What is the nature of the New Order proposed by the Pythagorean Illuminati, the world's most controversial secret society?
The Illuminati advocate the replacement of democracy by meritocracy, the abolition of all monarchies, dynastic families and privileged elites.
How can the corrupt reign of the Old World Order finally be brought to an end? The Illuminati have proposed the most radical and revolutionary redistributive policy of all 100% inheritance tax. With this single measure, the iniquitous rule of elite families such as the Rothschilds and Bushes would be terminated.
The super rich defy the natural law of the regression to the mean. The rich just keep getting richer, and the poor poorer. 100% inheritance tax restores the law of nature; it brings back healthy social equilibrium. It prevents the formation of dynasties that bestride the globe for centuries. It gives everyone a fair chance in life.
The world could turn at last to meritocracy where people get ahead on the basis of what they know rather than who they know; where hard work and talent count for infinitely more than having the right name and connections.
We live in a two-tier world of privilege where all those who do not belong to the charmed inner circle are second class citizens.
How much longer will you tolerate being pushed around by the elite? If you don't want to be a slave all of your life, get off your knees.Stand up to the privileged criminals who run the world.
When they die, strip them of all their ill-gotten assets and return them to the people from whom they were stolen in the first place.
It's time for the most radical paradigm shift. It's time for meritocracy.
First off, Adam Weishaupt is the name of the Illuminati's founder, and thus, it is merely a pseudonym as this book was published recently.
The book is called "The Illuminati Paradigm Shift" so I was at least expecting:
1 - A decent historical overview of the society.
2 - A decent summary of current events
3- A decent proposal for a new paradigm shift according to the Illuminati's principles.
However, it didn't deliver.
It is rather a violent (and oftentimes puerile) attack on Abrahamic religions, especially Islam. The very brief expositions on material culture dealt with England and Pakistan. While wading through the countless "WTF" and "Are you fucking insane", and lets not forget "retarded", I got the impression that the writer was not a member of the Illuminati, but a drunk Pakistani professor of the Humanities who happened to be based in London.
The gist of the book is the following:
The Illuminati believes in the Nietzschean concept of the Superman. Its members hate all people of religious faith, atheists, and agnostics. They only respect people who believe that human beings are God-like entities, and that our job is to achieve this power. More than 90% of our body is composed of microbes, says the book, which means that we have within us entities of the divine...
In a series of short, disconnected sections, the book discusses the garden-variety subjects of scientific and philosophical interest. What is the transcendental dimensions of the Big Bang? Which is the better system to govern our lives: Capitalism or Socialism? How are people divided according to personality types? And so on and so forth. At the end, it even included a comical discussion of 9/11 conspiracy theories. Are the hijackers really Muslim Al-Qaeda personnel, or are they CIA/Mosad agents?
So I gathered that he was a Pakistani Professor of the Humanities who was based in London (he talks about Pakistan and London a lot), and who was sick and tired of two extremes. He disliked social scientists and post-structural theorists who advocated material science as much as he hated religious fundamentalists who rejected scientific facts such as evolution.
And he kept saying "join us." But how? Seriously. The Illuminati is supposedly a secret cult. How can one join it? How can one discover their "Lodges" or phone numbers?
I completed this book thinking I should have spent my time actually reading Critical Theory instead. The author not only hails Nietzsche, but he talks about the universe in a constant state of becoming (Deleuze), he criticizes capitalism and calls for a more equitable distribution of wealth, he mocks the hypperality of the world we live in and champions a meritocracy, and so on and so forth. A single "Introduction to Critical Theory" is a thousand times more beneficial than reading this book. So don't waste your time on it thinking you'll learn a few key scientific or philosophical concepts.
As for my knowledge about the Illuminati, well, it's as cloudy as it was starting the book.
At the end, I found myself asking the same questions that led me to purchasing the book in the first place:
- Who were the Illuminati of the past?
- Who are the Illuminati of the present?
- What is the Illuminati's relationship to secularism?
- What is the Illuminati's relationship to paganism?
- The book says the society plans to rule the world to build a meritocracy. And it also says it will make many small communities, each with their own government. For instance, a community of Muslims. A community of Christians. A community of Atheists. Then, according to the book, all these diverse communities will somehow magically realize that they are all retarded and that they will want to embrace meritocracy as a system. Now we all know that the Illuminati relates to a "New World Order." I very much doubt that this is what they had in mind. But even if they did, the book does not tell us how they propose to achieve their "paradigm shift."
- What is the Illuminati's relationship to the Church of Satan, the Baphomet, The Knights Templar, or Muslims (Baphomet after all is the corruption of Muhammad in Old French, which means that it has a connection to the Crusades and the Christian's feud with Muslims throughout the Middle Ages).
- What is the Illuminati's connection to mind control, the Nazi's and CIA's experiments, MK ULtra, or Monarch Programming.
- How is the Illuminati using various industries both locally and globally to instigate the "paradigm shift" whatever it is?
- What is the Illuminati's views on reality, fantasy, the real world, and the the ideal world, hyperreality, mechanical production, the digital age, the age of the spectacle, 3D audio-visuals, touch screens, infrared technology, and satellites?
- And equally as important, what is the Illuminati's relationship to drug culture? The Illuminati, for example, are said to have originated during the Age of Enlightenment, and their intention was to awaken the people from the darkness of the Middle Ages which was, they claim, propagated by the Church's enslavement of rational thought. When the Illuminati say they bring the "light", or "truth", it means that they bring reality where fantasy (or false reality) had originally clouded one's judgment.
So how does the Illuminati regard mass culture, which is seen by Marx, for example, as false consciousness? And how do its members regard drugs? Does a state of intoxication bring one closer to Godliness and therefore to truth and illumination, or does it cause blindness, the way that pop music, for instance, dulls the senses and stupefies people?
The Illuminati Paradigm Shift by Adam Weishaupt (pseudonym) is the second book in the Illuminati series by this author who works as part of the communication cell of the PI.
This book had some interesting points which as always I agree with, however this book by no means constructs and provides a paradigm-shift as everything is discussed in a very basic manner.
For any reader and truth-seeker who seeks to construct a true paradigm shift, its about reading all the material by the PI authors (Mike Hockney, Michael Faust, Adam Weishaupt, Dr.Thomas Stark, Dr.Cody Newman, David Sinclair, Jack Tanner as well works of other towering geniuses. I would also recommend diving deep into Buddhist, Taoist teachings, Gnostic and Hermetic and Esoteric Christianity).