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Oct. 11, 2025 - The Leo Zagami Show
01:04:53
WICCA, FREEMASONRY AND THE PAGAN ROOTS OF DEMOCRATS EXTREMISM
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Time Text
Oh, here comes the devil.
Oh, here comes the devil.
Oh, the devil with the devil says I. Shh.
Look out for the devil.
Look out for the devil.
Look up for the devil.
Oh, the devil with the devil says I. You're so afraid of old man Satan.
No, why don't you stop your hesitating?
You're gonna be a long time, Ted So the Devil with the Devil says I You're always giving me the dickens, telling me that life's no easy pickings.
But just as long as I have fun, why the devil with the devil says I You can have your social teas and bingo for your fun.
But the things I like to do, you stop me one by one.
Now even if you make me stronger, that ain't gonna make me live no longer.
So even if I go to shh the devil with the devil, says I. Look out for the devil, look out for the devil.
Oh the devil with the devil,
says I. Uh slightly
late.
But no worries, no worries.
We're gonna recover and thanks to our sponsors who have uh permitted uh today's broadcast.
Yes, uh given the possibility to discuss today beaker Freemasonry and the pig and roots of democratic.
We say wicker, I think.
Big wicker, weaker.
We say I say big, but uh yes, we'll take that in Italian.
Uh yeah, probably, yes.
But uh yeah, we can wicker, we gas uh and uh we know there is a lot of witches and a lot of people who hate our president uh they even published a book, The Magic for the Resistance where they portray themselves as the one who are fighting the Nazis, which is an octist versus kings and Nazis after defeating Alofitler they want to defeat uh Donald J. Trump.
Well, good luck with that.
In any case, uh Christy, who are the sponsors of today's show?
Okay, um it's um an Ellen and Ian Poe.
Thank you so much.
Thank you guys so much.
Can I offer you an applause?
Maybe uh a lo-fi pixeled applause, but it's a great applause.
Here we are, you're up there with you guys what we gonna do with other sponsors because we're not saying that many books these days.
I know there is a crisis, I know that many of you have problems in investing money for a new book.
But if you don't have a problem, I will suggest a bunch of books that they're gonna, of course, uh cite within today's show.
Uh, and uh, and of course, uh, there is also uh Christie's uh confessions of Illuminati Princess, volume one and two.
We have also our cookery book.
Uh, the books are also another way of supporting our broadcast.
And in any case, guys, soon I'm gonna be making a great announcement, but I'm waiting.
I'm waiting because I want to really make sure it's already I know it is always get the no first.
Okay, okay.
Yes, you get to go.
Yeah, yeah.
Okay, let's not add anything else.
Uh let's start though, with this whole thing that uh I have a bunch of books here today that of course I want to use for citations.
Uh, maybe they are useful or not.
Um Wicca.
Wicca, um please read this, Christy.
This uh uh citation from uh sex cults and alternative religions of David Barrett, uh B. Barrett.
Okay, that's aware.
Just here until here, yes.
Oh, okay.
Wicca.
Wicca is simply another name for witchcraft, often used to avoid many of the negative connotations of the latter word.
Wicca is usually traced back to a Saxon root meaning to bend, sometimes to a word meaning wit, as in knowledge or understanding, and sometimes though with less justification to a word for wise, as in wise woman.
It should be remembered that in France a midwife is still known as a sage, femme.
Some instead of witchcraft or wicca prefer to be to call it the craft.
The term witchcraft covers a wide range of things.
A news story in 1995 reported that over a hundred women had recently been burnt to death, often with a petrol soaked tire around their necks.
In the Transvaal in South Africa, they had been accused by neighbors of being witches.
It has been suggested that in the famous Old Testament injunction, thou shalt not suffer a witch to live, Exodus 22, 18.
The word witch might be better translated, one who poisons well, which would make some sense for nomadic people living in the desert.
Today's witches rarely match the popular image of the toothless old hag living in her hovel.
They live in the country and the town in all western countries.
They are likely to be well educated, and many of them are professional people.
Okay, let me interrupt you a second because uh Wika is not really an old uh believe uh or you know, it's a modern pagan religion, which was born actually in the 1950s, and today I'm gonna actually show you how it was uh generated after Alistair Crowley's work.
It was Alistair Crowley who at the end of his life didn't have much money, he was an aeronadict, he needed uh desperately to you know to produce money for his habit.
He died uh with an arrow in uh with uh basically a needle that uh you know uh way to go well a way to go.
Uh anyway, um he apparently in 19 uh 46 chartered a no TO camp with uh uh this uh gentleman called Gerald Gardner.
Uh who is the guy who has created this system.
Um and uh Gerald Gardner was a Freemason, he was initially he had been initiated in 19 uh 1910 in Sri Lanka in Colombo in Ceylon, place where I have been.
Um and he was initiated in Freemasonry, uh, like of course Crowley, but in an even more regular way, because he was actually initiated in the Sphinc Lodge number 107, which is a lodge founded by the Grand Lodge of Ireland.
I'm gonna show you now.
This is just to introduce you to the character behind the whole thing, and then Christie will continue.
Sphinx Lodge number 107, year of Warren 1861, miss at the Victoria Masonic Temple, Galface, Colombo, Zero Free, Sri Lanka on the fourth month of each month, still to this day.
He apparently was elevated to Master Mason in 1911, and then he ceased to uh go to the Blue Lodge.
He was active, I think, then in the Royal Arch, and he became associated with uh co-masonry on returning to England, mainly with a group known as the Fellowship of Crotona, uh, an order affiliated with the Grand Orient of France, so a more progressive uh form, uh co-masonry also has is a mix of men and women.
We know that a lot of French obediences with witches have their lodges in London.
Yes, in the lodge in London, and then they were probably beacon practitioners.
Now he uh joined this fellowship, and then after moving to the Dorset area in 1939, um he reportedly met the members of a new forest coven, a group though that introduced allegedly to the ancient forms of pagan uh ritualism and uh witchcraft.
However, the the Croton uh fellowship was dismantled after the founder died, but then it's been revived and is practically a live and kicking here.
Rosa Crucian order Croton Fellowship School of Esoteric and Mical Arts.
Gerard Gardner was a typical guy of his time, he was also associated with theosophy, theosophy, of course, is also what brought together the ancient mystery schools of the Western Asiatic system with uh the age uh you know the practices of the East, especially Indian practices.
Um, but when it comes down to Vika, Vica is nothing uh of the source, in the sense Vika is Crowley making something more simple for the kitchen witches, for the for the for those people who didn't want to make an effort in studying the complex theory, the Kabbalah, their mates, this and that of Telema, and uh you know.
So he sells because he wanted money, I mean he gives a charter that I'm gonna show you now.
Uh, this charter um is uh the charter that was given by Crowley to uh to Gerard Gardner.
This is an article, by the way, that was published by a guy from the OTO Rodney Orpheus in 2009.
Uh and in this article, there is also the OTO charter.
Here we are.
I want to show you the OTO charter that was given to Gardner.
This is very important because you see, Crowley gives the OTO charter and gives all the rituals after to Gardner of the OTO.
He joins the OTO as at the fourth degree, which is the equivalent of the fourth degree of the OTO, is the Royal Arch.
And he presented himself to Crowley as a royal arch Mason.
So at the time, you could join the um the OTO with the equivalent Masonic degree, something that doesn't happen these days.
So what happens next?
Crowley dies in December 1947, but in the meantime, uh Gerald Gardner receives from Crowley also some rituals and material that eventually would become the basis from what for what would be later called the Book of Shadows.
The book of shadows will become the basis of Gardnerian magic.
Gardnerian magic would be, let's say, officially launched in the 1950s.
And then from that moment onwards, all these different beacon currents are born, and we're gonna now address each one of them.
But please, Casey, continue.
Okay.
Okay, um, I might read the same thing.
No, no, you mean some light.
No, okay.
You can remove it.
Today's witches rarely match the popular image of the toothless.
Oh, I read that already.
Male witches are called witches.
Terms such as wait are sped up.
Okay, but they are likely to be well educated, just listen.
And many of them are professional people, old and young, they are likely to be men as men and one thing though.
Men as women, men as women.
Most witches today, apart the fact that it's very inclusive, so anything goes in Vika, uh, is very leftist.
Uh, you will notice from also starting magic of the resistance that today's deacon practices are mainly done by leftist witches.
The witches who cursed uh Charlie Kirk, who unfortunately died on September 10th, were deacon practitioners, uh, who then were commissioned by the online magazine Jezebel.
So this is very important what we are discussing today.
Male witches are called witches.
Terms such as warlock and wizard belong only in fantasy novels.
One point must be made clearly here once again.
Witchcraft has nothing to do with Satanism, witches do not worship Satan.
Now, if that is what they usually use to disguise themselves.
I always noticed that.
When I used to go, for example, to a conference uh in a bookshop, uh celebrated bookshop in London called Atlantis, Christian UN.
Uh often you will have this beacon uh people attending, and they will always uh uh try to affirm that they will have nothing to do with this and that.
But then when you get to know them, they will be like, I don't need to say Shana more fierce, we are the most dark, we do real magic, all kinds of this kind of nonsense.
Oh God.
Okay.
Again and again, during the research for this book, witches, another neo-pagans said that this is still the most common misunderstanding they have to cope with.
Medieval witches, with all its demonic trappings, rather than being any sort of reality, was very largely the creation of the two Dominicans who around 1486 wrote the Malice Maleficarium.
Okay, we know that uh there was, of course, an Inquisition, we know that a lot of witches were persecuted, and we know that Bika was launched in a time in which, of course, the church didn't have any more that grip on society, and of course, at that point we know that uh we are in the 1960s.
By the time Gardner dies in 1964, anything goes, uh, the Beatles, the hippies are arriving, and then the second half of the 60s, all hell breaks loose.
So things have changed very much.
Um, but please let's talk about the recent beginnings, because Gardner based his work on uh some previous work from Dr. Margaret Murray in particular.
Dr. Margaret Murray, please read from the beginning.
Okay, two ways the recent beginnings, to some extent, modern witchcraft is a certain creation of a retired British civil servant Gerald Gardner.
Before him, however, providing at the time the powerful backings of academic study came the anthropologist Dr. Margaret Murray.
Murray argued pervasively, Persuasively in the witch cult in Western Europe 1921 and the God of the Witches 1931 that the medieval witches didn't worship the devil but were followers of an old pre-Christian pagan religion, which appears to be the ancient religion of Western Europe.
Murray called this worship Danny, Diane, after the goddess Diana.
Diani.
Dianism.
Diane.
Okay.
Yeah, uh, there is actually various branches of Vika.
Now we will try to discuss most of them, but it will be almost impossible to discuss all of them.
The most known ones, of course, is the center one, the key one, the originator, Gardner Vika, then you have Alexandrian Vicca, then you have Blue Star Vicca, then you have Celtic Vicca, then you have Dianic Vicca, sorry.
And this Dianic Vicca is a feminist leaning tradition that focused exclusively on the goddess and is known for its matriarchal structure.
Is a feminist form of Vicca that was born in Budapest, and it's uh uh was actually born in a library in a bookshop that called itself the the vicca feminist, and they were uh in and I mean that is really what was gonna bring us to eventually discuss uh later on also unfortunately the connections,
the pagan roots of the Democrat Party here in America and the abortion extremist because extremism that they have, which is rooted in the uh sacrifice of the fetus, the sacrifice of the children of the abortion as a human sacrifice.
Please, Chris.
No, I don't know where I am please.
Okay, Murray.
Okay.
Murray has been criticized on many academic grounds.
Richard Cavadish, the eminent historian of the esoteric states, this brilliant and ingenious theory is unfortunately full of holes and has been demolished time and again.
This didn't stop the Oxford University Press splashing on the US paperback of the God of the Witches.
The findings she sets forth, once thought of as provocative and implausible, are now regarded as irrefutable by folklorists and scholars in all related fields.
They are talking about this book that came out in 1921 that was extremely inspirational.
It's called The Witch Cult in Western Europe, a study in anthropology by Margaret Alice Moray.
It was actually published in Oxford at the Clarendon Press, so it kind of regained at the beginning some kind of academic credibility, though, like we said, it was criticized when you go and actually see what it's all about, says the mass of existing material on this subject so great that I have not attempted to make a survey of the whole European witchcraft.
But I have confined myself to an intensive study of the cult in Great Britain, and it's gonna be this study that this gentleman that you see on the left of your screen, Jarek Gardner, used as the basis then later on for uh conceptualizing and creating his Wicca, Wicca.
Yeah, Wicca.
Wicca.
We say Wicca.
Okay.
Okay.
We don't say it like that.
We don't say Wicca.
Okay.
Other scholars now point out that there is actually no evidence whatsoever for a religion of one goddess.
Early pagan religions were pantheist rather than female monotheism monotheists.
Murray, they say, came up with her theory, then selected evidence to support it.
Whatever the factual truth, Murray ceases with the added weight of Robert Graves, the White Goddess, 1946, a study of the moon goddess in many different cultures, which perhaps contain more poetic than historical truth, has become accepted wisdom for many of today's neo-pagans, making it possible for them to say they are recreating the old religion, not creating something which is solely new age.
Which is the case, because let's not forget that he's born and his whole religion and witchcraft modern witchcraft concept within the theosophical society frame, which mixes like Madame Boleslaski.
Yeah, and Luciferian beliefs.
So this is really a modern religion, disguised as an ancient one.
Please present-day Diane Dianic.
That's Dianic, not Diana.
Okay.
Dianic.
Dianic because you found the goddess Diana.
Present day Dianic Wicca stems from much stems very much from Murray's Cesis.
It is a religion of the goddess and very much a religion for women.
It has been argued that Dianic Wicca and similar religions are historically more spiritual expression of the feminist movement than anything else.
Okay, I want the Christi now to read from the book of Margaret Moore, this passage on child sacrifice.
Here.
It's on a computer.
Yes.
I read better on the book.
Okay.
Child sacrifice.
The child victim was usually a young infant, either a witch's child or unbaptized.
In other words, it did not belong to the Christian community.
This last is an important point was the reason why unbaptized children were considered to be in greater danger from witches than not baptized.
If there be any children unbaptized or not guarded with the signs of the cross or horizons, horizons.
Then the witches may or do catch them from their mother's sides in the night or out of their cradles or otherwise kill them with their ceremonies.
The same author quotes from the French authorities, the crime laid to the charge of witches among which are the following.
They sacrifice their own children to the ritual The duel before baptism.
The duel before baptism, holding them holding them up in the air.
It's like V's in French.
And then trust the needle into the brain, and then a needle into their brains.
And they burn their children when they have sacrificed them.
Bouguette says Le Matron and Sage Femme Son acum de Frier Satan, le Petite Enfin, que les rejuven and Pulfar Mourie.
So this and Le Batis.
So this is based, of course, also on the fact that they believe that by doing that, they could of course acquire not only the favors of the gods and Satan, but also they will uh acquire somehow also a way of rejuvenating themselves.
This of course is just one of the many citations from the book that then will uh inspire that uh guy we have been discussing until now, the guy who will go and make a deal with 666 himself,
Alistair Crowley, when uh he presents himself to Crowley as a Royal Arch Mason Gardner in his first meeting, then will be able to affiliate to the OTO directly in that way, and Gardner was elevated to the fourth of the OTO sometime during his contact with Crowley in May I think of uh 19 uh 46 or so I mean,
or at least uh in the middle of the 40s, uh, and we have uh a lot of testimonies regarding Crowley and uh uh his relationship with Gardner and how he arranged uh Gardner initiation into the OTO.
Uh Gardner learned a lot from Crowley.
Uh it was uh thanks to Crowley that he thrown the basis for his book of shadows, his book of shadows that will become uh the central text, and here I'm gonna show it to you of his new religion that will kick start with the initiation of a high priestess in the early 1950s,
and this is an original copy of the book of shadows.
Like I said, without Crowley, probably we will not have this book of shadows.
Now, Gerald Car Gardner starts his first coban, the Brickett Wood Coven in the late 1940s, early 1950s.
This was apparently the witch's cottage, which was used by him.
I'm gonna show you an image of it.
It's very British.
This is the place where he used to uh hang out with his witches.
Um he was able to start this religion, and the first woman to really uh be initiated was this one, and she looks like uh complete and utter Karen from the leftist of leftist.
No, I mean they have a specific look, uh these witches of the democratic party, of the democratic party, and she was really the one that uh kickstarted this whole uh thing with the Gardnerian Vika.
Gardnerian Vika becomes the initial uh you know uh the tradition that starts from Gardner, and the term Gardnerian was coined by uh the founder of uh what is known as uh Cochrane Kraft,
also Cochrianism, uh which is a religious movement similar to Vika that considers itself a traditional uh form of witchcraft that sprang out of the teachings of Gardner.
So basically, Gardner opened a can of worms, and once he opened them up, it was never ending, guys, because after the Gardnerian Vika, and of course after the practices with this uh, you know, he started like I said, like as a Mason.
Then he went into Rosacrucianism.
He also became part of the Theosophical Society.
He then allegedly met with a new forest coven who uh allegedly initiated them into the ranks in 1939, and it was this cavern that apparently made out of a group of pagan witches around the area of New Forest in Southern England, a beautiful place uh where he was initiated to the mysteries before then meeting Crowley.
I think that without Crowley he will not have been able, though, to create his witch cult in the way that we know it today.
Uh Crowley was a guy who uh, of course we considered diabolical, a great writer of the occult, he had the capacity of synthesizing many different um traditions from the east, the west, everything, and summarized them like he did uh in many of his books brilliantly.
And so uh that's really I think the basis more than anything else.
However, uh, uh Gardner described some of his experiences with the cavern in his published books, Witchcraft Today that came out in 1954, 10 years before he died, and the meaning of witchcraft that came out in 1959.
By the second half of the 50s, he already had a number of followers, and Vica was starting to spread.
At the beginning of the 60s, though, that will be when Vika really took off and became many different kinds of Bika.
And one of the most, let's say uh influential and well-known forms of Bika is Alexandrian Vika.
Alexandrian Bika uh connected to uh a gentleman uh who is called Alexander, also known as the king of witches, who I'm gonna show you now.
It looks like more like the king of idiots, but I mean uh he's dressed up like uh like I don't know.
Um he must have kind of probably found some uh some paramount from an old Anglican priest and adopted him in his twisted form of Vika.
He became though the founder of Alexandrian Vika, and together with his wife, and uh he created a new form of Vika.
Um he went under the craft name Verbius.
Let's not forget that there is a lot of uh Masonic elements in Vika, because uh it was created within that you know, that milieu of people.
So you have ceremonial magic, you have Crowley's influence, you have some Masonic influence, and you have, of course, uh what is uh some modern pagan lore, and uh um Alexandrian Vic starts to take off in the 1960s, and it becomes very popular.
Probably uh at one point uh even overshadows its original founder of Gardnerian Victor.
Um he was raised in a working class family, which is very important to say that when you're talking about somebody from England, because people have to understand in England uh everybody is defined by the accent and the social class they belong to.
He was from Sussex in England, he talked with uh heavy acts, he didn't have the kind of uh you know, present and and an accent that Crowley had.
How is his little bit more of a common accent?
So success is more like in Sussex, but I mean, uh like I said, from a working class background, he started to study uh in the local spiritual churches before going on to study and practice ceremonial magic.
In 1963, he was initiated into Gardnerian magic the year before uh Gardner died.
So he had a connection with the original Gardnerian magic, but like many others, like I said, Gardner opened a can of worms, he created a system that anybody could start adopting and remixing and creating at their own like.
So um Alex Sanders, who died in 1988, uh and claimed to have been initiated by this Welsh-speaking grandmother, Mary Bibi as a child, and some kind of like, because then all of these people somehow claim they have some kind of lineage of witchcraft that comes from also their family.
Okay.
Now the the wife who was 20 years younger, Maxine uh Sanders, was of course uh appearing with him in a number of documentaries.
It was the moment in which you know these things were very uh, you know, they would read documentaries uh later on in 1966 on the Church of Satan and Tom LaVay on these witches.
There was, I mean, there was a lot of interest in the 1960s, uh and we know also why, you know, it was all the old LSD, all the drugs that open, of course, themselves to the demonic.
We have, of course, uh the the mind control operation of MK Ultra to blame for parts of it.
But in Great Britain, uh it was also part of the fact that the witchcraft was no longer a crime.
Uh and this is what I think sanctioned, I think uh let me see in which year witchcraft uh was no longer a crime in Great Britain, uh, because this I think defines also the birth of all this uh and the expansion of all this.
Um yeah, witchcraft act uh was abolished, and I tell you, when it was abolished because it was abolished in 1951, you see, so it makes complete sense.
The Witchcraft Act of 1735 was abolished just before Gardner created Vika.
It was like no longer they had to be, you know, this is the witchcraft act, an act of parliament of Great Britain that imagine was in place until 1951.
Wow.
So all this uh was in place Until and then after when it was no longer in place, there was somehow the freedom.
See, it says repeal 22nd of June 1951.
So once there was no longer any limitations, here we have the expansion of witchcraft and uh this expansion, so as one of the main uh you know stars,
of course, Gardner, and then later on we have uh Alexandrian Vica, Alexandrian Vita Vica started to spread to Australia, to Brazil, South Africa, Canada, and of course also the United States.
Uh, it created also other factions in uh in the Boston area here in the United States of America, uh, a family uh who was directly involved with Alexandria and Vica Cavan, um, and who had directly downline from Coven Chitonoignoi.
I don't know how you spell it, Christian.
No, I don't know.
It's very difficult to spell.
You can find it if you want yourself here on uh on Wikipedia, but it's really difficult to spell.
Um they uh started also to have a lot of success, and um and basically uh they grew out of the Alexandrian practice of its founders, and they uh claim to have ulterior rituals and things to offer, and of course, an ulterior initiation, but this is only the beginning.
Uh like I said, uh Vica has so many many cultures and so many branches that is even confusing.
Uh Blue Star Vika.
Blue Star Vika, for example, uh is created in the United States in the 1970s, basically losed on Gardnerian Alexandrian tradition next together.
Their symbol is a blue septagram.
A lot of these things came out of California.
A lot of these things came out of California, depending also on the you know.
Uh here we are.
Here we are, this was their symbol.
And uh, of course, uh in this case it came out of Philadelphia, another another uh leftist stronghold.
It was uh uh the coven of the blue star and a gentleman known as Frank Dufner, and the uh in 1980 on its membership application to the Covenant of the Goddess, the Coven is described as practicing great American non-traditional collective eclectic wica.
Uh uh.
Now I repeat, this was only the beginning, because then uh there was all kinds of practitioners, books that were published.
Uh, one of them was uh the flowering rod men, sex and spirituality that was quite a success in 1993, published on Delphi Press.
But the Blue Stat tradition theology is uh is uh it's kind of flexible, kind of like most of the wica is, but allows Polities, Pantheist and Monotheists to participate all together in their invocation and prayers, and of course, centers on goddesses of the pagan world.
But this is not the only one, and and and we we have a lot to go through because, like I said, the tradition spread like uh wildfire.
Celtic Vika was born in 19 uh also from uh Gerald Gardner, uh, and it's like uh a modern form of Vika that includes of course the seasonal festival within uh which in Vicca is uh is very important for these new pagans to have the wheel of the year and to follow the seasonal festivals, and this is the wheel of the year, Christy.
I'm gonna show you.
And you have Beltane, you have all the, and we are approaching, of course, Halloween, so it's all part of they get they get very busy, they get very busy, and this is like we said, uh uh Celtic uh,
and then you have uh Dianik Vica, and Diani Vica, like I said, Diani Vica is dedicated to the to the to the goddess, and was founded in the United States by somebody known as Zusanna Budapest, uh,
who apparently um with a tradition name after the Roman goddess Diana, and uh it uh somehow originated uh in Budapest, and then it came to the United States, no.
Uh the Dianic Beacon belief is also eclectic and combines elements of uh traditional bic and Italian folk magic, uh what they call uh la tradition of Lesreghe or the stregoneria.
Uh so it has elements of Italian magic and healing practices and stuff like that.
Uh the Budapest uh thing uh I never understood, but uh it is apparently connected to uh this feminist uh in uh in in Budapest.
However, I mean it's a complete leftist uh crazy thing in which uh they practice uh, of course, what they say is uh the healing from the wounds of patriarchy, you know, because they are feminist and they've been wounded by the man, and so they have to, you know.
Uh now the differences from other forms of Bika is that they have this over-feminist tone.
Now I want to get Christie to read this uh to make understand how these people are insane.
This is from The Magic for the Resistance, Michael Hemuse, a Freemason we exposed in my books.
Uh I will advise people to read volume five of my confessions in particular, but also volume nine, which uh is uh as you know, a book uh about the seven steps to the sequence of the new world order from transhumanism and immortality to Gnosis Jesus Youth and Insect Witchcraft, which is also a form of witchcraft, of course.
Here we're talking about witch, an organization which is the initials for women, international terrorist conspiracy from hell.
Oh my goodness.
A group of radical, well, a group of radical feminists took inspiration from the creative, shocking political theater of the hippies.
When New York radical women split over tactical disagreements, several of the members formed formed witch or women's international terrorist conspiracy from the hell.
Their inaugural action took place on Halloween 1968 when the members dressed in stereotypical witch garb marched to Wall Street to hex the financial district.
The Dow Jones average dropped sharply the next day, for which the witches were more happy than to take credit.
One of their left leaflets stated, if you are a woman and dare to look within yourself, you are a witch.
You make your own rules, you are free and beautiful, you can be invisible or evident in how you choose to make your witch self-known.
You can form your own covenant of sister witches, 13 of a cousin number, 13 isn't cozy number for a group, and do your own actions.
You are a witch by saying loud, I am a witch three times.
I am a witch three times, and you're a witch.
Um think and thinking about it.
You are a witch by being female, unseen, angry, joyous, and immoral.
Now and immortal.
Yes, immortal.
Immortal.
Okay, just stay there a second.
Stay there a second because I want to uh uh make you read something else here.
Um just got a face guy someday.
That's it, we all do.
Uh Bika was was always uh was always uh had this uh goddess feminist element from the very start in their DNA.
Uh many beacon groups hold what is known as the charge of the goddess, which is uh as uh as some described the nearest thing the craft accept as a statement of faith common to all.
The charge was written by Gardner and his initiate Dorret Valiente, the one we showed with the glasses, uh, with some sections taken from Leland's Aradia, and so perhaps going back hundreds of years.
There are many different versions of the charge today, and here I want to uh present uh one of them uh which uh it's really to make understand a little bit better the beacon belief.
The charge of the goddess, Christy.
Uh give us the charge of the goddess.
Okay, you need the light.
Okay, why not?
Listen to the words of the great mother, who who of old was called Artemis, Astarde, Athene, Deion, Dion, Dion, Melusine, Aphrodite, Sara Dwin, Diana, Aronthrod, Isist, Brigd, Bri, I'm probably saying these wrong, and many other names.
You'll be you will be kicked out of a coven, Christy.
Whenever ye have need of anything, once in the month, and better to be when the moon is full.
This is weird English, then shall ye assemble in some secret place and adore the spirit of who am queen of all witches.
It's it's weird English.
Queen of all witches.
Yes.
Now let's not forget why is weird English.
Gardner was still in the vein of Crowley's English.
You know, it's that talk disgusting no, no, that kind of English Victorian, a little bit, you know, was still using that kind of formula.
And ye shall be free from slavery, and as a sign that ye be really free, ye shall be naked in your rights, and ye shall dance, sing, feast, make music, and love, all in my praise.
For mine is the exesty of the spirit, and mine also is the joy on earth.
For my law is love unto all beings.
Keep here your highest ideal, strive ever towards it, let not stop you, turn you aside.
For mine is a secret door which opens upon the door of youth, and mine is the cup of the wine of life and the cauldron of Kerwadwin, which is the holy grill of immortality.
I am the gracious goddess who gives the gift of children.
I don't know Crowley at all, darling.
I've never read any.
You you studied though Israel, you studied other people.
Yeah, but I should have researched okay, but you studied unfortunate.
You find some similarities here.
It's just a goddess thing.
Okay, okay, okay.
Nor do I demand sacrifices, for behold, I am the mother of all living, and my love is poured out upon the earth.
I am the beauty of the green earth, and the white moon among the stars, and the mystery of the waters, and the desire of the heart of man.
This isn't like a ritual, isn't it?
Like um manifestation of some donkeys.
The charge uh is it's not like bad, is I mean, it's bad, but do I have to read?
I mean, it's no, but if we go here in the end, it's it though wilt never find this without that sounds like that.
That's very clear.
Thou will never find it without that.
Sounds like so.
There is a very strong element of Crowley, and this in fact is confirmed also by people, academics, historians who of course have made the research based on what we are saying today.
Um like I said, these people uh have generated a number of weaker movements, but let's not forget that they have also been involved in politics.
The Dianic Vika developed from the women liberation movement uh uh and some covens traditionally compare themselves with radical feminism.
The Yannix prides themselves on the inclusion of lesbians and bisexual members in the group and leadership.
It is a goal within the many covens to explore female sexuality and sexuality as outside of male control, and many rituals function to offend lesbian sexuality, so making it a popular tradition for lesbians and bisexuals.
So, when, for example, me and Christy went here to the local libraries, and we saw certain books, Christy.
Do you remember what kind of books?
That wasn't a library, that was a bookstore.
Yeah, but we went to both here in Param Speaking, and then we went also to that uh uh mall in which there was a bookstore with titles, which were and the titles, so what the titles were outrageous.
How queers for witches, I don't know, stuff like that.
Rainbow Love and Witches and all kinds of magic because definitely wica becomes eclectic.
It is not a single tradition, but a broad term for people who also practices not only in a coven uh situation, but also in uh in a solitary situation.
So you have aside from all the other currents of wicca, you have a large number of wiccans who do not exclusively follow any single tradition or even are initiated into a single tradition, but are practitioners somehow, and there is a lot of them in the left.
Um, in contrast to the British traditional weekends, these other kind of weekends, uh, like I said, experiment also all forms, and I have myself, when I was in the OTO, I noticed that the heads of these weaker convents,
they were all uh people like Nicolai de Marthos Fritzful or very experienced people within the OTO, other secret societies, Freemasons who use those witches' coven to empower their acts of magic, and they and to create an agregator that they could use also in their black magical operations.
So I hope that today people have realized uh the fact that uh wica is uh is it is not just uh uh something uh innocent, there is something else.
There is also another tradition known as six uh sex, six uh vica.
Um this uh mixes element of Anglo-Saxon paganism was created by a guy called Raymond Buckland in the 1973, who came, of course, from Garnerian Vika, and then mixed these elements of Anglo-Saxon paganism and created created uh this uh new form of beacon, and this is the cover of the founding text, the three, the complete book of Saxon witchcraft.
So, I mean, it's really uh I mean it's an ever-expanding word, uh, the word of uh Wicca, and and you have uh, like I said, uh, in in Anglo Saxon in the sixth Wicca, you have the use of uh runes.
I noticed that that is also contemplated, especially in Scandinavia.
A lot of deacons uh were using that, so you have uh, and then polic politically.
Politically, you see, let me show you something.
This is an article from uh uh the Biden era from the Hill 19, sorry, 2022 uh shows of course one of the monsters of the Democratic Party.
Uh in any case, uh the interesting thing uh uh regarding uh the Democrats' uh uh position abortion is uh the archive uh please read Christy, because this is very interesting.
But Democrats' position on abortion is the archaic one, abortion is an archaic practice in pagan Rome, abortion was commonplace, performed by a variety of surgical and medicinal methods and taken for granted by philosophers,
Plato, for example, laid out in book V. Book five of the Republic, various regulations of what offspring should be conceived and prescribed abortion for an infant from any infrescable side of those regulations, including by women older than 40 and men and uh older than 55.
The ancient pagan largely accept infanticide as well.
And the exposure of infants was common.
The Greek father had an absolute right to expose his children, exposure of infants, especially girls, was common and often linked to economic concerns About raising too many children.
But even in large families, more than one daughter was practically never reared.
Termination of female infants was so common as to contribute to a dramatically skewed sex ratio.
Estimated at 131 males per 100 females in the city of Rome and 140 males per 100 females in Italy, Asia Minor, and North Africa.
Now, the sarchaic willingness to expose of infants fits into a broader calmness towards human life.
Callousness.
Callousness, yes.
In any case, the fact that the Democrats support abortion, it's also linking them somehow to the pagan practices of abortions.
So there is this whole discussion that terminates here.
And it says also from a serious days, the Christian church reject the abortion infantise based on recognition of the intrinsic values of infants.
But like I said, the pagan roots of democrats abortion extremism are there.
And Vika is celebrating all those leftist tendencies from feminist to abortion to all these things.
So I think that today we have understood how these people created something out of FNER, literally, because Wicca didn't exist until they abolished that law that prohibited witchcraft in Great Britain in 1951.
and then of course there is always the involvement of Alistair Crowley somehow who is the beast of the apocalypse is there to somehow give the basis for the development of this whole project And it seems like he actually comes in at the right time, no, because he died in the summer 1947.
But he manages to give his you know all this knowledge that he had ceremonial magical knowledge to uh Jeregga to this guy, Gardner, who then makes a use of it.
Um so what have you learned today from this show, Christy?
I mean, it is uh of course something that uh we have discussed in the past uh witchcraft, uh the influence of witchcraft.
I didn't know there was so many branches of it.
But I wanted to add that um I think that a lot of young people are misinformed because you know when you actually like because when I I did a lot of research in Freemasonry too, I'm not a Freemason if you've just joined this show, and I don't do anyone.
No, well, but you became a Freemason and then I'm not Freemasonry.
Well, but you became a Freemason.
Where are you initiated?
All the because a Freemason will tell you, did you get any shaded?
Then even if you are not no longer an active Freemason, you still had the experience.
Is it like information?
Well, that's what I said.
Well, in any any case, you you you went through the experience, and you saw and you actually saw those witches, and and they're mean and mean and mean anyway.
Um you had also mean witches are always really really meaningful.
You had experiences with witches also in other groups, and you had also negative experiences.
Yeah, so that's that's important because you actually had the possibility of having that experience.
But I was gonna say that these young people, you know, they go on the internet and they they if you just read like off of the internet stuff about Wicca, it just says that they they um worship nature and um you know there's white witches,
and you know, they have their crystals and um they form the magic the energy circles and they try to bring I mean I I've I've heard it, I don't think that's Wicca though, but I mean I really I don't know anything about this.
I don't so that is Vika.
I mean uh that is Vika.
Um, yeah, that that kind of thing, you know, but it too to people that don't understand it might seem very um I don't know, just very innocent.
If you don't know, you know, if you don't understand.
And we saw also, you know, these witches who are organizing themselves.
And for example, Michael M. Hughes, who I've exposed in my books, uh, who is a Freemason, uh, who is a member of the society uh Rochelle Kushani in Anglia, and and and himself who is leading all these covenants of witches,
is once again the demonstration that yes, these witches operate, but in the end, at the uh on top of the system, there is always a manipulative figure, a guy who uh takes on the you know the guy, the guidance aspect of the Sabbath of the witches.
Yeah, and and yeah, it's it's like uh the the the witch doctor of the situation, the guy who is in charge of all these witches, and in fact, the fact that you're the witches they did all these rituals to bind Donald J. Trump.
I mean, and and what they did with Charlie Kirk.
And and Trump who had two we all need to pray and Trump, who had two attempts against his life, uh, and it's it's and and they are, of course, even writing a whole book on how to fight Donald J. Trump is just insane.
I mean, scrolls, and they even have a ritual for Black Lives Matter, spell for justice for a victim of a police action.
Come on, guys.
I mean, uh, and then no borders, all one family, invocation to Hermes.
I mean, you you see uh some people say it was a false false flag.
I had this already uh in my Italian show.
Charlie Kirk.
Oh, how can you say that?
Come on.
Here they have even an ex on the NRA.
These people are insane.
I mean, uh I know that you want to be into conspiracy theories, guys, but poor Charlie Kirk gave his life.
Well, why are kids?
This is it's evil to say that.
Absolutely.
Anyway, I want to show the end now.
I'm ready.
No, but really, guys, you should have a limit to what you can consider real.
Uh, and okay, I understand there is many conspiracy theories regarding how he was killed or the reason for uh for Charlie Kirk being killed.
That is something that we can discuss here, but to actually state that Javika is still alive, guys.
You must have some serious problems.
Okay, uh, thank you for uh following uh this uh show today.
Uh and let's thank a sponsors, Christy.
Who has sponsors?
Thank you guys, you guys rock.
Yeah, Malgrizar Lanza, Ian Boyle, um and Daniel and Ellen.
Okay, and remember, guys, another way of financing your show is to purchase the Zagami Family Cookbook transforming uh with this authentic Italian cooking book, uh your kitchen, however modest it is, in a five-star Italian restaurant with the best recipes for your spaghetti meatboards, for your catch and pepper pasta, and uh of course, all this with great pictures.
Chris is also a great photographer, so it's very yummy, and you you know, you you have a sense really of really wanting to go and cook this food as soon as you see the pics that Christie made.
Uh it's Zagami Family Cookbook, Athenti Italian uh cooking, you can find it on Amazon.
You can also purchase my latest book, which is volume 12 on my confessions, the final installment of the confession series.
There will be no longer books in the confession series simply because you need to read from volume one to volume 12, and you will have a whole prospect on what is really behind the new world order.
And then we might add, of course, new books and new experiences in the months and years to come, God willing.
And now bless you all.
We see you next week.
Thank you again for keeping on encouraging us by uh donating to us and also purchasing our books.
Take care, guys, all the best.
Remember, of course, they can do all the witch, uh, you know, all their witch rituals, whatever.
Uh But when you have faith in God, when you have the power of prayer, you can protect yourself.
And Charlie Kirk wanted to protect himself.
You know, just a few days before he died when he knew about this hex on him.
He wanted to really call immediately this priests, Catholic priests to make this ritual of protection.
But it's not easy.
You need to have of course the right people to do these rituals of protection.
Don't go to any charlatans.
Anybody who asks money, it's already out.
And hopefully you will never need them.
You will never receive an X or in your life.
Like our dear Charlie Kirk.
God bless you all.
And we see you next week.
Of course, you know, if we will receive more than a certain number of donations, we will also offer you additional shows during the week.
And now Vincenzo is a mediocre.
In that time, our world has taken so many steps.
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