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TRAPPED IN A MASONIC WORLD

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- 287 -<br />

arms. - There is no law beyond Do what thou wilt‖. - Within Thelema, Ra-Hoor-Khuit is called the Lord of<br />

the Aeon - time.<br />

[1]"VampireFreaks.com Cult: Duty_of_Thelema." .<br />

[2] "S Y N T H E S I S - Crowley, Sumeria and the Fallen Angels." .<br />

[3] "Heru-ra-ha - .<br />

Operation Mistletoe<br />

It wasn‘t until after reading various books by the likes of Crowley, Manly P. Hall, Gardner, LaVey and<br />

other occultists, or similar books on the subject; that I began to grasp how widespread ―Black Magic‖,<br />

Wicca, and the occult really was, and which is arguably on par with many other religious orders, with as<br />

many, or if not more followers, than that of the Church of Scientology or the Unification Church – alias,<br />

the Moonies, whom combined have a worldwide membership of millions. I was also rather surprised to<br />

find out that various members of our own royal family, alongside many other world leaders and politicians<br />

such as Winston Churchill, Adolf Hitler, Rudolf Hess, Heinrich Himmler and Russia‘s royal families, and<br />

their own countries leaders, - whom many were members of the State Duma, were too all heavily into<br />

Black Magick, - and in some cases long before the likes of Aleister Crowley even came along. Stalin loved<br />

his Gnosticism, and it‘s well known how the Tsar Nicholas II and Tsarina Aleksandra, with the help of<br />

―Mad Monk‖ Rasputin were all well into the occult. The Occult in Russian and Soviet Culture; written in<br />

1997 and edited by Bernice Glatzer Rosenthal, is a book which provides a comprehensive account of the<br />

influence of occult beliefs and doctrines on intellectual and cultural life in twentieth-century Russia. Other<br />

contributors document occultism in the cultural life of the early Soviet period, [1] examining the traces of<br />

the occult in the culture at the height of the Stalin era, and describe the occult rise and revival in<br />

contemporary Russia today.<br />

It‘s seems as if Crowley just happened to be the man of the moment, - was a Freemason, as were many<br />

in high society in them days, and the occult was a popular pastime, endorsed by the likes of Queen<br />

Victoria, and which lingered on for decades after she had long passed away. It appears as if Crowley was<br />

employed to advise various world leaders in England, Germany and Russia, and perhaps even further<br />

afield in the realms of an occultist. It was also around this same period of time and without each other‘s<br />

knowledge, [or so they say], he was simultaneously advising all three of those countries leaders, that was<br />

perhaps a contributory reason that gave cause for the worlds press to go on and brand him as being; ―The<br />

wickedest man in the world, and; A man we‘d love to hang‖. You could say Crowley was a kind of triple -<br />

agent, as it was known he worked as a spy with a code name; The Beast-666. It appears as if on one hand<br />

he was advising Churchill, thus the British government as to what Adolf and his chums were getting up to.<br />

- Whilst on the other hand telling Hitler what a magick bloke he was, and what in his opinion Himmler and<br />

his jackboot boys should be conjuring-up in the sphere of occult that could perhaps help them overcome<br />

their enemies.<br />

Richard B. Spence writes in his 2008 book; Secret Agent 666: Aleister Crowley, British Intelligence and<br />

the Occult; that Crowley could have been a lifelong agent for British Intelligence. While this may have<br />

already been the case during his many travels to Tsarist Russia, Switzerland, Asia, Mexico and North<br />

Africa that had started in his student days, he could have been involved with this line of work during his<br />

life in America during the First World War, under a cover of being a German propaganda agent and a<br />

supporter of Irish independence. Crowley‘s mission might have been to gather information about the<br />

German intelligence network, the Irish independent activists and produce unusually propaganda, aiming at<br />

compromising the German and Irish ideals. As an agent provocateur he could have played some role in<br />

provoking the sinking of the RMS Lusitania, thereby bringing the United States closer to active<br />

involvement in the war alongside the Allies. He also used German magazines; The Fatherland and The<br />

International as outlets for his other writings. The question of whether Crowley was a spy has always<br />

been subject to debate, but Spence uncovered a document from the US Army‘s old Military Intelligence<br />

Division supporting Crowley‘s own claim to having been a spy: Aleister Crowley was an employee of the<br />

British Government ... in this country on official business of which the British Consul, New York City has<br />

full cognisance. [2]<br />

Spence writes: ―Crowley the spy is approached by two nondescript men, already being a spy, he should<br />

have been used to this, but no, these men are from MI5 and he wasn‘t expecting what was to come. They

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