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Tom
Horn has launched a new blog site for the express
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The US Government"
is not a play on words or an elaborate
advertising plot. Tom has visited more
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months, met with experts in
disciplines from science to
government, and has committed to
writing, for as long as he can,
information related to what he says is
coming. Tom will be submitting (God
willing) at least one entry per week
during 2009.
In
my last entry I concluded by stating the obvious,
that the end of the Bush administration was
accompanied by public desperation for
"hope" amidst widespread messianic
fervor surrounding the election of America’s
current president, Barack Hussein Obama. Bush’s
Angel in the Whirlwind administration was thus
prophetic in that it resulted in "universal
entreaty for an inspirational and political
demigod—a savior—to arise on the global scene
promising a New World Order."
It is entirely possible that Bush’s
understanding of his calling as the catalyst of
these end-times events was a revelation that grew
on him over time. In the beginning, much of his
ties to evangelical Christianity appear to have
simply been for the purpose of producing political
advantages. While still in his second term as
governor, Bush actually hired influence peddler
Karl Rove to help strategize how he might endear
himself to the fundamentalist base in anticipation
of a presidential run. Not long after, the
highest-ranking members of the nation’s
politically enthused church leaders were summoned
to the governor’s mansion where the handpicked
movers and shakers, selected for their proven
power to sway religious voters, were encouraged to
conduct a “laying on of hands” to anoint the
future president. As the executive mantle was
vicariously conferred on Bush, he surprised the
group by suddenly evoking the prophetic
commissions of the prophets, telling the attendees
that he had been “called” (by God) to become
the presidential candidate.
Most people including even perhaps Bush himself
were blissfully unaware of the ancient signature
these events represented, especially as it
involved the language of Bush’s two inaugural
speeches following the precedent setting
“anointing” by “holy men” in the state
owned mansion. For a few adepts of history and
secret orders, the ritualistic parody was
deliciously staged. The term “inaugurate” is
from the Latin “inauguratio” and refers to the
archaic ceremony by which the Roman Augurs
(soothsayers) approved a king or ruler (or other
action) through omens as being “sanctioned by
the gods.” As with Bush, the ancient
“inauguration” of the leader occurred after
the priestly blessing and magical words were
uttered, which assured the congregations and heads
of state that the course of action was endorsed by
the gods. The omens that the Augurs used in
determining the will of the gods included among
other things thunder and lightning, as reflected
in Bush’s “Angel in the Whirlwind”
statements. In modern times, the date on which the
U.S. inauguration occurs is also important for
occult astrological reasons. January 20th is when
the sun moves into the sign of Aquarius, an
important fact tied to the presidency of Barack
Obama, who likewise rode the Whirlwind into the
White House with equally telling symbolism and
commentary.
Following Bush’s consecration by the holy men of
1999, only a brief period transpired in which
public religious rhetoric surrounding him was no
more unusual than the historiography of other
American presidents.
Then came the election, followed by 9/11, and the
“calling” Bush believed he had received
started defining itself in unsettling ways.
Author Bob Woodward noted in his book Bush
at War that just three days after 9/11, the
president during the National Day of Prayer and
Remembrance at the National Cathedral in
Washington, DC seemed to assume a divinatory role,
as if suddenly he had accepted a fantastic cosmic
destiny, declaring that the nation’s
responsibility to history was already clear: “to
answer these attacks and rid the world of
evil.”[10] By taking up the language of “good
vs. evil,” Woodward viewed the president
“casting his vision and that of the country in
the grand vision of God’s master plan.”[11]
Immediately the dialect of Armageddon theology
began surfacing in presidential briefings. Even
religious publications were startled by it. Some
reacted right away, calling on the president to
plainly set out his views. Kevin Phillips recorded
how in March 2003, “the editors of Christian
Century insisted that ‘the American people have
a right to know how the president’s faith is
informing his public policies, not least his
design on Iraq.’”[12] Phillips further stated,
“More than Bush’s earlier religious
phraseology, his Scripture-flavored preparation
for war against Iraq—the latter-day Babylon of
biblical notoriety—stirred scrutiny. Those who
followed Bush’s religiosity had seen a change,
in one pundit’s words, ‘from talking about a
Wesleyan theology of ‘personal transformation’
to describing a Calvinist ‘divine plan’ laid
out by a sovereign God for the country and
himself.’”[13] So alarming was the
president’s change in demeanor that even leaders
of his own denomination registered dissent. Robin
Lovin, Southern Methodist University professor of
religion and political thought cautioned that
“all sorts of warning signals ought to go off
when a sense of personal chosen-ness and calling
gets transplanted into a sense of calling and
mission for a nation.”[14]
Ultimately the prophetic context for war in the
very land associated with future Armageddon (and
against Saddam Hussein, no less, the man who
claimed to be the reincarnated Nebuchadnezzar)
held for Bush the language of moral dualism
necessary to play out a “divine mission” while
earning him admiration from Dominionists, Neocons,
Bonesmen and the guardians of The Craft.
Perhaps more than to anyone else, it was precisely
for these members of the “family” and their
comrades in secrecy that the most startling coded
language was drafted at regular cycle. For them,
the phrase “fire in the minds of men” from the
second inaugural was not only a call for societal
upheaval to usher in a New World Order, but as
Phillip Collins, co-author of The
Ascendancy of the Scientific Dictatorship
recognized, a reference to the Promethean faith.
“It [associated] the text of neoconservatism
with the text of Promethean radicalism of earlier
sociopolitical Utopian movements.”[15]
The observation by Collins that neoconservativism
and Prometheanism can be married is keen, as both
doctrines are occult visions of a kingdom of God
(or gods) on earth established through human
endeavor and enlightenment. Prometheus was the
Greek Titan that stole fire from the gods and gave
it to man. When Prometheus is incarnated in the
human mind as the mystical longing for
illumination (a “fire in the mind”), the
latter produces what James Billington called
“the revolutionary faith” or “Promethean
faith,” a Gnostic doctrine whose origin was
solidified in occult Freemasonry and
“scientific” Marxism.
Thus in view of recent history, a fire in the
minds of men plus twice referring to the Angel in
the Whirlwind were perfect choices for George
Bush’s inaugurals. This was also key for those
who understood it at the time to unlocking what
researcher and academic Peter Dale Scott describes
as “deep politics”—those below-surface
realities that may for political reasons be hidden
from the radar of civilians while at the same time
signal the appropriate brokers of power concerning
the real or “deep” political and/or spiritual
agenda at play. By twice referring to the “angel
in the whirlwind,” Bush also certified
confirmation from God for his actions (“For God
speaks once, yea twice” [Job 22:13]; “In the
mouth of two… witnesses” [2 Cor. 13:1]). In
occult theology the number “2” is also the
Zoroastrian math for dualism, and extended the
Manichaean prose necessary for Bush to cast
himself as the Son of Light at war with Sons of
Darkness. For the Illuminatist, this light is
derived from Lucifer, the light-bearer, and, as we
shall discover, the Angel in the Whirlwind is key
to such dark forces.