Guest Gone Fishing... Posted March 17, 2022 Share Posted March 17, 2022 I just noticed that this section is a little quiet. Can we get a list of recommended books going please..? BC Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Ethel Posted March 17, 2022 Share Posted March 17, 2022 (edited) Journeys out of the body - Robert Monroe Anastasia - Vladimir Megre Man's search for meaning - Viktor E Frankl I need your love - Byron Katie How to live in the here and now - Paul Jones Man's Higher Consciousness - Hotema The Drama Of Being A Child - Alice Miller The Spirituality Of The Body - Alexander Lowen For Your Own Good - Alice Miller The Power Of Negative Thinking - Tony Humphreys The Spaces Between - The Joseph Communications The Biggest Secret - David Icke ...And The Truth Shall Set You Free -David Icke The David Icke Guide To Global Conspiracy - David Icke Thee 13 Satanic Bloodlines - Robin De Ruiter Trance Formation Of America -Cathy O Brien Your Brain On Porn - Gary Wilson 1984 - George Orwell Down And Out In Paris And London - George Orwell Us Against Them: How Tribalism Affects The Way We Think - Bruce Rozenblit Normal At Any Cost - Susan Cohen How The Illuminati Create An Undetectable Mind Controlled Slave -Fritz Springmeier Your Life After Death - The Joseph Communications Loving What Is - Byron Katie Animals Like Us - Mark Rowlands Circumcision, The Hidden Trauma - Ronald Goldman Birth Trauma And The Dark Side Of Modern Medicine - Jeanice Barcelo Breaking Down The Wall Of Silence - Alice Miller Edited March 17, 2022 by Ethel 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest Posted March 17, 2022 Share Posted March 17, 2022 "Jonathan Livingston Seagull" and "Illusions 'The Adventures of a Reluctant Messiah'" .... nice and easy way in (in my consideration) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest Gone Fishing... Posted March 17, 2022 Share Posted March 17, 2022 Kahlil Gibran - The Prophet Not a religious book, just some simple observations and truths of people and life... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest Gone Fishing... Posted March 17, 2022 Share Posted March 17, 2022 The first book that made me aware that all it not as it would seem, was a book l discovered on my parents bookshelf as a teenager. Lyall Watson - Supernature Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Grumpy Owl Posted March 17, 2022 Share Posted March 17, 2022 In no particular order, some books I read in the last few years which I felt were very important to me. Started with: "Nineteen Eighty-Four" - George Orwell "Brave New World" - Aldous Huxley Then continued with: "The Biggest Secret" - David Icke "Phantom Self" - David Icke "The Perception Deception" - David Icke More recently (after expanding into other aspects): "The Falsification Of History: Our Distorted Reality" - John Hamer "Mindpower" - Dr Vernon Coleman Other books that I found interesting reading on this voyage (and yes some of the authors others may find questionable, but if they open peoples' eyes and make them question things, that has to be a good thing, I don't necessarily agree with everything they have written): "Enemy Of The State" - Tommy Robinson "The Strange Death Of Europe" - Douglas Murray "No Go Zones: How Sharia Law Is Coming To A Neighbourhood Near You" - Raheem Kassam "2030: Your Children's Future In Islamic Britain" - David Vincent Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Ethel Posted March 17, 2022 Share Posted March 17, 2022 5 minutes ago, Basket Case said: The first book that made me aware that all it not as it would seem, was a book l discovered on my parents bookshelf as a teenager. Lyall Watson - Supernature Wow. Seriously, just wow. I have a copy of this and have only just started reading it. I was literally just looking at the front cover of this five minutes ago, thinking, "I bet this ends up being good enough to mention in this thread". Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
EnigmaticWorld Posted March 17, 2022 Share Posted March 17, 2022 Everything You Need to Know But Have Never Been Told - David Icke A History of Central Banking and the Enslavement of Mankind - Stephen Mitford Goodson The Secret World Government or "The Hidden Hand": The Unrevealed in History - Count Cherep-Spriridovich Fahrenheit 451 - Ray Bradbury Meditations - Marcus Aurelius Heathen Gods in Old English Literature - Richard North Anglo-Saxon Paganism - David M. Wilson Mythology of the British Isles - Geoffrey Ashe I'm looking for some good books on Celtic history. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
endfreemasonscum Posted March 17, 2022 Share Posted March 17, 2022 What a great thread! I literally just finished... Kings Dethroned Gerard Hickson (1922) A history of the evolution of astronomy from the time of the Roman empire up to the present day ; Showing it to be an amazing series of blunders founded upon an error made in the second century B.C... And all I have to say is wowowow! Read it for free here... https://archive.org/details/KingsDethronedAstronomyExposeGerardHickson1922_201805 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
endfreemasonscum Posted March 17, 2022 Share Posted March 17, 2022 I also have to add... the Bible (old and new) the Quran Much of the Vedas and the Upanishads Much of the Talmud the Zohar Much of Tripitaka, the Sutras and the Book of the Dead and I think for real insight into what is happening right now... The Externalization of the Hierarchy, Alice Baily Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Macnamara Posted March 17, 2022 Share Posted March 17, 2022 1 hour ago, EnigmaticWorld said: I'm looking for some good books on Celtic history. 'history is an attempt to narrate the past' - gilad atzmon so if the people whose history you want to know about have been conquered how will you ever hear anything except a distorted narration of their story? All you can do is detective work of piecing together the past from what you can discover that is reliable then lay it all out on the table in front of you and try and make sense of what you are looking at and even then it is subject to your own bias and desires 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
EnigmaticWorld Posted March 17, 2022 Share Posted March 17, 2022 1 minute ago, Macnamara said: 'history is an attempt to narrate the past' - gilad atzmon so if the people whose history you want to know about have been conquered how will you ever hear anything except a distorted narration of their story? All you can do is detective work of piecing together the past from what you can discover that is reliable then lay it all out on the table in front of you and try and make sense of what you are looking at and even then it is subject to your own bias and desires This is true. I know quite a bit about Anglo-Saxon history, but unfortunately not so much about Celtic history, and even though I'm English, the English on average still have quite a bit of Celt DNA, so it's something I want to learn more about. I'm just not really sure where to start really, but I totallly agree that you have to try and piece things together yourself so you can come to your own conclusions. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Macnamara Posted March 17, 2022 Share Posted March 17, 2022 (edited) An area that is going to come into sharper and sharper focus for people as they find themselves facing economic hardship and food shortages is the issue of land use and behind that land ownership This is because land is the source of everything. From the land comes food, shelter and clothes. People have been duped out of that and had the dust of modernity cast into their eyes but now as the reality of where modern life is leading us begins to sink in, many people will begin to rub the dust from their eyes and learn again what the real struggle has been in these isles for centuries: the struggle over land In scotland this is has been covered by Andy Wightman in his books 'the poor had no lawyers' and 'who owns scotland'. In england the issue is covered by a book that is on my 'to buy' list: 'who owns england: how we lost our land and how to get it back' by Guy Shrubsole Edited March 17, 2022 by Macnamara Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Macnamara Posted March 17, 2022 Share Posted March 17, 2022 1 minute ago, EnigmaticWorld said: This is true. I know quite a bit about Anglo-Saxon history, but unfortunately not so much about Celtic history, and even though I'm English, the English on average still have quite a bit of Celt DNA, so it's something I want to learn more about. I'm just not really sure where to start really, but I totallly agree that you have to try and piece things together yourself so you can come to your own conclusions. you and i know of the existence of a conspiracy so pervasive that it has its hands on all of the levers of power It has its hands on the levers of publishing and on the levers of academia I once contacted a leading academic because i was trying to find something that had been lost. The academic became very defencive and despite my best efforts to reassure them and to disarm them they remained evasive. What were they afraid of? They are gatekeepers and in that role they live in constant fear of failing to manage the gate properly and letting something through to public view They create a narrative. That narrative is repeated and pushed in official 'textbooks' as part of the academic course reading and through repetition it takes on the appearance of solidity. But the orthodox view of history is being eroded by the day with new discoveries You could learn everything in their proscribed textbooks but to get to a fuller truth you'd probably have to then unlearn much of it 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
EnigmaticWorld Posted March 17, 2022 Share Posted March 17, 2022 (edited) 38 minutes ago, Macnamara said: you and i know of the existence of a conspiracy so pervasive that it has its hands on all of the levers of power It has its hands on the levers of publishing and on the levers of academia I once contacted a leading academic because i was trying to find something that had been lost. The academic became very defencive and despite my best efforts to reassure them and to disarm them they remained evasive. What were they afraid of? They are gatekeepers and in that role they live in constant fear of failing to manage the gate properly and letting something through to public view They create a narrative. That narrative is repeated and pushed in official 'textbooks' as part of the academic course reading and through repetition it takes on the appearance of solidity. But the orthodox view of history is being eroded by the day with new discoveries You could learn everything in their proscribed textbooks but to get to a fuller truth you'd probably have to then unlearn much of it My family own the copyright for all my Grandfather's books. He was an archaeologist, writer, and part of a historical society, and led a few successful digs. It's a shame because he was my family and I trust his work, but I could never share it under my name because I would dox myself. He has a lot of interesting writing on pre-Christian England. I need to just get his stuff printed because some of his old rare out of print books go for hundreds on Amazon and other sites. That being said, even though he was my Grandfather, his sources could still be wrong, outdated, half truths, or misleading in other ways. So I hear you, it's definitely hard to find untainted history, even from those you trust. Edited March 17, 2022 by EnigmaticWorld 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Macnamara Posted March 17, 2022 Share Posted March 17, 2022 5 minutes ago, EnigmaticWorld said: his sources could still be wrong, outdated, half truths, or misleading in other ways. So I hear you, it's definitely hard to find untainted history, even from those you trust. i guess that's where the detective work comes in to cross reference things there is a war going on over history. Its the same war as the war over covid-truth, 911 truth, vaccine truth, sound money truth and so many other topics that affect us every day. They are just different battlefields of the same war 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
DaleP Posted March 17, 2022 Share Posted March 17, 2022 6 minutes ago, EnigmaticWorld said: My family own the copyright for all my Grandfather's books. He was an archaeologist, writer, and part of a historical society, and led a few succesful digs. It's a shame because he was my family and I trust his work, but I could never share it under my name because I would dox myself. He has a lot of interesting writing on pre-Christian England. I need to just get his stuff printed because some of his old rare out of print books go for hundreds on Amazon and other sites. That being said, even though he was my Grandfather, his sources could still be wrong, outdated, half truths, or misleading in other ways. So I hear you, it's definitely hard to find untainted history, even from those you trust. Has he written only about English? Gareth is looking for info/someone https://davidicke.com/2022/03/17/the-walk-series-three-researchers-historians-wanted/ You don't hear much about English history going back 10,000+ years. It always seem to cirlcle around the time of Henry VIII which is fairly recent. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
EnigmaticWorld Posted March 17, 2022 Share Posted March 17, 2022 Just now, DaleP said: Has he written only about English? Gareth is looking for info/someone https://davidicke.com/2022/03/17/the-walk-series-three-researchers-historians-wanted/ You don't hear much about English history going back 10,000+ years. It always seem to cirlcle around the time of Henry VIII which is fairly recent. Oh, he passed away years ago, the copyright for his work just got passed down through the family. It's mainly just content about England and ancient Briton, but there is some other work. Stuff about Atlantis, but I haven't read his work on that, so I don't know if he thought it was real. Also some writing on groups that possibly/did go to America before Columbus. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Macnamara Posted March 17, 2022 Share Posted March 17, 2022 (edited) 2 minutes ago, EnigmaticWorld said: Also some writing on groups that possibly/did go to America before Columbus. it was orthodox history for a while that columbus was the first person to go to america from the 'old world' but then archaeology discovered viking artifacts, i think the 1960s, and history had to bend to fit the new evidence if they can get something as simple as that wrong....wasn't it even spoken about in the sagas? Edited March 17, 2022 by Macnamara 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
EnigmaticWorld Posted March 17, 2022 Share Posted March 17, 2022 12 minutes ago, DaleP said: Gareth is looking for info/someone https://davidicke.com/2022/03/17/the-walk-series-three-researchers-historians-wanted/ That's pretty interesting. I will have to see what he has written about Scotland. Cheers for that though, I didn't know they already did England and Wales. Anyway, I better let people stay on topic. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
EnigmaticWorld Posted March 17, 2022 Share Posted March 17, 2022 3 minutes ago, Macnamara said: it was orthodox history for a while that columbus was the first person to go to america from the 'old world' but then archaeology discovered viking artifacts, i think the 1960s, and history had to bend to fit the new evidence if they can get something as simple as that wrong....wasn't it even spoken about in the sagas? I have no idea. There's lots of inscriptions on old rocks in America that indicate earlier settlers, but I haven't really looked into it for years. 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Macnamara Posted March 18, 2022 Share Posted March 18, 2022 (edited) 9 minutes ago, EnigmaticWorld said: I have no idea. There's lots of inscriptions on old rocks in America that indicate earlier settlers, but I haven't really looked into it for years. well they have just pushed back their previous dating for civilisation in the americas. The orthodox textbooks used to say that people crossed over a land bridge 10,000 years ago but now they have found archaeology artifacts from the clovis civilisation dating back to something like 14,000 years we have been comprehensively lied to about a lot of things LIDAR is now showing the true extent of the mayan civilisation that is now under jungle. Perhaps climate moves around and maybe that area wasn't always under rainforest? that's all mainstream stuff Edited March 18, 2022 by Macnamara 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
DaleP Posted March 18, 2022 Share Posted March 18, 2022 49 minutes ago, EnigmaticWorld said: Oh, he passed away years ago, the copyright for his work just got passed down through the family. It's mainly just content about England and ancient Briton, but there is some other work. Stuff about Atlantis, but I haven't read his work on that, so I don't know if he thought it was real. Also some writing on groups that possibly/did go to America before Columbus. Obviously Columbus wasn't the first person who spotted America. It has been proven already but they want you to think Columbus was the one who found it. lol 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
EnigmaticWorld Posted March 18, 2022 Share Posted March 18, 2022 Just now, DaleP said: Obviously Columbus wasn't the first person who spotted America. It has been proven already but they want you to think Columbus was the one who found it. lol Oh I agree, but I think the question is how many people spotted it before him. 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Bombadil Posted April 13, 2022 Share Posted April 13, 2022 On 3/17/2022 at 8:56 PM, EnigmaticWorld said: Everything You Need to Know But Have Never Been Told - David Icke A History of Central Banking and the Enslavement of Mankind - Stephen Mitford Goodson The Secret World Government or "The Hidden Hand": The Unrevealed in History - Count Cherep-Spriridovich Fahrenheit 451 - Ray Bradbury Meditations - Marcus Aurelius Heathen Gods in Old English Literature - Richard North Anglo-Saxon Paganism - David M. Wilson Mythology of the British Isles - Geoffrey Ashe I'm looking for some good books on Celtic history. If you have a,Avon prime they have shed loads of books for free to keep permanently on kindle. I’ve got about 200 books this way, all tend be older classics or more obscure. Found books on obscure mythology etc 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.