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zero1
08-07-2008, 08:50 PM
Here are three common, seemingly inoccuous everyday sayings in Western civilisation that originated in the esoteric (hidden) lore of a long deceased prehistoric subculture, which we today liken in our mythology to that of the Vampire.


"Blood runs thicker than water" -- meaning that the essence of old Vampire social organization was the family of sires and siredams (male and female elders), and that this essence is transferred to modern patriarchal family structure in spirit via religion...principally, Abrahamic religion.

"Don't worry, I won't bite" -- usually said today when offering to accompany a hesitant stranger or distant relative home or to/from a social event, but originally meaning that one would not force ritual initiation upon a non-vampire into the mysteries of blood (read; DNA), thus assuaging fears of mistrust...biting the neck and drinking blood from the Chalice of an initiates body was the standard initiation ritual of the Vampire subculture some 250,000 years ago, and today is preserved in the Eucharistic mysteries of the Catholic Chrisitian religion as consummation of the Body of Christ (read; King Vampire)...

"The spirit is willing, but the Flesh is weak" -- meaning today that the limitations of the body defy the desires of the spirit in Man, but originally meaning the absence of conscience and defiance of nature (read; death) were the formula for perfection and elevation in the Vampire, who desired immortality. This is the same reverse "ethic" the descendent secret societies of today (ie. Masonic, Catholic etc) use to craft their idea of the Perfected and Illumined Man of "God", for he must not be fettered with conscience or adherence to wild mother-nature so that he may achieve the intellectual clarity, self-mastery and visceral character of dominance to determine the future for those weaker than he (ie. the Profane, un-initiated), and be a leader of Mankind and a subjugator of Nature.

*

All of these everyday, "harmless" sayings reflect the hidden mysteries and thinking of the Vampire subculture which lent its gnosis to a long lineage of esoteric cults from the Druids of Ireland, to the Egyptian Pharaohs to the most essentially vampiric cult of all time; the so-called "Babylonian Mystery Religion", whose primary cultural gift to us was what we call Judaism, and so thence Christianity and Islam.

The signs in tribute are everywhere, you only have to look. There is already an excellent thread on here about Vampirism and the Red Cross, go check it out.

Anyway, just thought I'd share.

mcthompson2x
11-07-2008, 07:15 PM
What makes you think that Jesus was a vampire? I've never seen any evidence of this anywhere, I've also never heard anyone mention it. I know that the Catholic Church is in part closely connected with the Illuminati and the Reptilian underground, but I don't even think they worship the real Christ. Peter and his successors tried very hard to slander Mary Magdalene, who was Jesus' true disciple, in order to put forth their blasphemous lie as the true religion of God.

zero1
14-07-2008, 12:05 AM
What makes you think that Jesus was a vampire?

I did not say he was a vampire, but since the mystery religion of Babylon is celebrated in His name, he has been given the mantle, trappings and ceremonies of the Vampire King; he himself was a vastly different personage historically to the mythographised figure of modern Christianity, I'm sure you'll agree. So I only meant that symbolically he is the king of the Vampires, because as I explained Judaism is the offshoot of the vampire religion via Babylon (INRI; "King of the Jews"). Hope you understand that. Jesus was a man.

I've never seen any evidence of this anywhere, I've also never heard anyone mention it. I know that the Catholic Church is in part closely connected with the Illuminati and the Reptilian underground, but I don't even think they worship the real Christ. Peter and his successors tried very hard to slander Mary Magdalene, who was Jesus' true disciple, in order to put forth their blasphemous lie as the true religion of God.

Yes, Miryam ("Mary Magdalene") was indeed his chosen successor and best disciple, as you say. But she was murdered, and the religion and philosophy of Jesus subsequently lost, for the most part. You are also correct in inferring "Illuminati" and alien or Reptillian connexion to his supposed Bloodline.

As for the evidence, reread the OP. Attend a Catholic Mass, or meditate on the Eucharist. The Eucharistic mysteries are pure vampirism.

I don't ask that you believe me, only that you find your way to discover for yourself what I have come to know.

best,
/Z1

kblood
14-07-2008, 12:32 AM
Miryam ("Mary Magdalene")? Where does this Miryam come from? And how did she get murdered?

Havent heard or read about that before.

zero1
14-07-2008, 01:01 PM
Miryam ("Mary Magdalene")? Where does this Miryam come from? And how did she get murdered?

The Mandaeans of Iran/Iraq preserved some of the story in their scriptures, check them out online.

Miryam was a daughter of the High Priest of Sanhedrin in the time of Jesus, or Yeshua if you like, and she became enarmoured of the Essenes and Jesus and ran away from her station as a Temple Virigin in Jerusalem to join him and his band. This incurred the wrath of the Jewish elite priesthood and of course her father, hence the dafamations of her name as whore, sinful woman etc.

It's a long story, but after Jesus disappeared the Essenes were persecuted and she took the remaining body of them to Syria as leader, and after some years she was murdered by an associate of Saul/Paul's, the one known in the Bible as "Barnabas"...which only means Son of the Father, of course, but he had another real name at the time.

As I say, check out all you can about the Essenes and Mandaeans.

kblood
15-07-2008, 09:50 AM
Thank you :)

lakkimakki
16-07-2008, 12:51 PM
Here are three common, seemingly inoccuous everyday sayings in Western civilisation that originated in the esoteric (hidden) lore of a long deceased prehistoric subculture, which we today liken in our mythology to that of the Vampire.


"Blood runs thicker than water" -- meaning that the essence of old Vampire social organization was the family of sires and siredams (male and female elders), and that this essence is transferred to modern patriarchal family structure in spirit via religion...principally, Abrahamic religion.

"Don't worry, I won't bite" -- usually said today when offering to accompany a hesitant stranger or distant relative home or to/from a social event, but originally meaning that one would not force ritual initiation upon a non-vampire into the mysteries of blood (read; DNA), thus assuaging fears of mistrust...biting the neck and drinking blood from the Chalice of an initiates body was the standard initiation ritual of the Vampire subculture some 250,000 years ago, and today is preserved in the Eucharistic mysteries of the Catholic Chrisitian religion as consummation of the Body of Christ (read; King Vampire)...

"The spirit is willing, but the Flesh is weak" -- meaning today that the limitations of the body defy the desires of the spirit in Man, but originally meaning the absence of conscience and defiance of nature (read; death) were the formula for perfection and elevation in the Vampire, who desired immortality. This is the same reverse "ethic" the descendent secret societies of today (ie. Masonic, Catholic etc) use to craft their idea of the Perfected and Illumined Man of "God", for he must not be fettered with conscience or adherence to wild mother-nature so that he may achieve the intellectual clarity, self-mastery and visceral character of dominance to determine the future for those weaker than he (ie. the Profane, un-initiated), and be a leader of Mankind and a subjugator of Nature.

*

All of these everyday, "harmless" sayings reflect the hidden mysteries and thinking of the Vampire subculture which lent its gnosis to a long lineage of esoteric cults from the Druids of Ireland, to the Egyptian Pharaohs to the most essentially vampiric cult of all time; the so-called "Babylonian Mystery Religion", whose primary cultural gift to us was what we call Judaism, and so thence Christianity and Islam.

The signs in tribute are everywhere, you only have to look. There is already an excellent thread on here about Vampirism and the Red Cross, go check it out.

Anyway, just thought I'd share.

i wish i had a vampire girlfriend thy are so hot !:cool:

2013
16-07-2008, 05:40 PM
What makes you think that Jesus was a vampire? I've never seen any evidence of this anywhere, I've also never heard anyone mention it. I know that the Catholic Church is in part closely connected with the Illuminati and the Reptilian underground, but I don't even think they worship the real Christ. Peter and his successors tried very hard to slander Mary Magdalene, who was Jesus' true disciple, in order to put forth their blasphemous lie as the true religion of God.

Some early Christian cults worshiped the blood drinking aspect as the wine as blood quote literally .I read this in an old book some years ago pre INTERNET so cant quote source sorry .The peter religion is a sham from the start as he who in the story denied Christ 3 times was then was crucified upside down not being worthy to die like his Saviour thus symbolicaly perverting the teachings and ideas of the Christian ideal .to this day the pope sit in a chair with a reverse cross of st peter carved out of it :D

anonymous01201
10-08-2008, 09:41 PM
Some stuff on the vampire sub culture:

http://www.michellebelanger.com/

http://www.kheperu.org/

http://www.vampiretemple.com/

http://www.xeper.org/ovampyre/

Hope this stuff helps.

mcthompson2x
10-08-2008, 10:10 PM
I did not say he was a vampire, but since the mystery religion of Babylon is celebrated in His name, he has been given the mantle, trappings and ceremonies of the Vampire King; he himself was a vastly different personage historically to the mythographised figure of modern Christianity, I'm sure you'll agree. So I only meant that symbolically he is the king of the Vampires, because as I explained Judaism is the offshoot of the vampire religion via Babylon (INRI; "King of the Jews"). Hope you understand that. Jesus was a man.



Yes, Miryam ("Mary Magdalene") was indeed his chosen successor and best disciple, as you say. But she was murdered, and the religion and philosophy of Jesus subsequently lost, for the most part. You are also correct in inferring "Illuminati" and alien or Reptillian connexion to his supposed Bloodline.

As for the evidence, reread the OP. Attend a Catholic Mass, or meditate on the Eucharist. The Eucharistic mysteries are pure vampirism.

I don't ask that you believe me, only that you find your way to discover for yourself what I have come to know.

best,
Z1

Ah, I see now where you are coming from. I should have recognized that it's possible for there to be different variations of the same individual that can be "worshiped" or prayed to, variations which often times will be diametrically opposed philosophically. Names don't really matter anyway, it's ideals that matter. I do think that the Catholic Church seems to have vampiric rituals for sure, and I've always found it odd that they insist that the eucharist be taken literally.

zero1
10-08-2008, 10:29 PM
Ah, I see now where you are coming from. I should have recognized that it's possible for there to be different variations of the same God that can be worshiped, variations which often times will be diametrically opposed philosophically. Names don't really matter anyway, it's ideals that matter. I do think that the Catholic Church seems to have vampiric rituals for sure, and I've always found it odd that they insist that the eucharist be taken literally.

Yes, lot's in the Bible too about consuming the flesh and drinking the blood of the God for salvation (from Jesus' mouth, no less); a classic Vampiristic religious precept, wherein the meanings are to consume flesh = materialistically attaining by inducement the "no mind" state which some call pure consciousness or an enlightened state (cannibalistic enlightenment...meat-eaters today don't eat human flesh though, that's why they're more animals than cannibals or vampires), and drinking the blood of the god(s) could change the body's building blocks (DNA) at a fundamental level, resulting eventually in physical immortality in conjunction with certain other rituals (all of which are features in modern day Catholic Mass, but most especially in the old Latin Mass). Of course, for "the gods" a Vampire could read "human being" - as the Bible says, "Ye are gods".

Zombie (as in mindless) -Vampiricism you might say describes some of the behaviour of everyday people in their systemic roles as "Consumers" or energy and resources, wouldn't you agree?

Also, it is said we are "Alive" - why? A-live means "not present". In what way are we not present? Does it mean we're a sort of "living dead"? Or UN-dead? Or profane? Masons say the "common man" dwells in ignorance and darkness, and refer to them as "the Dead". Why? These are questions we need to examine.

Language often is used to hide deepest truths in plain sight. a study of the words/concepts of Enervation and Entropy reveals a lot about the topic at hand.