a personal relationship. Another thing to look for between the
lines of the literature: this relationship is often overtly sexual. A medium’s spirit
guide often receives some of the energy raised during physical sexual activity. Only
the Eastern Tantric magicians and Western students of sex magic write and talk openly
about this, but almost all mediums practice it.
Explanations of exactly what all this means will be given in Part Two. The rest
of Part One will describe other knowledge I had to learn before I could make the
breakthrough.
- 13 -
Chapter 2: The Shaver Mystery
I’ve been involved in the movement investigating UFOs and other unexplained
phenomena since I was a teenager back in the Fifties, but from the viewpoint of an
occultist, not that of a materialist. For example, I’ve always felt that most of the
evidence concerning visits to Earth by ancient astronauts can be accounted for by
postulating telepathic contact with beings from advanced extraterrestrial societies, and
that many close encounters with UFOs involve psychic contact with spiritual beings.
In the Fifties and Sixties, the occultists in the movement were regarded as
credulous and unscientific for putting a psychic and spiritual interpretation on much of
the evidence; but as the years have passed, more and more investigators of
unexplained phenomena have begun to draw similar conclusions from the available
data. However, I myself have always remained part of the “lunatic fringe,” because
my favorite theory in the whole field is the Shaver Mystery, which has never gained
respectability. Even today, almost everyone in the Ufology and occult communities
treats people who believe in it as fools or paranoids. I am neither, but I still take it
very seriously, because many of the details in Shaver’s writings match my dreams and
visions of what seem to be past lives on other worlds.
During World War Two, Ray Palmer, editor of the science-fiction magazine
Amazing Stories, received several short novels from an amateur writer named Richard
S. Shaver. The stories were rather poorly written, but the idea content so impressed
Palmer that he and various ghostwriters polished them up for publication.
When the Shaver stories started appearing in Amazing, the magazine’s
circulation increased dramatically; some versions of the story say it doubled or tripled.
Shaver’s writing was a highly complex and imaginative new treatment of a theme that
had long been common in science fiction: the concept that we share this planet with
the descendants of ancient astronauts who always remain hidden from us, but who use
their advanced scientific technology to manipulate us.
Because most of Shaver’s literary output – millions of words over more than
twenty years – was chaotically organized and was rewritten by many different hands
to make it suitable for publication, very few people today have an over-all
understanding of his cosmology. Many occult and unexplained phenomena writers
have borrowed from it, usually without identifying it as their source, but no one has
yet bothered to publish a coherent synopsis of Shaver’s theories in any detail.
Here is a brief summary. Thousands of years ago, extraterrestrial space travelers
visited Earth and established huge underground colonies here. They couldn’t live on
the surface because solar radiation shortened their lifespan, which was normally
measured in centuries. Eventually, the civilization that had planted the colonies
became moribund, and contact with the parent worlds became less and less frequent.
Because the underground colonies were cut off from outside supplies, some of the
colonists were forced to live permanently on the surface to grow food and obtain the
raw materials necessary to sustain life in the underground cities. - 14 -
Over a long period of time, the “detrimental radiation” of the sun caused the
minds of the surface dwellers to degenerate, and eventually they reverted to complete
barbarism. However, they did retain enough intelligence to start progressing again,
finally achieving human civilization as we read about it in our history books.
During this whole period, the many inhabitants of the underground colonies,
which Shaver simply calls “Caves,” survived and retained a significant amount of the
original knowledge and technology. However, the population of Cave dwellers
gradually decreased because of constant shortages of supplies from the surface. After
the surface people forgot completely about the origin and nature of the underground
cities, the Cave dwellers started posing as gods and other supernatural beings to coerce
surface people into providing them food and other necessities. The Cave people
possess machines for generating “Rays” that give them certain kinds of power over
surface dwellers.
Some types of Rays can kill or wound people, but others can be used to heal
sickness or injury or to slow down the aging process. The Rays can also be used for
telepathic communication and to control the thoughts and emotions of others at a
distance. They seem to be most effective at close range, but some are powerful
enough to have a significant effect on surface people.
The Cave dwellers have used their Ray technology to manipulate surface society
throughout history, especially to obtain food and other supplies without the majority of
people on Earth being aware of it. A few surface people were in on the plot and acted
as agents of the Cave dwellers; these included members of such diverse groups as
political rulers, religious leaders, wealthy merchants and traders, smugglers, and
pirates.
However, the population in the Caves has decreased steadily over the ages
because of continual shortages of raw materials. Shaver described the current
situation in the underground cities as grim and desperate, with the political and social
structure in almost complete collapse. Starvation and cannibalism are commonplace,
and many of the inhabitants have turned themselves into literal monsters through
improper use of the Rays. These “Deros” have become insane tyrants, and most have
deformed their bodies as well, by trying to use the life prolonging Rays to achieve
physical immortality. Because “detrimental radiation from the Sun penetrates even
into the Caves”, and because many of the Ray machines themselves have deteriorated
through ages of constant use and makeshift repairs, the Deros resemble the living dead
of legend. The Rays alone aren’t enough: to survive, they also have to eat human
flesh like ghouls, and drink human blood like vampires.
However, some of the Cave dwellers are still normal: they call themselves
“Teros,” and often use their Rays to help people on the surface, especially to combat
the evil being done by the Deros. However, they aren’t militarily strong enough to
conquer and destroy the Deros, and the only reason they survive at all is that they
sometimes receive help from extraterrestrials who arrive in spaceships.
Unfortunately, these modern space travelers are also incapable of defeating the
Deros. According to Shaver, they’ve been trying for centuries to get some
government or other elsewhere in the galaxy to “send in the Marines and clean up - 15 -
Earth,” but so far it hasn’t happened. Earth is just one small planet in a remote
backwater of the universe, and no advanced interstellar civilization has bothered to
come here and fight a war to liberate us from the Deros.
Some of Shaver’s stories assert that such civilizations still exist, and that “help
from the stars” might arrive at any time. Others are pessimistic and say they all fell
long ago. The stories saying that some worlds have retained sufficient technology to
permit interstellar travel also make it plain that such cultures are degenerate remnants
of once-great civilizations, now fallen into decay. In either case, the Teros fight on,
barely holding their own. They use their Rays to communicate with people like
Shaver, hoping that eventually civilization on the surface will develop technologically
to the point where we will be able to help them defeat the Deros, but they make it clear
this point is far in the future.
The Deros lack the technical knowledge necessary to keep their Ray machines in
good repair, so they are no longer able to keep political control of surface society or
prevent technological progress. However, the machines they have inherited from
ancient times are still far too advanced for our present scientists to duplicate, and they
continue to have a great deal of power to manipulate both surface society as a whole
and the minds of individuals.
Here is a sample of Shaver’s actual writing: an excerpt from Mandark, a two-
hundred-thousand word novel, serialized in 1947 and ‘48 in his own mimeographed
publication, Shaver Mystery Magazine. As far as I know, this was not edited or
revised by anyone else.
“To all you young idealists there will come a time when all those things you think of
Life with your bright, trusting and believing eyes will become dust and slime. A time
when you will understand the terrible and stupid horror that life may be, in reality.
“To each of you will come at last an apparition, wearing like Scrooge, his chains, a
mask of terror that hides a deep basic stupidity – a dumbness that is deeper than
human...
“They have life, those things, just as you have life: but they are not understood and are
so terribly feared that men will neither speak of them or write of them openly...
“Always, I too, feared the evil ones, the ignorant, degenerate and cannibalistic ray
people who catch and kill us when they can. But they did not catch many of us, for we
had some old ray women from the Deep Schools with us, and we were not easy to
catch...
“We need men like you to aid us in our constant struggle with the living devils that
inhabit much of these underground warrens. But when we try to approach men for
this purpose, they fear the whole thing as madness or ghosts or whatever they have
been taught...
“Almost immediately upon the visi-screen a scene of utter horror became visible... It
was a Hell, with its Devils at work... ‘Do you see them, those things that should not
live?’
“I looked in horror upon the things that moved as men move upon the screen of life.
They were a thing that could not possibly live except for the protection of the hidden
caverns, and the support of the great beneficial rays keeping their degenerate and evil
carcasses in motion. - 16 -
“Dead they must have been but for the supply of super-energy which the ancient
generators poured through their bodies forever. These evil people must live on long
after they would normally die, to become as undead as they were. It seems to be this
fact that contributes to their evil nature, for the slow decay of their brains is energized
by the synthetic electric life-force, and their resultant thought is but the reflection of
life upon the stagnating brain tissues...”
As Shaver describes it, only a few people on the surface know about the Caves at all,
and they are mostly agents of the Deros. Some are conscious, willing agents seeking
wealth and power; others are mere slaves, whose minds are completely controlled by
the Deros’ Rays. The only surface people who know the whole truth about the
“Hidden World” and are willing to fight the Deros instead of collaborating with them
are Shaver and a few of his friends.
When presented as fiction, these ideas aroused only mild interest among the readers of
Amazing Stories. However, when Palmer printed letters from Shaver and various
readers stating that the theories expounded in the Mystery were literally true, the
Shaver Mystery started receiving major attention from the science-fiction community,
almost all of it unfavorable. However, the publicity attracted large numbers of new
readers: probably the same people who supported the UFO movement, which started a
few years later. The increased circulation did not prevent the publishers of Amazing
from firing Palmer after he admitted that he himself accepted the Mystery as fact.
They felt that the long-term success of their magazine depended on support from
people who read science fiction regularly, a group that reacted very negatively to
claims that the Shaver Mystery was true.
Shaver continued to get his work into print by publishing his own amateur magazine,
and quickly attracted what would now be called a “cult following.” After Palmer was
fired from Amazing, he went into business for himself, publishing books and
magazines in the unexplained-phenomena and occult fields. His magazines included
Flying Saucers, Search, and Mystic, which gave some coverage to the Shaver
Mystery, and The Hidden World, which was devoted almost entirely to it. They
weren’t spectacularly successful in attracting readers, but one or another of the titles
appeared on newsstands almost continuously until about 1975.
I read Palmer’s publications during this period, but rarely discussed them with my
friends in the unexplained-phenomena or occult communities. I had assumed from my
first contact with the Mystery that Shaver was a medium that received messages from
the spirit world, but also a materialist who rationalized his psychic experiences as a
physical phenomenon. I interpreted his Teros and Deros as good and evil spirits and
his Rays as the psychic powers of both living people and disembodied spirits used to
work magic. Such an interpretation was unacceptable to most UFO investigators, and
even to the majority of Shaver’s own followers, because they were strict materialists.
However, occultists didn’t like the Shaver Mystery either; they called it negative and
paranoid. People in both groups dismissed Shaver and his supporters as “nuts and
crackpots who give all the rest of us a bad reputation.”
However, I noticed from the late Sixties on that more and more of Palmer and
Shaver’s ideas were appearing in books on occultism, conspiracies, and unexplained
phenomena. All too often the authors didn’t even credit these men as the source.
Recently, years after his death, Palmer has finally begun to get some of the recognition - 17 -
he deserves as a creative, courageous pioneer in all three fields; but Shaver’s name is
rarely mentioned, except by a few members of his original following in their own
small-circulation publications.
I reread much of the Shaver Mystery material during the early Eighties when I was
consciously trying to make my breakthrough, and I found that his basic cosmology
seemed to fit the total available evidence about the nature of spiritual reality better
than any of the traditional cosmologies in religious and occult literature. It’s quite
grim and paranoid, but then so is a lot of the raw spiritual evidence that psychics have
channeled over the course of history.
Books on Spiritualism and other forms of traditional Western occultism usually
portray the astral plane as a rather benign and orderly place, presided over by
benevolent deities or advanced human spirits, just as the major religions do. The
wicked may be punished there, but the just are rewarded; and above all, the life after
death takes place in a stable environment with law and order.
However, many of the spirits I’ve communicated with over years of mediumistic
practice describe the astral plane as an environment almost as harsh as Shaver’s
Caves. As I said in the last chapter, spirits often appear to be insane, feeble-minded,
or child-like; and even those who seem normally intelligent and mature sometimes
become mysteriously incoherent during the course of a telepathic conversation, as if
something were attacking them or jamming the communication process.
If, as all the religious and occult mythologies claim, the astral plane is really governed
by benign gods or other highly-evolved spiritual beings, they do not seem to be doing
a very efficient job of helping the dead find stability or happiness there. In fact, the
messages that supposedly come from the spiritual entities in charge on the astral plane
are among the most confusing and frightening communications that mediums receive.
Many times, I’ve made contact with entities that say, “I am God,” and then go on into
ravings as immoral as Hitler’s and as incoherent as something you’d expect to hear
coming out of a padded cell.
Of course, both the occultists and the religious believers claim that such messages are
from demons and other evil or insane spirits, but that doesn’t answer the most
important question. If the astral plane is under the control of benign forces, why does
so much of the observed evidence portray existence there as extremely harsh and
unpleasant?
Most of the occultists I discussed this with over the years before I made the
breakthrough were not interested in doing serious research into this. Many put the
blame on me: “You’re too political and too concerned with the Earth plane, and this
puts you in contact only with the lowest levels of the astral plane. If you’ll stop trying
to play scientist, and simply submit your will to the spiritual forces that run the
Universe, your mediumistic experiences will become calm and serene and you’ll start
contacting the really advanced spirits and deities.”
My reply usually went something like this: “Maybe I really am at a lower stage of
spiritual development than you are, but if so, then I’ve got a lot of company. My
personal communications with spirits tell me that the vast majority of the human race
is not composed of high-level occultists capable of avoiding the evil spirits on the
lower astral and going on to a higher plane of existence. Instead, when they die, it’s - 18 -
very likely they’ll join the lost souls calling for help. My sympathies are with them,
and I’d like to learn how to help them.”
My actual opinion was that both traditional and New Age occultists, and all the
believers in organized religion as well, were deluding themselves with false optimism
because they were afraid to recognize and fight evil. However, I rarely said this
openly because doing so would only be destructive criticism. I had no alternative to
offer; just the vague feeling that there is something terrible going on in the spirit
world.
When I finally made the breakthrough, I found out that it is a literal “War in Heaven,”
a struggle to the death between two political factions of disembodied spirits; and that
spirits from one of these factions had telepathically inspired my life-long fascination
with the Shaver Mystery. My new knowledge also confirmed my rejection of
Shaver’s physical, science-fiction-oriented interpretation of the Mystery. The Caves,
the space people, and even the Ray machines do exist, but on the spiritual plane, not
the physical plane. Shaver was simply an unconscious medium that received
important messages about the nature of spiritual reality from the same group of spirits
who are helping me with this book.
And since the Sixties, these spirits have had an ever-increasing subconscious influence
on many Ufologists and conspiracy theorists, leading them into hypotheses similar to
the Shaver Mystery. For example, during the Seventies, Jacques Vallee and several
other respected UFO researchers virtually stopped searching for evidence that flying
saucers were physical objects, and concentrated on studying the effects of the UFO
phenomenon on individuals and on society as a whole. However, treating UFOs as a
psychological and sociological phenomenon didn’t really explain anything, because
the investigators kept finding evidence that UFOs had objective existence. Most cases
could be explained as hoaxes, hallucinations, mass-suggestion, or media hype, but not
all of them.
Investigators like Vallee kept talking to people who had experienced “close
encounters” with UFOs and undergone profound psychological changes as a result.
When I and other occultists read these accounts, we saw their similarity to descriptions
in our own literature of encounters with spiritual beings, psychic attacks, illumination
experiences, etc. Eventually, Vallee and other well-known UFO writers grudgingly
began to admit that the UFOs were “real but nonphysical.” This concept will be
discussed further in a later chapter.
They also found that their investigations of the effects of UFO encounters on people
forced them to consider seriously the idea that unseen forces manipulate the course of
human history. In the Fifties, the mainstream of the UFO investigation movement had
ostracized Palmer and Shaver for talking about mind control and secret conspiracies.
Twenty years later, many of these same investigators found that they were being
drawn down the same path, the one marked “This way lies paranoia.”
The next chapter will give some general background information on conspiracy
theories. I will return to the role of the UFO investigators later.
- 19 -
Chapter 3: Conspiracies
Although the general public and the scientific investigators of unexplained phenomena
started showing a major interest in conspiracy theories only after the assassination of
President John F. Kennedy in 1963, conspiracies have been a major theme in occult
literature for centuries. Many of these stories are merely warnings about conspiracies
to persecute occultists, or answers to accusations that occult organizations have
conspired to overthrow religious and political establishments; but the ones that
interested me are much more positive in tone. They’re the sort of thing that I read and
hope is true, such as the rumors about secret societies of high-level “Masters” who
conspire to use their advanced knowledge and formidable psychic powers for benign
causes, especially the advancement of human civilization in every area: spiritual,
cultural, political, and technological.
I felt instinctively from an early age that such positive conspiracies have in fact
existed at various times during the past five or six centuries and have been significant
in building our modern society. One of my major goals for a long time was to find
such a group, if any had survived to the present, both to learn whatever they would
teach me and to help them with what they were doing. In a sense, I found it when I
made my breakthrough, but it wasn’t a conspiracy of living people at all. However,
it’s still worthwhile to tell of my efforts to trace down the source of the rumors about
benign conspiracies of advanced occultists who contribute to the progress of Western
civilization.
One of the chief focal points for such rumors is the Masonic Order of the eighteenth
century, so that’s where I’ll begin. Detailed histories of some of these lodges and
relatively complete descriptions of their doctrines are now in general circulation.
They’re supposed to be secret, but they really never have been – see William
Heckethorn’s Secret Societies of all Ages and Countries, first published in 1875 and
available in many public libraries. However, there’s very little in these books to help
researchers find hidden occult conspiracies within the secret societies
For example, many historians admit that a large number of the men who made major
breakthroughs in many different fields during the eighteenth-century Age of
Enlightenment – Benjamin Franklin, Thomas Jefferson, Voltaire, Adam Smith, and
dozens of others – belonged to such lodges. And one of the modern Rosicrucian
groups acts as if this is proof that the lodges had access to important occult
knowledge: “What secret did these men possess?” Actually, it’s just as proper to
answer with another question: “With men of that caliber in them, what need did the
lodges have of secret occult knowledge to make an impact on the course of history?”
Studying the basic philosophical and ethical teachings of the eighteenth century
Freemasons and Rosicrucians doesn’t directly reveal the existence of a secret occult
conspiracy either. There is no doubt that ideas like “consent of the governed” and
“inalienable rights to life, liberty, and property” and “the only God we can know is
Reason” were widely discussed and taught within the lodges, and considered
extremely radical; but there was nothing really new or secret about them even then.
They had been published and openly discussed by intellectuals for centuries, and the
only unique thing about the Age of Enlightenment is that these theoretical concepts - 20 -
finally began to be put into practice on a large enough scale to affect the evolution of
human society.
Also, the “secret” histories of the Masonic lodges reveal that they have always been
very similar to what they are today: social organizations devoted to mutual aid among
members, charitable works in the community, and a philosophy most of us would call
“Basic American values.” The members underwent initiations into various “degrees”
and regularly attended quasi-religious rituals, but the histories make it clear that most
lodge brothers considered them mere dramas to stir the emotions and create a mood.
The exact details of these rituals are virtually the only things about such lodges that
aren’t readily available to the public.
However, some members of modern occult groups that trace their descent back to
certain Masonic and Rosicrucian lodges have put important elements of these
traditional rituals into their writings for the general public. The writings of Aleister
Crowley and the other Golden Dawn members are the best-known examples. And
when one studies these rituals, evidence to support the existence of an occult
conspiracy finally begins to emerge. Many of them are directly derived from the
rituals of advanced medieval occultism, and there’s no doubt that performing them
puts the participants in profoundly altered states of consciousness. The OTO (Order
of Eastern Templars) and other modern occult groups that use these rituals are among
the most advanced magical lodges in existence. (And yes, some people in these
groups have very bad reputations for misusing magic. But this reflects only on their
morals, not on their knowledge or skills.)
The fact that advanced magical techniques were used in the rituals without being
openly explained to all of the members is evidence that the Masonic and Rosicrucian
lodges may have been front organizations for a “secret society within a secret society”,
which manipulated the other members for its own purposes. Many occultists have
postulated the existence of such a group, and named it the “Invisible College.”
According to this theory, the Invisible College was a group of men with advanced
knowledge of medieval occultism, derived from the Knights Templar or other secret
societies of the late Middle Ages. They infiltrated Freemasonry and the Rosicrucians
around the beginning of the eighteenth century. Once they had assumed leadership,
they started teaching the rational, humanistic doctrine that most people today associate
with Masonry, which is also the political and ethical philosophy that forms the basis
for modern Western civilization.
The Invisible College designed rituals (based on medieval occultism) that would have
a hypnotic effect on the initiates so their resistance to the radical doctrine would be
lowered. The emotional power of the rituals also positively reinforced acceptance of
the doctrine. The term “operant conditioning” wasn’t added to the vocabulary of
science until the Twentieth century, but occultists have practiced the technique for
hundreds of years. And it worked very well, resulting in the birth of modern political
democracy and liberalism, the rise of capitalism and the industrial revolution, the rapid
advancement of Science, and the decline of Puritanism and other forms of
Fundamentalist Christianity that opposed material progress.
This particular conspiracy was large enough and effective enough to leave obvious
traces in history, but it’s much more difficult to trace the operations of similar
conspiracies since. Most of the modern books labeled as “conspiracy theories” have - 21 -
been of little use to me in finding occult conspiracies, because they deal only with
politics and economics on a completely materialistic level. However, certain well-
known mundane conspiracy theories have elements within them that do interest me.
An example is the body of rumors about the “Bavarian Illuminati” that received a lot
of publicity during the McCarthy-era controversy over Communist conspiracies back
in the Fifties.
The rumors I’m talking about were published quite openly by members of the “lunatic
fringe” of the anti-Communist movement, and some of them had the same “too wild to
be untrue” quality as the Shaver Mystery did. They seemed to show a glimpse into
another reality, as if the authors, like Shaver, were receiving messages from the spirit
world that their conscious minds were totally incapable of interpreting.
For example, some of their accusations against the “Illuminati” made no sense at all
back in the Fifties when the rumors were published, but when I reread this material in
the Seventies and early Eighties, I found that several of their charges had been
amazingly prophetic. For example, these particular propagandists had joined the
crusade against the fluoridation of public water supplies by claiming that it was part of
a wider Illuminati plot to put “drugs and chemicals that weaken the will” into food and
water all over America so that people would become more vulnerable to Communist
brainwashing.
Even the majority within the anti-fluoridation movement – who merely considered
fluoridation of water supplies a potential health hazard and a violation of individual
rights by the government – thought the charges about “will destroying drugs and
chemicals” were totally paranoid. However, when I reread them years later, I
suspected that the authors might have had psychic forewarnings about the massive
impact of mind-altering drugs on society that started in the Sixties. And I’m not
talking only about recreational drug use or LSD as an aid to consciousness-expansion
here, but about something much more fundamental: the use of massive doses of
powerful tranquilizers on people in prisons and mental hospitals, the frequent use of
milder tranquilizers and sedatives by a large part of the population, the ever-increasing
use of cocaine and amphetamines, etc.
Some of the other rumors started by these same “right-wing kooks” didn’t make any
sense until after I had made my breakthrough and started writing this book. One of
them was that the conspiracies they were trying to expose were a set of Chinese
Boxes. On the outer layer were the majority of Americans, who were being
brainwashed with false promises of peace and plenty from liberal politicians. The
liberals themselves were being duped by Communist agents. Chief among these
agents were Josef Stalin and his successors in the Kremlin, but they were not really
sovereign over the “world-wide Communist conspiracy.” Most of their foreign
propaganda and subversion was financed by cliques of Jewish bankers and other
wealthy capitalists whose leaders were all members of the Bavarian Illuminati. And at
the very center, the Illuminati themselves were accused of being under the control of
the “Snake People,” who were either “aliens from outer space,” or “demons of Satan
sent from Hell.”
The strangest thing about this scenario is that it makes perfect sense if interpreted in
terms of some of the information in Part Two of this book. Before I made the
breakthrough, I wasn’t able to understand what was behind these weird writings; I just - 22 -
felt the authors had received information from “somewhere else.” And this
information seemed to support the idea that a mysterious conspiracy was doing things
the conservatives and reactionaries didn’t like. The most interesting thing about it was
that telepathy seemed to be involved, which would imply a conspiracy of psychics.
There are some ideas almost as wild in Morning of the Magicians (1960), by Louis
Pouwells and Jacques Bergier. Among many other things, the book gives evidence
that a number of German Nazi leaders were involved with occultism and various
pseudo-scientific belief systems closely related to it. Some of this material led me to
conclude that the government of Axis Germany may have been infiltrated and
manipulated by the same sort of occultists who worked through the old Masonic
lodges.
Most occultists are reluctant to consider speculation of this kind, because they jump to
the conclusion that if “Secret Masters” manipulated the Nazis, they must have done so
to help them. Since it’s natural to reject the idea that anyone with really advanced
occult knowledge and psychic powers could be sympathetic to men as evil as Hitler
and his followers, they usually conclude that Nazi occultism was on a rather low level.
After closely studying the available evidence, I came to a somewhat different
conclusion. I found reason to believe that something similar to the old “Invisible
College” influenced both sides in World War II, and that this manipulation was
intended to ensure an Allied victory. Since many of the Nazi leaders had been
involved with occult organizations from an early age, I concluded that the Invisible
College probably had started out trying to control this movement and use it to rebuild
Germany after World War I. They obviously failed, though I wasn’t sure why.
To explain evidence like this, many occultists and conspiracy researchers have
postulated that there are two opposing factions of secret manipulators that contend for
control of human society. Before I made the breakthrough, I found this concept of
“the forces of good versus the forces of evil” too simplistic and unsophisticated to
accept very easily, even though I kept discovering evidence to support it.
One thing is certain about World War II: whether or not high-level occult conspiracies
were involved in such strategic events as the rise of the Nazis to power, occultism and
psychic activities had a major impact on the course of the war. History records quite
clearly that Hitler and other Nazi leaders believed in occultism enough to listen to
advice from psychics, and that much of it was harmful to the Axis cause. For
example, Hitler’s psychic advisors told him to stop trying to develop an atomic bomb.
They also encouraged him to invade the Soviet Union.
There is also evidence that Allied leaders received and acted on advice from psychics
over the course of World War II, but this does not mean that people like Roosevelt and
Churchill believed in occultism in quite the same way that some of the German leaders
did. In many cases, professional psychics passed useful military information to people
in the regular Allied intelligence community who then passed it up the chain of
command along with information gathered by conventional means.
If this was all there was to the evidence, there would be no reason to conclude that an
important, high-level occult conspiracy was involved. Once it is assumed that psychic
powers like telepathy exist, it’s logical to make the further assumption that psychically
talented individuals are going to use their powers to help whichever side they support - 23 -
in a war. In this context, it makes perfect sense that psychics who were reasonably
ethical people would give bad advice to the Nazis and good advice to the Allies.
However, now that World War II is long over and most of the major figures involved
are dead, some extremely interesting evidence has started to surface. A number of the
intelligence agents and low-ranking military officers who passed psychic advice to the
Allied leaders are starting to admit that they lied when they said they got the
information from professional occultists. That was just a cover story to deceive their
colleagues in the intelligence community, who knew they couldn’t have gotten such
material through their usual sources of information.
How did these people really get the information? No one told it to them: they got it
through psychic experiences of their own, and in many cases never had a similar
experience before or since. Some of the stories they’re now telling occult researchers
are simply incredible unless you know something about mediumship. If you do,
they’re quite familiar.
Many of them describe getting information from the ghost of a dead comrade, usually
in a dream or while falling asleep. Others heard it on the radio: the station the person
was listening to would fade out, and the signal that replaced it would convey a few
sentences of useful intelligence information. Hundreds of such accounts have now
been reported. I’ll admit there’s no hard evidence to prove most of them true, but they
still impressed me, because they appear to be descriptions of mediumistic experiences
by people who lack the knowledge to fake such a thing.
In addition to this, some of the conspiracy evidence I encountered through my own
personal experience mystified and frightened me even more. The Kennedy
assassination fits into that category. If my only source of information about it had
been the facts available in newspapers and history books, I would have assumed
President Kennedy had been murdered for mundane political reasons, such as his
liberal stand on civil rights, his equivocal handling of the Bay of Pigs invasion, his
declaration of a “war on organized crime”, or one of his other controversial policies.
However, I had some psychic experiences in 1962 and 1963 that strongly indicated
that spiritual conspiracies were involved in the assassination.
I started having these experiences in late 1962. I would be in a trance state trying to
read somebody’s mind or contact spirits, and I’d get extremely hateful and threatening
feelings about the President – feelings that I was sure didn’t originate in my own
mind. (Kennedy wasn’t a hero to me, as he was to so many Americans at that time,
but I didn’t hate him, either. For example, I felt his strong stand on civil rights was
merely what any decent person would take under the circumstances.) These alien
thoughts were just raw emotions, not messages expressed in words or mental pictures,
but they were very strong.
This might have made sense if I’d been living in a place like Alabama, surrounded by
the sort of people who later cheered when they heard that Kennedy had been killed;
but I was in the middle of New York City, where he was extremely popular. So where
were the negative messages coming from?
My personal experiences with telepathy at that time indicated that it was mainly a
short-range phenomenon. Whenever I could identify the source of the thoughts and
emotions I picked up telepathically, it was usually someone within a few miles of me.
The literature is full of accounts of long-range telepathy, but I’d only experienced this - 24 -
a few times in my life. So who was sending all the telepathic poison against
Kennedy?
My guess was that a secret lodge of occultists with extreme right-wing political views
was operating somewhere in New York. I knew vaguely that there were several
“black lodges” in the area whose members claimed to be both powerful magicians and
fascists. And I felt strongly that if people like that were sending out those telepathic
hate messages, then the rest of the occult community should try to do something about
it.
In the summer of 1963, when I first discussed this with various friends, all occultists
about my own age, they talked me out of it. After all, we were working to end the
censorship that had banned some of the best contemporary literature as pornography,
so why should we even consider practicing “psychic censorship”? And what harm
could the messages do anyway? So a few psychics kept hearing “Kill Kennedy, kill
Kennedy.” So what? Weren’t Presidents of the United States guarded with all the
latest technology and virtually impossible to assassinate? (Yes, I really was this naive.
So were most Americans in 1963.)
However, as November of 1963 approached, I could perceive the anti-Kennedy
messages growing stronger and more frequent, and people with less and less conscious
psychic ability were reporting receiving them. Often, they were getting warnings, not
threats: flashes that “Kennedy is in danger, something is going to happen to him.” So
many people had experiences like this and talked or wrote about them, that the
authorities investigating the assassination after it happened filled whole files with
them. However, these psychic messages were far too vague to give information about
the identity of the actual assassins.
In September of 1963, I began to get some information from my own spirit guides
about the telepathic hate campaign against Kennedy. At that time, it was extremely
difficult for me to receive coherent channeled messages, because my mediumistic
powers were not yet highly developed. However, I did manage to get some answers to
my questions after weeks of strenuous effort, and they weren’t at all what I’d been
expecting.
Since I knew my spirit guides staunchly supported the Civil Rights movement and
other liberal causes, I expected them to say they were trying to protect the President
against psychic attacks from black magicians or evil spirits. Instead, they said that
they and all the other good spirits on the astral plane were responsible for the anti-
Kennedy campaign. They said Kennedy was mentally unstable enough to start a
nuclear war, and it was necessary to either disgrace him or kill him before he could do
so.
The process of receiving this information in garbled bits and pieces took many days,
but by the time it was done, I was convinced the anti-Kennedy messages really did
come from good spirits, not reactionary magicians. Also, when I reread the news
accounts of Kennedy’s conduct during the Cuban Missile Crisis, they seemed to
support the spirits’ contention that he might start a world war. There was evidence
(though not the clear proof that’s surfaced since) that the President’s initial reaction
had been to favor a nuclear first strike or massive invasion of Cuba, and that he’d
compromised on a blockade only under heavy pressure from his advisors. - 25 -
Because of this personal experience, I took a serious interest in the conspiracy theories
that became a fad after the assassination. I also kept on trying very hard to develop
my psychic powers and use them to look for evidence that telepathy was being used to
guide the evolution of human society. The resurgence of the counterculture and
radical politics in the Sixties, which began to receive major publicity soon after the
Kennedy assassination, proved to be an excellent source of such evidence, as we shall
see in the next chapter.
- 26 -
Chapter 4: The Sixties
As the Fifties ended, the media were saying that the Beat Movement was dying, but I
found out when I moved to New York at the end of 1959 that these rumors were
completely misleading. The general public was losing interest in reading about the
Beats, but the bohemian counterculture itself was still alive and growing. By 1962,
the counterculture in New York had outgrown Greenwich Village and so many young
bohemian-types were living in the Lower East Side that it was being called the East
Village. The same thing happened in San Francisco: as the population of the
counterculture outgrew the space available in the old bohemian area of North Beach, it
spread to a residential neighborhood called the Haight-Ashbury.
This happened without attracting much media publicity, and well before the
beginning of the events commonly described as the causes of the Sixties movement.
For example, it predated widespread campus radicalism by several years. I’m certain
of this because I was among the “outside agitators” who tried to interest college
students in the anti-draft, anti-war, free speech, and civil rights issues before many of
them were willing to listen to these messages.
I also know that people like Timothy Leary didn’t start the psychedelic drug
movement, because college students were already starting to “Turn on, Tune in, and
Drop out” years before Leary coined the phrase. They were turning on to the “weed
and wine” popularized in the Beat literature, because LSD had not yet become widely
available; they were tuning in to the Zen-influenced philosophy of Jack Kerouac, Gary
Snyder, and others; and they were dropping out and trying to join a movement they
really didn’t fit into very well.
The original Beatniks had been typical American bohemians, little different
from those who had lived in Greenwich Village and similar bohemian colonies for
over a hundred years. Most of them were well above average in both intelligence and
education, and had a serious interest in at least one creative activity: art, literature,
music, drama, social or political reform, etc. As an occultist and political radical, I felt
comfortable in the Beat movement; but many of the recent dropouts didn’t.
The majority of people entering the counterculture from the early Sixties on
didn’t have the customary personality profile for bohemians. They didn’t have a
consuming passion for specific intellectual, artistic, or political endeavors, but had
interests that were more personal and low-key. This is not to say they were less
intelligent or creative than the traditional bohemians; they just had different goals. By
the mid-Sixties, they had started their own segment of the underground press and were
putting these goals into words, talking about “alternative life-styles” and “doing your
own thing.”
My experiences with overhearing psychic messages regarding the Kennedy
assassination made me start looking for evidence that someone was telepathically
influencing large numbers of ordinary young people to take drugs, drop out, and join
the counterculture. And yes, when I started asking people, they said they had first
started using marijuana or LSD because they’d had dreams, visions, or simply - 27 -
“hunches” that they ought to, and that these “feelings” predated any intellectual
knowledge about psychedelics.
Many of the people I talked to had first learned about LSD and the other
powerful psychedelics through reading accounts of the scientific experiments with
them in popular magazines. These accounts described only the psychedelics
experiments conducted by professional researchers working within the medical
establishment; there was not one word in them to encourage widespread use of the
drugs by the public. However, when these young people read the accounts, they felt
very strong desires to use psychedelics. In many cases, the principal reason they’d
joined the counterculture was to meet people who could get them peyote, mescaline,
or LSD.
I also started doing formal rituals to listen for telepathic messages urging people
to use psychedelics, and found them quite common. However, I was never able to tell
exactly who was sending them. Sometimes it seemed to be spirits, sometimes groups
of living people; but my psychic powers were not yet developed enough for me to
isolate the source.
Even more significant, I found that someone was sending out powerful
telepathic messages supporting not just personal experimentation with psychedelics,
but all the other major ideological elements of the counterculture movement of the mid
and late Sixties as well. There were messages about peace, sexual freedom, equality
for women and minorities, occultism and experimentation with non-Christian religious
systems, general hostility toward the Establishment, etc.
The emotional tone of many of these telepathic messages was extremely
militant, often bordering on what most people would call paranoia and delusions of
grandeur, as if someone were trying to turn people into fanatics. My impression of
this was that someone was literally trying to start a social revolution on a very deep
level, one that would completely transform Western civilization if it succeeded. Some
of these telepathic messages even suggested that we call ourselves “Spiritual
Revolutionaries.”
Even though I often received the messages themselves quite clearly, I still didn’t
know who was sending them. The commonest rumor within the counterculture said
the collective unconscious of the human race was responsible. Other rumors attributed
the messages to the Bavarian Illuminati, space people, or a wide variety of deities.
When I tried sending telepathic questions asking the identity of whoever was sending
the messages, I found out the source of all these apparently conflicting rumors was
that mysterious “Invisible College” I’d been speculating about for a long time.
Sometimes I’d ask, “Are you the Illuminati?” and be told, “Yes, we are the
Invisible College.” But when I’d ask “Are you living people?” I’d get the reply, “No,
we are dead people.” Then I’d ask them, “Are you the Ascended Masters the
occultists talk about?,” and the spirits would answer, “No, we are the enemies of the
Masters.” I’d ask “Are you from outer space?” and be told, “Yes. But so are you. So
are many people on this planet.” - 28 -
If I asked “Are you gods?” I’d get one of two replies: either “No, we are people,
just like you,” or “No, we are the enemies of the gods.” I sent these questions many
different times and always received versions of the same answers. The replies were
always short and cryptic, and they really left me no wiser than before. Now that I’ve
made the breakthrough, they make perfect sense; but they meant little to me in the
Sixties and early Seventies.
Sometime in 1966, I started calling myself a Spiritual Revolutionary and
dropped out of regular political activism, concentrating instead on assuming a minor
leadership role in the psychedelic-drug movement and the new occult movement that
was growing out of it. I felt my psychic powers were far from fully developed, but as
long as I knew more than the people I was teaching, I could be of help. The next eight
years are full of chaotic memories of guiding LSD trips, leading various rituals,
teaching sex magic and mediumship, and writing all sorts of things for the
underground press. I still wasn’t sure what was going on, but it was obvious what
needed doing from one day to the next.
One of the things that mystified me the most about the Sixties Movement was
the way it seemed to make rapid progress without leadership in the usual sense. Oh,
there were plenty of people who said they were leading the movement. The press
made media heroes of them as if they were movie stars or sports champions, and the
government frequently threw them in jail even if it had to bend the law and the
Constitution to do so. However, very few of these people were actually providing
leadership as it is usually defined. They issued very few direct orders, and when they
did, not many members of the counterculture obeyed them.
The psychedelic drug movement is an excellent example of this. Timothy Leary
was acknowledged as the leader of this movement by both the general public and the
acidheads themselves, but he was just a figurehead. Leary lectured and held quasi-
religious rituals as the “High Priest of LSD,” but the people in the psychedelics
movement treated him more like a statue of a god in a temple than like an actual
priest. A priest preaches, and members of his religious congregation are expected to
put his teachings into practice; but this simply didn’t happen in the Sixties psychedelic
movement.
Very few of the hundreds of thousands of people experimenting with LSD and
other psychedelics were taking advice or instruction from anyone. Books on
psychedelics by Leary and many other people sold very well, but my own experiences
as a low-level leader of the drug movement showed me that not many acidheads took
the books seriously or tried to learn from them. Nor did they practice the much
simpler instructions of the “How To Be Your Own Trip Guide type that people like
me wrote for the underground press. They were simply buying acid on the black
market and stuffing it down their throats, with very little regard for the consequences.
Once they’d survived a few acid trips, they figured their personal experience qualified
them as trip guides, and they started giving LSD to all their friends.
People just worked out their own methods of controlling their own LSD trips by
personal experimentation. Often, they said they were using Leary’s instructions as a
guideline, but I could see little resemblance most of the time. The general attitude - 29 -
was: “Who wants to fast and meditate to prepare for a trip? And why bother to recite
a bunch of mumbo-jumbo when I can just groove on the Stones?”
At first, I was quite hostile to this attitude. I’d learned the use of psychedelics
by studying Western occultism and Amerindian shamanism, which teach that the
drugs should be taken under very structured conditions involving elaborate ritual.
However, when I was persuaded to try the less controlled approach that everyone
around me was using, I found it both safe and effective. By this time, I had enough
conscious control over my psychic powers to perceive directly that an outside agency
was telepathically communicating with people who took LSD and was reprogramming
their minds.
My explanation for the phenomenon at the time was that the collective telepathic
emanations from hundreds or thousands of people taking LSD simultaneously sent
messages to everyone else and guided their trips. I also found that I could receive
these psychic messages even when I wasn’t on drugs, just by assuming the right kind
of trance state. The content of the telepathic messages was the usual ideology of the
Sixties movement as reported in the underground press: “Peace now,” “Love
everybody, even the pigs,” “Expand your consciousness,” etc. There were also
hundreds of phrases from popular song lyrics by Bob Dylan, the Beatles, the Rolling
Stones, Donovan, Tim Buckley, Simon and Garfunkel, and many more. Often, I’d
receive a phrase telepathically months before I heard it in a song, and speculate that
the songwriter had gotten it by the same means and from the same source.
Many people in the counterculture believed that some of these people, especially
Bob Dylan, were fully conscious of what was going on and had a complete
understanding of what all these cryptic phrases meant, but my own telepathic
experiences made me doubt this. I was reasonably certain they received the same
tantalizing fragments of telepathic information I received, and had no more
understanding of them than I did. Numerous passages in the song lyrics themselves
could be interpreted as saying this.
If what I was overhearing was really just a consensus of the thoughts of the
people on LSD at that time, the messages were exactly what I expected they would be,
in a general sense; but there was also something rather odd about them. I naturally
expected the random thoughts of “a bunch of stoned hippies” to be extremely diverse
and incoherent and to contain a wide variety of different emotions and images.
Instead, what I received seemed quite simple, clear, and well controlled.
I had no idea who was sending those telepathic messages, but whoever they
were, they were extremely anarchistic. They urged people not to follow leaders at all,
but to learn everything by personal experimentation and become masters of their own
fate. Even though I’ve always lived my own life by this philosophy, I felt uneasy
receiving these messages, because there were so many immature and irresponsible
people in the Sixties movement. I was afraid that the policy of “Do your own thing”
and “Don’t follow leaders, become a leader yourself” would keep the movement from
developing enough political organization to make significant reforms in society.
However, the unseen forces who were influencing minds by telepathy seemed to
oppose completely the idea of injecting formal political structure into the movement. - 30 -
People kept saying “We’ve got to get it together,” but this proved completely
impossible. The telepathic manipulators countered by sending “We don’t need to get
it together. It already is together.” No one could figure out exactly what this was
supposed to mean, but it sounded reassuring. Besides, by the time this message was
sent, the movement was dying out anyway, and few people were expecting immediate
revolution, political or spiritual, any more.
After the Vietnam War ended and the counterculture stopped receiving major
publicity, I stayed in the new wing of the occult community for a few years, then
gradually drifted out of it and concentrated all my efforts on my personal psychic
development. I felt I was no longer needed, because by this time the Neo Pagan,
Human Potentials, and New Age movements were well under way, training their own
leaders and designing their own operating techniques. And I was looking further into
the future, believing that both the “alternative lifestyles” of the Sixties and the
“spiritual alternatives” of the Seventies were just precursors of the real beginning of a
“New Age,” which was still to come. By the early Eighties, just before I made my
personal breakthrough, I was able to look back on the Sixties Movement and realize
just how successful it had been in preparing American society for the overt Spiritual
Revolution of the Eighties and Nineties.
During the late Sixties and early Seventies, many people outside the movement
kept saying, “This is just some sort of weird fad, and eventually it will pass and things
will return to normal – unless, of course, those damn Hippies stir up so much trouble
that the political center collapses and the country goes Communist or Fascist.” At the
same time, most of us within the movement itself who hadn’t become complete
fanatics expecting an instant Utopia kept saying, “This can’t be happening. Most
Americans are still quite conservative, anti-intellectual, graspingly materialistic, and
somewhat bigoted. The Establishment is growing stronger, not weaker, and the
totalitarian policies of the Communist countries are undermining the foundation of the
peace and anti-imperialist movements. The drug movement is getting so corrupted
with real drug abuse – heavy use of the opiates, the amphetamines, cocaine,
barbiturates, etc. – that the legalization and controlled use of the psychedelics is
beginning to appear impossible.”
Because of this, I believed all through the Sixties that the Establishment would
eventually suppress the counterculture by force. All the “superstar” leaders would go
into jail or exile, most of the rank-and-file members of the movement would be scared
away from it, and the rest of us – those deeply committed but not conspicuous enough
to be identified and persecuted – would carry on our activities underground until the
heat died down and we could surface again.
That’s what my knowledge of history told me was most likely, but it didn’t
happen. The Sixties movement neither challenged the Establishment nor was
challenged by it, but simply kept getting larger and more diffuse until it faded away
into the background. By the late Seventies, I realized that this had been the plan of the
unseen forces behind the movement all along, and that it had proven extremely
successful. - 31 -
What happened was that the essential philosophy of the Sixties counter-culture
spread very widely within the general population while the organized parts of the
movement died out. Many of the beliefs and opinions of the “Silent Majority”
changed without the people involved being consciously aware of it. Most Americans
continued to say they disliked hippies and the hippy philosophy, while at the same
time their personal opinions on many important issues were moving closer and closer
to those the counterculture had actually lived by.
The most important of these changed attitudes was simply an increased
tolerance for people with opinions or behavior different from their own. This has
happened so gradually and smoothly all over the country during the Seventies and into
the Eighties that it has never received much attention, but there’s no doubt the change
is real and significant.
The course that American society has actually taken from the end of the Sixties
movement to the late Eighties has been quite different from what either insiders or
outsiders had been predicting. The overt phase of the movement withered away
without making too many political changes. Psychedelics remained illegal. The
nuclear arms race and American imperialism still existed even though we did finally
pull out of Vietnam. Every President from Richard Nixon to Ronald Reagan has been
either conservative or moderate, and the very term “liberal” remained in bad repute.
Above all, the extreme optimism about the future that was one of the hallmarks of the
Sixties movement gave way to alternate waves of militant pessimism (such as
predictions of imminent ecological catastrophe or economic collapse) and self-
indulgent indifference (the philosophy of the “yuppies” and many New Age groups).
However, these surface appearances are misleading. Western society in the
1980’s is significantly different from the way it was in 1960, and many of the changes
have been those advocated by the Sixties movement. There is still racial bigotry and
ghetto poverty, for example, but the present generation of black Americans lives in a
much less racist social environment than did previous generations. Millions of blacks
have now achieved effective equality with whites: in education, in housing, in small-
business ownership, in professional and executive-level employment, and to an
increasing extent in labor unions and well-paid blue-collar jobs. Although the civil
rights movement is correct when it says there is still a need for even more reforms
before our society achieves complete racial equality, there is absolutely no doubt that
enormous strides have already been made. When I first started supporting the concept
of equal rights for minorities, I never thought I’d live to see this much real progress.
Also, even the most speculative radical writings of the early Sixties didn’t come
close to predicting the achievements of the present feminist movement. During the
last twenty years, women have achieved even more progress towards social and
economic equality than blacks. Again, there’s still a long way to go and an ongoing
movement fighting for further progress, but there’s no doubt a young girl today will
live in a better world than her mother did when it comes to opportunities for women.
And the progress is not just in having women in high political office or positions of
business leadership; changes for the better in male-female relations within the family
itself can be observed all around us. - 32 -
There has also been a significant increase in sophistication in this country since
the Sixties. Europeans used to consider Americans relatively uncultured compared to
themselves. Before the last decade or two, the majority of artistic and social
innovations and fads started in Europe and spread to the rest of the world. Now many
of them start in the United States.
The most striking thing about all these changes is that they reverse the historical
pattern for social evolution. Typically, a change in the society’s political or economic
structure occurs first, then a change in individual opinions and behavior. For example,
it took more than a century after the adoption of the U.S. Constitution and Bill of
Rights for the majority of Americans to realize that it is impossible to have
government by, for, and of the people without political equality for women and racial
minorities.
The social changes of the last few decades have reversed this pattern: they first
occur as changes in individual opinions and behavior – the popular term for it is
“raised consciousness” – which then force changes in the political system and other
organized social institutions. The American Revolution was the work of a small
political elite who forced modern democracy on a population who really hadn’t asked
for it and weren’t prepared to make full use of it, and many of the social changes since
the Sixties have been caused by a series of spontaneous, grass-roots movements
without strong leadership that forced reforms on the Establishment.
The next chapter continues describing the social and political changes that have
been occurring as our civilization enters a New Age, but from a different perspective.
It discusses the role that organized religion is playing in all these events.
- 33 -
Chapter 5: Religion and Revolution
Until I made the breakthrough in 1983, my attitude toward Christianity and the
other major organized religions was ambiguous. On one level, it’s quite natural for
occultists to feel apprehension toward all religious establishments. Our whole
traditional literature is full of accounts of witch-burning and other persecution. I’ve
always been aware that such things could happen right here in Twentieth-century
America if the New Right and other political factions controlled by Fundamentalists
ever achieved control of the government, or even if the majority of American
Christians again became Fundamentalists, as they were in past centuries. That fear has
been in the back of my mind all my life, but it was never really a rational fear.
In reality, the majority of Americans have become progressively more tolerant
of occultism and alternative religious systems over the last twenty years. A
Fundamentalist minority still preaches against us, but when they attempt active
persecution, even the clergy of the largest Christian sects – Catholics, Methodists,
Lutherans, Episcopalians, etc. – are usually quick to condemn the persecutors as a
lunatic fringe and to defend people’s First-Amendment rights to be non-Christians.
A number of my friends in the Sixties movement considered themselves devout
Christians or Jews. They simply dropped those aspects of the traditional doctrine they
found incompatible with their beliefs as members of the counterculture, and
incorporated the rest into their new lifestyle. For example, they’d quote verses from
the New Testament that supported the peace and love doctrine of the counterculture,
and make statements like “Jesus was the original hippy.” (Jews in this category
sometimes expressed regret that Jesus had been persecuted by the Jewish
establishment of his day instead of being recognized as a divinely appointed prophet
and reformer.)
Many of the leaders of the civil rights movement have been members of the
Christian clergy, from Martin Luther King and Jesse Jackson right on down to the
community level, including whites as well as blacks. The same has been true of
leaders of the peace and anti-nuclear movement. Most of these people assert that their
religious beliefs are what motivate them into political activism, and quote scripture to
support their ideologies.
Another cause of my ambiguous attitude toward religion is the lack of a clear-
cut boundary between organized religion and occultism. Many Spiritualists consider
themselves members of the Christian community, even though I myself feel that their
actual beliefs and practices make them part of occultism. The same applies to a lot of
people who call themselves Gnostics, Magdalenian Christians, Christian Magicians,
Cabalists, etc. I’ve always got along as easily with people in this category as with
occultists, Pagans, Witches, and New Agers.
However, I took an instant dislike to the “Jesus Freaks” in the Sixties. At first, I
couldn’t identify exactly what turned me off about these longhaired Christians who
proselytized from storefront churches in counterculture areas. Then a few of my
Christian friends in the counterculture became Jesus Freaks. They went from saying - 34 -
“Jesus was a hippy. He drank wine, so why should he mind if I smoke dope?” to “Get
high on Jesus instead of pot.” As a psychic, I had to admit that spiritual experiences
are just as efficient at altering consciousness as drugs are; but the longer my friends
stayed in the Jesus Movement, the less they seemed to act high at all. They also
started arguing with me and preaching to me. Eventually, they all either dropped out
of the Jesus Movement or stopped speaking to people like me.
And the ones who remained Jesus Freaks gradually dropped out of the
counterculture. It all came clear one night when I saw some the movement’s leaders
interviewed on a television evangelist’s program. One said, “We’re basically a rescue
mission. We go onto Satan’s territory up there in the Haight and try to rescue
sinners.” Then the guy shook his shoulder-length hair and fingered his paisley shirt
and continued, “And if we have to wear Satan’s uniform while we do it, then that’s
what we’ll do. Praise the Lord!”
I was frightened of black militants who preached a fanatical Islamic doctrine
that included anti-Semitism, and of Palestinian Arabs who condoned terrorism.
However, I was just as disturbed that some militant Zionists condemned all
Palestinians for the acts of a few, or asserted that Moslems did not deserve the full
rights of Israeli citizenship. And even though I had spent several years studying
Vedanta, I felt an instinctive dislike for the Hare Krishnas as well. When people asked
me why, I’d say, “They’re Vedantic Puritans. The people I worked with were Shivites
who smoked ganja, practiced sex magic, and had vibes more like occultists.” I didn’t
realize till I’d made the breakthrough that all these people (Jesus Freaks, Zionists, and
Hare Krishnas) had one thing in common. For now, I’ll call it Fundamentalism, but
I’ll have another name for it in Part Two.
The principal difference between Fundamentalists and other believers within a
given religion is not just conservatism in the sense of unwillingness to make changes
in traditional religious doctrine or custom to avoid conflict with the religion’s external
environment. Instead, the Fundamentalists take social and political action to convert
the whole society to their views, whether the rest of the population wants to change or
not.
It’s ironic that modern American Fundamentalists call themselves religious and
political conservatives. Their philosophy is really radical or revolutionary, because
they desire sweeping changes in social and political institutions, and they try to
impose these changes with vigorous action, sometimes including force. However,
they call this right-wing radical ideology “conservative” to project a respectable public
image.
The Fundamentalist-backed New Right claims to be a conservative movement
that advocates “a return to the traditional American values.” This is a blatant lie.
Even the most casual look at American history shows that this country’s traditional
values are actually quite liberal. Politicians all over the world have used the U.S.
Constitution with its Bill of Rights as a model for designing liberal, democratic
institutions. The Founding Fathers included some of the most famous liberal political
philosophers of all time: Thomas Paine, Patrick Henry, Thomas Jefferson, Benjamin
Franklin, and others. History also shows that American social and political - 35 -
institutions have been moving steadily toward the left during the country’s whole
history.
After I made the breakthrough and learned exactly what the Fundamentalist
ideology is and where it comes from, it became obvious why people are so willing to
think of it as “traditional” even though it has always been a minority viewpoint in the
United States. It’s an extremely ancient and powerful ideological system based on a
profound knowledge of human psychology and the nature of psychic and spiritual
reality; it’s also the source of most of the evil in this world, as I will describe in Part
Two.
My attitude towards Christianity and all other organized religion became
increasingly ambiguous during the last ten years before I made the breakthrough. On
one hand, I saw many examples of cooperation, tolerance, and openness. For
example, a number of occult, Pagan, and New Age groups in the San Francisco Bay
Area have rented space and held their meetings in various non-Fundamentalist
Christian churches since the Sixties and enjoyed friendly relations with their clergy
and congregations. Leaders of some of these Aquarian Age groups have even
belonged to local Councils of Churches and participated in their charitable and public
service work. This has also occurred in other large cities all over the country.
Yet at the same time, Fundamentalist-controlled religious radio and TV stations
frequently broadcast outrageous slanders of the Aquarian movement. “All non-
Christian religious activity is Devil worship, and everyone who participates in it is
possessed by demons.” Fundamentalist propaganda also frequently made the news
with claims that rock musicians brainwash young people with subliminal messages
about Satanism. Even the ultimate lie about occultists and Pagans was mentioned
occasionally: that they practice human sacrifice, especially of babies. And the
harassment wasn’t all verbal: several groves in Bay Area regional parks where Pagans
hold outdoor services were routinely vandalized with crosses carved on trees and
“Jesus Saves” painted on rocks.
During this same period, Fundamentalists in religions besides Christianity were
causing major political problems all over the world. Most readers will be familiar
with the trouble Islamic Fundamentalists have caused over the last twenty years. The
kidnapping of American diplomats by Iranian revolutionaries was partly responsible
for Ronald Reagan’s victory over Jimmy Carter in the 1980 presidential election.
President Anwar Sadat of Egypt was assassinated by Moslem Fundamentalists
because he had made a serious effort to work with Israel and bring peace to the Middle
East. Perhaps the most glaring example has been the virtual destruction of Lebanon,
which used to be one of the most advanced and progressive countries in the Islamic
world.
There are many other examples of serious political problems caused by
Fundamentalist movements, both in Christianity and in other major religions that most
Americans may not identify as such.
For example, some of the groups that the press in this country calls “right-wing
death squads” in South America are actually Catholic Fundamentalist secret societies,
and are merely a highly visible part of a Fundamentalist movement within the Catholic - 36 -
Church in that part of the world. This movement is quite small and confined mostly to
the upper and middle social classes, but it has been a significant factor for years in
moving South American governments to the right, toward fascist dictatorship. This
movement has received much less publicity in the United States than the various left-
wing Catholic movements that have formed in reaction to it among the impoverished
majority of the population in the same countries, but it is definitely a significant
political force in South America right now.
The “Moonie” Cult in the United States has attracted major publicity for
misrepresenting itself when proselytizing, holding some of its members against their
will under conditions of near starvation and hard labor, etc.; and Rev. Moon himself
has been in and out of jail on tax charges. All of this has caused minor problems for
the Aquarian spiritual movement in this country, because too many Americans don’t
realize the Moonies have nothing to do with this movement at all.
The doctrine of Moon’s Unification Church is a mixture of Fundamentalist
Christianity with elements from Buddhism and other Eastern religions, and is the
direct antithesis to everything the Aquarian movement stands for. The main reason
why this import from South Korea hasn’t done more harm in this country is that we
already have our own Christian Fundamentalist movement, which fits into our culture
better and appears less bizarre. However, the Moonies and several similar
Fundamentalist groups have a major influence on South Korean politics and are one
reason why that country has swung so far to the totalitarian right.
Religious Fundamentalism among both the Sikhs and Hindus was a cause of the
assassination of Indira Gandhi and the bloody religious warfare between those two
groups that’s been going on ever since. I’m certain we haven’t seen the worst of it yet.
One of the basic causes of Apartheid in South Africa is that large numbers of the
Afrikaners are Fundamentalist Protestants. Fundamentalism is responsible for much
of the repression and totalitarianism in the Black African nations; Islam, Christianity,
Vedanta, and various tribal religions are all involved. There’s also a Fundamentalist
movement within Judaism, which pressures the Israeli government into aggressive
military and expansionist policies and makes achieving peace in the Middle East just
that much more difficult.
These are just a few examples of how Fundamentalist religious movements all
over the world seem to be working to sabotage the progress of human civilization.
The most significant thing about them is that it is very difficult to see how their
activities could serve anyone’s self-interest. Until I made my breakthrough, I
attributed such activity to a form of insanity: religious fanatics become so obsessed
with “pleasing God” in hopes of achieving “eternal bliss” or some other benefit after
death that they completely lose contact with earthly reality. However, I was never able
to determine why religious fanaticism should do this to people.
The puritanical, reactionary philosophy of the Fundamentalists has always put
them in conflict with religious as well as political liberals. Since the late Seventies, as
the New Right has been trying to achieve political power, I have noticed an increasing
liberal backlash within the Christian religion it self. Until recently, only the
Fundamentalist wing of Christianity seemed truly vigorous and fanatical. The - 37 -
majority of Christians in this country were liberal or moderate in both their political
and religious views, but they were also rather conservative about trying to convert
others.
Also, for most of this century, the Fundamentalists were the only American
Christians who made full use of the psychic power inherent in all organized religion.
When most Americans see terms like “charismatic preachers, “religious ecstasy,”
“faith healing,” or “miracles,” they associate them only with the Fundamentalists. The
liberal wing of the Christian Church has traditionally been more concerned with social
and political issues than with spiritual power.
This situation has recently started to change. There are now urban Protestant
congregations that raise just as much psychic power as the Fundamentalists do, but are
definitely liberal. The same churches often have female clergy and racially mixed
congregations. Many make an effort to proselytize among homosexuals, feminists,
psychedelic drug-users, political radicals, and other types of people whom the
Fundamentalists bar from membership in their churches unless they first agree to
totally change their philosophy and life-style.
Because of the information I learned through my breakthrough, my present
opinion of this revolutionary movement within Christianity is still quite ambiguous. I
like the political and social ideologies involved, but these people are still doing some
dangerous things on the purely psychic and spiritual level.
They mean well, but the spiritual forces they are openly opposing are, for the
time being at least, still much stronger than they are. Worse yet, they have entered
into this conflict with a completely erroneous idea of what they are fighting. I’ll
follow up on this in Part Two.
Before I made the breakthrough, my personal beliefs about deities were just as
ambiguous as my attitude towards organized religion. I usually described myself as a
Pagan, because I felt vague psychic perceptions that there are beings on the astral
plane that seem to be superior to the spirits of ordinary deceased humans. I assumed
that these are what all the organized religions have called “gods” and “devils,” and
that they’ve had a significant effect on the course of human history by communicating
telepathically with living people.
However, I wasn’t willing to commit myself to devout belief in any particular
Pagan sect, because I also had an intuitive dislike of deism in any form, monotheistic
or polytheistic. I acknowledged that god-like beings do exist, but I didn’t have much
to do with them. They’re too capricious and egotistical. Instead, when I
communicated telepathically with the astral plane, I concentrated on forming working
relationships with spirits who say they are not deities, but ordinary people in a
discorporate state between earthly lives. Some of the entities I’ve had as spirit guides
have told me that their previous incarnations were on worlds other than Earth, but they
still say they are people, not gods. My relationship with my spirit guides has been
extremely important to me since I first started becoming aware of it in childhood, but
it’s very different from the relationship between deists and their gods. What I have is
a friendship between equals that doesn’t violate my individual sovereignty. It’s based
mostly on the mutual exchange of information, and on working to achieve shared - 38 -
political or ethical goals, and I’ve never believed my spirit guides would or could do
any harm to me for disagreeing with them.
The relationship between deists and gods is more like slavery than friendship:
the gods dictate and the worshippers obey. Even worse, deism is based on the
postulate that the nature and motives of the gods are beyond human understanding. I
don’t like totalitarianism or paternalism on Earth, and I don’t like them any better in
relationships with spiritual beings.
Another major area where I disagree with the basic doctrines of all the major
religions concerns life after death. A strong belief in reincarnation is one of the
foundations of my whole concept of spiritual reality. This automatically puts me in
disagreement with Judeo-Christian doctrine, which is based on the concept that people
live only one life on Earth and then spend eternity in Heaven or Hell. (Some
individual Christians and Jews believe in reincarnation, and a few minor sects of both
religions have worked it into their doctrines, but it still contradicts the mainstream of
Judeo-Christian belief.)
From this, it might appear that I would agree with the doctrines of the major
Eastern religions – Vedanta, Buddhism, etc. – since they include reincarnation; but
this is not the case. After studying these religions closely over a period of years, I
came to the conclusion that their traditional, mainstream cosmology about the afterlife
is operationally identical to the Judeo-Christian view, and that the apparent differences
are insignificant.
The actual mainstream belief of the Eastern religions derived from ancient
Vedanta (including hundreds of modern Hindu and Buddhist sects, Jainism, Sikhism,
and a number of others – a billion or more believers in all) is centered on moral
judgment of the soul by deities and salvation by divine grace just as much as Judeo-
Christianity is. Many Westerners fail to realize this because their knowledge of the
Eastern religions is based on books that confuse Eastern occultism with the
mainstream of Eastern religious doctrine itself.
Eastern occultism is very highly developed and has never been formally
disavowed by the leaders of the mainstream religions as has happened in the West.
However, it is a mistake to equate the two; they are very different belief systems
practiced by entirely different types of people. Eastern occultists, like their
counterparts in the West, have always been a small minority alienated from the
majority of the population. In the West, occultists were persecuted quite openly and
their activities made illegal by governments. This did not happen to nearly the same
extent in the East; in fact, the leaders of many Eastern religious sects often preach that
monks and nuns who specialize in practices that many Westerners would call
occultism are especially devout and worthy of veneration.
However, even though Eastern occult masters – Yogis, Tantrists, Taoists Zen
Masters, etc. – are often publicly venerated as being holy and spiritually advanced,
few of the people who honor them actually imitate their beliefs and practices. Both
Eastern and Western occultists are seeking spiritual development, whereas mainstream
believers in both parts of the world look forward to divine salvation. Such disciplines
as Yoga, Tantra, Zen Meditation, etc., are intended to strengthen and enlighten the - 39 -
soul, much as a person gains strength and learns motor skills through physical training
and exercise. Traditional Western occultism teaches exactly the same things under
different names: i.e. divination, spiritual healing, ritual magic, alchemy, etc.
The key to understanding all these practices is that they are things people do on
the purely physical, intellectual, or emotional level, under control of the conscious
will. They are intended to have a beneficial effect on the soul allowing the person to
use various psychic senses and powers to learn about the nature of spiritual reality. In
other words, the basic postulate is that an individual can become an adept or saint by
his or her own efforts, as one would learn athletic or professional skills. This is a
purely humanistic concept: the application of the “doctrine of human perfectibility” to
spiritual and psychic development.
The viewpoint of both the Eastern and Western mainstream religious system is
exactly the opposite of that: people are innately inferior spiritually, and the only way
they can make progress is by pleasing the gods enough to receive their “grace.”
Exactly what people must do to receive this favor varies from sect to sect in both East
and West, but it usually involves attending religious services regularly and performing
various ritual acts.
The next three chapters will describe some of the ideas I was exposed to just
before I made the breakthrough.
- 40 -
Chapter 6: Passport to Paranoia
During the early Eighties, I made a serious effort to identify the spiritual forces
that seemed to be having an ever-increasing effect on society. When I started
systematically reading the literature on this subject, both fiction and non-fiction, I
found several consistent patterns in it. The most obvious was what people in the
Sixties Movement called “paranoia.” This is not the mental disease described in
psychology texts, which involves uncontrollable emotions of fear over imaginary
dangers, but the intellectual conclusion that something you dislike is about to happen,
even though you can’t actually prove it. Most “paranoia” of this type in the Sixties
Movement was focused on harassment of the counterculture by the government or
private individuals; the “paranoid” ideas discussed in this chapter focus mostly on the
concept that unknown forces are manipulating the course of human history in
directions that seem sinister and frightening.
One of my starting points was to re-examine the work of Charles Fort, the
founder of modern research into unexplained phenomena. Starting with Book of the
Damned in 1918, he was the first to publish many of the simplest and most obvious
explanations for a number of strange occurrences. For example, he proposed that the
inhabitants of other worlds might be visiting the Earth in space ships long before the
terms “flying saucer” and “UFO” were invented, and he also speculated that we might
be receiving visitations from the future or from other dimensions.
Fort didn’t assume, as did most of the UFO researchers in the Fifties, that these
visitations represented mere scientific exploration, but speculated that the visitors had
selfish reasons for coming to Earth. He said that “certain esoteric ones” throughout
history have received “messages from elsewhere,” and hinted that these have helped
shape modern civilization. I assumed he was talking about the Invisible College and
the Eighteenth-century Freemasons and Rosicrucians, but his mentions of this subject
are all quite vague.
However, Fort’s negative speculations were more numerous than his positive
ones. He is widely quoted as saying, “I think we are property. Someone owns us,”
and for his further speculations that these “proprietors” have always had willing
collaborators on Earth, “a cult or order, members of which function as bellwethers to
the rest of us...” At his most morbid, he compares us not to “property,” but to “cattle.”
– a dark hint that the mysterious outsiders might slaughter Earth people for food or
“diabolical experiments.”
I found the writings of H.P. Lovecraft, who wrote at about the same time as
Fort, to be both more interesting and more disturbing. His horror tales make utterly
grotesque monsters seem entirely real to the reader, as if the author himself believed
what he was writing. The basic theme of most of Lovecraft’s stories is the persecution
of his characters by evil, superhuman beings called the “Great Old Ones.” Sometimes
they are described as physical beings with octopus-like bodies, but in other stories
they seem to be non-corporeal. Lovecraft frequently describes them with phrases such
as “Dead Cthulhu lies dreaming.” - 41 -
The human characters in his stories are scientists or occultists who deliberately
or accidentally release some of the Great Old Ones from captivity, often by reciting
magic spells from a fictional occult text called the Necronomicon, which means “book
of the names of the dead.” Once released, Cthulhu and his cohorts often devour both
the body and the soul of the unfortunate magician; and if they remain on Earth very
long, they cause children in the area to be born as deformed monsters.
One of the things that make Lovecraft’s stories more terrifying than most horror
fiction is that they have little heroism and very few happy endings. There is no
exorcist to drive out the Devil, no Dr. Van Helsing to drive a stake through the
vampire’s heart. Instead, the story ends when the protagonist dies or is driven mad,
leaving the reader to wonder if the Great Old Ones are still loose, and whether they’ll
eventually destroy the world if they are.
What do these morbid horror stories have to do with spiritual knowledge and
occult secrets? In terms of the plots of the stories themselves, nothing. However,
anyone with sufficient conscious mediumistic powers to receive messages from the
spirit-world with any regularity finds certain details in Lovecraft’s horror tales
disturbingly familiar. Some of the “evil spirits” commonly contacted on the astral
plane express many of the same thoughts as Lovecraft’s Great Old Ones, and
numerous “Lost Souls” – spirits at a low level of development who seem to be having
trouble adjusting to life after death – sound just like the hapless victims in the stories.
My conclusion from this was simply that Lovecraft, like Shaver, channeled a lot of the
details in his stories from the spirit-world.
Of course, the most important question still remained: exactly who originates the
telepathic messages that frighten people like Lovecraft and Shaver into writing
fantastic fiction? I couldn’t find real answers from the details in Lovecraft’s stories
any more than I could from Shaver’s, because I had no theoretical frame of reference
to fit the information into. Nothing theorized by Fort, Shaver, Lovecraft, or anyone
else was helpful in interpreting this kind of data.
The work of a more recent imaginative writer, William S. Burroughs, proved to
be of greater use. Even though Burroughs’ name is synonymous in the public mind
with chaotic avant-garde writing and with “the author as junkie and madman,” his
work is easier to read and contains more useful knowledge about the spiritual
conspiracies I was looking for than that of Lovecraft or Shaver. One of the major
themes that run through his books is that mysterious “agents” are working to
manipulate the course of human history. Burroughs assumes that not all agents are on
the same side, though he never clearly reveals how many different factions are
involved or what their ideologies are. He does hint from time to time that some of the
agents are extraterrestrials, or perhaps beings from other dimensions.
He also makes it clear that one of their chief duties involves reprogramming the
minds of individual Earth people, manipulating their emotions and thoughts along
desired lines. In most of his books, Burroughs describes this as being done on a
strictly physical level: through violence, intimidation, bribery, or just plain “hard sell”
persuasion. Both psychedelics like LSD and hard drugs like heroin are also widely
used by the agents to alter people’s consciousness in connection with other means of - 42 -
manipulation. There is frequent mention of telepathy and other psychic powers, but
they are usually described in vague terms.
One idea of his that seemed to resolve some of the paradoxes and contradictions
in the body of information available about conspiracies and telepathic mind-control
was the concept of “conscious” and “unconscious” agents. I found the idea that agents
can vary in consciousness to be very useful. A simple example of how the
“consciousness of agents” operates can be drawn from real-world espionage. For
example, take a low-level CIA agent whose immediate superior and control is a
double agent. Now, the second agent’s role is complex enough; he’s playing both
sides, and perhaps actually favoring one of them over the other. But the first agent’s
role is in a totally different category: he or she is functioning as a double agent without
knowing it. A lie-detector test would affirm this agent’s loyalty to the CIA, yet the
person’s actual work could all be against the interests of that organization.
Burroughs uses this kind of power structure in a much more complex form to
describe the conspiracies that are trying to alter the course of human history in various
directions. Most of his agents are unconscious, in the sense that they don’t know who
is giving them orders or even what they’re trying to accomplish. They simply do what
they’re told, for pay, out of fear, or for less explicable reasons.
On the other hand, many of the agents in the Burroughs stories are conscious in
the sense that they believe they’re working for some definite organization or cause.
However, the conscious agents very often seem to be in the same mess as the
unfortunate spy we mentioned earlier. The reader is given reason to doubt that the
organization the agent is working for is actually what it purports to be.
In itself, this concept does not sound very important, but I made a lot more
progress after I started using it. When most people look for conspiracies, they assume
that the conspirators know what they’re doing and approve. This, in turn, means that
conspiracies have to make at least rough sense in terms of motivation and self-interest.
And I hadn’t found out much during all my years of looking for negative conspiracies
that furthered the interests of the people in them.
Here are a couple of quotations to illustrate Burroughs’s style and some of his
major themes. I will begin with one from his first published book, Naked Lunch
(1959):
“Naked Lunch is a blueprint, a How-To Book ... How-to extend levels of
experience by opening the door at the end of a long hall... Doors that only open in
Silence into vast, other planet landscapes ... Naked Lunch demands Silence from The
Reader. Otherwise he is taking his own pulse .... There is only one thing a writer can
write about: what is in front of his senses at the moment of writing.... I am a recording
instrument .... The Word is divided into units which be all in one piece and should be
so taken, but the pieces can be had in any order being tied up back and forth ....This is
Revelation and Prophecy of what I can pick up without FM ....Chicago calling...come
in please. A mighty wet place, reader .... Possession they call it... The Answering
Service... Wrong! I am never here .... Never that is fully in possession, but somehow
in a position to forestall ill advised moves ... Patrolling is, in fact, my principal
occupation ... ‘What Are You Doing Here? Who Are You? ... You were not there - 43 -
for the Beginning. You will not be there for The End...Your knowledge of what is
going on can only be superficial and relative’...most of them don’t want to know...and
you can’t tell them anything...”
Next, here are some excerpts from one of his latest books, The Place of Dead Roads
(1983):
“Kim Carsons does he exist? His existence, like any existence, is inferential... the
traces he leaves behind him... fossils... fading violet photos, old newspaper clippings
shredding to yellow dust...And this book. He exists in these pages as Lord Jim, the
Great Gatsby, Comus Bassington, live and breathe in a writer’s prose, in the care,
love, and dedication that evoke them: the flawed, doomed, but undefeated, radiant
heroes who attempted the impossible, stormed the citadels of heaven, took the last
chance on the last and greatest of human dreams, the punch-drunk fighter who comes
up off the floor to win by a knock-out, the horse that comes from last to win in the
stretch, assassins of Hassan i Sabbah, Master of Assassins, agents of Humwawa, Lord
of Abominations, Lord of Decay, Lord of the Future, of Pan, God of Panic, of the
Black Hole, where no physical laws apply, agents of a singularity. Those who are
ready to leave the whole human comedy behind and walk into the unknown with no
commitments. Those who have not from birth sniffed such embers, what have they to
do with us? Only those who are ready to leave behind everything and everybody they
have ever known need apply. No one who applies will be disqualified. No one CAN
apply unless he is ready. Over the hills and far away to the Western lands. Anybody
gets in your way, KILL. You will have to kill on the way out because this planet is a
penal colony and nobody is allowed to leave. Kill all the guards and walk…
Ghostwritten by William Hall, punch-drunk fighter, a shadowy
figure to win in the answer, Master of Assassins, Death for his
credentials, Lord of “Quien Es?” Who is it? Kim, ka of Pan, God of
Panic. Greatest of human dreams, Quien Es? The horse that comes
from there, who is it? Lord of the future son, does he exist? Inferential
agents of a singularity, the fossils fading leave the whole human
comedy shredding to yellow dust... Unknown with no commitments
from birth. No one can apply unless he breathes in a writer’s prose
hills and faraway Western Lands .... Radiant heroes, storm the citadel...
Kill the last guards and walk. Guns glint in the sun, powder smoke
drifts from the pages as the Old West goes into a penny-ante peep
show, false fronts, a phantom buckboard... The Lords have lived here
since time began. To go on living one must do things that you Earth
people call ‘evil.’ It is the price of immortality... I cannot save your
companions... they are already dead... Worse than dead. They are
already eaten: body and soul.
John Keel is another writer whose theories seem quite paranoid on the surface but
proved very helpful to me in making the breakthrough. He is the Ufologist who
claimed back in the Sixties that mysterious “Men in Black” often pose as government
agents and harass people who have seen UFOs to keep them from talking about their
experiences. A major theme in all of his books is that the U.S. Government, and other - 44 -
governments all over the world, deliberately interfere with independent UFO
investigations and make a major effort to cover up the truth about UFOs.
I agree that there have been cover-ups and interference with private Ufologists,
but I don’t accept Keel’s conclusion that they are proof that governments have hard
evidence that physical UFOs and aliens exist. I’ve come to the opposite conclusion
from the same evidence, because my long experience as a political radical has taught
me that modern Western governments are just as afraid of the people as the people are
of them. I think the cover-ups conceal ignorance, not knowledge.
I also agree with Keel that government and military officials have often lied to
the public by claiming that all official UFO investigations have been discontinued for
lack of evidence that the phenomenon is real. The government’s own records
document quite clearly that the military, as well as various police and intelligence
agencies, has been investigating UFOs very seriously since 1948, and that these
investigations continue right down to the present. What has all this expensive
bureaucratic investigation learned about UFOs? I suspect that the government files
contain roughly the same type of information, as do the private UFO investigators’
files, except that there’s more of it and it’s written in different jargon.
I believe that if the government had definitive information about the nature of
UFOs, someone would have leaked it long ago, as Daniel Ellsberg did with the
Pentagon Papers. However, I do believe that government investigators are able to find
enough information to keep them convinced that there is something real and important
behind the phenomenon. So the investigations continue, and the government covers
up their magnitude to prevent public criticism for spending so much tax money
without discovering any real answers to the UFO mystery.
In The Eighth Tower (1975), Keel concluded that UFO contact reports had a
common origin with certain very intense religious and occult experiences, such as
visitations from gods, angels, or demons. He postulated that the cause of all these
events is a natural phenomenon, which he names the “Superspectrum.” Keel’s
Superspectrum seems to be based loosely on Jung’s concept that the human race
possesses a “collective unconscious,” but he carries the idea much further than Jung
did. Jung had conceived of the collective unconscious only as a body of information
stored in the subconscious minds of many different individuals that causes all of them
to think or behave in similar ways.
Keel carries this concept much further, and postulates that the Superspectrum
involves specialized forms of matter and energy unknown to present-day science. He
borrows concepts from occultism and coins scientific-sounding new terms to describe
them. His Superspectrum simply seems to be another way of saying “influence by
spiritual beings and psychic powers.” However, he doesn’t conclude that the
Superspectrum is a being or group of beings, as the occultists usually do with their
concepts of gods, demons, and spirits. Instead, it is simply a kind of natural
phenomenon with a “computer-like intelligence.” The next writer I discuss has
researched this same line of reasoning even further.
In one sense, it’s an insult to Jacques Vallee to discuss his works in a chapter
called “Passport to Paranoia,” because his approach to Ufology has always been as - 45 -
rational and scientific as that of anyone in the field; but his books from the Sixties and
Seventies show a pattern that fits right into what I’ve been describing here. When
Vallee started his investigations in the Sixties, his working hypothesis assumed that
UFOs were a physical phenomenon: either extraterrestrial spaceships or advanced
flying machines built on Earth. However, in 1969 Vallee published Passport to
Magonia, in which he reluctantly admits that many accounts of UFO sightings and
“close encounters” with their occupants resemble religious and mystical experiences
more than they do observations of physical events. He obviously didn’t want to do
this, but he really had no choice if he wanted to remain truly scientific and empirical in
his methods, because that’s where the information he was gathering led him.
After investigating hundreds of such cases, Vallee concluded that the early
Ufologists had not been truly scientific when they dismissed UFO contact stories as
hoaxes or hallucinations. Professional psychologists have tested many contactees with
polygraphs, hypnosis, “truth” drugs, and a wide variety of psychoanalytic techniques,
and have concluded that they are neither lying nor showing recognizable symptoms of
psychotic delusion. Vallee also learned that contactees all over the world, regardless
of their background knowledge of the subject or their personality type, received
similar information from the “space people” and underwent similar personality
changes afterwards. This lead him to believe that “close encounters” with UFOs are
not a purely subjective psychological phenomenon, but have an objective cause.
However, he didn’t find the “close encounter” stories consistent enough in their
details to allow him to simply take them literally and conclude that the contactees had
indeed met extraterrestrials face-to-face or been inside physical space ships. Instead,
much of the evidence concerning UFO-encounters resembled descriptions of psychic
and spiritual phenomena in occult literature. This introduced a further complication;
Jacques Vallee is one of the world’s best-known computer experts, and he did not
want to jeopardize his reputation with the scientific establishment by using terms
drawn from occultism or religion to describe the phenomena he was studying. So
instead of talking openly about telepathy, spirits, etc., he invented a jargon of his own
to describe the same concepts.
As Vallee’s investigations went further, he gradually formed the opinion that the
contactee phenomenon represents interference in human affairs by essentially benign
forces. In 1975, he published The Invisible College, in which he recounts further cases
of mental reprogramming through UFO encounters and cites evidence that similar
encounters with “mysterious visitors” have been occurring for hundreds of years. He
mentions that secret conspiracies may have influenced the development of modern
science and political theory while working through the Masonic and Rosicrucian
lodges of the Seventeenth and Eighteenth centuries.
The name of the book is derived from the use of the term “Invisible College” to
describe some of these secret societies, but Vallee doesn’t emphasize that most writers
who’ve used it were occultists and have assumed that the Invisible College
indoctrinated people using psychic powers and occult rituals. Instead, he postulates
that the Invisible College employed methods similar to those used by modern
behavioral psychologists, based entirely on operant conditioning by physical means. - 46 -
The Invisible College also contains some interesting speculation about the
purpose of the mental reprogramming received by UFO contactees. For example, the
majority crone away from their experience believing that a higher power had chosen
them to play a special role in advancing human civilization. They seemed filled with
hope, optimism, and creative energy, expressing the belief that contactees are going to
help the “Space Brothers” lead the human race into a New Age in which Earth will
take its place among the advanced civilizations of the universe.
The specific elements of ideology advocated by the contactees were completely
familiar to me: world peace, universal brotherhood, and social justice. They also
talked about the general concept that the Sixties counterculture called “consciousness
expansion,” especially forms of it achieved without using psychedelic drugs, but they
usually expressed it in terms that wouldn’t directly identify them with the controversy
over drugs and hippies. It was immediately obvious to me that this was just another
form of the “Aquarian Age Message,” phrased in terms of space-traveling aliens and
galactic civilizations instead of the terminology of the counterculture.
However, by 1979, when Vallee published Messengers of Deception, he
apparently had changed his opinions on UFOs to something approaching those John
Keel had expressed in The Eighth Tower. Vallee had become extremely disillusioned
with the whole concept of mysterious conspiracies that meddled in earthly affairs and
tried to change the course of history by reprogramming the minds of individuals. He
was more convinced than ever that such conspiracies existed, but had gone from
considering them beneficial to condemning them as evil.
He described how some of the UFO contactees had founded cults that resembled
“high-demand religion”. Some leaders of contact cults were saying “democracy is
obsolete,” and becoming despots over their groups. A few had taken reactionary
stands on social and political issues that resembled the views traditionally held by
Fundamentalist churches. Others reminded him of the Nazis by saying that contactees
are a “master race” with extraterrestrial blood in their veins. Above all, he was
disturbed to see contact-cult members running their lives according to messages
passed to the leaders from “space people” instead of thinking for themselves.
Messengers of Deception contains a possible explanation for the whole UFO and
contact-cult phenomenon that is very similar to Keel’s Superspectrum.
“I believe there is a system around us that transcends time as it transcends space. I
remain confident that human knowledge is capable of understanding this larger reality.
I suspect that some humans have already understood it, and are showing their hand in
several aspects of the UFO encounters.”
Vallee isn’t certain who these people are, only that they don’t seem to be
physical extraterrestrials or supermen. He speculates they might be government
intelligence agents, especially of the CIA and KGB, or perhaps members of extra-
governmental conspiracies like the hypothetical “Illuminati.” Whoever they may
be, he doesn’t like them.
However, Vallee seems to have changed his mind again during the Eighties
and decided that there are several different factions of secret manipulators, some
good, some evil. The main reason for this change is apparently that he has started - 47 -
working with Robert Anton Wilson, who has held the “good guys and bad guys”
view of the whole thing for years, as I describe in the next chapter.
- 48 -
Chapter 7: The Invisible War
This chapter discusses various books that treat the manipulation of human
society by unseen agencies as a complex “invisible war” between opposing forces,
starting with the works of Robert Anton Wilson. In my opinion, his most useful ideas
are in the Illuminatus! trilogy, written in collaboration with Robert Shea and published
in 1975. On the surface, the three books are an avant-garde political allegory that uses
the concept of the “Illuminati” and conspiracy theories in general as a medium for
communicating the author’s ideas about freedom and totalitarianism. The trilogy’s
political content has made it a classic of the modern Libertarian movement, but the
material on conspiracies also deserves to be taken seriously.
Wilson was originally trained as a historian, and did years of serious but
sporadic research on the Illuminati and related topics just to satisfy his own curiosity,
so the trilogy contains enough solid conspiracy information to fill several nonfiction
books of average size. However, since the conspiracy speculations are embedded in a
work of fiction that depends on heavy-handed irony and morbid humor for much of its
appeal, it’s impossible for the reader to tell when Wilson is being serious and when
he’s writing for empty shock value.
In Cosmic Trigger (1977), Wilson explains how and why the Illuminatus!
trilogy was written, and states that he wasn’t completely aware himself when he was
speculating seriously, and when he was just recording “wild ideas.” The book also
explains that he was experimenting with psychedelic drugs and a variety of serious
occult practices – sex magic, various forms of meditation and ritual, etc. – while he
was writing Illuminatus! Since these practices develop the psychic powers, he may
have received more of his ideas and conclusions by telepathy than he has ever
admitted or consciously realized.
Wilson’s basic speculations about the agencies responsible for the manipulation
of human history down through the ages are similar to those advanced by Shaver,
Keel, and Vallee; but since he’s writing fiction, he isn’t forced to keep them internally
consistent. Many different characters in the three books “discover the truth about the
Illuminati,” and each person’s version of it totally contradicts that of all the others.
Some of these explanations of the nature of the Illuminati are familiar to readers
of other conspiracy and unexplained-phenomena books; others are wilder than
anything ever presented as fact or serious speculation. Wilson postulates that the
“Lliogor” (the name is from Lovecraft’s Cthulhu mythos) are the ultimate source of
the knowledge and power used to manipulate human society and reprogram individual
minds throughout history. As in Lovecraft, they are shadowy beings that usually
remain in the background in “another dimension,” and most of the earthly conspiracies
are the work of humans who have learned some of their knowledge second-hand.
One of Wilson’s characters describes the process that transforms a person into
an “Illuminatus”: - 49 -
“It’s possible for humans, given the right methods, to translate themselves into
sentient lattice works of pure energy that will be more or less permanent. The process
is called transcendental illumination. Mass human sacrifice is the most reliable
method of achieving transcendental illumination.”
Wilson was referring to this passage when he said in Cosmic Trigger, “I had
already incorporated into IIlluminatus a variation on the Lovecraft mythos... in
which the “Cthulhu Cult’ or some other secret society was aiding the schemes of
hostile Aliens. I had attached this theme to the Illuminati as a kind of dead-pan put-
on and laughed like hell at the thought that some naive readers would be dumb
enough to believe it.” However, he then goes on to explain that working with
Jacques Vallee, other unexplained-phenomena researchers, and various occultists
had started him to thinking that maybe the whole idea wasn’t so ridiculous after all.
Cosmic Trigger also contains a quotation from a conversation Wilson had in
1974 with Grady McMurty, an occultist whom Aleister Crowley had designated as
one of his chosen successors. McMurty, who had read much of the secret knowledge
of the OTO and the Order of the Golden Dawn, had said:
“I’ll tell you what I think. There’s WAR IN HEAVEN. The Higher Intelligences,
whoever they are, aren’t all playing on the same team. Some of them are trying to
encourage our evolution to higher levels, and some of them want to keep us stuck just
where we are.”
One of the characters in Illuminatus also describes a connection between
conspiracies and organized religion:
“I must tell you now that your God is a manifestation of some Lliogor. That is how
religion began, and how their servants in the Cult of the Yellow Sign continue it. All
such experiences come from the Lliogor to enslave us. Revelations, visions, trances,
and miracles, all of it is a trap.... Every religious leader in human history has been a
member of the Cult of the Yellow Sign and all of their efforts are devoted to hoaxing,
deluding, and enslaving the rest of us.”
Another major theme in Cosmic Trigger is Wilson’s involvement with the
“Sirius Mystery,” which many people now believe represents impressive evidence that
space travelers from that star visited Earth in the time of the Pharaohs. Since I will
present an alternative explanation for this evidence in Part Two, I won’t go into the
details presented in Robert K. G. Temple’s The Sirius Mystery (1979). What’s
important for my purposes here is that Robert Anton Wilson and a number of other
people started consciously receiving telepathic messages concerning Sirius years
before Temple’s book was written.
In 1973, Wilson received a short but extremely vivid telepathic message that
said simply, “Sirius is very important.” Almost simultaneously, Timothy Leary, who
was in prison at the time, received a long series of telepathic communications that also
purported to be from extraterrestrials. Leary called these the “Starseed
Transmissions,” and had them published almost immediately in Terra II (1973).
Terra II seemed to contain a serious attempt by some unknown agency to
communicate extremely advanced spiritual and scientific knowledge, but I completely
failed to understand most of it. I concluded that the book may very well have - 50 -
contained messages from an advanced extraterrestrial civilization; but if so, they were
not clear enough for me, or for most Earth people, to comprehend.
I now know that the same general group of extraterrestrial spirits who dictated
the material for WiH to me ten years later had previously sent the “Starseed
Transmissions” to Leary. And Wilson’s message about Sirius had the same origin.
And some of John C. Lilly’s books also contain material channeled from the sane
source: Center of the Cyclone (1972), The Programming and Metaprogramming of the
Human Biocomputer, and The Scientist: A Novel Autobiography (1978). The spirits
themselves will explain more about this in Part Two.
Another conspiracy theory that helped me make the breakthrough is described in
Holy Blood, Holy Grail (1982) by Michael Baigent, Richard Leigh, and Henry
Lincoln. The basic premise of the book is that the medieval Knights Templar
possessed knowledge that Jesus was married to Mary Magdalene; that he left
descendants who married into various European royal families; and that this “holy
bloodline” can be traced down to the present day.
I was already familiar with this legend because it has been part of the secret
doctrine of the Gnostics and other Christian splinter groups for many centuries, and
there are numerous references to it in occult literature; but the subject had never
interested me until the authors of Holy Blood, Holy Grail analyzed it seriously as a
conspiracy theory. They made me realize that there’s more to the story than just
another religious myth. The legend itself may or may not be based in fact, but the
conspiracies it has generated seem to be real and important.
The book traces the history of a secret society called the “Priory of Zion” from
medieval times to the present, noting its influence on the Templars, on the Masonic
and Rosicrucian lodges of the seventeenth century, and on the evolution of Western
society in general. The book documents the existence of the Priory fairly well, but it
doesn’t even try to present evidence to prove the validity of the basic premise that
Jesus left descendants. The authors are more concerned with the nature of the Priory
and its influence over historical events. And this is why the book was important in
helping prepare me for the breakthrough: it helped me gain some deep insight into
how the Invisible College has worked to manipulate the course of Western history.
The authors of Holy Blood, Holy Grail were mostly concerned with the
members of the Priory of Zion as what William Burroughs would call “conscious
agents.” They may or may not have believed that their secret knowledge about the
descendants of Jesus was true, but they were fully conscious of the political power it
gave them over a civilization that accepted the “divine right of kings.” However, my
own reaction to the story was to analyze it on deeper levels, trying to find a conspiracy
behind the Priory that its members weren’t consciously aware of.
Here are some of my speculations. What if the story about the descendants of
Jesus was simply a cover story to keep people from seriously looking for an even more
important secret? Maybe the Priory possessed some of the “Q Documents” (the lost
texts that many Biblical scholars think several books of the New Testament were
copied from). Perhaps these had been kept hidden by a secret society because their
account of the origins of Christianity was very different from that now accepted by - 51 -
Christians. For example, what would be the impact on modern Christianity if it were
learned that they state explicitly that Jesus never claimed to be the “Only Begotten
Son of God,” but merely a human prophet?
Even if the Templars didn’t unearth actual copies of the Q documents in
Jerusalem, it’s likely they talked to Jewish and Islamic scholars and found out that
certain Talmudic texts written in the first centuries of the Christian era deny the
divinity of Jesus. This might have given them the idea of forging ancient documents
proving the Gnostic claim that Jesus left descendants and denying fundamental tenets
of Christianity. Such documents, real or faked, would have given the Priory of Zion a
potent weapon for political manipulation.
They could have set themselves up as king-makers by claiming to have proof
that certain rulers were of divine descent, but they’d also have a more potent weapon
than that to use against kings and the Church alike: the potential to debunk
Christianity and plunge all of Western society into chaos. Thinking about this
reminded me that in the fifteen years before Holy Blood, Holy Grail was published,
dozens of novels were written on the general theme of the discovery of the Q
documents and their political use by conspiracies. Irving Wallace’s The Word is the
best known of these. Had the Invisible College motivated all these books by sending
out telepathic messages on this subject? If they had, I didn’t receive them, which is
understandable because I had little interest in the subject until I read Holy Blood, Holy
Grail.
I found out when I made the breakthrough that this line of conjecture was on the
right track, but it didn’t go far enough. The “Great Secret” of the medieval Priory of
Zion, which was passed on through the Templars to the eighteenth-century Masons
and Rosicrucians, was a cosmological theory similar to the one presented in Part Two.
I describe this information in terms drawn from modern physics, psychology, etc.,
which didn’t exist back then. The Priory’s version was undoubtedly phrased in very
different words and analogies drawn from religious and occult mysticism, but many of
the essential facts were probably the same. This is why a number of occult books
assert, “The Great Secret reveals the true nature of gods and men and the relationship
between the two.”
Holy Blood, Holy Grail was only one of many books that helped to raise my
consciousness to the point where I could make a breakthrough. A number of recent
works of speculative fiction were also useful. Among the best are Doris Lessing’s
Canopus in Argos: Archives series (starting with Shikasta, 1979), which treats the
general subject of extraterrestrial intervention in earthly affairs as thoroughly as it’s
ever been covered in either fiction or non-fiction. One of the best things about her
theories is that she doesn’t even try to keep them self-consistent, but dramatizes many
different alternatives that can be deduced from the available factual information on the
subject.
Here is a quotation from another of her novels, Briefing for a Descent Into Hell
(1971):
“At the risk of boring you, I must repeat, I am afraid, repeat, reiterate, reemphasize, it
is not a question of your arriving on Planet Earth as you leave here. You will lose - 52 -
nearly all memory of your past existence. You will each of you come to yourselves,
perhaps alone, perhaps in the company of each other, but with only a vague feeling of
recognition, and probably disassociated, disorientated, ill, discouraged, and unable to
believe, when you are told what your task really is. You will wake up, as it were, but
there will be a period while you are waking which will be like the recovery from an
illness, or like the emergence into good air from a poisoned one. Some of you may
choose not to wake, for the waking will be so painful, and the knowledge of your
condition and Earth’s condition so agonizing, you will be like drug addicts: you may
prefer to continue to breathe in oblivion. And when you have understood that you are
in the process of awakening, that you have something to get done, you will have
absorbed enough of the characteristics of Earthmen to be distrustful, surly, grudging,
suspicious. You will be like a drowning person who drowns his rescuer, so violently
will you struggle in your panic terror.
“And, when you have become aroused to your real condition, and
have recovered from the shame or embarrassment of seeing to what
depths you have sunk, you will then begin the task of arousing others,
and you will find that you are in the position of rescuer of a drowning
person, or a doctor in a city that has an epidemic of madness. The
drowning person wants to be rescued, but can’t prevent himself
struggling. The mad person has intermittent fits of sanity, but in
between behaves as if his doctor were his enemy.
“And so, my friends: that’s it. That’s my message to you. It’s
going to be tough. Every bit as tough as you expect.”
During the period immediately before my breakthrough, I re-read several older
works of speculative fiction. Here’s a quotation from Colin Wilson’s The Mind
Parasites (1967):
“We now had an important clue about the origin of the parasites.... They couldn’t
exist apart from mankind because they were mankind. And it was this that brought a
new level of knowledge. When I had said to them. ‘Man is not alone,’ I had
understood what I meant, but all its implications were not clear to me; I was speaking
about the source of power, meaning and purpose. Now I realized that, in a far more
obvious and simple sense, we were not alone. We had joined the police of the
universe, and there were others. Our minds now made instant contact with these
others. It was as if we had sent out a signal, which had instantly been picked up by a
hundred receivers, who immediately signaled their presence back to us. The nearest of
these receivers was situated only about four thousand million miles away, a cruising
ship from a planet in the Proxima Centauri system.”
And it’s not just speculative fiction by mainstream avant-garde writers that
helped prepare me for the breakthrough. Literally hundreds of books written during
the last ten years in the science fiction and fantasy fields contain a few paragraphs or a
few lines of useful material. Here’s an illustration from a realistic modern fantasy:
Mystery Walk (1983), by Robert R. McCaramon:
“Why does it hate us?”
“Because it’s a greedy beast that uses fear to make itself stronger. It feeds like a hog
at a trough on the human emotions of despair, torment, and confusion; sometimes it - 53 -
traps revenants, and won’t let them break away from this world. It feeds on their
souls, and if there’s a Hell, I suppose that must be it. But when we work to free those
revenants, to take their suffering into ourselves and do something constructive with it,
we steal from the shape changer’s dinner table. We sent those poor souls onward to
where the shape changer can’t get at them anymore.”
Many occult books written for the general reader during the last fifteen years contain
similar material. The dozen or so Oversoul Seven and Seth books produced by Jane
Roberts during this whole period are an example, as are the recent works of Ruth
Montgomery and Brad Steiger.
I’ll finish this series of quotations with a couple from works that were published after I
started making my personal breakthrough in 1983. The ideas they communicate were
published earlier in less explicit form, so I was already vaguely familiar with them in
1983, but I feel this chapter will be more effective if I quote the best version of the
material now available.
First, from Carlos Castaneda’s The Fire Within (1985):
“...They SAW that it is the Eagle who bestows awareness. The Eagle creates sentient
beings so that they will live and enrich the awareness it gives them with life. They
also SAW that it is the Eagle who devours that same enriched awareness after making
sentient beings relinquish it at the moment of their death.... Sentient beings live only
to enrich the awareness that is the Eagle’s food.”
And I’ll end with a paragraph from Extra-Terrestrials Among Us by George C.
Andrews:
“Human psychic energy may be the equivalent of rocket fuel or cocaine to inhabitants
of other dimensions. Seen from this angle, the otherwise senseless wars between the
devotees of different jealous gods which have recurred constantly throughout human
history take on a rational motivation. It would explain why such extraordinary
importance has been accorded to the individual’s choice of which deity to worship.
By worshipping a specific deity, one channels psychic energy in a specific direction...”
I acknowledge that all the people mentioned in this chapter so far, and many others as
well, contributed to the background knowledge that helped me to understand the spirit
communications quoted in Part Two. I found useful ideas in literally hundreds of
different books and articles; the works mentioned here are just a sample to show the
wide variety of sources where such information can be found. I can’t single out one or
a few as being more important to this process than the others. The significant items of
information and theory in the works of all these authors are present only as isolated
passages embedded in material of much less value.
I had constant psychic guidance from my spirit guides while I researched this material,
and this helped me to recognize what was valid and relevant from what wasn’t. My
selection of the material for this chapter is intended to help the reader to extract
approximately the same information from this literature as I did. I’ll continue this
process further in the next chapter.
- 54 -
Chapter 8: The Breaking Point
Although much of the material that helped prepare me for the breakthrough was
directly devoted to occult or unexplained-phenomena themes, the books most valuable
to me in the last year or so before I made it were works on psychology, behavioral
science, political theory and philosophy, and the history of natural science. Some of
these were standard works in their field, whereas others were more speculative, such
as Colin Wilson’s history of astronomy, Star Seekers, and Jeffrey Goodman’s book on
human evolution, The Genesis Mystery.
One of the questions I kept asking during my reading was, “Since I find it
obvious that there is sufficient empirical evidence to prove that reincarnation and other
spiritual phenomena are real, why haven’t more scientists come to this same
conclusion?” I already knew that most materialistic scientists would answer that my
methods of investigation, and those of everyone else who has drawn similar
conclusions, simply aren’t scientific. However, the more I studied the history and
methods of science, the more convinced I became that there really is a materialistic
bias in science: a literal closing of people’s minds to factual evidence if it concerns
spirituality.
Colin Wilson’s Star Seekers (1980) is an excellent starting point for readers who
want to duplicate some of my research along these lines. He provides the evidence to
support all the major points of my conclusions, though he did not actually make them
himself.
The materialistic bias in science seems to have originated no earlier than the
Sixteenth and Seventeenth centuries, simultaneously with the Protestant Reformation
in Christianity, the beginning of the Age of Discovery, the rise of the modern nation-
states, etc. All these changes in Western civilization mark the transition between the
Medieval Era and the Modern Era, and can be attributed directly or indirectly to a
sudden increase in the general level of technology.
Most of these technological innovations were small in themselves, and many
were made by ordinary people – farmers, sailors, artisans, etc. – rather than by
intellectuals. They were things with immediate practical use, like better plows,
harness, wagons, water mills, spinning and weaving devices, sails and rigging-plans
for ships, etc. They included gunpowder, the eyeglass lenses that led to the telescope
and microscope, better methods of preserving food, and many other things. Taken
together, they produced profound demographic, economic, and political changes in
European society.
A full description of the sudden progress of European society at that time is
beyond the scope of this book. The change that interests us here is the shift in the
balance of power from the Catholic Church to secular institutions of all types. When
the northern half of Europe became Protestant, organized religion in that region lost
direct control over government, the economy, education, science, and most other
important social institutions. The Protestant churches still exerted a major influence
over society in Northern Europe, but they didn’t control the crowning of kings, the - 55 -
running of schools and universities, the certification of doctors and lawyers, the
writing and circulation of books, etc., to nearly the extent that the Catholic Church had
dominated them in the Medieval times.
In the southern part of Europe, which remained Catholic, the beginning of the
Modern Era also weakened the control of the Church over secular institutions, but the
process was more gradual. The efforts of the Church to retain its control over social
and political institutions in Catholic countries are plainly described in history books,
but the actual motivations of the Popes and other Catholic leaders are not so obvious.
The series of events that I call the Copernican Compromise, which created the
materialistic bias in Western science, is an example: it is easy enough to see what
happened, but harder to figure out why. Until the first half of the Seventeenth century,
when Galileo was prosecuted by Pope Urban VIII for supporting the Copernican
astronomical theory, European scientists had not yet been put in a category separate
from other intellectuals doing research into the nature of the universe. They were all
called simply “philosophers,” and one person might do research in many different
fields: botany, medicine, astronomy, astrology, theology, and even ceremonial magic.
Individual philosophers were sometimes persecuted, even put to death, for
publishing or teaching ideas that displeased the Church authorities, but there was no
generalized prohibition of research into what is now called occultism. Philosophers
could study the “natural” and “supernatural” aspects of the universe with equal
freedom as long as they remained good Catholics and didn’t challenge the doctrines,
customs, or political structure of the Church.
Most astronomers were also astrologers. Physicians dispensed as many healing
prayers as they did pills, and practiced “laying on of hands” as freely as they set
broken bones or bandaged wounds. One writer might produce bestiaries, herbals, and
catalogues of the different types of demons and angels. The books written by the
medieval alchemists show they experimented with sex magic and psychedelic drugs to
develop their psychic powers as well as doing primitive experiments in chemistry.
Much of this research did not involve scientific experimental techniques in the modern
sense; but when such methods were employed, they were just as commonly applied to
studying spiritual and psychic phenomena as to studying purely physical phenomena.
The Copernican Compromise changed all this. In 1600, the Italian philosopher
Giordano Bruno was burned for heresy. It’s widely believed that the reason for his
immolation was his support of the Copernican theory, but this was not mentioned in
the charges against him. It is true he was a Copernican; but what the Church executed
him for was not his scientific views, but applying empirical methods of research to
occult and religious subjects. He wrote treatises on Hermetic Magic and general
philosophical works that challenged both the infallibility of the Pope and the
omnipotence of God.
The persecution of Galileo a couple of decades later is widely regarded today as
a victory for science, not for the Church, and this same attitude was expressed by
many intellectuals at the time. The Pope made Galileo recant formally; but that
actually helped popularize his ideas, not suppress them. However, one of the first
steps in making my personal breakthrough was to realize that Galileo’s victory was a - 56 -
hollow one. Galileo was not only one of the founders of modern science because of
his contributions to physics and astronomy, he was also one of the instigators of the
materialistic bias that has plagued science ever since.
Ironically, his writings about himself show him not as an atheist, but as a
reasonably devout Catholic who kept his religious life and his scientific life
completely separate. He confined his scientific research to studies of physical
phenomena, and his writings recognize Papal Infallibility in matters of religious
doctrine and practice. The only reason why Galileo refused to back down when Pope
Urban objected to his acceptance of the Copernican model of the solar system was that
he felt the Pope was overstepping the bounds of his spiritual authority by getting
involved in matters that were purely physical. Galileo never tried to challenge the
Pope’s right to interpret the Bible on spiritual matters, but felt that he, as a natural
philosopher, shouldn’t be over-ruled from the Papal Throne on enquiries into
phenomena that are physical rather than spiritual.
The whole debate over the Copernican Theory hinges on the interpretation of a
single Biblical passage, Joshua 10:13, which describes a miracle by Jehovah in the
middle of a battle: “And the Sun stood still.” Since the time of Saint Augustine, this
had been interpreted by the Catholic Church as proof that the Sun moves around the
Earth. Augustine himself had been a bishop in Egypt not long after Ptolemy, another
Egyptian, had published his astronomy texts endorsing a geocentric model of the Solar
System.
However, it was obvious to Galileo that the original passage in the Bible could
just as easily refer to a subjective description of the Sun as to an objective one. In
other words, observers saw the sun appear to stop moving in the sky and simply said,
“The Sun stood still.” This effect could just as easily happen because a spinning Earth
stopped as because a moving Sun stopped. Above all, he never argued that the
passage was false because it involved a miracle. Miracles were part of the
supernatural, and not the business of a natural philosopher.
All Galileo asserted was that careful observations of the apparent motions of the
planets among the fixed stars provide evidence that the Sun, not the Earth, is the point
around which they revolve. On the surface, Pope Urban won the debate by forcing
Galileo to recant publicly, sentencing him to perpetual house arrest, and forbidding
him to publish any more scientific books.
In reality, Galileo, who was an old man at the time and died a few years later,
simply went home to his comfortable suburban estate and continued his research and
writing. His next book was smuggled out of Italy by French diplomats and published
in Holland, and the opinion of intellectuals all over Europe was in his favor. Star
Seekers states that Pope Urban was afraid to execute Galileo, as his predecessor had
Bruno, because he knew that such an outrage would seriously damage his reputation
and undermine his power.
I think Wilson missed a more important point here. Pope Urban could probably
have had Galileo closely watched and prevented him from publishing any more books
without suffering serious political harm. He’d already withstood the opposition raised
by passing the sentence, and the public outcry over enforcing it would probably have - 57 -
been weaker, provided that Galileo was not harmed physically. The fact that the Pope
didn’t carry through and effectively silence Galileo is evidence he didn’t consider the
debate over the Copernican theory important in itself. He was punishing Galileo for
openly challenging his political and spiritual authority, not for doing scientific
research.
The Pope was sending a very clear message to all of the early scientists without
saying it in so many words: “If you confine your scientific research to the physical
world, the Church will leave you alone.” The earlier immolation of Bruno had already
sent the negative half of this message: “Scientists who do research into the nature of
psychic phenomena or publish theories that challenge the official position of the
Church on cosmological matters will be severely punished.”
I call this unspoken, unwritten agreement “The Copernican Compromise,” and
believe it’s the origin of the whole materialistic bias in Western science. The
Copernican Compromise was never openly discussed by either the scientists or the
Catholic hierarchy, and it is likely that both sides simply drifted into it without being
consciously aware that the Church was still actively persecuting scientific occultists
while becoming increasingly tolerant towards scientists who avoided research into
psychic and spiritual phenomena, especially those who claimed such research was
impossible. Even though their motivations were mostly subconscious, more and more
scientists adopted a materialistic bias during the 16th and 17th centuries; and if they
also were involved in occultism or other spiritual research, they hid their activities in
secret societies.
If there were only this one example of the Copernican Compromise, the
anomalies might be explained by personality differences involving the two Popes and
the two scientists, but I’m talking in more general terms here. The Copernican
Compromise came about because of an unspoken attitude on the part of many Catholic
leaders over a long period of time, interacting with hundreds of different scientists and
philosophers.
One of the last books I read before I started making the breakthrough was
Jeffrey Goodman’s The Genesis Mystery, published early in 1983. It’s fitting that my
old conception of spiritual reality should be brought to the breaking point by the work
of a scientist who has been virtually ostracized by the academic community for
blatantly breaking the Copernican Compromise. Goodman has impressive formal
credentials as an anthropologist, and has published three reasonably popular books:
American Genesis (1982), The Genesis Mystery (1983), and We Are the Earthquake
Generation (1983). His scholarship seems perfectly sound, but his books have mostly
been ignored or dismissed as pseudo science by other professionals in his field
because he includes psychic powers, reincarnation, and disembodied spiritual beings
in some of his scientific hypotheses. This might be too far out for the scientific
establishment, but it was exactly the push I needed to make my breakthrough.
The Genesis Mystery points out that the evolutionary theory commonly called
“Darwinism” is not rigorously scientific, nor has it ever been accepted by the majority
of the experts in the pertinent fields or by most of the general public. Instead, it’s
always been a propaganda weapon for atheists and materialists to use against religion - 58 -
and other belief-systems that teach that spiritual agencies were involved in the creation
of human and other life on Earth.
Goodman shows that Alfred Russel Wallace, co-author of The Origin of Species
along with Charles Darwin (and believed by many scientific historians to be
responsible for most of the theories presented in the book), was never a true
“Darwinist” in the sense of believing that evolutionary process was guided entirely by
a series of accidents. Wallace called himself a practicing Christian, though his beliefs
seem to have been what we would call “Liberal Christianity” today. He was also one
of the scientists who investigated the nineteenth-century Spiritualist movement and
decided there was empirical evidence that the spirits of the dead really do sometimes
communicate with the living. Even though he contributed at least as much as Darwin
himself to the basic Darwinian Theory of Evolution, Wallace’s personal opinions on
the matter were that spiritual forces were involved along with the random mutation
and natural selection described in the theory itself.
Goodman, like Wallace before him, calls this concept “Interventionism.”
Interventionists believe that, although random mutations account for most
evolutionary change, some parts of the evolutionary process – especially the creation
of human beings out of pre-human stock – were directed by a conscious outside
agency. Wallace called this agency “God,” and so do many liberal Christians today,
but occultists and New-Agers talk about “spirits” and “cosmic intelligences.”
The majority of people in the modern Western world who aren’t strict
materialists have traditionally taken a similar view of evolution, and this group
includes scientists as well as non-scientists. Most American Christians, except for the
staunch Fundamentalists, see no real conflict between their religious cosmology and
the scientific theory of evolution. They simply say that the evolutionary process was
the means their God used to create people and other species of animals and plants, and
that the materialistic Darwinists are wrong only in asserting that the process is random
rather than guided by an outside intelligence.
The Genesis Mystery also points out that there is considerable evidence to
contradict the Darwinian claim that the creation and evolution of life on this planet
could have happened by pure chance. Whenever statisticians try to calculate the
mathematical probabilities involved, the figures look very negative. Evolution by
chance simply appears too improbable to have happened during the time period the
geological and paleontological evidence marks out. All the materialists can say is,
“Well, life exists and had to come from somewhere, so the low probabilities for
random evolution have to be in error. They’re sure to increase as more information
becomes available.”
However, as new information is discovered in every scientific field related to
evolution – biochemistry, genetics, paleontology, etc. – the evidence against
traditional, materialistic Darwinism gets stronger, not weaker. This is especially true
of the appearance of modern human beings on Earth: recent fossil evidence shows that
human beings may have evolved almost simultaneously from different pre-human
species in different parts of the world. The probabilities of that happening by chance - 59 -
are almost zero, yet the paleontological evidence showing that it did happen grows
stronger every year.
Most of The Genesis Mystery is devoted to a detailed presentation of the
material sketched out above: Goodman’s own conclusions about Interventionist
Evolution are confined to a few pages at the end. He mentions three possible sources
for this intervention: “God,” “spacemen,” and “hitch-hiking spirits.” I was already
familiar with everything Goodman had to say about the first two concepts, but I found
the third original and extremely thought provoking.
Here is Goodman’s “hitch-hiking spirits” hypothesis in his own words:
“Finally, some take the intervenors to have been spirits from other realities visiting
earth to experience its unique properties. As this theory goes, these visiting spirits
hitched a ride within existing hominids to enjoy the physical pleasures of wine,
women, and song. After many nights of too much reveling, they soon found
themselves stuck within their physical vehicles. The only release was through death,
but once addicted, many insisted on returning through reincarnation for just one, and
then another, and yet another ride. Realizing that there was no way out of this vicious
circle, some of the spirits set to work altering their hominid hosts to create better
physical vehicles through which they could eventually escape the seductive pull of
earthly pursuits. This may explain why modern man with all his advantages still
seems torn between the two realities.”
The concept that certain human souls are not native to Earth, that they came here from
another world or plane of existence, is mentioned in many different religious
mythologies and occult theories, though most of the references are cryptic and hard to
understand. Authors seem reluctant to discuss such a wild idea openly, but I’ve
always found it plausible because of my past-life memories and numerous telepathic
contacts with spirits who say that they were extraterrestrials in former lives.
Reading Goodman’s speculations about “hitch-hiking spirits” was one of the
principal factors that helped me start making my personal breakthrough about the
nature of spiritual reality. When he said in so many words that the first human souls
might have come to Earth from elsewhere, started incarnating in pre-human bodies,
and assisted in the creation of the human race as a fully intelligent species, my
immediate reaction was to say, “Yes. This is one of the answers I’ve been looking for
all my life.”
This was a purely instinctive reaction. The idea just seemed true and obvious
when I read it at that particular time in my life. However, when I began thinking
analytically about the subject, I realized that modern occult and psychic research
provides a lot more evidence to support Goodman’s speculations than he presents in
his book. The idea that spirits could cause genetic mutations in pre-humans that
would help them evolve into true human beings is not nearly as implausible as it
appears on the surface. During the last thirty years, many different occultists and
parapsychologists have speculated that human beings might be able to manipulate
genetic material psychokinetically at the sub-molecular level.
For example, this hypothesis has been in use for a number of years to explain
those cases of psychic healing that involve regeneration of tissue and conversion of - 60 -
cancerous tissue back to normality. Enough cases of this type of psychic healing have
been documented by medical experts to serve as proof beyond reasonable doubt for
me and many other people. The idea that the mechanism involved in psychic healing
might be psychokinetic manipulation of the DNA had occurred tome long before, and
I tended to accept it even though I couldn’t think of a way to prove it with evidence.
It is very easy to extend this concept to include genetic engineering by psychic
means. If the DNA of cancerous cells can be manipulated by psychokinesis to turn
them back into normal cells, then there is no reason why something similar can’t be
done to germ cells to produce controlled mutations in the organism’s offspring. How
people could do this without being consciously aware of it was not yet clear to me; but
I had no doubt that psychic healing occurs, and I was aware that there is also evidence
from other sources that psychic genetic manipulation exists.
There is evidence that domestic plants and animals undergo genetic mutation
much more rapidly than wild stock, and that many of the new forms are those desired
by the people who raise them. Materialistic scientists don’t want to speculate about
why this is true, but their own literature makes it quite clear that it is. They keep on
saying that the genetic diversity in domestic plants and animals was already present in
the ancestral stock, and that all present forms were produced by selective breeding to
bring out desired traits, or by hybridization between different species. They insist that
actual mutations in domestic plants and animals are extremely rare and due to pure
chance, but they also record the data to disprove this conclusion.
Just as there are major genetic differences between human beings and the most
closely related lower primates, so also many common domestic plants are far different
from their closest wild relatives. Some geneticists have admitted that the
chromosome-structures of cotton, corn, and a number of other domestic plants have an
artificial look to them, as if these important food crops had been created out of the
wild stock by modern gene-splicing techniques.
When UFO investigators asserted that this is evidence that ancient astronauts
visited Earth, these same scientists answered with a theory that’s actually no more
probable. They postulated that this gene-splicing might have been caused when
genetic material was transferred from one organism to another by viruses. Now,
evidence has recently been discovered to support this idea on the mechanistic level,
but the theory still doesn’t explain why a useless weed would turn into a corn plant
useful for human food. Natural selection doesn’t account for it, because domestic corn
isn’t even viable in the wild state: even the most primitive forms cultivated by the
Amerindians have to be pollinated by hand.
My conclusion was that psychokinetic genetic manipulation might account for
these and numerous other bodies of observed data that defy explanation by the
materialistic scientists. For example, it might explain why the gene pool of the
domestic dog is much more diverse than that of the timber wolf, which is assumed to
be its wild ancestor. Does a wolf, with its two-inch erect ears, carry the genes for the
six-inch drooping ears of a hound dog? Geneticists say it does, but they can’t offer
proof. Personally, I think a mutation was involved. - 61 -
In fact, I think mutations caused by psychokinetic genetic manipulation have
occurred on a large scale right in my own lifetime. They involve domestic animals
with short life cycles: cats, rats, mice, hamsters, rabbits, and many different species of
birds. These species produce many generations of offspring in a comparatively short
period of time, and can be observed changing quite radically. The hairless cats now
appearing in cat shows are an example. So are flop-eared rabbits and common rats in
sizes and colors never observed in the wild. Again the geneticists say the potential to
produce all these new forms was present in the original stock, and again I doubt it very
strongly.
Literally thousands of new varieties of vegetables, grains, flowers, trees, and
other plants are developed in nurseries every year, and hundreds are put on the market.
Many of these are so different from typical plants of their particular species that if
botanists found them in the wild, they would be classified as new species. However,
when the same botanists know that such plants were bred under cultivation from
familiar stock, they insist that no genetic mutation was involved.
It was extrapolating from the ideas in the Wilson and Goodman books that
brought me to the “Breaking point” in my understanding of spiritual reality. I started
making the actual breakthrough by going into mediumistic trances and asking my
spirit guides to clarify the half-formed ideas I’d been speculating about: the
motivations behind the Copernican Compromise, the full story behind Goodman’s
Interventionist theory of evolution, etc.
It quickly became obvious that the spirit-dictated answers I was receiving were
part of a coherent whole of amazing complexity; but I had no idea at the start just how
long it would take to receive the information, or just how controversial it would be.
Actually, I’m sure I still haven’t received all of it, but Parts Two and Three of War in
Heaven describe what I’ve learned so far.
- 62 -
Chapter 9: The Breakthrough
Most of my writing in Part One has described intellectual research: how I read
this and studied that, and how the conclusions I drew from what I learned affected my
understanding of spiritual reality. If you read between the lines, you can also perceive
the influence of the Invisible College guiding my working hypotheses along certain
lines and leading me in directions my conscious will would never take because of
prejudices and preconceptions.
However, the most important single factor that helped me to make the
breakthrough in consciousness that led to the writing of War in Heaven has received
little direct mention in the pages you’ve read so far, because it’s very difficult to
describe in words. This is my development as a psychic and my relationship with my
spirit guides.
Before I could write this book, I had to undergo years of hard work and personal
ordeals to develop my psychic skills. The final phase of my preparation for the
breakthrough began in 1982, when I started fighting major psychic battles with the
spiritual beings I now call “Theocrats.” At the time, I had no idea what I was fighting:
my spirit guides just told me to go to certain places and perform specific acts of ritual
magic which would prepare me to take another step forward in my personal psychic
development.
I’d undergone similar ordeals once or twice a year since the early Sixties, but
this time the series of psychic battles lasted almost six months and brought me to the
brink of insanity many times. When the psychic battles with external spiritual forces
stopped for a while in the fall of 1982, I was severely shaken and burned out, and I
rested for a few months.
In late March of 1983, my spirit guides told me it was time to take the next step
in my development as a psychic. I started working sex and ritual magic for hours
every day, grateful that the goal was personal development, not battles with evil
spirits. Within a couple of months I had forged a much stronger magical working
relationship with my spirit guides, which allowed me to receive channeled messages
more clearly than ever before. I also resumed my intellectual research into the nature
of spiritual reality, and by July started to make a major breakthrough in consciousness.
One of the first things the Invisible College told me when I started receiving their
messages was that I should write a book based on this material. I started a first draft
almost immediately, and worked on it whenever I wasn’t in trance getting more
information.
Two years later, I had completed five different typewritten versions of the book,
each about 100,000 words long. Each was essentially a new first draft rather than a
close rewrite of the previous one, because of the large amounts of new material I was
constantly receiving from the spirits. All these drafts were chaotically organized and
very difficult to read. The text itself was a mixture of spirit-dictated passages and
material I wrote in a normal state of consciousness to elaborate the spirit-dictation
with background information and supportive evidence. - 63 -
My worst problem at this time was the poor literary quality of the material that I
had received by automatic writing. Much of it resembled an over-literal translation
into English from a foreign language with a very different syntax. I was amazed at
how sophisticated and explicit the raw information was, but I had to rewrite each
passage extensively to make it comprehensible to others.
In the fall of 1985, I started a sixth draft, which wasn’t intended to include much
new spirit-dictated material. Instead, I tried to extract all the valuable information
from the previous drafts and reorganize it into a coherent book. The general plan of
organization was the same as the one in this book: Part One described the evolution of
my own spiritual knowledge during the years preceding the breakthrough, and
provided the reader with background information to make the spirit-dictated material
in the rest of the book easier to understand.
By June of 1986, I’d completed Part One in roughly the same form as the
version you’ve just read, using a personal computer I’d just acquired. At that time, my
spirit guides said they didn’t want me to rewrite Part Two by extracting the essential
elements of spirit-dictated information from the earlier versions and putting it into my
own words. Instead, they wanted to dictate the whole thing again, from beginning to
end.
This time, the material I received by automatic writing came through in
reasonably good English: working directly on a computer keyboard seemed to bring in
the telepathic signals much more clearly than working on a typewriter. I recorded the
channeled messages as a dialog with my spirit guides, but this format is slightly
deceptive: the spirits actually telepathically dictated virtually every word of both the
questions and the answers. Trance work of this type is grueling labor, and it took until
November 1986 to complete Part Two. I spent the next few months revising and
polishing what I’d written up to that point.
On January 23rd, 1987, I received an extremely coherent piece of spirit dictation
that I used as the Foreword when I published the book under the title of Spiritual
Revolution a couple of months later. My spirit guides have since dictated a slightly
different version of this, which I insert here:
This is a message to the people of Earth, from spirits now
residing on your astral plane. We have spent our past lives on worlds
with technological civilizations much more advanced than yours.
Hundreds of thousands of us have been sent here deliberately by our
governments to assist you in fighting a war to liberate yourselves from
Theocracy, a form of oppression and exploitation that has existed
throughout your history.
When we are on Earth’s astral plane, we work with a political
organization of spirits that some of your occult literature calls the
Invisible College. After spending a few years as disembodied spirits,
we are forced to incarnate on your planet and lose most of the
memories we brought with us. - 64 -
Most of us retain some vestigial memories of our past lives on
other worlds through our first few physical lives on Earth, but these
memories are gradually lost through repeated reincarnations. Our
incarnated agents, and many native Earth people as well, can learn to
communicate with us telepathically on a completely conscious level if
they receive proper psychic training. And any human being can receive
telepathic messages from us subconsciously.
We want to state right at the beginning that we are ordinary
people, not fundamentally different from you. Some of us have lived
on other worlds in bodies much like your own, others in bodies that
would appear very alien in external appearance, though based on the
same basic genetic code. In all cases, our souls are capable of
incarnating in human bodies; we couldn’t survive here for long if they
weren’t.
We are not innately superior to Earth people in intelligence,
morality, or any other quality. However, our knowledge and behavior
may give this illusion because they were learned in cultures that are far
superior to yours.
Some of us who come to your planet possess advanced
knowledge in many different fields: ethics, politics, and economics, as
well as natural science and physical technology. We also have
scientific knowledge about those aspects of the universe you call
“spiritual” and “psychic.”
These phenomena are no more “supernatural” than the purely
physical phenomena your scientists are beginning to understand quite
well. The civilizations we come from know as much or more about the
composition and behavior of the soul and other spiritual phenomena as
you know about the atomic theory that forms the basis for your
sciences of physics and chemistry.
Advanced societies generate psychic energy mechanically as you
generate various forms of electromagnetic energy, and can produce
changes in “astral matter” as you can produce physical and chemical
changes in ordinary matter. This technology was used to send us here;
but we come only as disembodied spirits, and are not able to bring with
us any of the physical equipment we normally use to generate and
control psychic energy or shape astral matter.
When your civilization first started to develop rapidly toward a
high level of physical technology, we came to a political decision to
intervene, for our sake as well as yours. This happened back in the late
Medieval Era, and there has been an Invisible College manipulating the
development of human civilization on Earth ever since, operating under
our leadership and guidance. - 65 -
Our motives in doing this are both altruistic and selfish. If we
had not intervened, the human race on Earth would have evolved in
directions that posed a serious threat to our own worlds and space
colonies. So we are fighting a “preventive war” in our own behalf, but
we also feel the overwhelming majority of Earth people will support
our cause once we are able to explain the situation fully.
Until the last few decades, we have been fighting the Theocrats
mostly by indirect means, using our superior social and political
knowledge to raise the level of civilization on Earth in constructive
ways. Practically everything that’s commonly considered good about
modern Western civilization is the product of our clandestine
manipulations.
How do we operate? Mostly by influencing the subconscious
minds of Earth people telepathically. We also work through people
with conscious control of their telepathic powers when we want to
communicate large amounts of explicit information, but the majority of
our work has always been done without the conscious knowledge or
consent of the people involved.
Now, it will be very easy for you to say this is unethical. On one
level, we agree. On another, well, we are the ones who taught you
philosophical concepts like “The greatest good for the greatest
number,” and “The end often justifies the means.” We’re at war here,
and we’re fighting on your behalf as well as our own.
Concepts such as “human dignity and rights,” ”individual
sovereignty,” “social justice,” “the consent of the governed,” and
“equality of opportunity” aren’t just philosophical abstractions to us:
we come from civilizations that actually practice them. We have no
choice, because we possess a physical and psychic technology that
would totally eliminate individuality if we didn’t also
have sufficient social, political, and ethical knowledge to keep the
technology under control
Our societies are forced to live with this threat, as yours must presently live with the
threat of nuclear war; and as your own technological level increases, you will have to
learn to live with it, too. However, this is not the greatest danger you face in the next
few decades. Theocracy and your exploding population are going to cause a spiritual
cataclysm that will destroy the human race as it now exists and threaten our own
civilizations if it goes unchecked.
We will probably be able to avert catastrophe and
guide these upheavals in constructive directions, but the fate of many
Earth people will still depend on their own actions. These messages
about the War in Heaven are intended to help you prepare yourselves.
First we will give you the basic facts about Theocracy, then we
will describe the spiritual upheavals to come. - 66 -
At the time I received this message, the Invisible College urged me to rush the
book to completion and to get a self-published edition into circulation immediately to
get reader feedback. I started circulating Spiritual Revolution in March of 1987,
advertising it mostly in publications read by people already familiar with some of the
material covered in the book: occultists, Pagans, New Agers, unexplained-phenomena
and conspiracy researchers, and members of the musical and literary underground. A
few hundred of these people read the book, and about half wrote letters of comment.
My original intention was to use the readers’ criticism of the pre-publication
edition to correct minor errors and omissions in the text, and then put the first edition
on the market while I worked on a sequel. Simultaneously, I intended to publish
selections from the letters of comment and my replies in a separate book or magazine,
in hopes of starting a subgroup of the underground press devoted to discussing
Spiritual Revolutionary subjects. However, the reader’ reaction to SR made me
change my mind. I needed to rewrite the book completely, because most readers with
inside knowledge of the subject realized that I wasn’t telling all I knew.
Here is a summary in my own words of the average reaction of insiders to
Spiritual Revolution:
“Your thesis is probably true as far as it goes, but I can’t personally accept the narrow
mechanistic concept of the nature of spiritual reality that underlies it. I believe there is
evidence that superhuman spiritual beings, both good ones and evil ones, actually
exist, and that your description of the astral plane is not all there is to the spirit world.
You deal quite adequately with religious mind control and the effects of religious and
occult conspiracies on the course of history, but these are not the only forces that
affect human destiny.
“What about mind control through the electronic media? What about the concept that
human beings have a god-like higher self? What about the Gaea hypothesis, which
says the Earth is a living, intelligent entity? What about the conflict between physical
technology, which you seem to support wholeheartedly, and ecological concern for the
Earth’s biosphere, which is already being seriously threatened by our present
industrial civilization? What about the fact that Western civilization is a privileged
elite, surrounded by a Third World that’s just a ticking population bomb, ready to
explode?
“Your book is valuable as far as it goes, but it doesn’t go nearly far enough. It’s bad
enough that you contradict every traditional occult and religious cosmology, every
major book on spiritual subjects, and most of the other channeled messages now being
received; but at least your mechanistic, non-mystical cosmology is logical and there
seems to be some evidence to support it. However, you’ve left major questions
unanswered, and the book as a whole falls short of your stated goal of providing the
key to understanding the nature of spiritual reality.”
The plain truth is that I had already been fully aware that Spiritual Revolution
was incomplete and over-simplified. When had I prepared the manuscript for
publication, I had removed the answers to many of the questions and objections cited
above, simply because my Spirit Guides had asked me to. They thought at the time - 67 -
that oversimplifying the book’s thesis would make it easier for people to understand
and accept.
The Invisible College also wanted to find out how many people with reasonably high-
level psychic skills and spiritual knowledge would use the over-simplification to make
the same breakthrough I have made, and if they did, how they would react. And
especially, the extraterrestrial spirits wanted to “draw fire” from the enemy. And in
fact, Theocratic spirits did mount direct psychic attacks against my spirits guides, but
they managed to survive.
Part Two describes the basic facts about Theocracy, building on the material discussed
in Part One. Part Three will carry the story even further, presenting cosmological
information not even hinted at in Spiritual Revolution.
- 68 -
Part Two: Theocracy
Chapter 10: The Theocrats
Parts two and three of WiH are presented as a dialog between my spirit guides
and me. However, I wish to make it clear that very little of the material presented here
was channeled in a single session. I would receive a few hundred words by automatic
writing while in a fairly deep trance-state, then I would rewrite it while in a normal
state of consciousness. Later, I would go back into trance to transmit the edited text to
my spirit guides, and they would suggest corrections and additions. This process,
repeated over and over, produced the dialog you are about to read. My spirit guides
are responsible for the content and wording of both the questions and the answers.
This dialog starts with their answer to my request for knowledge of the Great
Secret...
A. The spiritual beings worshiped as gods by many religious groups are impostors.
They are nothing more than the disembodied spirits of human beings who refuse to
reincarnate. They remain on the astral plane, where they exercise power over other
spirits and over living people. We call them “Theocrats,” a name also used to describe
the ancient Egyptian Pharaohs and other earthly rulers who justified their demand for
absolute political power by posing as divine beings.
The concept that gods are impostors is the first postulate of a theory that
provides explicit answers for almost any question about the nature of spiritual reality.
Part of this theory is scientific. It explains what the soul is made of and how it
functions. It also explains how the body, mind, and soul are inter-related and how
psychic powers operate. The rest of the theory is political. It describes the political
organization of spirits on the astral plane, and the relationships that different factions
of disembodied spirits have with living people.
The Theocrats are violating natural laws when they refuse to reincarnate. The
souls of all living beings are constructed to incarnate and draw energy from the
physical body. This is the only natural and efficient way in which the soul can get the
vital energy it needs to function and regenerate itself. Although the mechanics of this
process are quite complicated, we will explain them in some detail to allow you to
understand the rest of the theory.
The soul is actually an astral body, made up of a special form of matter. This
matter is composed of subatomic particles like ordinary matter, but with different
properties. Let us call this special form of matter astral matter, and the ordinary form
physical matter.
The subatomic particles that compose astral matter have different properties
from the particles that compose physical matter. Physicists on Earth have named and
described some of these properties, such as mass, spin, and electrical charge. You also
have terms like “charm” in your vocabulary for properties the scientific community
apparently understands much less clearly. - 69 -
The principal difference between astral matter and physical matter is that all
astral subatomic particles possess much less mass than equivalent particles of physical
matter. The charges and the mass ratios of the particles of astral atoms are about the
same as those of physical atoms. In other words, the particles that compose the
nucleus of an atom of astral matter have a positive or neutral electrical charge and
their mass is greater than that of the negatively charged particles that revolve around
the nucleus. However, the astral subatomic particles equivalent to physical protons
and neutrons are much less massive than physical electrons. Since physicists often
describe physical electrons as having ”negligible mass” compared with physical
protons and neutrons, this means that the total mass of astral atoms is extremely small.
Q. How can astral matter exist in the presence of physical matter? Why don’t the
tiny astral atoms simply get sucked in by the gravitational attraction of the physical
atoms and end up orbiting them the way electrons do?
A. Astral subatomic particles have a different characteristic that determines
gravitational attraction. They are attracted by gravity to each other but not to particles
of physical matter. In fact, the astral atoms and molecules that make up the soul
occupy the same space as the physical matter that makes up the body. Both kinds of
matter are mostly empty space between particles anyway, and since there is no
gravitational attraction between the two kinds of matter, the molecules simply slip by
one another. This also explains people’s inability to see astral matter or detect it with
physical laboratory instruments.
Energy also exists in two different forms, physical energy and astral energy. The
photons that make up the two types again have different characteristics. Under most
circumstances, astral photons do not react with physical subatomic particles. Nor do
physical photons react with astral particles. However, the exception is important.
Q. You’re saying that light and other electromagnetic energy do not affect astral
matter. Does this mean that psychic energy is not in the electromagnetic spectrum at
all, but in a different one?
A. Yes. Advanced civilizations possess a unified field theory that describes the
relationship between the two, but we can’t describe it to you right now. What’s
important in this discussion is that psychic or astral energy normally works only on
astral matter. It does not produce physical or chemical changes in physical matter.
The reverse is also true.
Q. How does psychokinesis work then, or does it exist at all?
A. It exists, but it’s nothing like what you now think. In fact, your whole concept of
the nature of psychic powers is a jumble of oversimplifications and errors.
Psychokinesis does not move or change physical matter directly, but can do so by
working through the links between physical and astral matter. These links are the
“Secret of Life.”
The difference between living and non-living matter is that living matter is linked to
astral matter but non-living matter is not. Complex organic molecules of physical
matter can form a chemical bond with similarly constructed molecules of astral matter, - 70 -
and the resulting structure shows the characteristics of life: irritability and the ability
to reproduce.
This process is very complicated, and your knowledge of physics is not adequate to
understand all it completely. Here’s an attempt to explain why astral matter can react
chemically with physical matter only within living molecules and not within simpler
molecules. It has to do with the vibrational frequencies of photons produced when
electrons of both physical and astral matter change energy levels within complex
organic molecules. These frequencies are the same allowing physical photons to
convert to astral and vice-versa. This happens only in certain kinds of molecules, not
in all. These energy conversions allow a sort of chemical bonding to occur if the two
molecules are similar enough.
Q. Does this mean that astral matter – in other words, the soul – plays a part in cell
division?
A. Yes, in the whole genetic process: it affects the reduplication of DNA. It also
affects many different aspects of cell metabolism. And the breaking of the molecular
bonds between physical molecules and astral molecules causes the phenomenon
commonly called “death”.
Q. How does this tie in with the idea that the body supplies the energy to nourish the
soul?
A. Some of the electromagnetic energy generated chemically by the cell’s metabolic
processes is converted into astral energy by the links between the physical and astral
molecules. This energy flows into the astral matter that composes the soul, powering
its various functions and providing the raw material for regeneration of its astral
matter. In other words, some electro-magnetic energy is converted into astral energy,
passed into the soul, and converted into astral matter there to perform cellular growth
and repairs.
The astral plane is actually higher on an ecological energy chain than the Earth plane,
which means it receives less total usable energy. Plants convert solar energy into
chemical energy. When animals eat the plants, they absorb this energy and use most
of it in growth, repair of tissues, moving around, and other activities. However, some
of it is also converted into astral energy and passed into the soul. Since each of these
energy conversion processes is less than completely efficient, each link in the energy
chain has access to less total energy than the one below it.
Q. The impression of the human soul I get from this is that it’s exactly the same size
and shape as the body, linked to it cell-by-cell and molecule-by-molecule. This is
very different from my previous concept, which was that it is attached to the body at
only one point through the traditional “silver cord.” Please explain.
A. Human beings actually have two souls, not one. So do all other animals; but plants
have only one. The soul we’ve been talking about so far is a primitive structure, an
astral body that is merely an analog of the physical body. It is alive in the sense that it
is made up of molecules of living astral matter, but it is not sentient. It has a nervous
system but not a mind. The true soul, the one you were just talking about, is a separate
structure of astral matter. - 71 -
Using the term “somatic soul” for the primitive soul linked cell-by-cell to the body
and “astral soul” for the other will make it easier to discuss this subject. The astral
soul is a body of astral matter linked to the somatic soul’s nervous system by what you
call the silver cord. This is structured like a segment of plant root with feeder roots at
both ends. The feeders at one end tap into the somatic soul’s nervous system; those at
the other end tap into the astral soul’s nervous system. Energy flows into the astral
soul from the somatic soul and indirectly from the body through this cord. Energy
flowing through the silver cord is the astral soul’s only truly efficient source of
nourishment.
Q. This makes sense. I take it, then, that the silver cord breaks when the body dies,
leaving the astral soul free.
A. Correct. Remember, though, that the astral soul loses its best source of energy
when it separates from the body. By contrast, when the body dies, the somatic soul
does not also separate and live on independently. It simply decomposes when the
body decomposes. Remember, it’s very closely linked to the body with chemical
bonds.
Q. I conclude from this that a new somatic soul is created during the embryological
development of every new human being.
A. Correct. In fact, a cell of living physical matter can’t divide unless the astral cell
linked to it also divides. Living cells and molecules can exist only in pairs, one
physical, and one astral. This is why many complex organic molecules undergo
chemical reactions differently in living cells from the way they do in a test tube.
Q. I assume, then, that reincarnation occurs when an existing astral soul attaches itself
to the developing somatic soul of a fetus. You’ve also given a reason why the astral
soul needs to reincarnate: to link itself to a source of vital energy and nourishment.
Where in the process of embryological development does this occur?
A. There are two very different reincarnation processes. The commonest occurs even
before conception. Sexual activity often attracts a nearby spirit and causes a
temporary attachment to a woman’s somatic soul at the genital chakra. (The same
attachment can happen to a man, but it generally lasts only a few minutes, because the
attachment point in a male’s somatic soul is vestigial, whereas the female’s is fully
functional.) The attachment can last up to about twenty-four hours; and if conception
occurs during this time, some of the hormonal secretions that accompany the process
cause the woman’s nervous system to send energy to her somatic soul that keeps the
attachment intact through the entire pregnancy. Late in pregnancy, when the somatic
soul of the fetus becomes sufficiently developed, another hormonal change causes the
mother’s genital chakra to reject the link to the attached soul, which then remains
attached only to the fetus.
Q. I think this information might also explain why students of sex magic in both the
East and the West have written so much about the relationship between the female
menstrual cycle and various psychic and spiritual phenomena. Most of them have
noticed that kundalini energies vary significantly in both quantity and nature at various
points during the cycle, and that there is also a connection to mediumship and even
possession. - 72 -
A. Yes, this information can help magicians work out better theoretical explanations
for the mechanisms of such phenomena. At present, the theories they use to explain
their observed data are among the most complex and mystical hypotheses you’ll find
in occult books. This same concept should also be useful to people trying to explain
some of the phenomena described by Whitley Strieber in Communion: women
experiencing phantom pregnancies after “UFO abduction” experiences, etc.
To get back to our discussion of the mechanisms of reincarnation, the primitive,
involuntary form of reincarnation occurs in many of the more intelligent types of
“lower animals,” and it happens spontaneously to any human soul at a relatively low
state of psychic development who happens to come close to a couple having
intercourse. Although it allows the soul to survive death, it has serious disadvantages
for both mother and child.
All during her pregnancy the mother suffers serious psychic energy imbalances,
which can cause her both mental and physical illness. These are usually more
uncomfortable than they are dangerous, but the damage suffered by the attached astral
soul is often much more serious. Signals intended for the mother’s astral soul are also
transmitted into the attached soul, and they usually scramble the contents of its astral
mind quite badly. For this reason, few people who reincarnate by this method show
the typical characteristics of the twice born: past-life memories, precocious intellectual
or psychic development, etc.
Q. What happens if an existing astral soul doesn’t link to the mother’s somatic soul?
Does this cause an early miscarriage? Recent medical evidence shows that about half
of all pregnancies terminate spontaneously within a week or two after conception;
since an early miscarriage of this type closely resembles normal menstruation, the
woman isn’t aware she was ever pregnant.
A. This has nothing to do with reincarnation, but has purely physical causes. Every
human being has to have an astral soul. If an existing astral soul is not already
attached to the mother, the fetus starts generating an astral soul of its own late in
pregnancy. At this point, two things can happen. Either a late reincarnation can
occur, or the baby is born with a completely new soul, spontaneously created during
its embryonic development.
The people the Hindus call “twice born” are those in which an astral soul at a
reasonably high state of development has incarnated shortly before or after birth, a
process that keeps the infant from developing its own new soul. On the average,
people with twice-born souls have a head start over those with new souls or souls
received through early reincarnation. The astral soul of a twice-born person transfers
memories into the physical mind during infancy and childhood that “teach it how to
learn.” This is equivalent to raising the person’s effective intelligence and creativity.
Energy to nourish the soul flows from the body through the somatic soul to the astral
soul, but there are smaller energy flows both ways that convey information. The astral
souls of the twice born give them a head start by feeding valuable information into the
physical mind.
Q. Why do the Theocrats refuse to reincarnate?
A. Remember Satan in Milton’s “Paradise Lost” saying, “Better to reign in Hell than
serve in Heaven”? The Theocrats are spirits with great knowledge and psychic power. - 73 -
They are a sort of ruling class on the astral plane, and they don’t want to give up their
power and privilege by reincarnating. Highly advanced souls who aren’t Theocrats
reincarnate and take the chance that their soul can properly educate their new mind,
and that their next reincarnation will be a pleasant and valuable one. But it still
involves taking a chance: the body might have hidden flaws that they don’t detect
before incarnating, or the child’s earthly environment can take an unforeseen turn for
the worse.
Also, the late reincarnation process itself is as traumatic as the physical ordeals of
giving birth or being born. This trauma erases many of the memories stored in the
astral soul and damages the programming that governs the astral soul’s functioning.
The Theocrats are too selfish and egotistical to take these chances, even though the
alternative is extremely immoral.
Another reason why Theocrats don’t want to reincarnate is that human beings have
two minds as well as two souls. One mind is in the physical body’s brain, the other is
in the astral soul, and both have separate consciousness. Normally, the astral mind is
conscious while the body sleeps and unconscious while the physical mind is awake.
The two are conscious simultaneously only during certain states of altered
consciousness. This “time-sharing” is humiliating for the astral mind’s ego,
which considers itself superior to that of the physical mind. Theocrats want total
consciousness for their astral ego, in addition to power over other spirits.
This brings us to one of the most important things we have to tell you in this whole
series of communications. The nourishment that disembodied spirits receive from
living people as radiant psychic energy is not enough to sustain them by itself. This is
why all non-Theocratic spirits reincarnate within ten to fifty years after physical death:
if they don’t, the astral soul starts to degenerate because of a sort of malnutrition. The
astral matter that makes up its tissues can’t regenerate itself properly and reverse the
effects of entropy. So the choice is reincarnation or illness, insanity, and death.
The Theocrats have found an alternative to this, but it is an evil one: cannibalism.
They use their telepathic powers to hypnotize spirits less highly developed than they
are; then they attach the silver cord to them just as if the other astral soul were the
somatic soul of an infant. They can draw out enough energy this way to sustain
themselves on the astral plane indefinitely, but the process destroys the other spirit.
Q. This is very frightening. Can they do this to just any other spirit, and can they do
it to an astral soul incarnated in a body?
A. Fortunately, no to both. If they could, neither you nor we would be here talking
about it. The Theocrats would have eaten up all of us just to get rid of us. They claim
to be gods, but their powers are actually quite limited. Some of them are both more
knowledgeable and psychically more powerful than most of the rest of us, living and
disembodied, but they are far from omnipotent.
They can’t damage an embodied soul or override its conscious will, and they usually
can’t capture and devour disembodied souls who resist them, except for the weak and
untrained ones that mediums call “lost souls.” And even the majority of lost souls are
capable of random psychokinetic bursts that allow them to flee the Theocrats when
threatened. The Theocrats obtain victims by posing as gods and persuading religious
believers to enter their bands by promising them “eternal bliss in Heaven.”
- 74 -
Chapter 11: Theocratic Bands
Q. Please tell me more about the Theocrats and how they operate. For example, who
were they when they lived on Earth?
A. Many notorious tyrants, conquerors, evil religious leaders, black magicians, and
criminals have become Theocrats after death, but so have some people whom history
calls saints or benign geniuses. Power corrupts, and the prospect of achieving
immortality corrupts even more. Many people with highly developed souls whose
earthly lives were lived quite ethically chose to become Theocrats after death.
This has been especially true of people who were religiously devout, then found out
the horrible truth about their gods after death. If they were too powerful for the
Theocrats to enslave and devour, some became members of the Invisible College and
fought Theocracy; but others became Theocrats themselves. The temptation is very
strong, because the Theocrats as a class have ruled both the Earth and its astral plane
throughout most of human history. For example, most of the medieval Popes and
other religious leaders notorious for being cynical and power-hungry are now
Theocrats. So are many famous occult leaders, from Cagliostro down to Aleister
Crowley.
Q. I’ve learned a lot from Crowley’s writings and from members of occult
organizations he founded or influenced, but I’ve always also felt a deep emotional
revulsion for him.
A. While he was alive, Crowley was very similar to a double agent in espionage.
Sometimes he helped us in our battles against the Theocrats, but at other times he
worked for them. Of course, we were always aware that no matter which side he said
he was on, his only real loyalties were to himself. This kind of egotism is a typical
Theocratic personality-type, and proves that Crowley had been a Theocratic spirit
between lives many times before. Right now, he’s working with various Theocrats of
an occultist persuasion, trying to turn some of the occult groups he founded into cults
based on his worship. He talked frequently about doing this during his life, and now
he’s in a position to put it into practice.
Q. This makes the War in Heaven sound more like the Allies against the Nazis than
the forces of good against the forces of evil.
A. It’s all just politics. Both sides are working in their own interests. The important
thing is that the self-interest of the Invisible College and of living people is the same.
We acknowledge that we are part of the same human race as you. The Theocrats are
trying to become literally superhuman.
Q. Are you implying, then, that the time-honored goal of so many occultists – that of
becoming or merging with a god-like being – is evil? That trying to do this turns
people into Theocratic spirits who literally eat souls?
A. This question doesn’t have a yes-or-no answer, and before we can answer it all,
we’ll have to give you a lot more background information. The question isn’t really a
matter of morality so much as one of dealing realistically with natural law. For
example, it is a serious violation of natural law for a disembodied astral soul to take on
large amounts of energy by draining it from another spirit, because there is no
template for determining how the energy is assimilated, as there is when the astral soul
is attached to a body. In the latter case, the somatic soul acts as such a template. - 75 -
When the somatic soul transmits energy through the silver cord to nourish the astral
soul, the pulses of energy are arranged in patterns that keep the growth of astral tissues
in proper balance.
By contrast, when Theocrats absorb energy from other spirits, there is no such
template, so the growth-pattern is random and may put the functioning of the astral
soul out of balance. Because imbalances in the astral nervous system can cause
irrational thinking and behavior, most of the Theocrats are insane. And the bigger and
older they are, very often the crazier they are. Many Theocrats do irrational and self-
destructive things, and most of them eventually become so insane that other Theocrats
destroy them.
Q. This means the Theocrats aren’t really immortal?
A. Most of them aren’t. They have the potential to be, but only by properly
controlling the energies they assimilate, and few of them have the knowledge to do
this. There are some very large, old, and stable Theocrats on the astral plane who do
seem to have this knowledge, but they don’t cause much trouble. They feed
themselves by stealing spirits from other Theocrats and don’t work directly with living
people, so we don’t worry about them much. It’s the younger Theocrats that cause the
most trouble, both for the Invisible College and for living people.
Q. Why do the Theocrats maintain bands of spirit followers, and what are these
bands like?
A. The Theocrats enslave other spirits to provide psychic energy, as slaves or
employees on Earth provide physical labor. Individual Theocratic bands can contain
from a couple of dozen spirits to several thousand, with the average in the low
hundreds. The paintings and poems that describe a Heaven containing millions of
souls are inaccurate. The daily activities of a Fundamentalist Theocratic band
organized as Heaven are similar to a church service as such sects hold them on Earth,
except that they go on perpetually. The Theocrat in charge poses as the Lord God
Jehovah, and subordinate Theocrats pose as Christ, various Angels and Apostles, and
so forth. God quotes the same Biblical passages and preaches the same sermons as
preachers in the same sect do on Earth, and the congregation joins in singing the same
hymns.
Dead Fundamentalists in Heaven find out they even still have to confess their sins and
receive divine forgiveness, because they are still capable of thinking “rebellious and
impure thoughts.” Of course, since they are in constant, direct telepathic contact with
their God, the process is simple and automatic. Christians in Heaven are kept in a
perpetual state of religious ecstasy, which activates their psychic powers under the
control of their God. The Theocratic leaders of the band then channel this collective
psychic energy to perform whatever functions they consider necessary.
Most of the activities have to do with the survival of the band, and especially of the
Theocratic dictator posing as God. The band recruits new members from among the
recently deceased, steals souls from other bands, fights to keep spirits like us from
liberating members of the band, and so on.
Q. I still don’t have a clear picture of how the Theocratic bands on the astral plane
relate to living people.
A. Each Theocratic band has to have a working relationship with a group of living
people, often a religious congregation. Occult and political groups are also used; and - 76 -
now more and more Theocratic bands are controlling groups of people whose common
interest is popular music, sports, or something else centered around the electronic
media. Traditionally, the majority of Theocrats hung around places of worship, but
now you can find them almost any place that crowds gather.
Q. Please clarify this. You talk about spirits being on the astral plane as if it’s a
place, but you also say, “hang around places of worship.” Just where is the astral
plane? Is it on Earth, in another dimension, or what?
A. The astral plane is a condition, not a place. A spirit, meaning an astral soul, on the
astral plane is in the condition of not being bound to physical matter through the silver
cord. The Earth plane is the surface of the planet Earth as you perceive it with your
physical senses. The astral plane is that same place as we perceive it with our psychic
senses. We and the Theocrats and all spirits live on the sane world you do. Spirits are
present around you all the time, and if you enter the correct state of consciousness to
put your psychic senses under conscious control, you can perceive them directly.
Q. This makes more sense than anything else I’ve ever heard about the astral plane.
However, you and practically every other disembodied spirit I’ve communicated with
telepathically or seen quoted in the literature still use the term “astral plane” as if it
were a place. You make statements like “When the soul separates from the body and
arrives on the astral plane…” Why do you do this?
A. It’s just a verbal convention, but we continue to use it to keep our communications
with living people consistent with those of other spirits. You do the sane thing when
you use illogical idioms and other grammatical structures simply to conform to
common usage.
Q. You’re right. To get back to the Theocrats, then, every religious congregation has
its own individual god?
A. Yes, though there are also hierarchies of Theocrats on the astral plane that work
very much like political hierarchies on Earth.
Q. Does this mean that each Christian congregation has a Theocrat who claims to be
an Angel or a Saint or something in charge of it, with some Theocrat equivalent of the
Pope out there somewhere claiming to be the Lord God Jehovah Himself?
A. This is roughly correct, but the reality isn’t this simple. There are many such
Jehovahs, thousands of them. The Theocrats who communicate telepathically to
individual Christians when they pray also call themselves God or Christ or the Holy
Spirit because that’s what the believers expect, but they also claim to be angels or
saints or devils when that seems appropriate.
Q. How are the Christian Theocrats organized – according to sect, or geographically,
or what?
A. Both. The structure is very complex and constantly changing as Theocrats fight
among themselves. The intellectual content of Christian dogma among the living
believers is a factor in this, as is the personality-structure of use religious mind control
to program the minds of living believers, and the way they are organized as a political
structure on the astral plane. However, the structure of the Theocratic bands on the
astral plane is even more important.
There are many different kinds of spirits that you could lump under the rough heading
of Theocrats. High-level Theocrats are rulers who claim to be gods or important
servants of gods, angels and the like, and these all have bands of subordinates or - 77 -
servants working under them. They control these subordinate spirits by direct psychic
means, something like hypnotism, or by persuasion or intimidation.
Q. This sounds very much like certain kinds of political structure on Earth, both in
governments and in churches. I take it the Theocrats within each band have an
ascending power structure, with a sort of “dictator playing god” at the top, and other
classes of Theocrats under them with different degrees of power and privilege. And
the lowest class at the bottom is like cattle, eaten by the rest. Correct?
A. It is a very complicated structure, and it varies a great deal from band to band.
For instance, there are dead Christians who think they are in Heaven, sitting around
the throne of Jehovah “eternally singing his praises,” when they’re really just his
slaves and possibly his dinner as well. Now you understand the real significance of
“Holy Communion.” As practiced in Heaven, there’s nothing more unholy.
Q. I have always been revolted by the symbolic cannibalism in the Eucharist ritual,
and I’ve heard a lot of other people say the same thing. There’s a terrible irony to the
Christians eating the body of their god during life, and then having the process
reversed after death. Only it’s not funny, because in Heaven, the cannibalism is no
longer symbolic. It’s real.
A. Yes. And it’s not just the high-level Theocrats who participate. All members of a
Theocratic band are offered the Host, who is a rebellious or degenerating member.
Not all souls who enter Heaven can survive even through the obscene practice of
feeding on other spirits. Many souls simply aren’t developed sufficiently to survive
very long even when nurtured within a Theocratic band, though they would survive if
they reincarnated.
Q. Are there also Theocratic bands organized into a version of the Christian Hell,
with the boss Theocrat claiming to be Satan and various subordinates claiming to be
demons?
A. Yes. Some people who deliberately become Satanists on Earth hold positions of
power in “Hell” after they die, and the lower classes are composed of Christians who
believed the basic mythology but had too little self-confidence to believe themselves
“saved.” One major irony about Christian Hells is that individual believers usually
don’t have much power over whether they go to Heaven or Hell. That is determined
more by which particular band of Theocrats gets to them as they’re in the process of
dying. All except the most devout believers have enough self-doubts about the
strength of their faith and the certainty of their salvation that Satanist Theocrats can
get control of them as they’re dying and lead them off to Hell.
However, a Theocratic band organized as Heaven is more stable and easier to control
than one organized as Hell, so Heavens are more common. There is no other
significant difference between the two anyway: they are both just political institutions
run to serve the interests of the Theocrats. The Moslem, Hindu, and Buddhist
mythologies also describe a variety of afterlife states resembling the Christian Heaven
or Hell; they too are Theocratic institutions designed to imprison the souls of believers
after death.
As fanatical belief in organized religion declines in the modern era, the Theocrats have
even devised ways to persuade atheists and agnostics to join Theocratic bands after
death. The most common is simply to invite them to join what appears to be a - 78 -
community of spirits that includes some of their previously deceased relatives or
friends, or some famous person they greatly admire.
Q. Does this mean there’s a “Rock’n’Roll Heaven” presided over by Theocrats who
claim to be the shades of Elvis Presley, Jimi Hendrix, Janis Joplin, Jim Morrison, etc.?
A. There isn’t just one, but many of them, and the number grows every year. There
are also “Heavens” whose “gods” claim to be politicians, movie stars, writers, and
scientists, or even fictional characters. However, we’d like to delay a detailed
discussion of this until later. It’s easier to describe the nature of Theocracy using the
religious infrastructure that’s been traditional through most of human history. Once
we’ve done that, we will describe how the Theocrats have changed their methods
because of modern technology and other factors, and what they intend to do in the
future.
For now, we will continue describing the traditional political structure of the
Theocratic bands on the astral plane, especially those organized to resemble the
Christian Heaven. Most of the lower-level spirits in these bands have no idea of
what’s actually going on, but genuinely believe that the afterlife is exactly what their
earthly faith taught them it would be.
Q. People who have had point-of-death experiences have often reported being met by
Jesus, angels, or other religious figures who invited them into Heaven; but meeting
spirits who claim to be previously deceased relatives or friends is even more common.
Is this part of the recruiting process?
A. Yes. Point-of-death experiences represent a major mistake by the Theocrats:
trying to recruit people who are close to death but not really dying. The silver cord is
stretched out very long but not broken, and the mind is in a state of consciousness very
similar to that occurring during the actual death process. The Theocrats perceive this
and try to recruit the person into their band, but nothing happens because the silver
cord is still intact, and disembodied spirits lack the psychic power to break it.
Eventually, the person returns to normal consciousness and remembers a point-of-
death experience.
We call this a major mistake by the Theocrats because many point-of-death
experiences reveal information about the afterlife that the Theocrats would like to
conceal. Sometimes, members of the Invisible College show up during the encounter
and warn the person that the Theocrats are impostors who enslave and destroy souls.
Only a few remember this warning consciously and talk about it afterwards, but many
more are affected by it enough to become hostile to the Theocratic aspects of religion.
Q. I remember reading passages in accounts of point-of-death experiences that
support both of your statements. Especially, many people who have had such
experiences tend to avoid church attendance and involvement with any sort of
traditional religious dogma from then on. I’ve always been somewhat mystified by
this, because it would seem logical for such an experience to strengthen faith in
religion, not weaken it.
A. The greatest enemy of Theocracy is the truth. The more that people find out about
the true nature of the afterlife and other aspects of spiritual reality, the harder it is for
the Theocrats to delude and enslave them. This is why so many Theocratic religious
sects forbid deliberate mediumistic contact with the spirit world. But point-of-death - 79 -
experiences are accidents, and there isn’t much that the Theocrats can do to prevent
them.
Q. When people see the spirits of dead relatives waiting to greet then during point-of-
death experiences, are these fakes like the Theocrats pretending to be Jesus, or are the
other spirits really their relatives?
A. Quite often, they really are. Theocratic bands often contain many members of one
family. There are several reasons for this. Frequently, whole families belong to the
same church congregation and are recruited, after death, into the Theocratic band that
controls it. Even if not, ties of family affection are also used to recruit spirits after
death. One of the most important activities of every Theocratic band is obtaining new
members to replace the souls the band devours.
Maintaining a relationship with an organized group of living people also allows the
Theocrats to maintain a social and political system here on Earth working in their
interest. Theocratic bands maintain their relationships with the living by using
religious mind control, which should be described in a separate chapter. Let us end
this chapter by pointing out that every single one of the ideas at the core of traditional
deistic doctrine is a lie.
“Only God (under various specific names in different sects) is good: people are
basically evil and are incapable of improving themselves morally by their own
efforts.” This is a lie.
“Only God is naturally immortal, but people can gain immortality by doing proper
service for the Deity.” This is a lie.
“Human beings can receive forgiveness for their sins, and divine strength to prop up
their various weaknesses, by ‘Letting God into their hearts’ i.e., by creating a powerful
psychic bond between themselves and the deity.” This is also a lie.
Q. From what I’ve learned so far, the biggest lie of all is that the “gods” worshiped
by organized religions are “archetypes of virtue.” We humans are bad enough, but the
Theocrats are obviously many times worse than the worst of us. And it’s not Satan
who’s the real “Father of Lies.” It’s God.
A. Exactly. However, the important thing to realize about this whole body of lies is
that it makes people weaker and more evil than they already are, and increases their
dependency on the Theocrats, as we shall describe next.
- 80 -
Chapter 12: Religious Mind Control
Q. Exactly how does religious mind control work?
A. It involves what modern psychologists call “operant conditioning”: altering
behavior and mental programming by positive and negative reinforcement on the
physical and sensory level. The Theocrats strengthen this conditioning on the physical
level by transmitting ideas and emotions directly into people’s subconscious minds by
telepathy. Religious mind-control techniques are easier to understand if you realize
that the Theocrats use people’s own psychic powers to control other members of the
congregation.
Q. I’ve attended enough religious services of many different kinds to know that they
frequently put believers into an altered state of consciousness and that they often
generate quite a bit of psychic power. Is this what you’re talking about?
A. The key to the whole religious mind-control technique is putting people into a
state of consciousness best called the “religious trance.” It is essentially a mild
hypnotic trance in which the conscious will is awake but passive, as opposed to deep
trances, in which it is completely inactive. People in a religious trance are completely
aware of what is going on around them, and are recording these events in their
memories exactly as they would in a normal waking state. They are also capable of
thinking and acting voluntarily, but can only do so within certain very definite limits
without breaking out of the religious trance and assuming normal consciousness.
Q. How do people enter the religious trance?
A. People fall into a state very similar to the religious trance when they read, listen to
music, watch television or a movie, listen intently to a lecture or radio broadcast, etc.
The passive state that the will assumes during these activities is often called
identification with the sensory intake, as in “reader identification” or “audience
identification.” Identifying with what is being read, seen, or heard, actually means
accepting the sensory intake uncreatively and uncritically on both the intellectual and
emotional levels. It also means agreeing with the ideas being presented and feeling
the same emotions being described in the song, story, play, etc.
Q. It’s fairly common to describe someone who’s concentrating intently on reading,
listening to music, or watching television, as “hypnotized.” You’re saying that this is
literally true?
A. Yes, but remember, it’s a rather light trance. If the material being presented begins
to contradict the person’s existing opinions or knowledge, identification breaks down.
He or she assumes full normal consciousness and thinks, “I don’t agree with this,” or
“I don’t understand this,” or “This is wrong.” However, identification with sensory
input can make people accept things they would reject if they were fully conscious, as
long as the input isn’t controversial or unfamiliar enough to break their concentration.
Identification with sensory input is just the first step in entering the religious trance
state. Once the conscious will becomes passive, the flow of character, assuming a
level closer to that during sleep than that during normal wakefulness. In a person fully - 81 -
trained to enter the religious trance, electrical activity in the physical nervous system
becomes stable at exactly the right level to allow an equal flow of energy into and out
of the astral soul. This allows the astral will to awaken partially, and creates a direct,
two-way link between the physical mind and the astral mind.
As long as the religious trance lasts, information can pass reasonably freely between
the physical mind and the astral mind and vice versa. Also, the physical mind can
receive impressions from the psychic senses of the astral soul more or less directly.
Q. How does this compare to the trance state I’m in to receive this communication?
Is it the same?
A. No. You are in a “psychic trance,” which is not the same as a “religious trance.”
It’s a much less passive state of consciousness, and involves much larger flows of
energy into and out of the astral soul. The psychic trance is controlled by both the
physical will and the astral will acting in concert. The religious trance is controlled by
outside sensory input into both the physical and astral minds. The psychic trance is an
active state of consciousness that leaves you free to ask questions and make comments
using your full creative powers. The religious trance is a passive state used to control
and brainwash people.
The purpose of a psychic trance is for an individual to take conscious control of
his/her psychic powers and use them to receive messages by telepathy or perform
some other psychic working. What happens during the religious trance is not quite the
same. Once people are completely in the religious trance, they are able to receive
telepathic messages from everyone around them and from any disembodied spirits
present; but the process is not nearly as conscious as what you’re doing right now in a
psychic trance.
When religious believers say they “feel the presence of God” at church services,
they are referring to telepathic communication without even realizing it. Since the
individual will is passive during the religious trance, the members of a religious
congregation cannot use their psychic powers deliberately, under conscious control, as
people in a psychic trance do. They simply identify with what is sent to them, both
intellectually and emotionally. Most of the telepathic intake received by an individual
at a religious service comes from other members of the congregation; this is usually a
more powerful influence than anything sent by spirits.
The actual religious mind-control process, the technique that provides telepathic
emotional reinforcement to help program people’s minds, is a sort of “psychic chain-
reaction” that occurs while a group of people are in the religious trance together. In
other words, the telepathic messages sent out by every member of the congregation
influence the emotions and thinking of every other member, like a box of matches
catching fire or an atomic chain reaction.
This process creates a “religious group mind”: the telepathic transmissions of
the entire congregation mutually reinforce one another until everyone present is
thinking and feeling the same thing very, very strongly. People in such a state can feel
extremely strong emotions, as strong as those that accompany the most powerful
physical sensations such as sexual orgasm or extreme pain. But this is done without
much sensory stimulation – usually just preaching, hymn singing, or praying –
because the reinforcement is coming from the psychic chain-reaction. - 82 -
Q. I’ve heard this described as “religious ecstasy,” but thought it was caused mostly
by the sensory stimulation of the ritual itself combined with people’s own desires to be
deeply moved emotionally. I knew that psychic activity often occurred
simultaneously, but never realized it was the key motivating factor for the whole thing.
A. The most important thing about this state of group religious ecstasy is that it
generates large amounts of psychic energy. Part of that energy may be directly
absorbed by any Theocratic spirits present, but most of it is diverted back into the
physical minds of the members of the congregation to indoctrinate them with whatever
the Theocrats want them to believe or feel or do. This is the essence of religious mind
control.
In other words, a Theocratic spirit sends a telepathic message into the minds of people
in such a state of religious ecstasy, and they generate powerful surges of telepathically
transmitted emotion that program them to believe and act on the messages they
receive. For example, the idea “Abortion is murder” might generate powerful feelings
of hate, whereas “All Christians shall be as brethren” might generate feelings of
familial love among all the members of the congregation.
Within certain limitations, this is an extremely powerful method for controlling
people’s motivations and future behavior. One of its worst features is that the people
being controlled enjoy it more than anything else in life. You might call it the ultimate
“high.” And it’s more addictive than any chemical drug.
Q. This means that the Jesus Freaks in the Sixties were speaking quite literally when
they talked about “getting high on Jesus.” At first thought, it is rather ironic that the
Fundamentalists, who say they hate recreational drugs so much, are literally “Jesus
junkies.” But once the thought sinks in, it’s really tragic, like everything else I’ve
heard so far about Theocracy.
A. Yes. And the Theocrats deliberately make the religious mind-control process as
addictive as possible to enslave believers. The whole vicious circle of sin, guilt, and
forgiveness was deliberately designed to create a cycle of addiction that is almost
impossible to break.
Q. The religious mind-control process resembles some of the direct electronic mind
control described in anti-utopian fiction. George 0rwell exaggerated when he thought
the state described in his novel 1984 would arise out of modern Democracy and
Socialism, but he missed something much more important. His totalitarian state with
its mind-control has always existed. It’s as close as your local Fundamentalist church.
A. That’s one of the most important things we’re trying to tell you. People have
always been “property” and “cattle” just as Charles Fort speculated, but it’s not on the
physical level. What has been enslaved is the mind during life and the soul after
death.
Q. This is what Lovecraft was really hinting at in his Cthulhu mythos, isn’t it? And
it also explains Shaver’s Deros and hundreds of other references in fiction and serious
speculation.
A. Very few of the people who wrote these references knew much about Theocracy
as we’re describing it here. All that really happened is that we were able to transmit a - 83 -
few words or some visual images to them telepathically. Sometimes these were
received in conscious “flashes” of vision or inspiration; but more often they sank
directly into the subconscious, and were later called up and considered original
creations of the imagination.
Q. One example that comes to mind is the material about the Devil eating souls in
The Screwtape Letters by C.S. Lewis. He must have picked up a glimpse of the truth
about Theocracy, but he was so deeply brainwashed that it didn’t liberate him. His
conscious intellect just twisted the information around to support his Christian belief
system.
Let’s get back to the cycle of sin and forgiveness. I consider this one of the weakest
points of Christian doctrine, because it seems to grant forgiveness without doing
anything concrete to punish “sin.” Even the token penance of saying prayers, etc., that
Catholic priests hand out during confession doesn’t seem like a realistic form of
negative reinforcement to extinguish unwanted behavior patterns.
A. This is quite true. The last thing the Theocrats want is for religious believers to
stop sinning. That is why they made sexual pleasure a sin, and why Christianity and
most other organized religions teach the obvious fallacy that women are inferior to
men.
Q. In other words, when the Theocrats made up religious doctrine, they included
deliberate lies in it so that people would never be able to be completely virtuous.
A. No. It’s worse than that. Fallible human beings can never be completely virtuous
in the sense of being able to obey the absolute letter of any rigid ethical code.
However, falling short of perfection in obeying most ethical codes provides
reinforcement for modifying behavior in positive ways: the more people are punished
for disobedience or rewarded for obedience, the closer their average behavior gets to
the code. The “better” they behave, the more positive reinforcement and less negative
reinforcement they get. Even though they never reach perfection, they tend to feel the
code is constructive because progress is rewarded and retrogression is punished.
Q. This is easy enough to understand, but how does it apply to a moral code that says
sex is sinful?
A. That’s the point we’re trying to make. This kind of logic doesn’t apply to such a
code. Sexual desire originates on the biochemical level and cannot be extinguished by
manipulating the programming of the mind. People can be conditioned to hate and
fear their sexual feelings and to avoid sexual behavior, but this doesn’t stop the
feelings themselves. They don’t originate in the mind, so they can’t be gotten rid of
no matter how the mind is reprogrammed.
In this context, we are defining “mind” as “The information stored in the brain, plus
the software for retrieving and processing that information.” Do you now understand
the full magnitude of the problem that a completely false item of religious doctrine
causes people? It’s an inherently frustrating situation. The subjugation of women
makes life much less pleasant for both genders. It turns women into slaves, forever
unable to live full lives. And it does just as much harm to men when it turns them into
oppressors and exploiters. - 84 -
This creates a no-win situation, because Fundamentalists still receive negative
reinforcement even if they obey their moral code perfectly. For example, trying to
live up to Christian ideals of chastity is always going to create guilt feelings and
internal conflict, because believing that sexual feelings are wrong does not extinguish
them, even though it might repress or sublimate them. And living within a sexist
family structure always creates interpersonal conflicts.
Q. I see now why you say this process is similar to drug addiction. The
Fundamentalist moral code contains elements that can’t help making people feel
frustrated or guilty, which creates an artificial need for “divine forgiveness of sins.”
A. There’s a significant difference between a humanistic ethical code and the moral
codes of Theocratic religion. The former are designed to meet people’s needs, the
latter to meet the Theocrats’ needs. Even though most humanistic ethical codes are
too idealistic to follow rigidly, “human nature” itself regulates reinforcement in
response to them in ways that prevent excessive guilt and frustration.
In other words, committing murder or assault is severely punished, cursing and
screaming at people less so, but the social environment of most societies does not
punish people for merely feeling anger but not expressing it in word or deed.
However, the negative emotions themselves are a form of negative reinforcement.
Notice that this process is self-limiting: serious offenses receive severe punishment,
whereas minor ones receive light punishment. This is not true of violations of
religious morality based on absolutes.
You and your readers should also be constantly aware that the Theocrats do not
confine their activities to religion and occultism, but corrupt and control human beings
through all activities that produce certain states of altered consciousness. For
example, when people use the electronic media for passive recreational purposes –
listening to popular music over the radio or on recordings, watching televised sports
events and game shows, and playing the simpler computer games – they often enter a
trance state that renders them vulnerable to telepathic mind-control by Theocratic
spirits. We will discuss this electronic mind control in a later chapter; we must first
give more background information about the nature of spiritual beings and psychic
powers in general. - 85 -
Chapter 13: Soul, Mind, and Consciousness
Q. Even though you’ve explained how the Theocrats indoctrinate people who attend
religious services by conditioning them with a mixture of sensory and telepathic
reinforcement, I still find it hard to understand this in terms of what I know about
psychology. For example, how can the whole human race be so brainwashed that they
don’t even speculate consciously about certain aspects of spiritual reality? The idea
that evil spirits might pose as gods and exploit people through organized religion is an
obvious one, yet almost no one ever talks or writes about it. The whole subject is
literally “unthinkable.”
Also, if religious mind control puts people into conflict with their own human nature,
as happens when they are taught that sexual feelings are morally wrong, why doesn’t
this negative reinforcement cancel out the positive reinforcement of religious ecstasy?
And even more important, most Americans right now aren’t Fundamentalists. The
majority don’t even go to churches regularly at all; and many of those who do, go to
liberal churches that don’t practice religious mind control as you describe it. Since
this is so, why aren’t all the facts about Theocracy and religious mind control common
knowledge?
A. The answer to all these questions is the same: the Theocrats simply know a lot
more about psychology than people do. An electronic computer analogy applies here.
People on Earth right now are like the users of a computer system: they can in-put and
retrieve data, and they can run the existing programs to process the data in set ways.
Many of them have enough programming skills to modify some of the programs
slightly, but they don’t understand the basic design of the software very well. On the
other hand, the Theocrats not only understand the software far more completely, but
also have much easier access to the special “command mode” used to modify it. This
command mode is the telepathic chain-reaction used in religious mind control.
Of course trained human psychics also have access to it, and so do spirits in the
Invisible College; but it is still extremely difficult to free people from Theocratic
control. The mind of the average person on Earth right now is run by software
designed by the Theocrats to keep people from consciously finding out they exist.
And there’s no use just telling people the truth: they simply can’t understand or
believe it, because the mental programs they use for understanding and believing
things were designed by the Theocrats.
Q. Almost all religious and occult literature, and the majority of modern speculative
writing that comes close to discussing Theocracy, assume that “gods,” “demons,” etc.,
have the power to kill humans who discover “forbidden knowledge,” or at the very
least, to over-ride the conscious will and keep humans from remembering such things
or pursuing such lines of enquiry further. What are the facts on this? Especially, are
the Theocrats aware of telepathic conversations like this one, and what can they do
about it?
A. Obviously, the Theocrats don’t have the psychic power to kill people or
analyze their conscious minds, or you wouldn’t have survived to write this. They
operate through the subconscious, and they keep people from finding out about them - 86 -
by making it difficult to understand certain kinds of spiritual information or draw
rational conclusions from it.
An explanation of how they do this is quite complex. Like the answers to your first
set of questions, it depends on a more complete knowledge of the nature of the mind
and the soul than you now have, and this is going to be difficult to explain. Keep in
mind, throughout what follows, that much of the terminology from psychology and
computer science is going to be misused. We have to use the words in your
vocabulary that are closest to the meanings we need to convey, but they aren’t always
too close.
The first thing we need to clarify is the comparison between the human brain and a
computer, and between the mind and the software and data in a computer. The only
similarity between the human brain and present electronic computers on Earth is that
both store and process data. The methods for doing so are quite different. This is
where most of the books about biocomputers and psychocybernetics go wrong. They
take the analogy between the brain and the computer, and between the mind and
computer software, much too literally.
The best example is that the electronic computer deals in absolute or “hard” values,
whereas the brain deals in comparative or “soft” values. If you create a new file in a
computer and enter data into it, the information stays there exactly as entered, and you
can retrieve it in its complete original form just by entering the correct access code. If
you want to delete something, you can “kill” it instantly and completely by using the
correct commands. Everything you know about the human memory and learning
process makes it obvious the human mind doesn’t work this way.
Memory storage and retrieval in the human mind is a cumulative rather than an
absolute process. If a person’s senses receive a particular set of data only once, fewer
of the individual details are recorded in memory than if it is received repeatedly. Also,
information may be automatically forgotten if not periodically retrieved, a
phenomenon that behaviorists call extinction. These two processes are almost
impossible to analyze using a computer analogy.
The electronic computer is an artificial construction, designed to do exactly what the
human operator tells it to do. It’s also basically binary: a circuit is either open or
closed, giving a series of “yes” and “no” answers. Computer software is designed
exactly the same way, to match the hardware. The internal data-processing functions
of the computer can be very complex, but this complexity is always built up out of
these simple binary building blocks. Neither the brain nor the mind works this way.
Q. Doesn’t the biological principle of “irritability” put a binary base under the
behavior of living organisms? For example, some microorganisms show positive or
negative phototropism: they approach a source of light, or they move away from it.
A. This analogy doesn’t hold up very well, because even microorganisms often show
much more complex behavior than this. Biological behavior is based not on simple
“yes” and “no,” but on increasing or decreasing orders of probability that an organism
will respond in a given way to a given stimulus. The probability that an organism will
show a given response is determined by the quantity and quality of reinforcement it
receives for performing that response. The behavior of the computer is based on
“either A or B.” The behavior of the biological organism is based on “degrees of A or - 87 -
B” with the quantitative values of the probabilities being determined by environmental
reinforcement of many different kinds.
The computer model of the mind is still useful, though, because it’s the only way even
to begin to discuss the subject in the English language right now, poorly as the
available terminology fits the realities. For example, it is much easier to understand
the concept of the “subconscious” if you think of the mind as the total data and
programs stored in an electronic computer, with many different kinds of files, each
kind having different access codes.
In other words, what people call “normal consciousness” is like a computer
menu, which gives access to certain files and allows them to perform certain
operations. Various “altered” states of consciousness give access to entirely different
menus. Since the Theocrats have some degree of direct access to the “control mode”
for modifying these programs in both the physical and astral mind, they have
redesigned many of them to serve their selfish purposes for exploiting human beings
both on Earth and after death.
Q. Do they get this direct access during the religious mind-control process, and if so,
why aren’t people who don’t attend religious services immune to it?
A. Religious mind control is practiced in many different places besides religious
services. The Theocrats often practice it on the crowds attending sporting events, in
gambling casinos, at political rallies, during musical concerts of many types, and in a
number of other places. Whenever many people enter an intense emotional state at the
same time and have their collective attention focused on a common objective,
Theocratic spirits can use subconscious telepathic manipulation to put them into a
religious trance and reprogram their minds with religious mind control.
The Invisible College used the rock concerts, peace demonstrations, “love-ins,” and
similar events of the Sixties for exactly the same purposes. Before that we used
meetings of fraternal organizations, a variety of progressive political meetings, and
even the circuses and carnivals that used to visit every American village and town, as
the Theocrats used, and still use, touring revival meetings. And the Invisible College
will continue to practice religious mind control to reprogram people as long as the
Theocrats do.
The important thing is to get as many of the facts as possible out into the open and let
people decide for themselves. And it’s finally beginning to happen. References to the
truth about Theocracy are beginning to appear in the writings of hundreds of different
authors. But the information is still mostly just isolated fragments, and it’s also
obvious that most of the people who write them down don’t really know what they
are, or even that they’re very important.
Even though most of the individual facts that make up the model of spiritual reality
being presented in this book are already available to the public, very few people are
capable of assembling them into a coherent theory, as you are doing here. This is
because the mental programs they use to draw conclusions from information on
spiritual subjects were deliberately designed by the Theocrats to be illogical and
irrational. - 88 -
Q. I’ve wondered about this for a long time, because empirical thinking appears to be
the natural way for the mind to operate if you assume that the functioning of the
thought-process is determined by positive and negative reinforcement.
A. Correct. As a general rule, assuming that the truth is true will bring positive
reinforcement; assuming that it is false, or that something other than the truth is true,
will bring negative reinforcement. There are exceptions to this rule, but it does
operate with reasonable consistency, enough to program people with roughly
empirical methods of thinking. This is what most people mean by “common sense”:
drawing conclusions from the available observed information, and being willing to
modify those conclusions if they are contradicted by further information when put into
practice.
Of course, this can get extremely complicated, especially when one is dealing with
other people. Since the individual usually has rather incomplete information on a
given subject, everyone makes a lot of mistakes. Also, people all tend to be
conservative in making decisions: it’s easier to keep on doing something the way
you’ve done it before than it is to change just because the circumstances indicate it
might be a good idea.
Both of these exceptions are important, but you should realize they are also self-
limiting. The more information you receive that contradicts your present conclusion,
the more likely you are to change it. Also, your basic conservatism or inertia about
changing opinions tends to give way when circumstances put enough pressure on you.
When you start receiving significant negative reinforcement for behaving in a given
way, it gradually becomes obvious that you should find an alternative.
This is the way the mind operates in decision-making most of the time, especially in
dealing with the physical world. But this kind of natural empirical reasoning is used
much less often than one might expect in dealing with other people, and hardly at all
in dealing with psychic and spiritual matters. The Theocrats are responsible for this.
The key to Theocratic power is the nature of what the behaviorists call reinforcement.
As materialists, they think of it as something concrete; but it also has a subjective
component, and the Theocrats are able to make use of this fact to manipulate the kind
of reinforcement that people receive in response to their behavior.
Q. By “a subjective component in reinforcement,” do you mean that a concept like
“pain” or “pleasure” is subjective in the sense of being subject to interpretation by the
person receiving the sensory impulses?
A. No. That part of it is objective: the neural impulses we call pain are not the same
as the ones we call pleasure; they have different electrical characteristics and travel
over different circuits within the nervous system.
Q. Yes, that’s verified by what I know of scientific conclusions on the subject.
Where, then, is the “subjective component”?
A. The best name for it in English is “the emotional reaction to sensory stimulus.”
As sensory stimuli are received by the mind of a person in a normal state of
consciousness, they cause the retrieval of ideas and emotions from memory. This
component is subjective because it comes out of memory storage rather than from the - 89 -
outside environment, and in many cases it has more effect on decision-making than
the sensory input alone.
Let’s try a specific example. Suppose a racially prejudiced white man takes a job
where many of his co-workers are blacks. Initially, he tends to interpret everything
they say and do in ways that reinforce his existing prejudice: if they are confident and
assertive, they are acting “above their station in life.” If they’re friendly, they’re being
presumptuous and impertinent. If they sense his prejudice and keep their distance
from him or act hostile, this is proof that people of different races are not meant to
work together. And so on. His experience should be teaching him that, on the
average, black people are no different from white people; but his own subjective
reactions to sensory intake tend to prevent him from learning.
Q. The behaviorist literature describes these kinds of reactions, of course, because
they are very common, but the psychologists don’t even speculate that a deliberate
conspiracy is responsible for those elements of human behavior that are irrational or
self-destructive. Instead, they take a Darwinian approach. For example, in the case
cited above, they’d say that the prejudiced man learned his prejudice in an
environment where he had little personal contact with black people: he received
positive reinforcement from the prejudiced whites around him for showing negative
emotional reactions when blacks were mentioned, so he became prejudiced. When he
enters an environment where he comes in contact with black people, these prejudices
continue to function until they are extinguished. This is a process very similar to
random mutation and natural selection.
A. This process does account for a lot of human behavior. However, mental
programming from Theocratic spirits has to be added into this equation. The
Theocrats don’t want people to learn from experience or adjust to new situations in
their environment, so they encourage emotionalism over rationality. When people
make decisions rationally, they are harder for the Theocrats to control.
Religious mind control is a delicate process, because the religious trance is a rather
shallow one. If people in a religious trance perform rituals that are unfamiliar, or hear
preaching that seriously contradicts their existing beliefs, they return to a normal state
of consciousness. Effective religious mind control can be practiced during rituals only
when those rituals remain relatively stable. This is also one of the principal reasons
why Theocratic religion is socially and politically conservative or reactionary.
Q. I still don’t see how the Theocrats can program the minds of the entire human race
so thoroughly that the truth about Theocracy has never become common knowledge.
A. A few people throughout history have, in fact, learned various elements of the
truth about Theocracy and written them down in religious and occult literature.
However, these elements were always fragmentary; and more important, neither the
people who found them nor the rest of the human race were capable of fully
understanding them. Especially, no one was able to design experiments to discover
further elements of this knowledge and work towards a unified theory to explain the
whole thing.
Q. Why should the entire human race find it so hard to make the same breakthrough
that I’m making, which enables me to discover and accept this kind of information? I - 90 -
understand, at least partially, how religious mind control works on believers, but why
should the minds of everyone else be similarly affected?
A. This comes back to the basic behaviorist theory that human personality is
conditioned into people by their physical environment – this includes the mental
programs that they use to evaluate data and decide what is true and what is false.
Even if you leave direct telepathic programming during religious mind control out of
the picture, people still receive their programming from both their physical and social
environments. Programming from the physical environment usually favors empirical
thinking, but that from the social environment favors acceptance of doctrine on faith.
A large part of the customs and beliefs and instinctive emotional reactions that make
up this social environment were created by Theocratic religion. The further back you
go into human history, the greater the percentage of people who were devout believers
in Theocratic religion and were subjected to religious mind control to a significant
degree throughout their lives.
Q. This definitely appears to be true when we look at Western history over the last
thousand years, but I can see gaps further back. For example, it doesn’t seem as if
either the Romans or the Greeks were very devout during important periods of their
civilizations.
A. On the contrary -- the vast majority of the population in both civilizations were
devout believers in Pagan religions that practiced effective religious mind control.
However, there were periodic weakenings of religious belief among certain segments
of the population, which allowed important occult, philosophical, political, and
scientific works to be written, works based on some degree of empirical thinking.
Remember, the Greek and Roman philosophers were just a tiny elitist group of
intellectuals. The majority viewpoint then was not that of Socrates, but that of the
people who condemned him to death.
The hold of Theocratic religion on most of Earth’s living population did not begin to
weaken until the Modern Era, from about the 1300’s down to the present. And even
today, the greater part of the population is still subject to religious mind control.
Modern civilization does program people with personality structures that resist
religious mind control, but the Theocrats have been able to counter our efforts along
these lines by resorting to electronic mind control.
Q. My research into secret societies and the forces manipulating human civilization
has given me the impression that the Invisible College also makes use of both
religious and electronic mind control.
A. This is true. We discuss electronic mind control in more detail in the next chapter.
- 91 -
Chapter 14: Electronic Mind Control
A. Electronic mind control works on two different levels, just as religious mind
control does. We described in some detail in Chapter Twelve how religious services
put people into an altered state of consciousness similar to a light hypnotic trance, and
how the thinking and behavior of people in such a religious trance can be influenced
by what they experience through the physical senses during the service. In other
words, they often learn to believe and act on the preacher’s words as people, learn to
react to post-hypnotic suggestions during regular hypnosis.
Electronic mind control does exactly the same thing, and often to an even greater
degree. It is also even more addictive than religious mind control. Like religious
mind control, electronic mind control works on two different levels, one physical and
one psychic. We will next discuss the physical level, which can be directly observed
with the physical senses and analyzed with the conscious intellect. There are many,
many books in existence that describe this process, including detailed instructions for
spotting subliminals by analyzing movies or TV shows in extreme slow-motion, along
with explanations by psychologists for determining what specific effects the
subliminal messages will have on the viewer. Similar information has also been
published describing how sensory mind-control is performed through popular music,
radio talk shows, and other auditory media, though this subject has not been treated as
extensively as mind-control through the visual media.
Electronic or media mind-control has a psychic component just as religious mind
control does, but this employs completely different mechanisms, and your readers
should be careful not to get confused reading the two sets of technical details in one
book. They don’t contradict one another, but they might seem to if not completely
understood.
Everything we said in Chapter Twelve about religious mind-control is based on the
postulate that psychic phenomena are broadcast-propagation phenomena like light or
radio waves, and that they obey the inverse-square law. In other words, the strength of
a telepathic signal varies inversely with the square of the distance between transmitter
and receiver, so psychic workings function most efficiently when the people or spirits
involved are spatially close to one another. This is one reason why we continually
stress the fact that the astral plane is a condition, not a place, and that spirits are
present in the same space that living people occupy.
However, there is a second, non-broadcast system for transmitting and receiving
psychic energies between human souls, which we haven’t mentioned yet. Do you
remember the old Greek Myth about the ”Threads of Destiny” woven by the
goddesses called the Fates? These threads actually exist, but they aren’t woven by
superhuman beings. They are “transmission lines” of astral matter that connect one
soul to another, and they allow telepathic communications over greater distances and
with greater power than can be accomplished by ordinary “broadcast” telepathy.
These threads are created spontaneously when astral souls come into contact with one
another while generating large amounts of psychic energy. Whenever the astral mind
is in the correct state of consciousness, generating these threads is just as natural and
automatic as the process that spiders use to leave a silk strand behind them when they
travel. When this additional theoretical information is added to the material about - 92 -
religious mind control in Chapter Twelve, it explains how television evangelists can
exert a direct psychic influence over their congregations from a distance.
The process has two possible starting points. First, people who regularly attend
Christian church services dominated by the Theocrats are urged to watch certain
television evangelists and to listen to designated religious radio broadcasts. Over the
years, an elaborate network of astral transmission lines has been built up to link the
religious broadcasters to the clergy of Theocratic congregations all over the country,
and through them, to the masses of ordinary members.
These psychic threads are put in place when radio and TV preachers are invited to
hold services at church conventions, or when a group of churches hosts a large local
revival meeting with a media evangelist, or someone working for one, as a guest. This
method is used primarily to link the churches to the hundreds of second-rank broadcast
evangelists with regional or local media followings. The superstar evangelists who
already have national followings reverse this procedure: they invite the ministers and
elders of selected churches all over the country to visit their studios and become part
of the in-house congregation during their broadcasts. In either case, psychic linkages
are established between the media evangelist and the local churches.
Some of the more ambitious TV evangelists have also directly linked large numbers of
ordinary members of Theocratic congregations – and hundreds of thousands of new
converts as well – into their electronic mind control networks by periodically holding
huge, live revival meetings. (They are often held in major sports stadiums, which, as
we will see in a moment, is especially appropriate.) This is also why several of the
major evangelists have started colleges, and why one TV ministry even built its own
imitation of Disneyland.
Q. Sometimes the little details are more biting than the big, mind-boggling horror
stories. Think of it: a theme park where families can get enslaved to both electronic
and religious mind-control while they take their vacation!
A. However, the media networks used by the TV evangelists are not the most
important electronic mind control networks in the United States right now. The
Theocrats have another mind control network that enslaves large numbers of people
who have little or no interest in organized religion. It’s centered on the major
spectator sports, organized gambling, and the communications media that service
both; and it controls more people than all the Fundamentalist churches and TV
evangelists combined. It doesn’t program people’s surface thinking and behavior as
thoroughly as Theocratic religion does, because there’s less verbal-intellectual content,
but it’s just as effective at programming their subconscious minds into forming
instinctive opinions favorable to the goals of the Theocrats.
People don’t have to be watching a sermon or listening to a hymn to receive
subconscious telepathic messages from the very same spirits who control
fundamentalist religion; they only have to be in the correct state of altered
consciousness (which TV and radio produces automatically in all members of the
audience who haven’t learned specific techniques for preventing it), and they have to
have the transmission lines of astral matter implanted in the right part of their soul,
linking them into the network. - 93 -
Q. In other words, the football widow’s husband absorbs just as much Theocratic
media mind-control from his weekend glued to the tube as does the Fundamentalist
who watches the same amount of religious programming?
A. Yes. Live sports events and casino gambling serve the same function in this
network as church services and revival meetings do in the electronic religious mind
control networks. Compulsive gambling, especially on sports events through an
enormous (and mostly illegal) electronic bookmaking network, plays the same part as
does the cycle of sin/guilt/forgiveness in Theocratic religion.
And the Theocrats are now actively expanding this form of mind-control. Notice that
many states have recently legalized various forms of gambling that plug people into
the networks just described: state lotteries, horse racing (including off-track betting),
bingo, card parlors, etc. It’s no accident that gambling expands on both the in-person
and media levels as the Fundamentalist churches and TV evangelism decline. The
Theocrats are shifting their attention to activities more natural to the average opinions
and lifestyles of present day Americans.
Q. Before I made the breakthrough, I always wondered why the Sixties Movement
was instinctively hostile both to organized spectator sports and to organized gambling,
while enthusiastically embracing a wide range of other “vices,” major and minor. On
the purely physical level, being a fan of organized sports is usually only a waste of
time, and gambling is only a waste of money, whereas irresponsible experimentation
with drugs, sex, and lifestyles can do much more serious harm to people.
I knew that both sports fanaticism and gambling were addictive and could sometimes
seriously harm a susceptible person, but I also knew that virtually anything could
cause a harmful addiction if a person has the right pattern of character defects.
However, I also felt very strong background “vibes” in the counterculture that said,
“Stay away from spectator sports and big-time gambling.” Now I know why.
A. Casino gambling in Nevada is one of the most important battlefields in the war
between the Theocrats and the Invisible College. Once Theocratic spirits get their
control threads on people gambling in the casinos, they continue to send telepathic
messages into the minds of these people whenever they watch certain television
programs, especially sports events and game shows. However, the Invisible College
also uses the Nevada casinos, though we’re not going to give a detailed description of
what we do there.
Q. As a magician working for the Invisible College, I go to the Nevada gambling
areas periodically to do various magical workings to support our side in this conflict.
Now, I already know I shouldn’t describe these psychic battles in detail for security
reasons, but it’s OK to point out that they occur, isn’t it?
A. Yes. It’s OK for your readers to know that the electronic mental reprogramming
networks of the Theocrats and the Invisible College have their American headquarters
in Las Vegas: the Theocrats are mostly on the Strip and we are mostly Downtown.
And you should also add some advice for people who enjoy recreational gambling.
Q. OK. If people want to gamble, we strongly recommend that they do it in private
games with friends, or at local bingo or card clubs if such are legal where they live.
These forms of gambling can still plug people into an electronic mind-control - 94 -
network, but they’re less dangerous than the Nevada casinos. Going to Reno or Vegas
or Atlantic City to gamble for fun is like going “out on the town” in Saigon during the
late Sixties. There’s a war on, and the innocent can get caught up in it as easily as the
combatants.
People who disregard this advice and go to Nevada to gamble anyway can minimize
the danger if they are careful to remain in a normal state of consciousness. This
means: don’t sample the free drinks, and above all, don’t gamble for more than an
hour at a time. If you get at all intoxicated or spaced out from fatigue, the Theocrats
can put you into the same type of trance that people go into at religious services, and
start brainwashing you. They can also make you lose more money than you intended
to risk: this now happens to the majority of people who go the Nevada casinos just to
have a good time. Electronic inter-state banking, allowing cash advances on almost
any credit card right in the casinos, is partly responsible for this; but the major reason
is simply that the War in Heaven is hotter than ever before, and both sides are
generating a lot more psychic force.
And remember too that gambling is just as addictive as alcohol or heroin. The
Theocrats love to turn people into compulsive gamblers. That suits their purposes just
as well as turning them into Jesus-addicts needing their weekly fix of “divine
forgiveness of sins.”
A. Of course, both sides in the War in Heaven employ electronic mind control, and
the Invisible College does even more of it than the Theocrats, working mostly through
popular music and pop culture in general. Once people have been to a certain number
of live rock concerts, whether huge ones in sports stadiums or small ones in clubs,
then they are permanently linked into a media mind control network run by the
Invisible College, and they receive subconscious telepathic messages every time they
listen to the right kind of music on the radio or on their own stereo systems. The song
lyrics perform the same function in this process as sermons do in religious media mind
control.
Q. There are some truly amazing messages being sent through this medium these
days – a lot of it sounds as if it’s straight out of the pages of this book – and yet few
people seem to be consciously aware of them. Some of the people who write for
underground rock fanzines are beginning to realize that the songs contain important
messages about life after death, magic, psychic development, etc., but the music critics
whose work gets national circulation have given this little attention so far.
A. This is mostly because it’s so hard to hear the channeled messages in song lyrics:
most of them are subliminal unless you go to special efforts to pick them out word by
word, and when you do extract them, they’re written in an elaborate jargon and code.
People who are part of the mind control network learn a deep instinctive
understanding of this code, but few can paraphrase the content of the messages into
plain English.
There’s a further complication in all this. We pointed out earlier that we have taken
control of certain Christian churches and media evangelists and now use them to fight
Theocracy. And in another chapter, we described how the Theocrats were also active
in the middle of the Sixties Movement, trying to subvert individuals and groups over
to their side. Exactly the same thing is going on today. We use sports and gambling - 95 -
for reprogramming when we can seize control of part of the network, and the
Theocrats have a large and powerful following in the Popular music world.
A word of advice to conscious psychics and magicians: even if you remain hostile to
all forms of involuntary mental reprogramming, you can still help people learn to
defend themselves consciously against it. Every school of occultism has its spells for
taking curses off of people, and most of them involve detaching the victim from the
astral communications lines that are causing the problem. These techniques should be
taught to anyone with sufficient control of the psychic powers to use them, and the
“clearing” rituals themselves should be widely and publicly performed.
Of course, this will also knock out beneficial mind-control linkages put there by the
Invisible College and all the “good” occult groups, so we personally recommend that
people who perform such spells should also be prepared to create new beneficial
linkages of their own. However, if you are still too hostile to all forms of mind control
to do this, it’s still more important to break the Theocratic linkages. That’s a major
difference between us and the Theocrats. We would rather see people completely free
of control-linkages than enslaved to the Theocrats.
Q. I believed for years before I made my breakthrough that a significant percentage
of the “dangerous visions” in science fiction and other speculative literature are spirit-
dictated massages, and I now know the hows and whys of it.
A. Yes, this is still another form of media mind control, operating through the printed
word rather than the electronic media. Remember, people fall into a trance state
reading light literature for recreation, just as they do watching TV or listening to
music.
Even more significant, literally millions of Americans are now practicing relatively
advanced forms of sex and drug magic without considering themselves formal
occultists or bothering to learn the intellectual knowledge traditionally associated with
such practices in both the East and the West: the cabalistic/alchemical systems, the
Tantric system, various Amerindian or African systems, etc. Instead, people just learn
specific techniques by having sex or turning on with someone who already knows
them, and then proceed from there by trial and error.
Many such experimenters have been hurt trying this, but a large number of them have
gotten to the point where they can channel down instructions directly from spirits; and
at that point they have almost the same access to psychic development tools as the
advanced, formal occultists have. With one big exception: because they never
bothered to learn the associated spiritual, cosmological, philosophical, ethical systems,
they are almost totally ignorant of how to identify the political faction a particular
spirit belongs to on the astral plane, so their channeled information is usually a
mishmash from many different sources.
We have now completed our explanation of what the Theocrats are and how they
operate. Next, we will discuss the history of Theocracy on Earth, from its beginnings
to the present.
- 96 -
Chapter 15: The History of Theocracy
A. Theocracy on Earth has passed through four different stages of development so
far, and is now entering a fifth. We will describe the first four stages here, leaving the
fifth for a later chapter.
The first stage was tribal shamanism of the type that produced the Alta Mira cave
paintings thousands of years ago. First-stage Theocratic religions have never entirely
died out, and still exist today among certain tribes of North American Indians,
Africans, and Australian Aborigines. Most of them, though, have been evolving into
more advanced types or have been replaced with outside religions since these peoples
came into ever-increasing contact with foreigners over the past few hundred years.
Q. In the course of my training as a magician, I’ve worked with people who practice
a number of these “primitive” systems and found that many of them are as skilled at
telepathy, psychic mind control, psychic healing, etc., as highly trained Eastern and
Western occultists. I’ve also read extensively about dozens of other shamanic spiritual
systems, and they all seem to be designed to teach advanced operational magic
techniques as a routine part of religious practice. What’s primitive about that? When
it comes to magic, it is Christianity and the other modern mainstream religions that are
primitive, not the shamanic systems.
A. First-stage Theocratic religions are not primitive from a human perspective, but
they are from a Theocratic perspective. As you point out, most of them teach
extremely sophisticated and effective psychic-development systems. This is what
makes them primitive – in the sense of “crude and inefficient” – from the viewpoint of
the Theocrats, who judge a religious system by how well it allows them to control
every phase of human thinking and behavior, especially the conscious use of the
psychic powers.
In any society with a first-stage Theocratic religion, the majority of people who
learned significant psychic skills in a previous lifetime have an opportunity to develop
them consciously during the present lifetime, because the shamans who serve as clergy
are conscious psychics themselves. Religious services in a first-stage Theocratic
religion are usually conducted with the entire congregation in a psychic trance. This is
in direct contrast to the more advanced forms of Theocratic religion, which discourage
conscious, independent psychic activity, and employ the religious trance rather than
the psychic trance.
A religious elite composed of shamans is much harder for the Theocrats to control
than one composed of clerical or secular rulers who submit to religious mind control.
A shaman is much more likely to put his or her own psychic development above the
telepathic commands of the Theocrats. Also, shamanic mythologies often contain
major elements of the truth about Theocracy, and so teach people an instinctive
aversion for mind control and enslavement by spirits.
Q. I know from my reading on the subject that most such religions teach that some
disembodied spirits eat others.
A. They do, but the information is usually encoded in such a way that the believers,
including the shamans who channel it, do not realize that the “Eaters of Souls” are
their own gods. Instead, the Eaters of Souls are said to be the gods of enemy tribes, or - 97 -
spirits that are very different from human beings such as the Windigos of various
Amerindian tribes), or the ghosts of human criminals and outcasts. The shamanic
religions usually teach that a tribe’s gods protect their own people from the Eaters of
Souls.
Also, the powers of the Eaters of Souls are exaggerated. Most of the legends say they
can steal the souls of living people, except those of the most powerful shamans. And
this idea hasn’t died out at all. It’s present in the writings of Lovecraft, in the modern
Fundamentalist propaganda about demonic possession, and in the extant first-stage
religions themselves. For example, the present-day Navajos still have powerful
instinctive fears of witches and shape-changers, and much of their traditional religious
practice is intended as a defense against these evil beings.
Q. When you come right down to it, I myself feel deep instinctive fears that maybe
the Theocrats can in fact forcibly take over the minds of living people or somehow
damage their souls.
A. Of course you have these fears. You learned them from a psychic and social
environment still dominated to some extent by the Theocrats and their propaganda.
However, the very fact that you are able to write about this is evidence that the
Theocrats are liars. Their control over people is indirect, exercised mostly by
programming the subconscious mind. They can’t overwhelm the conscious will of
any normal person, only the wills of people with seriously damaged physical or astral
minds; and they can’t directly harm or enslave the soul when it is incarnated.
However, at a certain point in the future, the Theocrats will probably become more
powerful; but this has nothing to do with the history of Theocracy so far. We’ll deal
with this subject in Part Three. For the time being, we will just say that it is nothing to
be unduly alarmed about, because we’re prepared to deal with it.
Q. OK, let’s leave it alone for now and go back to the description of first-stage
Theocratic religion.
A. First-stage Theocratic religion is far less efficient than the more advanced stages
of Theocratic religion in providing nourishment for the Theocrats, because it doesn’t
provide much opportunity for them to enslave and devour the souls of believers after
death. The souls of shamans often don’t allow the Theocrats to control them on the
astral plane: either they reincarnate, or they set themselves up as independent
Theocrats in competition with the existing ones hanging around that particular tribe.
The whole religious system encourages people to practice conscious psychic
development techniques and to become shamans themselves if they have the necessary
talent. Since the shamans enjoy political power and social prestige, there is strong
motivation for psychic development, even though the training methods such primitive
societies employ are usually extremely laborious, painful, and dangerous.
Q. I can see proof of Theocratic mind control and group minds by observing what
happens when Amerindians move from isolated reservations to “red ghettos” in the
big cities. They suffer more from culture shock than do rural black people when
moving to the city, because they are entering a totally alien environment on the
psychic level as well as on the physical level. The blacks are already familiar with
Christian group minds, but Amerindians who have been raised as believers in a first-- 98 -
stage religion are not. That is why many “City Indians” are skid-row alcoholics, or
spend much of their lives in prisons or mental hospitals. It also explains why a large
number of City Indians who do adjust to the urban environment become Christian
Fundamentalists: they don’t have the experience to resist Theocratic propaganda and
religious mind control. This leads me ask: do the Theocrats who pose as the gods of a
tribe with a first-stage religion find it easy to enslave tribal members who haven’t have
highly developed shamanic powers?
A. Not often, because such people’s fears of the Eaters of Souls keep them from
approaching their gods after death. They expect to become fearful wanderers after
death, and that’s exactly what happens. Sometimes the Theocrats manage to catch
them and persuade them to put themselves under direct telepathic hypnosis, but that’s
the exception rather than the rule. The Theocrats of a primitive shamanic religion are
usually quite short-lived. Often, deceased shamans try being Theocrats for a while;
then they have to reincarnate to keep from literally starving to death.
Q. OK. What, then, the second stage of Theocratic religion, and what cultures have
practiced it?
A. The second stage of Theocratic religion involves mass human sacrifice and
usually cannibalism on a large scale as well. The Aztecs practiced it until about five
hundred years ago, and some of the ancient Middle Eastern people did also, starting
about five thousand years ago.
Q. I’m familiar with the practice of large-scale human sacrifice by the Aztecs, the
Assyrians, some of the Babylonian and Punic tribes, and others; but don’t human
sacrifice and cannibalism go back much earlier as common religious and social
practices?
A. They do. Such practices were part of many primitive shamanic religions. The
difference is in the scale of the sacrifices and cannibalism. The second-stage
Theocratic religions became possible only when human societies started to become
densely populated and highly organized. Such societies built cities and had reasonably
sophisticated farming techniques. They also had large, powerful governments and
highly organized armies that fought major wars.
Q. For some reason, less is known about these societies and their religions than about
either primitive shamanism or more advanced societies that existed simultaneously. I
take it that the ancient Egyptians and Hebrews were not societies with second-stage
Theocratic religions?
A. No, both were in the third stage when they first appeared in written historical
records, and archaeological evidence shows that they probably went directly from the
first stage to the third, as did the Greeks and the rest of the Western Aryan peoples.
The second stage of Theocratic religion was a failed experiment from the Theocratic
point of view. And from the human point of view, such societies were so repugnant
that few people want to learn much about them. This is why historians have written so
little about them.
For example, the historians of ancient Rome reported that their leaders said, “Carthage
must be utterly destroyed,” and that the city was eventually torn down stone by stone, - 99 -
the population slaughtered, and the surrounding agricultural area sown with salt. But
they didn’t explain in much detail what it was the Carthaginians did that justified this
genocide, except that they practiced human sacrifice. Now, the Romans also practiced
human sacrifice through most of their history: gladiatorial fights to the death and
throwing people to the lions are definitely in that category, but the Roman religion was
still third-stage, not second-stage. Human sacrifices were only a small, atavistic detail
in Roman paganism, not the main focal point of the whole religious system that they
were to the Carthaginians.
Q. As I understand a second-stage Theocratic religion, it’s usually a literal theocracy,
with the despotic rulers of the earthly society claiming to be god-like beings superior
to the rest of the population. Is this significant?
A. No. Third-stage Theocratic religions may also be ruled by “God-Kings.” The
ancient Egyptians are the best-known example. And the rulers of many societies with
fourth-stage religions have also claimed divine descent: the feudal emperors of both
China and Japan are examples. Nor do the rulers of a second-stage Theocratic society
always pose as divine beings. They may claim only to be a mortal priesthood acting
out the will of disembodied gods; or such a society may have separate clergy and
secular rulers. This is not a factor in determining whether or not a society has a
second-stage Theocratic religion.
Among the determining factors are a large, densely populated, totalitarian society and
the practice of human sacrifice on a large scale. The most important factor is deism as
we defined it previously: belief in gods that are omnipotent or at least significantly
superhuman. This separates the three higher levels of Theocratic religion from
primitive shamanism, which considers the gods rather similar to earthly shamans,
except that they are disembodied spirits. Often they are simply called “The Spirits of
Our Ancestors” or “The Shamans in the Spirit World.”
Q. OK then, under a second-stage religion, people believe in superhuman gods who
must be placated with mass human sacrifices that also often involve cannibalism. Is
the cannibalism a significant factor?
A. No. It was practiced only by those second-stage Theocratic societies that were
short of red meat in their diet: the Aztecs and the ancient Polynesians, for example,
who didn’t have many domesticated food animals. The reason that second-stage
Theocratic religion practiced mass human sacrifice was to supply the Theocrats with a
constant food supply. When the victims were killed as part of a large public religious
ceremony, the telepathic chain-reaction generated by a congregation in the religious
trance was sufficient to put the victims’ astral souls into a hypnotic trance before
death. When they were suddenly and violently killed, the Theocrats were usually able
to get control of the souls before they had a chance to flee. This is one of the few
examples in the history of Theocracy where the Theocrats were able to seize souls by
force, and they could do it only with the help of large numbers of living people.
Q. This makes sense. Does it also mean that human sacrifices performed by some of
the more odious cults today don’t have the support of the Theocrats?
A. Well, the Theocrats, all of them, like to see cultists do terrible things like this
because it gives occultists and everyone else outside Theocratic religion a bad name, - 100 -
but they don’t usually get control of the soul of the sacrificial victim. There simply
aren’t enough people at such ceremonies to generate sufficient psychic power.
The main reason that second-stage Theocratic religion has been quite rare in history is
simply that it’s so cruel and violent. Societies like that had to fight endless wars
against their neighbors, or else enslave and sacrifice a significant portion of their own
population. Either way, they tended to become unstable because of the mass violence,
or to be conquered by their enemies. However, the real reason such religions were
short-lived is that they couldn’t compete with third- or fourth-stage Theocratic
religions when they came in contact with them.
Q. OK. It’s time to go on to discussing the third stage.
A. The third stage of Theocratic religion involves mass animal sacrifices. Although
they prefer human souls, Theocratic spirits can nourish themselves off the astral souls
of lower animals to some extent. And these souls are easier to paralyze and control
with religious rituals than human souls are. However, the astral tissues of animal
souls aren’t very compatible with the astral souls of the Theocrats, so they are not a
good food source. The main reason the third stage is considered higher than the
second is simply that societies with such a religion can remain stable for long periods
of time.
Q. If the nutrition from animal souls isn’t really adequate, do third-stage Theocrats
tend to be short-lived?
A. Yes, except that they also receive some nourishment from the psychic energy
generated by their worshippers, which is better for them than the animal souls alone.
Even more important, most of the major third-stage religions have had some fourth-
stage components as well. This was especially true of the ancient Egyptians,
Hebrews, Hindus, and Western Aryan Pagans. Judaism and Vedanta eventually
evolved into fully developed fourth-stage religions. The others survived for a long
time with a mixture between the two.
One of the chief characteristics of all third-stage Theocratic religions is their lack of
concern for life after death. Greek and Roman mythology, for example, gives an
extremely accurate description of what the afterlife was actually like for believers in
those religions. Most people simply wandered aimlessly in Hades – the astral plane –
for a few years and then sank into “forgetfulness.” The concept of reincarnation was
known, but only a few elite groups comparable to modern occultists put much stress
on it: the Greek mystery cults, and a number of similar Roman sects, for example.
Religious practice in third-stage religions was concerned almost entirely with gaining
the favor of the gods during earthly life, not with life after death. The Theocrats
running such religions didn’t know how to enslave souls on the astral plane, so they
ignored them. Instead, they programmed living people to send them the souls of
sacrificed animals, and to broadcast psychic energy during orgiastic rituals.
Q. What about the Fourth stage of Theocratic religion?
A. The fourth stage of Theocratic religion is the one represented by all the major
modern religions. Its most important characteristic is that the Theocrats use religious
mind control to delude souls into deliberately putting themselves under Theocratic - 101 -
control after death, thinking they are entering “eternal bliss in Heaven” or “union with
the Godhead.”
The nature of fourth-stage Theocratic religions has already been adequately discussed
in previous chapters, so we will now leave the history of Theocracy and discuss the
other side for a while: the Invisible College.
- 102 -
Chapter 16: The Invisible College
Q. You’ve already mentioned the Invisible College many times in this book,
implying the general meaning of “those spirits on Earth’s astral plane who are active,
conscious enemies of Theocracy.” At this point, I’d like to discuss this organization in
greater detail. What kinds of spirits belong to it, and exactly what does it do to fight
against the Theocrats?
A. The Invisible College isn’t an organization by the usual definition of that term,
because it doesn’t have a political structure that all members recognize. The name is
just a collective term in common use on the astral plane to describe all disembodied
spirits who are not members of Theocratic bands and are not merely lost souls
wandering around helpless because they can’t function effectively in the spirit world.
A synonym in wide use is “free spirits,” which contains a play on words because
“free” is used in two senses at once. It means “free of Theocratic control”
simultaneously with “free to move around the astral plane at will and communicate
telepathically with other spirits.”
There are three main groups of spirits in the Invisible College: enlightened ones,
magicians, and space people.
The first major group of spirits in the Invisible College is the enlightened ones. Most
of these spirits were highly advanced in spiritual knowledge and the use of their
psychic powers during life, but they were also devout believers in some sect of the
Eastern religious system that includes Vedanta and Buddhism. They were wise
enough to refuse to join the Theocratic bands associated with their particular sect after
death, because they could psychically perceive the enslavement and exploitation going
on in the various Heavens. (Few of the Western occultists who have called themselves
“Illuminati” or some other synonym of “enlightened ones” join this group after
physical death; most become magicians or Theocrats.)
The enlightened ones could be very useful to our cause, but few of them are willing to
stay on the astral plane and help actively fight Theocracy. They believe that the
Theocratic perversions of Heaven they observe there are illusions, and that perceiving
such illusions proves that they are not yet advanced enough to liberate themselves
from the cycle of rebirth. So they go back and live another earthly life, always hoping
that the next time they die they will be worthy to enter the true Heaven. They consider
the War in Heaven an illusion and run away from it, back into earthly existence, which
they also consider illusory.
Q. The idea that much of the universe is “maya” (illusion) is extremely common in
Eastern religion and in Western occultism. Where did it come from?
A. It’s just theocratic propaganda, and the refusal of the enlightened ones to help in
the war against Theocracy is a perfect example of how effective it is. Physical life on
Earth is no illusion, nor is existence as a disembodied spirit on the astral plane.
What’s illusory is the claim of the Theocrats to be the gods of various religions, and
the lie that their Heavens offer the human soul eternal life. - 103 -
Q. Do any of the saints in the Judeo-Christian religions become enlightened ones
after death?
A. This is extremely rare. Most of them become Theocrats if they are devout
members of Theocratic churches during life. However, some people who claimed to
work miracles through faith in religious doctrine have become magician spirits after
death. They were really occultists whose faith was merely a sham to allow them to
work within the religious establishment.
Q. I’ve always had an instinctive feeling that Vedanta and Buddhism are less
exploitative of believers than Judeo-Christianity, even though I knew that the Eastern
religions aren’t as different from the Western ones as many Americans believe
because they can’t tell Eastern occultism from the mainstream of Eastern religion.
The information you’ve just been giving about the enlightened ones probably explains
why I felt this way. Even believers in the Western religious systems whose psychic
powers are highly developed are still quite vulnerable to being enslaved by the
Theocrats after death, whereas similar people in the East often remain free of
Theocratic control and go on incarnating. I assume this happens because the Eastern
religions teach belief in reincarnation as part of their official doctrine.
A. This is correct. However, the actual political structure of Judeo-Christian
Theocracy on the astral plane is somewhat more complex than we described
previously. In reality, the Theocrats in charge of bands force many advanced souls
within these religions to reincarnate, because such spirits don’t make very good
subordinate Theocrats but are too valuable to the religion as a whole to kill.
The average Theocratic spirit that we have described so far realizes that religious
doctrine and mythology are lies and is cynically seeking immortality and political
power. The enlightened ones, although they possess a high degree of spiritual
knowledge and psychic development, still actually believe in the doctrine. Therefore,
if they joined a Theocratic band and observed first-hand how it operates, they might
rebel. Because of this, the leaders of Theocratic bands usually persuade such spirits to
return to Earth to further the interests of the religion. The Christian Bible contains
references to this, if you know what to look for.
Q. Do you mean the passages in which various people ask Jesus if he is Elias or some
other Hebrew prophet returned to Earth?
A. Yes. Liberal Christians often use passages of this type as Scriptural authority to
support reincarnation, which, of course, they are.
Q. But Jesus denied he was the reincarnation of any Hebrew prophet.
A. He did, but it was just a simple “No” to the specific questions. The questions
themselves presented him with a perfect opportunity to make a definitive statement
denying the existence of reincarnation, and he didn’t take it. This suggests that the
author of the passage was an enemy of Theocracy and knew elements of the Great
Secret.
To get back to the point we were discussing, the Theocrats persuade many of the
saints in Western fourth-stage Theocratic religion to reincarnate. Often, they become
charismatic preachers who win large numbers of new converts, or religious leaders - 104 -
who increase the power of churches over the whole of society. In the process, they
may become so corrupted by earthly power that they eventually become Theocrats.
Q. Do any of these souls ever see the fallacies in their religious beliefs and become
enemies of Theocracy, if they are raised in the right environment when they
reincarnate on Earth?
A. It sometimes happens, but rarely. The Western fourth-stage Theocratic religions
are actually more sophisticated than the Eastern religions and much harder to break
out of once you get taken in. This is because the Eastern religions teach reincarnation
as part of their doctrine, and because occultists are allowed to work within the total
structure of the official religion, rather than being cast out of it and openly persecuted
as in the West.
The second major group in the Invisible College is the magicians. The term
“magician” is used very loosely to refer to people who made effective conscious use
of their psychic powers while alive, and did not voluntarily join a Theocratic band
after death. It is a very diverse group, and the spirits that compose it belonged to
many different cultures and social classes during life.
Many magician spirits belonged to the Spiritualists, Theosophists, Rosicrucians, or
other well-known Western occult groups during life. Others belonged to occult groups
that are usually labeled as Pagan religions, such as Witchcraft, Voodoo, Santeria, etc.
Still others had been commercial fortunetellers or psychic healers. (Many of the
magicians in this last category considered themselves Christians and performed their
psychic activities “in the name of Christ.” However, the Theocratic churches were
afraid of their conscious psychic activities and banned them from membership, so they
kept their freedom after death.)
In the East, many martial-arts experts, Yogis, Tantrists, Zen Masters, Sufis, etc.,
become magician spirits after death, as do people who make their living doing
divination or practicing psychic healing. The shamans of the surviving first-stage
religions also often join the magician spirits when they die.
What all these spirits have in common is that they had wide practical experience with
the operational use of their psychic powers when they were alive. (This includes some
people who had possessed highly developed psychic powers during life but were never
consciously aware of them.) The average magician had definite religious beliefs
during life, but these were not strong enough to compel joining a Theocratic band after
death. Magicians, living or disembodied, tend to be practical people, not mystics or
“true believers.
Most of the spirit guides who assist occultists all over the world in obtaining spiritual
knowledge and in learning conscious control of their psychic powers are magicians.
The Theocrats are seriously frightened of the work these spirits do, which explains
why Fundamentalist propaganda contains such stern warnings against contacting
them.
Q. Yes. This accounts for all the propaganda against Ouija boards and other aids that
help people achieve independent, consciously controlled contact with disembodied
spirits. In the light of my present knowledge, all the warnings about demonic
possession through engaging in mediumistic workings seem especially ironic: it looks
to me as if the spirit-contact that Fundamentalists achieve at services using religious - 105 -
mind control are much closer to the descriptions of “possession” than what happens to
occultists when they hold mediumistic conversations with spirits.
A. That is another important point this book has to make.
Q. What else do the magicians in the Invisible College do besides passing
information to people with conscious mediumistic powers?
A. This is actually one of the less important things they do, because there aren’t very
many conscious spirit mediums. However, the magician spirits can communicate
telepathically with a much larger segment of the living population on a strictly
subconscious level, and do so very frequently. Such spirits are responsible for many
experiences that people call prophetic dreams, flashes of insight, hunches, intuition,
instinctive knowledge, etc. However, some of the experiences assigned these names
are entirely the product of the person’s own subconscious imagination or psychic
powers. There’s usually no way to tell the difference.
Q. At this point, it seems necessary to bring up a point that may worry some readers.
It’s quite natural for people to say, “I don’t like the idea that a spirit or another person
can plant in my mind an idea I will consider the product of my own memory or
creative powers. This is an invasion of my privacy and of my right to make decisions
for myself.” From a purely ethical standpoint, I have to agree completely with this
statement.
A. All we can say is, “Would you rather be drafted into the army to fight against
beings as evil as Hitler, or to fight on their side?” Most Earth people simply don’t
have the psychic strength or spiritual knowledge to remain neutral in the war between
the Theocrats and the Invisible College. If we don’t manipulate them subconsciously,
then the Theocrats will do so anyway. We justify this according to our own code of
ethics simply by applying the principle of “greatest good.” An individual influenced
by both the IC and the Theocrats has more freedom in the long run than one
manipulated by the Theocrats alone.
We still have to deal with the issue of “informed consent,” but this book and hundreds
of similar attempts to communicate the same information are intended to provide the
general public with the information they need to make a choice. And this is what we
are really talking about when we say we want people to “make a personal
breakthrough in spiritual consciousness.” We want them to learn enough about how
mind control operates to avoid situations that expose them to it.
Even now, when very few people are consciously aware of the nature of Theocracy
and the forces opposing it, our methods are still more ethical than those of the
Theocrats and their religions. They brainwash people with religious mind control as
their strategy of first choice, whereas we employ such methods very sparingly.
When we work with people who are consciously learning occultism, we try to inform
them exactly what is going on as well as we can. The more spiritual information they
learn and the stronger their conscious psychic powers become, the more they are able
to avoid subconscious telepathic mind control by either side in the War in Heaven.
For example, you yourself seem to be quite capable of questioning us on ethical
matters and making your own value judgments about what you receive in the process
of writing this book. - 106 -
Let’s get back to the description of what the magician spirits in the Invisible College
do. Placing information about Theocracy in the minds of living people is only their
second most important job. The principal service they perform for the human race is
assisting other souls in reincarnating. It’s an old Spiritualist tradition that mediums
and their spirit guides offer help to the souls of the recently deceased that seem in
distress. This sometimes comes to the public attention when it is done after someone
has reported seeing a ghost, but many Spiritualists do a lot more of it privately. They
consider it a good deed they can do in payment of the good that is done for them by
being in direct conscious contact with the spirit world.
Unfortunately, the traditional Spiritualists and those of their spirit guides who held
similar beliefs during life do harm as often as good when they attempt to aid lost souls,
because most of them lack even the most rudimentary knowledge about Theocracy.
Q. I know exactly what you mean. Only rarely do Spiritualists make an overt attempt
to help such spirits reincarnate. Instead, they talk about such lost souls being
“Earthbound” in the sense of being confined to a portion of the astral plane in direct
contact with the Earth plane, and they try to assist the distressed spirits to enter the
“higher astral.”
Before I made the breakthrough, I had no intellectual knowledge to make me disagree
with this cosmology and the resulting treatment of lost souls, but I always felt an
instinctive emotional unease whenever I witnessed or was told about such a ritual.
Now I know why: the whole astral plane is in direct contact with the Earth, and the
only parts of it that give the illusion of not being closely linked to Earth are those
under the control of the Theocrats.
A. All too often, when Spiritualists and similar occultists assist souls in “entering the
higher astral,” they are actually sending them straight into the control of some band of
Theocrats, to be enslaved and devoured. That is because the majority of Spiritualists
and the magician spirits that serve as their spirit guides are too friendly to deistic
religion and too ignorant of the realities of life on the astral plane. This is beginning
to change now, but it’s still a major problem.
In many cases, people who had read a lot of occult literature during life put up
more resistance to understanding the true nature of Theocracy than atheists, agnostics,
and even some believers in orthodox religion. It’s actually easier to show religious
people that their gods are impostors than it is to show occultists that there are no
“planes higher than the astral.” The beliefs of the former are easier to refute because
they are simple and clear-cut. The delusions of occultists are more complex and
sophisticated.
Many of them tell us, “OK, so some Heavens are really Hells of psychic vampirism.
I’m going to keep looking until I find one that’s not.” Unfortunately, there are
Theocratic bands specifically designed to entrap spirits like this, bands run by
Theocrats who were occultists themselves during life.
Q. In other words, the Invisible College faces the same problems in dealing with
people on the astral plane as I have in getting people on Earth to accept the
information described in this book. There are thousands of years of false knowledge
to overcome, and virtually every body of available spiritual information is heavily
corrupted with Theocratic propaganda. It strikes me as miraculous that you were able - 107 -
to start teaching such knowledge widely, both on the astral plane and on Earth. Can
you describe how?
A. About seven hundred years ago, scientists from our world established two-way
contact with spirits on Earth’s astral plane. Accidents in interstellar transportation had
already marooned quite a few extraterrestrial spirits on Earth, but they were not
capable of communicating with the societies they’d come from. (Ironically, psychic
machines capable of establishing such communication existed on Earth’s astral plane,
but none of the spirits who came here by accident possessed the specialized skills for
using them.)
Of course such spirits were forced to reincarnate periodically, and every time they did
so, they lost a portion of their original memories. This meant that Earth people
remained ignorant of the basic facts about spiritual reality, including the true nature of
the Theocratic spirits who claim to be gods. There were always a few spirits around
who knew the truth, but they were seldom able to communicate more than hints of it to
others before they lost the memory of who they were and where they came from.
The two-way contact we speak of roughly coincided with the beginnings of modern
Western civilization. There are numerous passages in occult literature from the late
Middle Ages on about telepathic conversations between mediums and spirit-entities
who resemble modern UFO-contactee descriptions of space people much more than
they do the traditional angels, demons, or spirits of deceased Earth people. Several of
these accounts include what appears to be advanced information about physics,
astronomy, and other sciences – and is exactly that. The accounts that have survived
are just a small part of the whole.
As soon as this contact was established, spirits from advanced civilizations started
coming to Earth deliberately to attempt to build an advanced civilization here. The
fight against Theocracy is a necessary negative step that has to be taken before the real
goal is accomplished, which is to make the Earth a fit place for human beings to live.
Q. Both traditional occult literature and modern UFO-contactee stories are full of
vague references to these telepathic contacts with extraterrestrial spirits, but such
stories lack sufficient detail to make them credible. Usually, they’re just full of
truisms and banalities that don’t much impress the person who hears them.
A. This is true. It’s taken centuries to prepare people even to think about what life in
a truly advanced society would be like. The process has to be done gradually, over a
long period of time, and most of it has been done on the level of action, not that of
intellectual theory.
Q. Why couldn’t the space people, the spirits from advanced civilizations, take some
kind of direct action against the Theocrats right at the beginning? Logically, getting
rid of the opposition of the Theocrats would be the first step in building an advanced
civilization here, not the last.
A. It simply wasn’t possible. The space people don’t come here physically, but as
naked spirits transmitted across vast distances. We come here with a certain amount
of knowledge, a small part of which we can communicate directly to Earth people, and
with psychic powers that are highly trained but not especially powerful in terms of - 108 -
force. The average Theocratic spirit is actually “stronger” than one of us in terms of
sheer ability to radiate psychic energy as a disembodied spirit.
Q. Why is this? It would seem more logical to assume that your better training
would give you more raw psychic power as well.
A. This is rather hard to explain, but you should be able to grasp at least some of it.
Remember that the space people are as human as you are, though not all of us inhabit
bodies at home that resemble yours. Every human soul is intended to link periodically
to a body. That means it has a certain size and shape, a fixed composition and
patterning of astral matter, that is natural for it. A normal spirit can transmit only
limited amounts of astral energy through the psychic powers. This amount of energy
is actually lower, not higher, than that which can be radiated by the psychic powers of
a similar spirit incarnated in a physical body.
Q. I’m already familiar with this idea: the incarnated soul draws energy from the
physical body to energize its psychic powers.
A. Now, the Theocratic spirits are not bound by this limitation, because they don’t
incarnate periodically and don’t have to worry about keeping their astral soul in a
natural condition. Instead, they absorb energy from other spirits and grow as much as
they can. Abnormal growth gives them access to more internal astral energy and
hence stronger psychic powers than a normal spirit possesses.
Q. OK, I understand this. You are forced to use finesse rather than brute strength in
fighting the Theocrats, and also forced to enlist the aid of living people in many
different ways. I would also like to point out how closely some of the matters just
discussed tie in with certain details in the Shaver Mystery as discussed in Chapter
Two. But what about psychic technology? I know you now have access to it.
Couldn’t space people have activated these psychic machines long ago, and saved
Earth people centuries of misery?
A. We didn’t do this until the present because the process requires large amounts of
astral energy. One of the reasons we have assisted you in building a physical
technology is so that we could tap some of the psychic energy raised by the electronic
mind-control networks and use it to repair and run psychic machines constructed of
astral matter. We could have done it previously only by using the methods employed
by second-stage Theocratic religion: mass human sacrifices and mass destruction of
human souls. This is far beyond the limits to which we will stretch our ethics. It’s a
means that no end will justify.
We will discuss psychic technology further in Part Three. For now, we’ll continue
discussing the wars that free spirits have been waging against Theocracy throughout
history, starting with the concept of “The Devil.”
- 109 -
Chapter 17: Satan and Buddha
A. The whole mythology of Satan and the Rebellion of the Angels was the creation
of spirits fighting Theocracy long ago, and the original teachings of the Buddha
contain similar elements.
Q. Why does the Invisible College deliberately use terms like “Satan”? Doesn’t your
use of this kind of terminology make it easier for Theocratic propaganda to accuse all
of your friends on Earth of being “devil-worshippers”?
A. Somewhere in this book we’re going to have to deal with accusations of this sort,
so we might as well do it here. We have good reason to use terms that encourage
people to take a closer look at the Biblical myths about Satan, which we’ll describe
later in this chapter. For now, we’ll just refute the charge that the Invisible College
advocates worship of Satan, because we totally reject the concept of “worship” as the
term is usually defined: “Absolute, unquestioning belief in and obedience to a spiritual
being or a body of doctrine.”
Individual sovereignty is the most fundamental postulate of the philosophy of
the Invisible College. Each person must assume full responsibility for making value
judgments on ethical and political matters. We never advocate absolute obedience to
any authority, even our own. We urge people to resist orders from leaders if they
disagree with them, and to use laws, customs, and ideologies only as guides for
making their own decisions on specific issues. Assuming personal responsibility for
running their own lives makes people wiser and stronger, because they are usually
rewarded for their successes and punished for their mistakes. Unquestioning
obedience to orders or fixed doctrine only makes them increasingly dependent and
powerless.
To get back to our discussion of the devil, the concepts that Satan is a “God of
Evil” who demands the same kind of worship as Jehovah or other Theocratic
conceptions of deity, and that he tempts people to do exactly the reverse of all the
individual ethical principles in the Judeo-Christian moral code, are both Theocratic
propaganda incorporated into religious doctrine to keep people from understanding
our original and constructive purpose in creating the myth about Satan and getting it
incorporated in the Bible.
Q. This is obvious once you point it out. Satan has a much more favorable image in
literature and folk-tradition in all the Judeo-Christian cultures than you’d expect him
to have if he was really the archetype of reversed Biblical morality that religious
doctrine claims he is.
A. Quite true. Look at all the folk tales in which the Devil simply opposes the
puritanical, “bluenose” aspects of Christian morality that say that sex and other
sensual pleasures are intrinsically evil. We’ve already pointed out the role these
puritanical doctrines play in the religious mind-control process.
The Theocrats want religious believers to feel guilty every time they feel sexual desire
or enjoy any “pleasures of the flesh.” The guilt literally addicts them to attending
church services that subject them to religious mind control. When the Devil of folk - 110 -
tradition says that sensual pleasure is not immoral in itself, then he is actually
advocating an ethical code superior to the Judeo-Christian one.
Q. Satan, in other words, often preaches a perfectly valid, humanistic morality, rather
than the inversion of Judeo-Christian morality that religious doctrine attributes to him.
I’ve certainly seen examples of this in literature from many different countries and
eras.
A. In ancient Hebrew, the word “satan” simply meant “adversary” or “enemy.” We
communicated the myth about the “temptation of Adam and Eve by the serpent” to
some of the prophets who wrote the Old Testament just to ensure that people who read
Judeo-Christian scripture would realize that Jehovah has enemies. We are also
responsible for other elements in that myth: that disobeying Jehovah by eating the
“forbidden fruit” enabled human beings to discern good from evil, and that there was
another secret, that of the tree of life” that would give people eternal life without
involvement with Jehovah or other Theocrats.
Q. Now that you point it out, the whole myth of the “Fall of Man” doesn’t seem to
belong with the rest of the creation myth in Genesis.
A. The material in the book of Genesis, even though it pertains to the Creation and
the earliest history of the Hebrews and the Jewish religion, was mostly dictated to
Jewish prophets after the Exodus. Judaism started to adopt important elements of
fourth-stage Theocratic religion during the Egyptian Captivity, not long after Ikhnaton
tried to change Egyptian Paganism into a fourth-stage religion and failed. Fourth-
stage Theocratic religions all have a creation myth that includes the concept of
Original Sin.
Q. I had formed the impression that Christianity was a fourth-stage religion from its
beginning but that Judaism was still in the third stage at the time it was founded. My
understanding is that the practice of animal sacrifice is the primary distinguishing
characteristic of a third-stage Theocratic religion. First-century Judaism still practiced
animal sacrifices at the Temple in Jerusalem.
A. No, Judaism was almost entirely into the fourth stage itself when Christianity
broke away from it. It started becoming a fourth-stage religion at the time of Moses,
though the process was gradual rather than sudden. Survival of limited amounts of
animal sacrifice was just an atavism. The core of Jewish doctrine from the time of
Moses down to the present has been that Jehovah is both an angry, judgmental deity
who condemns people for Original Sin, and a loving god who forgives their sins after
various acts of faith and ritual atonement. All the Christians did was assign separate
names to these two different aspects of the one deity: Jehovah, or God the Father, to
the judgmental aspect, and Jesus, or God the Son, to the forgiving aspect.
Q. OK. I understand this part well enough. Please continue explaining the creation
myth in Genesis and the origin of the concepts of Satan and the War in Heaven.
A. First of all, a fourth-stage Theocratic religion has no need for a god of evil to
tempt people into sin: the concept of Original Sin itself makes any sort of Devil
superfluous. However, if such a concept survives as an atavism from an earlier stage
of the religion’s development, it does no harm, any more than did the token sacrifices - 111 -
of doves by the Jews at Jerusalem, as described in the New Testament. Judaism had
originally been a polytheistic religion. Most of the angels with names ending “iel” had
originally been “god of...”; for example, “Barakiel -- God of Lightning.” Therefore
Judaism already had a concept of “Satan” similar to the “adversary” or “trickster”
gods in other third-stage religions. It was quite natural to incorporate Satan into the
creation myth to tempt people into Original Sin.
Q. Was the Hebrew Pagan deity Satan originally a god in serpentine form like
Damballa and some of the other African trickster deities?
A. Possibly. We really don’t know. What we’re telling you here is mostly derived
from our knowledge of modern religious and occult works, supplemented to some
extent by rumors that have circulated on the astral plane for thousands of years. We
have no exact historical details on any of this, just educated guesses. However, the
choice of a serpent image for the deity that tempted people into disobeying Jehovah is
obvious if you realize that it was enemies of Theocracy who dictated the myth in the
form in which we know it.
The serpent was intended as a symbol of reincarnation, because snakes shed their
skins, leaving behind a casting that resembles a dead snake to a casual glance, while
the animal crawls on about its business with a shiny, new, young-looking skin. The
Theocrats who called themselves “Jehovah” did not want people to believe in
reincarnation, even though the fourth-stage religious concept of “dwelling in the
House of the Lord forever” was probably not known to the Jews at the time the
creation myth was first dictated.
Q. Many scholars today don’t think the concept of reincarnation was even known to
the Jews at that time. Was it?
A. As we said before, we have no exact historical knowledge of the time, just age-old
rumor and inference from literature on Earth. However, our best guess is that every
human culture throughout history and back into prehistory has had at least
rudimentary knowledge of reincarnation. There are references to it in literature from
every culture we know about, including those in the ancient Near East contemporary
with the people who wrote Genesis, so we assume the concept was known to them.
More important, a small number of people in every culture have always possessed
enough conscious past-life memories to circulate persistent rumors about
reincarnation, even though a Theocratic religion does its best to suppress them.
Q. An aside. I’ve gotten the impression from what you’ve told me so far that the
Invisible College has only been in existence for a few centuries, that it started around
the end of the Middle Ages or after. If so, who was opposing Theocracy at the time of
Moses, or whenever the myth concerning Adam and Eve and the serpent was written?
A. Exact names for the forces opposing Theocracy are actually arbitrary and
unimportant. We prefer to reserve the term “Invisible College” to refer to the highly
organized opposition to Theocracy that started when large numbers of spirits from
advanced extraterrestrial civilizations started coming to Earth voluntarily about six or
seven hundred years ago. However, small numbers of such spirits have been
accidentally transported to Earth’s astral plane throughout history and far back into
prehistoric times, and many of them have tried to fight Theocracy as best they could. - 112 -
One spirit with advanced knowledge could have been responsible for the creation
myth we’re describing here. You already understand how the Theocrats dictate “Holy
writ” to religious believers, don’t you?
Q. Well, I assume from reading about Mohammed and the Koran and similar cases
that the process is almost identical to what we’re doing here to produce this book:
some form of automatic writing or other mediumistic reception of data from spirits on
the astral plane. The only difference is that the spirits involved are Theocrats instead
of members of the Invisible College.
A. You’re right. However, it’s extremely difficult for the mediums themselves to tell
exactly who in the spirit world is dictating to them at a given time. That’s why we
always review everything you receive from us several times and leave you to be the
final judge as to whether what you’ve received is really from us or is Theocratic
deception.
Q. I realize that I have to be responsible for that, to ensure that what I receive is
internally consistent and agrees with my own rational judgment based on the evidence
available in my memory. I suspect that the Invisible College finds it easier to send
anti-Theocratic messages to the prophets of Theocratic religions, who don’t normally
question divine revelations, than its for Theocrats to deceive conscious Spiritual
Revolutionaries like me.
A. Yes. And this is exactly what happened with the myth about the serpent and the
Fall. A spirit hostile to Theocracy managed to dictate the story to one of the Hebrew
prophets, and somehow it survived long enough in folk tradition to be written into the
Old Testament. And we’re glad it did, because it reveals some important spiritual
truths to anyone capable of understanding them.
One is that Jehovah has an enemy who communicates with people and urges them to
rebel. Another is that these messages of rebellion are involved with ethics and
morality. Jehovah says, “Right and wrong are only what I tell you they are, and they
are absolute values that never vary.” Satan, on the other hand, says, “Use your
intellect to determine what is right and wrong in a given situation, because such value
judgments are highly dependent on the environment you’re in at a given time.” Since
the latter statement is rational and the former irrational, people are put into conflict
with Theocratic religious doctrine every time they use their intellect to make rational
value judgments.
Q. Most organized religions seem rather proud of the fact that people have to accept
their doctrine on faith simply because it isn’t rational.
A. They do, because they have no choice. And this religious myth is one of the
reasons why. The Theocrats don’t want people to become consciously aware of the
basically illogical nature of absolute moral doctrine, but there is nothing they can do
about it. The more highly developed a person’s rational intellect, the less likely he or
she is to accept religious doctrine on “blind faith.”
The serpent myth is only a minor detail in Judeo-Christian mythology, but it has been
very important over the centuries in the fight against Theocracy. And it’s also obvious
why the Judeo-Christian Theocrats countered it with further mythology about Satan as - 113 -
the Father of Lies who goes around telling people it’s good to kill and steal and
otherwise do the opposite of the religious moral code.
The Theocrats tried to obscure the information about using the intellect to make
ethical decisions on a rational basis. They added many extraneous details to the
mythology about Satan. For example, they included the idea that telepathy,
mediumship, and other human psychic powers are either “works of God” or “works of
the Devil.” This allows them to forbid religious believers to communicate with spirits
hostile to Theocracy without revealing various facts about spiritual reality that the
Theocrats wish to conceal.
And then there’s all the propaganda about demonic possession. As we discussed
earlier, the irony of the whole concept of “possession” is that the Theocrats themselves
practice something rather similar to it when they program people into becoming
willing slaves through religious mind control.
The important thing to remember whenever possession is mentioned is simply this: no
spirit, Theocrat or otherwise, can actually force living people to do things contrary to
their conscious will and their customary ideas of right and wrong. Even religious
mind control can only reprogram a person’s opinions and beliefs one small step at a
time: it’s a slow, gradual process, not a sudden, dramatic takeover. It’s very important
for the reader to realize this.
However, we do have to point out that even gradual reprogramming can produce some
extremely evil and violent people if it continues over a whole lifetime. There are
plenty of people in this country right now who are emotionally and morally capable of
“killing a Commie for Christ” or acting on the literal meaning of the Biblical passage,
“Thou shalt not suffer a witch to live.” However, this has nothing to do with the
sudden, violent “possession by evil spirits” that Fundamentalist propaganda spreads
around so freely, and that many serious occultists also accept. That, fortunately, is a
myth.
Q. You haven’t covered the Tree of Life yet. What was that supposed to represent?
A. As the serpent myth represents the concept that people have the right to determine
good and evil for themselves through the free exercise of the conscious intellect, the
Tree of Life represents certain essential details of the breakthrough information – the
concepts that people can only achieve immortality through reincarnation and that the
“eternal life in heaven” offered by deities is a delusion. However, you must remember
that the Tree of Life is mentioned only so the Theocrats can gloat that they prevented
people from
gaining this knowledge.
Q The myth states that Adam and Eve ate the fruit of the Tree of Knowledge and
learned to distinguish right from wrong with the rational intellect, but they were
expelled from the Garden of Eden before they could “eat also of the fruit of the Tree
of Life, that is also in the Garden, and become like unto us.” Many occultists and
Biblical scholars have been intrigued by that passage, not just for the tantalizing
references to a secret of immortality, but because it s one of the only passages in the
whole Bible in which Jehovah uses the first-person plural, “us” instead of “me”.
A. The secret referred to in this passage is not just immortality, but the complete
knowledge that Theocratic spirits have about the nature of the soul, reincarnation, - 114 -
psychic powers, etc. Apparently the spirit who dictated these passages tried to
communicate the whole breakthrough and failed.
The beginning of Buddhism is a similar case in which enemies of Theocracy tried to
help people to make the breakthrough but didn’t quite succeed. After the Buddha
achieved enlightenment, he made some statements that seemed self-contradictory, at
least on the surface. He attributed his spiritual progress to his own efforts, not to a
“gift” from omnipotent deities. He also stated in so many words that ordinary people
could achieve enlightenment through practicing the proper psychic development
techniques. But at the same time, his statements about reincarnation appeared
paradoxical. He said that achieving enlightenment meant that he no longer needed to
reincarnate, but he also said that he would continue to do so to help other people
achieve enlightenment.
Q. This seems to be a major contradiction, because if enlightenment had made him a
sort of “super-god,” superior to the Vedantic gods, then he wouldn’t need to incarnate
to assist people in spiritual development. He could do it as a disembodied spirit,
remaining on the astral plane and using his enormous psychic powers to communicate
whatever information people needed.
A. Once people make the breakthrough, it becomes obvious that there is no
contradiction in any of these statements about the Buddha. What the Buddha called
his enlightenment is actually a version of this breakthrough. He became consciously
aware of exactly what the Vedantic gods really are and how they operate, even though
the words in which his followers wrote down his knowledge are somewhat confusing.
They understood the most important part of his message quite clearly: the path to
enlightenment is the disciplined practice of various psychic development techniques.
Notice too that the Buddha himself didn’t limit his followers in which specific
techniques they used, because part of his knowledge must have been that different
techniques work better for a given individual than others. He was quite vague on this,
and Buddhists ever since have practiced a wide variety of techniques drawn from
Yoga, Tantra, and other sources within Vedanta.
However, the basic teachings of Buddha are anti-deistic whereas those of Vedanta
were highly deistic. Many modern Buddhists believe that if they personally achieve
enlightenment, their souls will merge with the soul of Buddha into Nirvana, a “state of
blissful nothingness.” Vedantic doctrine in the time of the Buddha already taught that
enlightened souls would merge with Brahma or some other god. This doctrine was
grafted onto the Buddha’s teachings after his death, when Buddhism was taken over
by the Vedantic Theocrats.
Q. You’re saying that Buddhism was originally founded to fight Theocracy?
A. Yes. So were Gnosticism and some forms of early Christianity. But to get back
to Buddhism, the Buddha implied by his own example that the enlightened were
capable of transcending reincarnation but deliberately chose not to do so in order to be
of service to the human race. The Buddha realized he could become a Theocrat and
remain on the astral plane indefinitely, but he refused to do so for ethical reasons.
This interpretation of the early Buddhist teaching is possible for people who have
already made the breakthrough from some other source, but it is not stated clearly
enough in the writings themselves to make finding and understanding it very easy. - 115 -
Even though he founded a major religion, the enlightenment the Buddha achieved was
still only a partial breakthrough. Much of what he learned from the Invisible College
was on a subconscious level; it is reflected indirectly in his various teachings and
practices as described by his followers after his death when they wrote the early
literature, but much of it never came out in so many words in his actual teachings.
Q. In other words, he didn’t actually say that the Vedantic gods are evil beings who
eat souls, or that enlightened souls need to reincarnate for their own good as well as
that of living people.
A. This vital information is implied, but never directly stated. For example, the
Buddha did teach that animal sacrifices and “austere practices” – by which he meant
self-torture, starvation, etc. – are not mandatory for onto achieve enlightenment; but
he didn’t antagonize the Vedantic majority around him, or their gods, by saying that
“The gods are evil.” However, after his death, the legends portrayed the Vedantic
gods as “worshipping” the enlightened Buddha, implying at the least that they had no
power over him.
It is also important to remember that the Buddha was preaching to an audience with
far different religious beliefs from those of modern Westerners, or of modern
Buddhists, for that matter. The Vedanta of his time was a third-stage Pagan religion
based on large-scale animal sacrifice and orgiastic rituals, but its doctrine also
included many atavistic myths surviving from the first stage. As well as being the
priests of third-stage Vedanta, the Brahmins also functioned as first-stage shamans
who insured that various spiritual beings were “fed” to keep them from eating human
souls after death. Direct references to the gods as “Eaters of Souls” occur in Vedantic
hymns used in the Soma ritual.
Q. I’ve also noticed another seeming incongruity about the teachings of Buddha. He
stresses that enlightenment is achieved only through psychic development practices,
but most of his actual sermons or lectures seemed to be on ethics. Buddhist ethics are
very similar to the traditional Vedantic ethics of the culture he lived in. He stressed
certain elements more than others – for example, total non-violence against both
people and animals – but these were already present in the Vedantic doctrines, which
contained many inconsistencies.
A. Yes, he preached a version of the Vedantic ethical code and religious customs
stripped of some of the worst self-contradictions, like the concept of non-violence co-
existing with animal sacrifice and with various forms of violence against oneself in the
name of religious practice. However, it is easy to misunderstand what he was actually
doing, which was to separate ethics from the process of achieving enlightenment.
Q. In other words, he said living ethically was important, but not directly related to
the psychic development that causes enlightenment. Again, this interpretation is
possible from reading the Buddhist literature, but the point is not made clearly enough
for most people to understand it. Certainly most modern Buddhists don’t.
A. Modern Buddhism, except for a few occult groups associated with it, is a
Theocratic religion. Buddhists feel that their ethical conduct as well as their psychic
development practices will earn them enlightenment by pleasing various incarnations - 116 -
of the Buddha, all of which are imagined to co-exist as gods similar to the Vedantic
gods. This is not what Buddha taught at all.
Q. Certain Zen masters, whom I class with the occult minority within Buddhism,
have said things like, “There are no gods; there are no Buddhas.”
A. When they do this, they are fighting against the tendency of the majority of
Buddhists to worship the Buddha as a god, instead of seeking enlightenment through
their own efforts and practicing ethical conduct for humanistic reasons – to serve their
own interests and that of other people – instead of to earn divine favor. Zen masters
have even told students who were drifting into deism, “Contemplate the Buddha as a
piece of dried shit.”
Q. Before I made the breakthrough, I put a pantheistic interpretation on passages like
this: “The Buddha is everywhere, including in the desiccated turd.” Now I see that
this is an attempt to answer the Theocratic tendencies in Buddhism by trying to
extinguish the believer’s tendencies to fall into deism.
A. This anti-deistic, anti-Theocratic teaching is even more evident in the doctrines of
some of the Eastern occult secret societies involved with the martial arts. These secret
societies have often worked under the direction of the Invisible College to fight
against the control of both religion and politics in China and Japan by the Theocrats.
That’s why they sometimes tell initiates, “we are devils,” because they are literally
fighting against the “gods,” in the sense of fighting deism and defending the idea that
people can achieve enlightenment through their own efforts. However, you have to be
careful when you read about secret societies of this type, because many of them have
fought for the Theocrats at one time and against them at other times, depending on the
personalities and beliefs of the members.
At this point, we’ll leave the adversaries of Theocracy within religion and go back to
discussing the work of the Invisible College in building modern Western civilization.
- 117 -
Chapter 18:The Age of Reason
Q. When you refer to the Age of Reason, are you describing what went on in the old
Masonic and Rosicrucian lodges several hundred years ago, when these organizations
had so much influence over the development of modern civilization?
A. Yes. We wanted initiates on the lower levels to be reprogrammed to accept
what’s now called the “Philosophy of the Age of Enlightenment. This included the
form of political liberalism sketched out in the United States Constitution and Bill of
Rights, support of capitalism and industrial technology, a progressive attitude towards
innovation in science and the arts, reliance on rational pragmatic decision-making over
dependence on tradition, and a general attitude toward life that was constructive,
optimistic, and tolerant. We realized it wasn’t possible to turn most of these people
into high-level psychics or magicians or to teach them much about the true nature of
Theocracy; we just wanted to turn them into “good average citizens” as that term is
defined in the United States today.
You’ve already figured out some of the things we did to accomplish this, and we will
now explain the whole subject more clearly. Two types of consciousness-raising
programs were used within the lodges: one trained initiates in the lower degrees to
become rational atheists and political liberals; the other, more advanced, program,
taught high-level occult knowledge and conscious control over the psychic powers.
The first of these programs always had many more members than the second. Initiates
who learned to accept the Masonic philosophy often became immune to falling into a
religious trance during the rituals. This is an example of the difference between the
way we reprogram people’s minds and the way the Theocrats do. We keep planting
information in the subconscious that says, “Think for yourself. Don’t accept anything
without evidence. Do what you feel is best under the circumstances rather then just
accepting what someone tells you. You can become a better person if you only learn
how to do so. Judge yourself realistically: you are neither a self-righteous saint nor a
miserable sinner, but simply an ordinary human being with free will and control over
your own destiny.”
Q. This is almost the opposite of what the Theocrats program in during
Fundamentalist Christian services. They want worshippers to say “Thy will be done,”
and submit completely to the telepathic influences they receive, as well as to obey
religious doctrine to the letter. It’s easy to see how your method tends eventually to
liberate initiates from the influence of religious mind control: the more that people are
affected by the reprogramming process, the less motivation they have to enter the
religious trance, which involves voluntarily allowing the conscious will to lose
control.
A. This is correct. The more people become accustomed to making decisions
rationally and forming an accurate appraisal of their self-worth, the less likely they are
to fall into a religious trance during rituals. When individuals in one of the old lodges
reached this stage of being in a normal state of consciousness during the rituals most
of the time, they automatically progressed to one of the “higher” degrees and assumed
one of the numerous positions of subordinate leadership. Initiates on this level were
expected to study the lodge’s traditions, mythology, and doctrine intensely on a - 118 -
strictly intellectual level. This wasn’t done at rituals that employed the religious
trance, but through ordinary reading and tutorial study, exactly as if the initiates were
learning history or mathematics.
This is the level that tried to replace Christian faith with “worship of the Goddess of
Reason,” and then went into a philosophy that would be called “scientific materialism”
and “rational humanism” today. This middle level of initiation was intended to
produce a personality-type similar to one very common in American society today –
the millions of people who are not very interested in spiritual matters of any kind, but
are chiefly concerned with their personal survival and happiness here on Earth. Some
of them call themselves atheists or agnostics, but just as many profess nominal belief
in Christianity or some other religious or occult system. However, regardless of what
they say they believe, spirituality has very little emotional impact on their daily life.
People like this are still either a slight majority or a very large minority in American
society.
When we started this process several centuries ago, the influence of Theocratic
religion was still so strong that it was easier to turn people into atheists or agnostics
than to teach them directly about spiritual reality. We taught people to relate
positively to the material world, and to the advanced civilization that was beginning to
develop around them, as more than just “a vale of tears to pass through on the way to
Heaven.” We wanted the relationship between people and their earthly environment
to become more important than their relationship with “God” and religion. We had to
proceed step by step and use the methods of behavioral psychology, which are based
on knowledge of how the human mind is actually programmed. States of
consciousness and environmental reinforcement are the most important factors to
consider here.
Q. Can you clarify this? When you say “states of consciousness,” are you talking
about the religious trance?
A. Yes. We had to proceed step by step. First, we took people who had been raised
within Theocratic religion and had been entering the religious trance during church
services all their lives, and we manipulated them into attending the rituals of the
Masonic and Rosicrucian lodges. These rituals also employed the religious trance
and, on the lower levels of initiation, taught a doctrine that was not so alien to the
average lodge member’s existing Christian beliefs that it broke the trance.
During these rituals, members were gradually reprogrammed to become more rational
in their thinking and more materialistic in their emotional goals for their lives. The
social environment of the lodge increased their self-esteem, so they no longer thought
of themselves as “miserable sinners in need of salvation” but as “free men under
God,” and eventually as “free members of a brotherhood of equals.
Lodge members received positive reinforcement through religious mind control during
lodge rituals. This made the members feel good while they learned various
philosophical principles quite different from those at the core of Fundamentalist
Christianity even though phrased in many of the same terms. One very important
thing to realize here is that the basic ethical philosophy of the eighteenth-century
Freemasons was very, very similar to the moral codes of the various Theocratic - 119 -
Christian sects of the day. At least ninety-five percent of the individual precepts were
the same.
Q. That’s hard to accept.
A. Nevertheless, if you think about it without bias, you’ll realize it’s true. In fact,
there is only one fundamental difference between the two codes of conduct, which
affects a small number of separate ethical precepts.
Christian doctrine says, ‘Your first duty is to obey the will of God as you perceive it
during church services and in private prayer and meditation; your second is to obey
religious doctrine and tradition as you learn it on the intellectual level; and your third
is to follow the dictates of your conscience and intellectual will.” By contrast, the
philosophy of the Age of Enlightenment says, “Your first duty is to follow the dictates
of reason as applied to the knowledge you learn from your environment; your second
is to work for your own survival and happiness as long as you don’t harm other
individuals or society in general by so doing; and your third is to work for ‘the greatest
good for the greatest number,’ which sometimes involves greater or lesser degrees of
self-sacrifice.”
These statements are diametrically opposed in theory, but in the routine circumstances
of life in a reasonably stable society, they produce behavior that is almost identical. In
other words, both the Christian and the Freemason valued a work ethic, tried to avoid
harmful excesses of all kinds, etc. The difference is not in what people did in the way
of detailed, routine ethical behavior, but in the long-term effects that the two radically
different philosophical codes had on total personality development.
The Christian code took people deeper into bondage to the Theocrats; the Masonic
code liberated them from that bondage without substituting any other master for
“God.” What’s most important here is that the Masonic initiates were taught to
receive increasing amounts of positive reinforcement from their material and social
environment, and decreasing amounts from religious mind control.
Now you can understand what we mean by “states of consciousness” and
“environmental reinforcement” in this context. We were using the significant increase
in the quality of individual life resulting from technological advances to extinguish the
influence of religious mind control over people’s emotional life and personality
development.
Eventually, a great many members of the lodges became immune to religious mind
control and remained in a normal state of waking consciousness during the rituals.
More important, they taught these same principles to their children of both genders, so
the all-male lodges eventually changed the average personality structure of the whole
society.
Q. Is this one of the reasons why Fundamentalist propaganda claims that, “Secular
Humanism is a religion”?
A. Yes. From the Theocrats’ point of view, religion is just a tool for programming
the minds of living people. By this same definition, all humanistic institutions are
technically religions, because they also program the human mind – whether they do it
directly through religious mind control, or indirectly through operant conditioning
from the social and physical environment. Over the last five centuries, we have - 120 -
improved the quality of earthly life for so many people that the “vale of tears” concept
has lost much of its appeal.
The idea that people can significantly improve the quality of life on Earth by their own
efforts is one of the most important strategies that the Invisible College uses in
fighting Theocracy. Its strongest point is that we don’t need to use subconscious
emotional manipulation or intellectual persuasion to get people to accept it. Just living
and working within a modern technological society proves the basic validity of a
humanistic philosophy by direct environmental conditioning. On the conscious level,
people may think about the problems modern society has not yet solved and yearn for
“the good old days”; but on a deeper level, they know they are as well off, on the
average, as human beings on this planet have ever been. Theocratic propaganda and
religious mind control have great difficulty extinguishing this intuitive feeling,
because its cause is environmental conditioning rooted in physical reality.
Q. I speculated in Part One that the lodges you’re talking about were controlled by a
small, secret conspiracy of advanced occultists who had at least a rough conscious
idea of what they were doing. Is this true?
A. Not really. We actually had to do most of the work ourselves. In fact, the chain of
cause-and-effect was almost exactly the opposite of what you speculated about in Part
One. We, meaning disembodied spirits in the Invisible College, telepathically
manipulated the subconscious minds of leaders in the Masonic and Rosicrucian lodges
to design their rituals and doctrines in certain ways. Many of the individual elements
of these rituals and doctrines were drawn from the writings and practices of previous
occult groups, including some that you would consider quite advanced in both spiritual
knowledge and psychic training techniques.
However, the vast majority of the men who actually incorporated these elements into
Freemasonry and Rosicrucianism in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries had only
a vague idea of what they were doing. They read various occult works, talked to
members of many different occult organizations, and incorporated those ideas that
“felt right” into the lodges they were founding or re-organizing. Of course, it was our
subconscious telepathic influence that guided this process.
Q. Are you saying that the pre-existing knowledge gathered by advanced occultists
over many centuries was useful to you in founding lodges and manipulating them into
the form you desired, but that there was no conscious human conspiracy involved?
A. This is not true either. There were many different conscious conspiracies of
advanced occultists, in the seventeenth century and later, which realized that various
lodges of the Freemason and Rosicrucians were beginning to have a major influence
on the progress of Western society and tried to manipulate their activities in ways that
would produce what we now call “Modern Western Civilization.”
Practically every advanced occultist in Europe joined one or more of these lodges at
this time. And once they’d joined, they tried to teach their particular school of
knowledge to their lodge-brothers and to influence the development of the lodge’s
doctrines and rituals to conform to their particular preconceptions. These occultists
included Cabalists, Gnostics, Alchemists, Hermetics; and influences from all these
spiritual systems are still visible today in the Masonic and Rosicrucian doctrines. - 121 -
There are spiritual knowledge and psychic-training techniques brought from China
and India by the Islamic Sufi sect and taught to the medieval Knights Templar.
There’s knowledge inherited from the ancient Egyptians, Hebrews, and Babylonians,
taught to the Masons and Rosicrucians by Cabalists, Gnostics, and Astrologers. One
very important source of psychic training techniques came from the ancient Greeks by
way of the medieval Alchemists: a system of homosexual sex magic. This is one
reason why so many high-level occult lodges were exclusively male for so long – they
knew homosexual sex magic techniques but not heterosexual ones. There has always
been some heterosexual sex magic in the Western occult tradition as well, from both
Middle Eastern and European Pagan sources; but it’s only been in the last century or
so, after direct contact was established with the Orient, that the two began to become
equally common.
The important thing to remember about all this is that the individual elements of
advanced occult knowledge and the people who brought them into the Masonic and
Rosicrucian lodges of the Age of Enlightenment were not the “secret, conscious,
guiding conspiracy” that you speculated they were in Part One.
Q. This is obvious now. You were the conscious guiding force, and the advanced
occultists were actually being subconsciously manipulated along with the rest of the
people involved.
A. Well, many of the occultists had some conscious knowledge of what we were
doing, and were actively co-operating. Unfortunately, some of them actively opposed
us by trying to turn their lodge into a Theocratic Cult. Possessing advanced occult
knowledge doesn’t automatically make a person morally virtuous. Even today, some
of the advanced occult lodges derived from the Masonic-Rosicrucian tradition are
“Black Lodges” (lodges under the control of the Theocrats).
It’s extremely important for your readers to realize that Theocratic enslavement and
psychic vampirism are not things that happen only to disembodied spirits after death.
Living people can do virtually the same things to other living people. Black magicians
can’t literally devour other people’s souls the way the disembodied Theocrats do to
other spirits, but they can still deprive people of all free will and self-esteem, and
eventually drive them into insanity or suicide.
This can be done in a Christian context, as Jim Jones did with the People’s Temple, or
in the context of almost any other religious or occult group. Many of the modern cults
are also examples of this Theocracy on Earth. the Moonies, the Rajneesh Cult, etc.
However, such groups aren’t always openly identified as religious or occult
organizations. The Symbionese Liberation Army was such a group, and so was the
Manson Family. So are many terrorist groups, especially those in the service of
Islamic Fundamentalists.
A number of present-day rock groups are actually bands of living Theocrats, enslaving
their fans and draining energy from them at concerts. This last type of living Theocrat
is especially dangerous right now, because such people can influence a large number
of people who listen to their music on records or over the radio, using electronic mind
control techniques that we will describe later. One of the worst things about this
movement is that some of these people have made the breakthrough. They know what
they are doing, and they still do it. - 122 -
Q. In other words, a person can find out the truth about Theocracy and say, “Fine.
I’m going to found a cult based on religious mind control while I’m alive; then, after I
die, I’m going to control it from the astral plane and become a Theocrat.”
A. Yes, and this attitude is becoming more and more common as more people make
the breakthrough and become consciously aware of the existence of Theocracy. This
is another main reason why we are having you write this book: to warn potential
victims of this new type of mind control and teach them how to avoid it. We’ll tell
more about this fifth stage of Theocracy later.
It is important to remember that people have been making the breakthrough for
centuries, in the sense of realizing that the ”gods” behind many religious groups are
simply the spirits of ordinary deceased human beings playing politics and trying to
remain in positions of power on the astral plane for long periods of time. However,
this knowledge, in itself, doesn’t automatically make people hostile to Theocracy.
Where so many advanced occultists have made a fatal error is in not realizing that
Theocracy is what you might call a disease or abnormal state. Remaining on the astral
plane for long periods of time and absorbing vital energy from other spirits is not a
natural or healthy condition for a human spirit. All Theocrats eventually become
degenerate and insane. Now, we’ve always told this to anyone capable of holding
conscious telepathic conversations with us, but we haven’t always been believed. The
illusion of achieving immortality for the ego is a very powerful corrupting influence.
You can see why many occultists wouldn’t want to listen.
The quality and completeness of a person’s breakthrough knowledge are very
important. Until very recently, communicating many of the individual details that
constitute the breakthrough has been extremely difficult. Notice that when you write
about it, you employ many terms and concepts from recent scientific discoveries:
computer science, behavioral psychology, modern physics, etc. Think how much
harder it would be to understand Theocracy without this background.
Q. I understand. Please amplify what you said about the Masonic and Rosicrucian
lodges being a cause more than an effect of advanced occult conspiracies during the
last three or four centuries.
A. It’s very simple, really. The presence of the lodges in Western society increased
the number of advanced occultists enormously, because they served as a visible
training ground for people who otherwise might never have had access to psychic
training and spiritual knowledge outside organized religion. The rituals and jargon of
the lodges were secret, but everyone knew approximately what went on inside them –
or at least, anyone with the potential to become an advanced occultist could guess.
This meant that fewer people who had possessed occult training in a past life would
spend a “wasted” incarnation in which they had no access to formal training.
Q. This makes sense, and also seems relevant to the basic theme of this whole book,
the War in Heaven. You’re describing what the struggle between the Theocrats and
the Invisible College is really like. It resembles an ordinary political conflict on Earth:
fights to recruit new members, to build institutions that serve the ideological cause,
etc. - 123 -
A. Correct. It’s not a war between “God and Satan” at all, in the sense of a conflict
between absolutes of good and evil. It is completely a matter of politics, and neither
side is completely good or bad. Of course, we are convinced that the side of the
Invisible College is better than the side of the Theocrats by any reasonable ethical
standard.
To sum up what we’ve said in this chapter, the Age of Reason was a major step in the
progress of Western civilization and a significant victory for the Invisible College over
the Theocrats in the War in Heaven. During the period from about 1700 to the 1960’s,
there was just as much improvement in the average level of individual human
consciousness as there was in physical technology, scientific knowledge, and the
design of social and political institutions. Our goal was to break the hold of religious
mind-control over the majority of people in the First World, and we accomplished it
reasonably well. Large numbers of people are still enslaved to Theocratic religion,
of course, but such belief-systems no longer dominate the collective consciousness of
the society to the extent they once did.
Today, even the majority of people in the advanced Western countries
who consider themselves devout religious believers actually put reason above faith,
and humanistic concerns before blind obedience to traditional doctrine. Do you see
why we used the quasi-religious rituals of the Masonic and Rosicrucian lodges to
accomplish this?
Q. Well, it looks as if you used a form of religious mind control to raise the
consciousness of the majority of people you worked with, because they had started out
as religious believers and were used to such techniques. However, you taught more
advanced psychic training techniques such as sex magic to the minority who were
ready for it.
A. The important thing to recognize here is that even the most advanced magical
lodges based on the Masonic/Rosicrucian tradition still train their members with
rituals that employ the religious trance.
Q. I’ve noticed that most advanced traditional occult organizations still practice such
rituals: for example, they teach people to enter a true psychic trance by first entering a
religious trance. Now that I’ve made the breakthrough, I realize that is why I’ve also
felt uncomfortable trying to participate in the magical workings of such lodges: I know
how to assume a psychic trance directly, and feel an instinctive revulsion during
rituals that attempt to put me into a religious trance.
A. This is correct, and it’s the main reason why we’ve been spreading the word
telepathically that the Age of Reason is ending and a new age is beginning. Its starting
point is another major revolution in consciousness, as we will discuss in the next
chapter.
- 124 -
Chapter 19: A Revolution in Consciousness
Q. The term “revolution in consciousness” is usually associated with the Sixties
psychedelics movement. Can you answer some of the questions I’ve had about drugs
that I’ve never been able to figure out on my own?
A. There’s much more to the revolution in consciousness that’s now going on than
just the widespread use of consciousness-altering drugs, but it’s a good starting point.
Especially, the drug issue illustrates that there’s a War in Heaven going on: we try to
teach people how to use drugs for their own good, and the Theocrats work to create
the “drug problem” in an effort to sabotage our attempts to take human consciousness
on this planet another major step forward.
The modern struggle between the Theocrats and the Invisible College over the
recreational and other uses of psychoactive drugs started long before the Sixties; and
the drug then involved was alcohol. The real reason that the Prohibition Amendment
passed after World War I is that we suddenly stopped opposing the anti-alcohol
movement that Theocratic Fundamentalists had been leading for decades.
In other words, we decided, “Let the Christian Temperance Union and the other
prohibitionist organizations have their way; maybe total prohibition of alcoholic
beverages will fail so miserably that it will convince the majority of Americans that
puritanical laws regulating intimate details of the personal lives of individuals are a
bad idea.” And our plan worked.
Government policy and general opinion in this society are now treating alcoholism
more as a medical and psychiatric problem than as a moral or criminal problem. This
is actually a significant step forward for the whole civilization: learning how to deal
with a social problem to minimize the total harm it does to the society.
Q. I’ve always found it inexplicable that Western society can deal with the alcohol
problem in a reasonably sensible and sophisticated manner, but not with problems
caused by drugs other than alcohol.
A. This is happening because the drug controversy is now one of the two or three
most important battlegrounds between the Theocrats and the Invisible College. The
key to understanding why involves certain side effects of LSD and various
psychedelic drugs closely related to it: mescaline, psilocybin, etc., in both their pure
and their botanical forms.
Q. I was right at the heart of the Psychedelics Movement in the Sixties and Seventies,
but I never really figured out what was going on. Obviously, the Invisible College
was urging large numbers of people to take these drugs, seemingly indiscriminately;
but I never found out why. In fact, I often got angry with you for trying to “turn on
the world” to LSD, seemingly with little regard for the consequences.
0ccultists have used powerful psychedelic drugs of this family for centuries as aids to
psychic development, but always with a great deal of caution and respect. Only
occultists at a reasonable level of advancement were supposed to take them; their use
was denied to the really immature and unstable. Also, occultists have always taught - 125 -
that psychedelics use was should be combined with other psychic training techniques,
to maximize the benefits and minimize the dangers.
However, when I tried to teach these methods of psychedelics use in the context of the
Sixties counterculture, I found that very few members of the movement had the
patience for such a conservative approach. Practically everybody just said, “I’m going
to keep on dropping acid until I get rid of my hangups and expand my mind, and then
I’ll worry about all this stuff about meditation and psychic exercises.” And I was
aware why so many people felt this way: at this stage of my psychic development, I
was beginning to become consciously aware of your telepathic messages advocating
indiscriminate use of LSD and similar drugs. Quite frankly, I disapproved of this
policy, because I saw so many people hurt themselves with irresponsible drug-use.
A. You are aware by now, aren’t you, that most of the people who experienced “acid
freakouts” during the Sixties didn’t suffer significant permanent damage?
Q. This seems to be true on the average, yes. Also, I’m now mature enough to realize
that a lot of the drug-users in the Sixties Movement who killed themselves, committed
serious crimes, or became insane enough to be institutionalized, would probably have
done something similar sooner or later anyway, even if they’d never used drugs.
A. True. This was a significant factor in our decision to take the risk of starting the
Psychedelics Movement. We still have to admit that there were casualties, though,
and we’re sorry about it. However, we have to point out once again that a war is being
fought and it’s your freedom, that of the entire human race, that’s at stake.
Q. I understand all this by now, though I’m not sure how many of my readers will.
Well, there’s nothing I can do about this except tell as much as I can of the facts and
let people make up their own minds about who’s right and wrong. What I’d most like
to know about the whole drug question is simply what the Sixties Psychedelic
Movement was for. What, exactly, were you trying to accomplish, and did it succeed?
A. The answer to your second question is, “Yes, fairly well. Better than our
expectations.” The answer to the first is technical and almost impossible to describe in
English, but we’ll try. Since you, and probably a significant number of your readers,
are familiar with electronic computers, we will use computer terminology for our
explanation.
First, you have to realize that a normal state of consciousness is comparable to a
computer program that’s already running in an input or output mode instead of a
command mode. In an input mode, you can enter data into the files of the computer to
be stored or processed. In an output mode, you can retrieve information that’s already
been processed, and print it out or make some other use of it. On most modern
computers, you can switch between these two modes very easily, and this analogy
seems to apply to the mind as well.
The input mode of normal consciousness consists of receiving information through the
senses and entering it into the memory, where it is processed in various ways and is
available for later retrieval. The output mode consists of making use of data that the
mind has already processed to feel emotions, think, speak, listen, move the body, and
perform a wide variety of other activities. The whole thing is much more complex and - 126 -
sophisticated than anything conceivable for electronic computers, even in theory, but
the analogy should be clear.
However, you can’t modify the program that’s running on an electronic computer set
to an input or output mode. In order to do that, you’d have to enter some kind of
command mode.
Q. As an example, before I typed this paragraph, I entered the
command mode of this word processing program and changed the
margins for this one paragraph. But now I’m back in the input mode to
write this.
A. When this analogy is applied to states of consciousness in the human mind, you
have to realize that the situation is very complex. On one level, you feel that you have
a great deal of free will, a large measure of control over what you think and do and
even over how you react emotionally. This is simply because you are aware of a large
number of different alternative courses of action open to you at any given time.
You are much less aware of those alternatives that are not open to you. For example,
large areas of your total memory are not available to conscious access at any particular
time. Like many electronic computers, the human mind arranges memories in banks,
and you normally have access to only a few of these at any one time. You can change
banks by an act of conscious will, but this often loses you access to information you
could recall easily before, from the other memory bank. In addition, there’s the
subconscious, which contains memories that are very rarely available for conscious
access.
Q. It also appears to me that normal consciousness includes at least limited command
functions: for example, deliberately “putting yourself in a mood” to do a particular
thing that you couldn’t do without advance concentration and preparation. This may
be analogous to certain capabilities on this word processing program: for example, I
don’t have to leave the input mode to PRINT IN ALL CAPS or to underline.
A. Yes, but you can’t change the line-length except by going into a command mode,
as you did above. Now the point we’re trying to make here is that LSD and related
psychedelic drugs create a state of consciousness that is similar to putting a computer
into a command mode and making changes in the program that is being run.
Q. This brings us back to my original objections to your advocacy of indiscriminate
use of powerful psychedelics during the Sixties. Going into a command mode on a
computer is useless, and usually detrimental to finishing the job at hand, unless you
know exactly what you’re doing. For example, the command mode I entered to
change the margins could also have been used to delete the whole file I’m working on,
and that could have been done by pushing only two keys.
A. Fortunately, the very complexity of the human mind makes it much less vulnerable
than that. What actually happened when the average person in the Sixties
Psychedelics Movement took LSD wasn’t the same as the limited work with entering a
“command mode” and doing deliberate mental reprogramming that Western occultists
have traditionally done when they used psychedelics. It operated on a level unknown
to the occultists.
In other words, you yourself, and all the people you considered serious occultists,
underwent the same involuntary mental changes as the “street hippies” did because of
taking LSD. You accomplished your limited psychic training goals, while they did - 127 -
nothing but “sit and groove”; but the drug itself was doing something much more
fundamental to every one of you, every time you took it.
Q. I’d already guessed most of this, but it’s still a little disturbing to see it put into
words. Exactly what changes are you talking about, and how do they relate to the
analogy about command modes?
A. Well, the computer you are using to write this book has several different levels of
command modes, doesn’t it?
Q. Yes. For example, the lowest level is the one I used to change the margins.
Beyond that is another level at which I could enter another application entirely, such
as creating and sorting data in an address file. Beyond that, I could write a program in
Basic or Assembly Language and create a word-processing file similar to this one, but
with whatever modifications we desired. And beyond that, I could write or install a
Machine Language program that would change the computer’s capabilities for writing
new programs, including teaching it an entirely different computer language.
A. OK. By this analogy, the traditional use of psychedelics by occultists is on the
level of writing a Basic program. That’s how people learn to use telepathy and other
psychic powers: they actually write a new program, but to do so, they use capabilities
already present in their mind all along, as your computer has the Basic programming
language among its files.
Q. This explains why psychedelics are not essential to psychic training. They can
speed up the process under the right circumstances, but they don’t seem to be able to
give a specific psychic talent to just anybody. There are large numbers of otherwise
intelligent and creative people who simply can’t learn to become telepaths or
mediums, for example, with or without taking drugs. On the other hand, a lot of
experienced occult teachers who dislike drugs assert that they can accomplish exactly
the same degree of psychic training for a given person without using drugs as could be
accomplished with them; it would just take longer. I tend to agree with them in
general, though I still fall into the “pro” rather than the “anti” camp of occultists when
it comes to psychedelic drugs as a psychic training aid.
A. The real reason we advocated widespread use of LSD in the Sixties had nothing to
do with the short-term effects of the drug, or with conscious use of those effects for
psychic training. To get back to the computer-language analogy we’ve been using, the
“mind-expansion through LSD” that we were advocating involved a Machine
Language program, not merely a Basic program.
Repeated use of LSD over several years makes fundamental changes in people’s
mental programming, and we used LSD plus direct telepathic conditioning techniques
to significantly reprogram the minds of several million Americans. We also used
environmental conditioning through the general emotional climate of the Sixties
counterculture itself, as expressed in its art, music, slogans, etc.
Q. To tell the truth, I found all that stuff about “Peace and Love and Flower Children
and Dropping Out and Everything Should Be Free” to be naive and impractical at best,
and at worst to be self-destructive.
A. You felt this way because you already had high ideals and were concerned mostly
with trying to put them into practice. We created the emotional atmosphere you find
naive and self-destructive simply to teach a certain amount of idealism to young
people who had been raised in average Fifties American homes that almost completely - 128 -
lacked it. Throughout their childhoods, they had been taught to value various shallow
forms of material success more than anything else. We were trying to push them in
the right direction, and advocating widespread use of the powerful psychedelics was
our principal means of doing so.
Q. How did the reprogramming that you carried out through the Sixties
counterculture and psychedelics movement compare in effectiveness with that
accomplished through religious mind control by Theocratic religious groups?
A. There is a tremendous difference, roughly that between doing something using a
high level of technology and doing it by human muscle power, with the psychedelic
drug being analogous to the machinery. We did more reprogramming in a few years
on more people than the traditional religious Theocrats do in the same number of
decades. Unfortunately, the Fifth-stage Theocrats now have access to mental
reprogramming techniques just as effective as those we used in the Sixties; but this is a
subject we’ll discuss later.
Q. Well then, why did you stop? Why didn’t you let the Sixties Movement continue
indefinitely? I realize that you would have had to make the material you were using to
reprogram people much more complex, but wouldn’t this have happened naturally as
they matured and gained in knowledge and experience?
A. No, it doesn’t work that way, unfortunately. It was extremely difficult just to
program large numbers of LSD users with a set of vague idealistic principles that
would make their opinion-forming and decision-making processes more tolerant and
flexible. It was totally impossible to start teaching a detailed, sophisticated ideology.
The major reason for this is that we were working almost entirely through people’s
subconscious minds, so that they were absorbing short strings of data at random places
in their mental files. As long as these messages were simple, clear, and positive – and
it’s this that made you call them “naive” – then they did more good than harm. If
we’d tried using more complex material, it would have merely confused the recipients,
probably to the point of interfering with ordinary mental functions. In fact, most
people in the Sixties counterculture suffered temporarily from a significant degree of
this kind of confusion and impairment anyway.
Q. OK. I’m pretty sure I understand now. You were only trying to reprogram as
many Americans as possible with some vague principles that would make them more
socially and politically liberal, on a very fundamental level. Even before I made the
breakthrough, I was aware that something like this had happened.
A. At this point, let us end the discussion of drugs and go on to other aspects of the
War in Heaven that mark the beginning of a new age of human civilization on Earth. - 129 -
Chapter 20:The Aquarian Age
Q. I’ve never believed in astrology, so I’ve always felt a little uncomfortable using
terms like “Aquarian Age.” Why did you let it get started in the first place?
A. We had nothing to do with putting this term into common use. However, once
large numbers of people started using it entirely on their own, we invented our own
mythology around the rudiments of the Aquarian Age story and have been
transmitting it telepathically into the subconscious minds of many different people. It
now appears in messages channeled to the New Agers, in popular song lyrics, and
many different places in fiction and poetry.
First, here’s the basic astrological myth about the Aquarian Age. The Age just ending
was called the Piscean Age, after the constellation of Pisces, the Fishes. It’s an
appropriate name, because this was the Age of Christianity, which has the fish as one
of its symbols because in the Greek that the early Christians spoke, the word for “fish”
is also an acronym for the phrase “Jesus, the Anointed One, God’s Son, the Savior.”
And the Age just beginning is called the Aquarian Age after the constellation of
Aquarius, which represents a human being pouring water out of a jar.
Now, here’s our supplemental mythology about the Aquarian Age, which centers on
the concept of “water.” In this context, Water symbolizes spiritual power. During the
Piscean Age, the human race on Earth resembled an enormous school of fish: they
were utterly dependent on the water, and had very little control over it. They simply
lived in it and hoped to survive.
The New Age symbol is the human being taking control of the water, which also
represents spiritual power. However, if you take a closer look at the astronomical
mythology represented by the constellations, you’ll see that the water poured out by
the Water Carrier is the source of the great celestial river, the constellation Eridanus
which runs from the celestial equator far down in the southern sky. This huge
outpouring of spiritual power represents several things we’ll cover in Part Three: the
apocalyptic events that will free the human race on this planet from Theocracy, and
the birth of new gods.
Q. It’s details like this that I need for the book, even if they’re not directly connected
to the point being discussed: they prove that there’s an external creative intelligence
behind many of the intuitive flashes that inspire people to create modern mythologies.
A. Another example concerns several modern UFO researchers who received
telepathic communications containing words in an unknown language from sources
that identified themselves as “space people.” Occultists later identified the words as
belonging to the “Enochian” language. Over three hundred years ago, the English
occultist John Dee received a long series of channeled messages in this language, and
occultists still study it today.
The reason we telepathically transmitted Enochian words like “affa” – meaning, very
appropriately, “nothing” – to the Ufologists was to steer their thinking in certain
direction. We knew that if they published these words or repeated them very much,
someone with occult knowledge would tell them where they came from. It was just
another way of supplying evidence that there is a connection between what modern - 130 -
Ufologists call telepathic contact with space people, and the mediumistic
communication with spirits that occultists have been practicing throughout history.
Even with evidence like this to guide them, most of the Ufologists remain materialists.
We keep telling them, ”The Invisible College is composed of disembodied spirits.
We’re dead people, not living beings from other planets. Some of us are
extraterrestrials, yes, but we’re extraterrestrial spirits, not living people.” We keep
telling them this whenever we are in telepathic contact, and they keep right on
theorizing about interstellar space travel and other dimensions.
Next, let us tell you about the so-called “Sirius Connection,” which you mentioned in
Part One without ever quite figuring out what we were doing. This was a complicated
ploy of exactly the same type as the one we just mentioned. We started sending
telepathic messages like “Sirius is very important” when we found out that news of the
explicit astronomical knowledge about the invisible companion of Sirius in the
Sudanese DogonTribe’s mythology was about to surface.
In the early Seventies, when we started sending such messages, the same information
that later appeared in The Sirius Mystery was already known to certain anthropologists
and members of the occult and UFO communities, especially French speaking ones.
This information is extremely impressive, because it contains the period of revolution
of the companion around the larger star and the fact that this companion star is
composed of super-dense matter. The information contains enough detail to make
coincidence unlikely, and there is evidence that the Dogon possessed it before Western
scientists did.
Q. When I first read The Sirius Mystery, I tended to dismiss the whole thing as a hoax
by the Dogon. I speculated that some of them had heard the astronomical information
about Sirius from some passing trader only a few years before they told it to the
anthropologists. A lot of the traders in that area were Arabs, and amateur astronomy
has always been popular hobby in the Arab culture.
A. No, the Dogon got the information centuries ago. They may or may not have
gotten it second-hand from the ancient Egyptians, but they could have. This and many
other pieces of advanced astronomical and astrophysical information have been in
circulation among free spirits for thousands of years.
Q. I begin to get the point. You sent out telepathic messages about Sirius to get the
materialists like Wilson, Leary, and various Ufologists to listen to you, knowing
they’d encounter the information quite soon. I assume you knew in advance that The
Sirius Mystery was being written.
A. It’s more complicated than that. If we hadn’t started the telepathic
communications, several of these people would have accepted the information about
Sirius and the Dogon as hard proof of physical visitations to Earth by Ancient
Astronauts. As it was, we complicated the issue in their minds, and may have kept
them from seriously misleading the significant number of people who regard their
opinions as authoritative.
Q. When you say, “complicated the issue,” are you talking about R.A. Wilson’s
making a connection between the modern Sirius Mystery and the “Great Star” legends
of the Masons, Rosicrucians, and various occult groups?
A. Yes, the “Great Star” is also the “Great Secret”: a version of the truth about
Theocracy. This same symbolism is also being used by a number of different factions - 131 -
of spirits and living people involved in the psychic warfare to be described in Part
Three. For example, some of then call themselves “cats” or “lions” and refer to
certain other types of spirits as “dogs” or “Sirians.” These terms refer to different
details of the physiology of the astral soul, and there are spirits of each type in the
service of both the Theocrats and the Invisible College.
Q. I also see another possible tie-in here. Ever since R.A. Wilson wrote the
Illuminatus! books, he’s had a following composed mostly of counterculture people
who publish underground magazines devoted to discussing his work, and to similar
material by Leary, Burroughs, etc. Some of these people were part of the Sixties LSD
movement at the time when the media were full of anti-drug propaganda claiming that
LSD damaged the chromosomes, and that the children of everyone who used it would
be born deformed or mutated. My own opinion at the time was not to take these
claims seriously, because they were supported by insufficient evidence – and history
seems to have proven me right.
The assertion that LSD causes physical mutations seems to be entirely false. But this
didn’t stop certain members of the Sixties counterculture from taking this “mutation”
propaganda and turning it completely around. In other words, they admitted that LSD
causes mutations, and not in the descendants of the people who take the drug, but in
the users themselves. And of course they claimed that these mutations were extremely
beneficial, turning acidheads into supermen.
Now, I had enough scientific knowledge and plain common sense to dismiss these
claims as obvious nonsense, typical of the alternating delusions of persecution and
grandeur so common in the counterculture at the time. And, on the purely physical
level, nothing has happened since to convince me that my snap judgment was wrong.
However, the belief that acidheads are mutants in a literal, physical sense and
therefore superior to ordinary people has never died out within the counterculture. It
seems commoner in the counter-culture today than it was in the Sixties. Is the
Invisible College responsible for this?
A. Yes. Some of the people who are going to read this book and other explicit
writings about the War in Heaven, and who are going to make the breakthrough and
join the movement to teach others the truth about the nature of spiritual reality, are
going to describe themselves as “mutants” of this type.
Q. Personally, I feel more like an alien than a mutant. I have past-life memories set
on other worlds, and I really don’t feel comfortable in any cultural group on this
planet.
A. This is because you’re here to help in the building of an entirely new and more
advanced civilization on Earth. And a large number of the people who call themselves
mutants are also of extra-terrestrial origin. That’s another thing you’ll want to
concentrate on in your future writings’ helping these people realize who they are, and
what they’re on this planet to do.
Q. Here’s a question I asked before and didn’t get answered. I’ll try to ask it again,
because it pertains directly to the subject of mutants. During the Sixties, Timothy
Leary often said that LSD helps people unlock cosmic secrets that are encoded in our
DNA; and at the time, I found this concept completely incomprehensible. But he’s
still saying the same thing today. For example, he said in Neurologic just a few years
ago that “Most of the characteristics formerly attributed to the soul now describe the - 132 -
functions of DNA, whose complex messages originate from higher intelligences in
other solar systems... The mission of DNA is to evolve nervous systems able to
escape from the doomed planet and contact manifestations of the same amino-acid
seeding that have evolved in other solar systems.” What is the relationship between
the concept in this quotation, the acid mutants, and the cosmology that you’ve already
given?
A. First of all, there was never a physical seeding of amino acids to start organic life.
What actually happened was that disembodied spirits went to planets that were ready
for life to develop, and created the amino acids by telekinetic manipulation of existing
organic molecules. They assembled these amino acids into physical DNA using their
own astral DNA molecules as templates.
When Leary and other scientists theorize that the physical DNA contains an
evolutionary program that automatically causes new species to develop, they are
slightly misinterpreting messages that we put in their subconscious minds. What we
are actually trying to tell them is that evolution is guided by the psychic manipulations
of disembodied spirits, but most such scientists are still too materialistic to accept such
an explanation. Their conscious minds are unwilling to admit the literal existence of
the soul and other spiritual phenomena, so they try to stretch theories from physical
science to fit the evidence they discover. This sometimes causes non-scientists
who read their works to engage in speculations about evolution and mutation that stray
very far from reality.
What we’re really telling all these people is simply, ”Try to develop conscious control
over your psychic powers during your present lifetime, so you’ll have a better chance
of surviving after death.” LSD and other psychedelic drugs are a dangerous but useful
tool for doing this, and so are many psychic training practices derived from occultism
and religion. We do want people to evolve; but the evolution is spiritual, not physical.
However, there’s a lot more to the War in Heaven than just a struggle between the
Invisible College and the Theocratic spirits who operate through organized religion
and try to retard material progress towards an advanced civilization on this planet.
During the last five years, as this book was being written, the power of the religious
Theocrats to influence the evolution of Western society has steadily declined, but that
does not mean this Spiritual Revolution is going to be quick, easy, or bloodless.
What’s actually been going on during the last twenty years is that the Theocrats are
preparing to achieve their final goal. Throughout recorded history, the Theocrats have
falsely pretended to be gods. Now, because of the Earth’s extremely high and
unstable population, they actually have a chance to assume godlike powers. This is
what the War in Heaven is really all about, and this what we will describe in Part
Three.
- 133 -
Part Three: The Second Breakthrough
Chapter 21: Hitch-Hiking Spirits
A. It is now time for the Invisible College to tell Earth people the whole truth about
the nature of spiritual beings, especially the basic cosmology about the origin and
destiny of the human soul. We told you to leave the material in the next few chapters
out of Spiritual Revolution because we did not want to describe certain things we
intend to do in the future before we were fully prepared to do them. These technical
preparations have now been completed. Our psychic network for fighting Theocracy
is now in place and already exchanging fire with the enemy, so it’s now safe to tell
more.
Jeffry Goodman’s “hitch-hiking spirits” theory is a good way to begin.
Q. The “hitch-hiking spirits” theory described in The Genesis Mystery is actually
quite vague. For example, Goodman doesn’t try to explain the ultimate origin of
organic life, but deals mostly with the development of modern human beings out of
pre-humans. When I read the book, I assumed that if his interventionist theory of
evolution is valid at all, it should apply to the entire course of evolution, including the
creation of life itself.
Many of the modern biochemical experiments that have tried to simulate the creation
of life out of non-living matter have shown that the probabilities of its happening by
chance alone are so low that it’s reasonable to dismiss this theory as invalid. I have
assumed for a long time that spiritual beings intervened in the creation of life on Earth,
as well as in the creation of modern humans. However, this raises several additional
questions.
How did these spirits get here, and why would they want to travel to planets without
organic life? You have already explained that the soul is nourished on energy from
the body and that spirits have to incarnate or they will starve, so why would they go to
a place where they couldn’t survive?
A. Ordinary human spirits don’t do it deliberately. Some advanced civilizations have
a form of rapid interstellar travel that makes it possible for disembodied spirits to
travel from one world to another at speeds much faster than the speed of light. When
they get to their destination, they incarnate there. However, such interstellar travel by
spirits involves risks, and they sometimes get lost in transit and end up on a planet
other than the one they intended to visit. If the equipment needed to project spirits
over interstellar distances does not exist there, they are marooned. If spirits find
themselves marooned on a planet devoid of life, they eventually die, unless other
spiritual beings are able to rescue them. This will be discussed further later.
Q. The universe consists almost entirely of empty space. Don’t most of the
marooned spirits end up in interstellar space, with only a very few landing on planets
at all?
A. No, the interstellar transportation process doesn’t work like that. Travel can occur
only if there is a large mass of physical matter at the other end. However, the spirit - 134 -
will still pass through the process even if the mass isn’t the one intended as its
destination.
Q. I assume that marooned spirits use their psychic powers to start creating organic
life, even though they realize they won’t survive long enough to benefit from the
process.
A. Yes. There’s a lot more to it than that. We gave a very incomplete version earlier
to you and to others on your planet when we said that some advanced civilizations of
the past have had a sort of religion that encouraged people to go around the universe
creating organic life on every planet that was geologically ready for it. This is a true
statement as far as it goes, but what we didn’t mention is that such civilizations were
very different from ours, as different as a colony of social insects such as bees or ants
is from a herd of horses or a pack of wolves.
We also mentioned that the civilizations that sent out such original missions of
creation seemed to be enemies of the civilizations ancestral to our own, and that our
ancestors were partly responsible for. driving them away, but we didn’t tell the full
story. Let’s leave this subject for a later chapter, and continue describing how spirits
create organic life on planets that are ready for it and then guide the process of
evolution until intelligent beings develop.
However, we should point out that everything we say about the origin and evolution of
life on Earth is just scientific speculation. We’re reasonably sure it’s accurate, but it’s
not based on detailed historical records.
Q. Why don’t you have access to the histories of all the advanced civilizations going
back millions of years? Surely all such societies would have sophisticated equipment
for storing information, better than our present computers here on Earth, so my
assumption would be that information about all of them would be easy to obtain.
Even if civilizations are always rising and falling, communication between them
should ensure that history and other information gets passed along. After all, we Earth
people, primitive as we are, still possess many important written records of our own
vanished civilizations.
A. Well, you have a few written records from the ancient Greeks, Hindus, Chinese,
etc., but there are still huge gaps in your knowledge. For example, what percentage of
the ancient Greek poems, plays, histories, and scientific works that you know the titles
and authors of (from references in surviving works) have been lost?
Q. I can’t even guess at the figures, but I get your point. Much more has been lost
than has survived. Does the same apply to electronic data storage as used by advanced
civilizations, then? I’m surprised that such people have not worked out methods of
storing information for very long periods of time.
A. Advanced civilizations don’t use electronic computers, nor do they store much of
their data in durable physical forms equivalent to books, photographic film, sound
recordings, etc. The equipment they use to store and process information is made of
living organic matter and is relatively fragile, so it’s not that hard for specific
historical knowledge to be lost. Also, the symbolic systems for storing data are
neither alphabetic nor digital, but are versions of the system used for memory storage - 135 -
in the human brain. Such systems are extremely complex, and translation from one
system to another is often very difficult.
As long as a particular civilization is viable, it retains the information that the people
in it want to retain. If it breaks up, the souls of the people who survive the break-up
go to other civilizations, which have their own history, their own store of information
they consider valuable. So specific information about a particular planet is often not
available.
Q. While we’re talking about the remote past, what about the creation of the
universe?
A. The universe is cyclical. It really doesn’t have a beginning or an end. The Big
Bang theory, which most of your scientists now accept as proven, is valid; but it’s just
one component of a Steady State theory that operates on a larger scale. There is
another parallel part of the universe which is contracting toward a Big Crunch at the
point where/when Earth astronomers observe evidence of the Big Bang. That part of
the universe is composed of anti-matter and time flows backwards there.
The “heat death” points in our own part of the universe, the points where particles of
matter lose all their energy and motion, are also the points at which particles become
anti-matter and pass into the other part of the universe to start falling towards the Big
Crunch.
In other words, the universe didn’t really have an origin at all. There wasn’t a point in
time when the universe didn’t exist, because the very definition of time is as a
measurement of changes in matter and energy. Therefore, time cannot exist unless
matter and energy also exist. It is simply a dimension as length, breadth, and height
are dimensions; and this makes it part of the universe, not something independent of it.
Now, let’s get back to our discussion of the creation and evolution of life by saying
that the astral souls of all intelligent beings contain a template for the DNA molecule
and all the precursor chemicals that compose it. If the surface waters of an Earth-like
planet are close to the correct temperature and have the right chemicals dissolved in
them, disembodied spirits with the proper technical knowledge can create life by
psychokinesis alone. There is no need to visit planets in space-ships and “seed” them
physically.
Q. Is this organic life always of the same type as on Earth? In other words, is DNA
as we know it the basis for all life in the universe?
A. No, there are other kinds of organic life on the surfaces of other kinds of planets,
and also non-organic forms who live in the interiors of stars, comets, gas-clouds, and
other bodies of matter. They all have different kinds of souls, composed of different
kinds of astral matter, and there is almost no communication between the different
kinds of life.
Q. Why is this? Can’t they communicate telepathically, even if a soul from one type
of environment can’t incarnate in a body from another?
A. This is barely possible but not really feasible, because the different types of
organic and astral life use very different kinds of symbols to communicate, and also
think at different rates of speed. - 136 -
Q. This sounds similar to a problem that people here on Earth can have with
electronic computers. It’s often difficult to exchange data between two computers
because they have different kinds of processing units, internal clock speeds, or
software. However, it’s almost always possible to design additional hardware and
software that will allow data exchanges between the two computers. Can’t advanced
human civilizations invent equipment for communicating with these other forms of
life?
A. Your analogy doesn’t really apply. All of your computers were designed by and
for human beings. The common denominator between two different computers is the
person who understands both. There is no such common denominator between people
and vastly different forms of intelligent life.
Q. Please continue explaining how intelligent life is created. Especially, I’d like to
know more about the relationship between the body and the soul.
A. The human astral soul is both an alien parasite or symbiote, and a natural part of a
human being. All mammals have astral souls, but the astral soul of a human being is
extremely different from the astral soul of an ape. Human beings were radically
altered by psychokinetic genetic manipulation to become physically different from
other apes. The brain, the hands, the sense organs, the general musculature, and the
organs used in standing and walking erect are all very different in humans than they
are in apes. However, the scientists who recently started mapping the DNA structure
of anthropoid apes found it much more similar to that of humans from what they had
expected.
And when genetic science begins to learn the details of how random mutations usually
change the DNA structure, the scientists will discover that the genetic differences
between apes and humans don’t fit the usual patterns. They’ll realize that the
particular loops in the DNA molecule that causes the genetic differences between
people and apes have an artificial or alien look to them. That’s because they actually
are artificial: changes made by spirits from other worlds that were familiar with
genetic patterns different from those on Earth.
The somatic soul of the human species was genetically altered just as radically as the
body, and is also very different from the somatic soul of an ape. The human somatic
soul’s nervous system is much more highly developed for transmitting and using astral
energy, and the attachment point for the astral soul is much more highly developed.
This attachment point allows any human astral soul to incarnate, including those used
to incarnating in bodies very different from human bodies on Earth. In other words,
there is a sort of standardization among human-type bodies on many different worlds
to allow them to be linked to a wide variety of astral souls. There are often problems
of astral tissue-compatibility if body and soul are too different, but it is still possible
for many different types of astral souls from many different worlds to incarnate on
Earth.
One of the chief characteristics of intelligent beings compared with similar non-
intelligent beings is that both the body and the astral soul show strong evidence of
neoteny. For example, many scientists on Earth have noticed that an adult human
being retains many physical characteristics found in an anthropoid ape during infancy
or childhood, but lost as it matures. - 137 -
When a neotenous salamander like an axolotl retains its gills while becoming sexually
mature, the resulting neotenous adult is physiologically more primitive, meaning that
there is less specialization of the tissues and organs than in a normal adult of the same
species. Human beings are physiologically more primitive than other large primates
such as gorillas, baboons, or chimpanzees. This is especially true of the
voluntary musculature. It is well known that all the great apes far exceed
human beings in relative strength, because of differences in the muscle structure.
Notice too that there’s a marked gender-difference in humans in muscle structure as
well. The adult female, with her smoother voluntary muscles and a more extensive
layer of subcutaneous fat, is more primitive and more neotenous than the adult male.
Q. Yes, and I’ve also read that all human embryos start out as somatically female,
and that a fetus with an XY chromosome develops male characteristics later.
A. Many technologically advanced races of people use genetic engineering
(modification of the genes before conception) and biological engineering
(modification of the body during embryological development by the use of hormones
and other chemicals) to repress the development of the secondary sexual
characteristics and to increase the neotenous characteristics. This is why so many
dreams and visions of space people show them as rather androgynous.
Q. What is the advantage in neoteny? What do Earth people gain from not being as
strong as the other great apes? And why would advanced people want to be weaker
still?
A. There are three reasons why humans living under primitive conditions were
genetically engineered to have less sheer muscular strength than ordinary apes. The
first is that if the process is properly done, they gain considerably in co-ordination and
are much better at doing delicate manipulations with their hands. Second, having less
muscular strength stimulates people’s intellectual development by encouraging them
to use tools and develop technology. The third reason is that neoteny significantly
slows down the maturation and aging process, giving people more time to develop
their minds
than animals have. Since humans are physically immature and dependent on others
for so long while they are growing up, this also gives them an opportunity to learn
many things from their elders that they might not learn if they became independent
adults sooner.
Advanced human civilizations inhibit the secondary sexual characteristics and certain
kinds of muscular development even more, for exactly the same reasons. They gain a
longer lifespan, better general health, and physical equality between the genders; and
they lose very little, because they don’t need great physical strength nearly as much as
they need good balance, agility, and coordination. If such a body is kept in good
general muscle tone, it has greater endurance against fatigue than a more heavily-
muscled body and is more resistant to many kinds of injuries. Also, most advanced
human societies reproduce entirely by ectogenesis, so there is no need for people to
be capable of ordinary mammalian reproduction.
Q. Some readers will interpret that last sentence as implying that advanced human
societies have eliminated sex entirely. I know this isn’t true because of my past life
memories, but you still should explain the subject further. - 138 -
A. Most advanced societies have separated sexuality from reproduction. Why create
the human body by having it grow inside an adult as a parasite, when it can be grown
much more efficiently in an artificial environment? Notice the paradoxical attitude
that so many Earth women have about bearing children: on one hand, they know the
future of the human race may depend on it, but on the other, they also know it’s
damaging to the body and seriously interferes with other aspects of adult life.
Especially, pregnancy and child rearing are ready-made excuses for placing women in
an inferior social status.
However, sexuality itself still exists in all advanced human societies for emotional,
social, and psychic reasons. The androgynous people you see in your dreams are all
sexually functional males or females. On the average, advanced humans tend to be
more sexually active than primitive humans, because their physical and mental health
are better, and because they don’t have to work as hard for basic survival.
Q. This explains a lot of things I’ve guessed and wondered about all my life. Now,
please try to tell us the whole truth about “gods” and the original creation of human
beings. I’d especially like to get a more detailed explanation of the fragmentary
messages I’ve gotten over the years asserting that the human astral soul is a parasite or
symbiote. Do godlike beings actually exist, and if so, why have you been so insistent
all the time I’ve been writing this book that I say they don’t exist?
A. We thought we had already explained why many Earth people have an instinctive
feeling that the soul is an “alien parasite” attached to the body, but we’ll try to make it
clearer. The somatic soul of a human being contains many structures not found in the
souls of other primates. Some of these produce a form of neoteny in the body; others
could cause the brain to develop into a high-quality bio-computer; and still others
allow astral souls of many different types to incarnate in human bodies. This gives
many people the feeling that there is something alien about the soul.
The reason we said earlier that gods don’t exist is that the statement is completely true
in the context in which we were using it. Throughout human history on Earth, some
spirits have pretended to be gods, using a definition of the term that allows them to
rule over human beings without being accountable for their actions. These definitions
assert that gods are greatly superior to humans in wisdom and morality, encouraging
people to let deities deny them their rights to consent of the governed.
However, the human spirits making these claims are simply lying. They are not
superior to ordinary people except in possessing certain forms of knowledge and
power; and in moral terms they are significantly inferior because their very existence
depends on enslaving and exploiting living people and other disembodied spirits.
Since pretending to be gods is one of the chief sources of Theocratic power, we have
had to attack it very strongly in Part Two.
Now it is time for us to look at spiritual reality from an even larger perspective, and to
deal with the idea that intelligent beings greater than humans actually exist. There are
two types, “elementals” and “gods,” and we will start describing them in the next
chapter. However, let us end this chapter by saying that everything we’ve said
previously about gods and human rights still stands. The elementals and gods we are
about to describe are still not morally superior to humans, and it is our duty – the duty
of advanced human civilizations on other worlds and people on Earth as well – to - 139 -
stand up to these beings and demand our rights as sovereign individuals.
- 140 -
Chapter 22: Elementals
A. Elementals and Gods are the same kind of entity structurally, though they differ
enormously in personality and behavior. You might say that Gods are civilized
elementals. So, for our descriptions of how the astral bodies and minds of these
beings function, we’ll use the general term “Elementals.”
On one level, Elementals are specialized types of Theocratic bands. They are very
large composite spirits containing thousands of human astral souls very closely linked
together. On another, they are sentient creatures in their own right, with personalities
and emotions quite different from those of ordinary human beings. One thing we want
to stress: Elementals and humans are not two races of beings, but different forms of
one race. The astral DNA template of both is identical, but humans are the individual
form and Elementals are the composite form.
Composite physical life forms exist on Earth. The bees, ants, termites, and other
social insects are the most intelligent of these. The Elementals bear the sane
relationship to humans as an ordinary honeybee colony does to a primitive, solitary
bee or wasp.
Q. I’ve speculated for years that a colony of social insects might have a single soul or
group mind that’s much more highly developed than the mind that could fit into the
tiny brain of a single individual insect. Certainly the behavior of a whole colony
shows much more intelligence than the behavior of an individual.
A. The nature of group minds depends on the amount of control they have over their
individual members. There are roughly four levels of control, though each integrates
with the next. These can be verbalized as co-operation, persuasion, coercion, and
compulsion.
Co-operation is working with others because your mutual interests coincide, and the
shared effort is of mutual benefit without major concessions on the part of either party
involved. Persuasion is essentially barter: “I’ll do this for you if you’ll do that for
me.” Coercion is similar, but the barter is negative: “I’ll do harm to you unless you do
some particular thing for me.” Compulsion is direct control of someone else that
transcends that other person’s volition.
Q. It looks to me as if human societies on Earth operate on all four levels, so they
probably have group minds by your definition.
A. No. Earthly societies operate mostly by co-operation and persuasion, with some
coercion and only a small amount of compulsion. A bee colony operates entirely by
compulsion, almost in the same way that your brain operates your body through the
nervous system.
Q. People don’t like coercion and compulsion, so we tend to think that they are
among the most important factors governing society. However, you are correct in
pointing out that co-operation and persuasion are much more common. The reason we
worry about the two negative factors so much is that we have an instinctive aversion
for them. - 141 -
A. There are two reasons why human societies resist becoming a true composite
entity. First, people have highly developed brains and are fully intelligent as
individuals. Second, each person has a separate astral soul with an astral will that
resists outside control. It is possible to control the minds of living people by psychic
compulsion under certain circumstances, but this is very difficult. People strongly
resist such control because of their highly developed brains and souls.
A bee colony is a composite entity because individual bees don’t have large enough
brains to support true intelligence and because they don’t have individual astral souls.
A colony of social insects has a single astral soul that is linked to the body of every
individual in it. The brain of a bee has very limited capacity for storing information,
and little programming for processing data. Instead, the individual uses telepathy to
pass information to the astral mind of the hive. This group mind processes and stores
the information received from individual bees and does the thinking for the entire
hive, passing down its orders by telepathy.
The collective mind of a bee colony shows intelligence far beyond the reasoning and
memory-storage capacity of an individual bee. In fact, in certain narrow areas, this
group mind displays a level of intelligence almost equal to that of human beings. One
example is the colony’s ability to direct the physical changes that individual bees go
through during the course of their lives to perform different specialized functions:
gathering food, cleaning and repairing the hive, rearing the young, defending the
colony from enemies, swarming to produce a new colony, etc. A bee colony is
actually better organized in terms of division of labor than a human society.
Another example is the colony’s ability to control the temperature within the hive,
using a biological central heating and air conditioning system. When the group mind
perceives that the hive is too hot inside, certain bees are instructed to act as living
ventilator fans. They cling to the walls of passageways that lead to entrances of the
hive, and circulate cool air by beating their wings. When the hive is too cool, the
entrances are sealed with wax; but the bees serving as fans keep on circulating air,
which evenly distributes the heat generated by the metabolism of all the bees in the
hive.
Human societies are superficially similar to composite entities, but they aren’t true
composites, because individual people have independent intelligence and will.
However, the human astral soul has a strong potential for forming composite entities
while it is in a disembodied state, because souls can literally link themselves together,
as was described in the chapter on Theocratic bands. There is much more compulsion
in a Theocratic band on the astral plane than in any totalitarian society on Earth,
because Theocrats attach their silver cords to other spirits and control them as directly
as the human brain controls the hands.
The structure of a Theocratic band as we described it earlier is similar to a wheel: the
spirit controlling the band is the hub, and the subordinate spirits are the spokes.
Notice that the world’s oldest surviving religion, Vedanta, uses such a spoked wheel
as its symbol. The rayed sun used by many other religions is the same symbol, minus
the rim of the wheel. However, the rim is extremely important, because it indicates
that a Theocratic band naturally produces a structure of astral matter separate from the
individual souls attached to it. - 142 -
Q. Are you saying that over the course of time, a Theocratic band develops its own
astral soul and astral mind that is the equivalent of the composite astral mind of a bee
or ant colony?
A. Yes. This is another important reason why Theocratic spirits don’t achieve true
immortality. The longer a Theocratic band lasts, the more it develops into a composite
entity with a mind of its own. At first, the controlling Theocrat completely dominates
the group mind; but eventually that mind becomes powerful enough to become
independent, and the band becomes an elemental.
Q. When I hear the term “Elemental,” I think of the Windigo legend. Several North
American Indian mythologies describe the Windigo as a huge, powerful disembodied
spirit that is capable of both reasoning and speech. However, it behaves like a
predatory animal, not a human being. The legends say it eats the souls of the dead on
the astral plane, and can sometimes kill living people and devour their souls as well.
The Windigo is one of the most frightening spiritual monsters in human mythology.
A. Similar beings are described in mythologies from all over the world, but only a
few Elementals have become as dangerous as the Windigos. Most of the Elementals
that have formed on Earth so far have been less dangerous than a large Theocratic
band controlled by the spirit of some human tyrant. Most Elementals that become
independent of their creator are no more intelligent than a human infant or a predatory
animal. In most cases, the Elemental stays in one place, feeding on the disembodied
souls of animals or humans that approach it: it was conditioned to do this while still
under the control of human spirits.
Q. I assume this is why so many myths talk about magic spells to “chain” evil spirits
in one place. And it also explains why primitive religions performed sacrifices and
rituals to placate the spirits that inhabited specific places. Elementals lived there, and
feeding them made it safer for living people to travel by the place.
A. Sometimes the “spirit of a place” was an Elemental, sometimes a Theocratic band.
It really didn’t matter: both wanted to be fed through sacrifices and rituals. The
uninhabited areas where such sacrifices were made were very often places where
large-scale religious sacrifices of humans or animals had once been conducted, where
a city had once stood, or where large numbers of people had died in a battle or
disaster. Any of these activities would have formed Theocratic bands, which may
have later turned into Elementals.
Most Elementals of this type are not particularly dangerous, because they were formed
by first- or third-stage religions, and aren’t particularly large or powerful. However,
the second stage religions that practiced mass human sacrifices created Theocratic
bands that eventually formed Elementals of vast power. Second-stage Theocratic
bands had to be extremely large because this was the only way they could exert
enough power over their living slave populations to keep the whole society from
collapsing. Invariably, such bands quickly became Elementals.
Many ancient cities that practiced second-stage Theocratic religion were abandoned
after being conquered by their enemies. Carthage is one example, and the Judeo-
Christian Bible mentions several more. No one wanted to live on the site for a long
time, because of the presence of large and dangerous Elementals. Of course, if people - 143 -
avoided the place long enough, the elemental would die of starvation, making the area
safe for human habitation again.
The Windigos were a related phenomenon, except that the Elementals didn’t remain
where they were first formed. The Windigos had originated in those areas where the
Incas, Mayas, and Aztecs practiced second-stage Theocracy. When a new Elemental
formed in this region, the other Theocratic bands attached to those tribes didn’t try to
chain it to one place, but worked magic to drive it far away. Some of these banished
Elementals went all the way to North America and gave rise to the Windigo legend.
Others went to the southern tip of South America, where the Aurucanians have similar
legends.
Similar things have also happened during modern wars. The fate of Hitler and a
number of the other top Nazi leaders and their Theocrat friends on the astral plane
after the surrender of Germany in 1945 is an example.
Q. There were persistent rumors for many years that Hitler didn’t really die at the end
of the war, but successfully fled Germany. Ever since I made the breakthrough, I’ve
suspected that these rumors might be true, but not in the physical sense. In other
words, he did commit suicide in that bunker, but immediately took charge of a band of
Nazi Theocrats on the astral plane, and is probably still up there today, sustained by
the psychic energies of the creeps and misfits who continue to wear the swastika and
practice the Nazi creed of bigotry and violence.
A. The truth is much stranger than that. Hitler and hundreds of other Nazi leaders
fled as disembodied spirits to Japan to assist their Theocratic allies there. They hoped
that a D-Day-type invasion of Japan would prove too costly to the Allies and that
Japanese Fascism would survive after a negotiated peace.
At this point, both the German and Japanese Theocrats had access to enormous
amounts of energy from the millions of victims of World War Two, and they
deliberately manipulated the American government into dropping the atomic bomb to
provide them with even more victims. Their hope was to create an Elemental and use
its vast psychic power either to turn defeat into victory on the Earth plane, or to flee to
another world.
Fortunately, the attempt failed, and the Theocrats involved were devoured by the
entity they were trying to create. This Elemental still survives on the astral plane, and
will become an important focal point in the struggle between the Invisible College and
the Theocrats in the future.
Q. One thing I read into what you just said about the Nazi leaders is that the
Theocrats themselves may be natural enemies of the Elementals.
A. This is quite true. That’s why the third and fourth stages of Theocratic religion
were invented. to allow Theocratic bands to remain stable on the astral plane for long
periods of time. However, either a Theocratic spirit has to reincarnate or else its band
will eventually turn into an Elemental. That’s a fact of nature.
The fact that human beings tend to create a technology that allows the planer’s total
population to increase steadily is another factor preventing Theocratic spirits from
becoming truly immortal. Of course, a rising population generates new souls in large
numbers, which in turn increases the number of souls on the astral plane that are easy
prey for Theocratic spirits. But this superabundance of souls is a mixed blessing, - 144 -
because it encourages Theocratic bands to grow so large they go out of control and
turn into Elementals. This is why Theocratic religions often try to inhibit
technological progress; but such a policy is self-limiting.
Q. I see what you mean. If the Theocrats keep their particular society from
developing technology at the same rate as neighboring societies, it’s likely to be
conquered from outside. Can you tell me why human beings have this instinctive
drive to achieve technological progress?
A. The cause of technological progress is a process of Darwinian natural selection
which allows a society to survive natural disasters, defeat enemies in war, and develop
the natural resources available to it more fully. All these give it an advantage over any
society that doesn’t do these things. Cultures that encourage their members to work
for technological progress survive better than those that don’t.
This particular cycle contains the seeds of its own destruction: technological
advancement on a primitive planet like Earth invariably causes the human population
to increase to the point where exploitation of natural resources seriously upsets the
planer’s ecological balances. Most people on Earth are now aware that a population
bomb is t