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The Esoteric Weirdness of BLM

Updated: Feb 2, 2021

Before getting started here, we have to get clear on one crucial fact:


The idea of the lives of people of African ancestry mattering...


...and the organization that goes by the name "BLM"...


...are two distinct things.


When the name "BLM", or "Black Lives Matter" is referenced here in this article, we are not talking about the idea. We're talking about the organization.


The idea is correct. Obviously. People of African ancestry matter.


But the organization is not the idea. And the organization has some... problems.



Besides the burning, the breaking, and outright violence, one of the more strange things BLM activists like to do is confront people and demand an out-loud recitation of their organization's name.


They believe that if a person refuses to recite the name/slogan, it means that they don't think the lives of people of African ancestry matter.


But this is not what's really going on.


When we refuse to recite the phrase, it's not because we factually disagree with it as a statement. It's because we view the whole process as highly weird and cult-like.


First, there's the simple fact that forcing people to recite words, on pain of physical assault and/or social ostracism, is highly worrisome to begin with. The only people who have ever gone around approaching random pedestrians, and forcing them to recite a phrase, have been invariably fascistic and totalitarian. It's not a good thing to do. It doesn't exactly telegraph an enlightened mindset.



But that's only scratching the surface. There's something more going on. Something hidden. Something... esoteric.


But the rabbit hole doesn't stop there. It keeps going.


There's also the black square symbol.



The BLM phrase seems to like showing up on a lot of solid black backgrounds... all shaped like squares.



In traditional occultism, a black square is often used as a two-dimensional symbol of the black cube of Saturn - a very dark, heavy, and perilous entity and energy to mess around with.



And nowadays, people are putting this symbol all over the place, like in their Instagram profile pictures - right next to their names. It's even showing up in people's dating site profiles. They think they're just making a statement of racial inclusiveness, but they could be making subconscious affirmations of an entirely different nature, without realizing what they're doing.



Want more evidence?


How about the famous phrase, "I can't breathe."


In a year when we're already dealing with an epidemic of people freaking out about the inability to breathe due to a supposed "virus" - one which already has its own extensive and sophisticated body of occult symbolism and trauma-based mind control woven around it - could this curious phrase perhaps be a component of that matrix?



If you have people going around chanting, passionately and repetitiously, that they "can't breathe", while superimposing the very same words on a black square potentially associated with Saturn and/or other occult entities, don't you think this *could* potentially synergize into a potent psychological magick?


And there's one more piece of evidence: the words "BLM" themselves.


I hypothesize that the slogan may actually be a spell.


Look at each individual word. "Black" seems fairly straightforward. It's a color. But the word "lives" has two distinct grammatical meanings. It can mean the plural of the noun "life", or it can mean the third-person simple-present conjugation of the verb "to live."


Furthermore, the third word also has two meanings. There is the verb "to matter" - to be important - and also the noun "matter," as in the physical matter of the universe.


The mythological associations of the color black are usually on the negative side of the spectrum, having to do with darkness. There is "black magic", which is the negative use of magic, a "black heart", a "black mood", and so forth. And this association is found in virtually all cultures around the world, including those on the continent of Africa. Cultures native to Africa don't think of themselves as "black" - but rather as simply people, and the color black has the same mythological connotations to them as it does to Europeans and everyone else.


So the BLM phrase could have a double meaning. On one hand, it means that the lives of people of African descent have value.


But on the other hand, it could be a spell, invoking the mythological energies of darkness (black) to come and dwell (live) in the world (matter). It could read as something along the lines of "darkness incarnates into the world."


Now of course, the simple phrase would not invoke such an intent, if it were spoken all by itself, in a matter-of-fact conversation, in an era prior to the establishment of the BLM organization and mass-movement. If the year was 2010 (before the organization was founded), and you merely said the phrase, it would probably not have magickal power.


But when it gets combined with all sorts of trappings - like symbols, signage, chanting, ritualistic hand gestures (the fist), marching formations, and all the intense emotion that's been channeled into it through the media, it takes on a whole new kind of potency. A simple, true statement is just a statement - but if you combine it with ceremony and ritual, that's when it might cross into the realm of magick.



Does this sound a little too far-fetched? What's that you say? You don't "believe" in all of this magicky spirity stuff?


Well they do.



That's Patrisse Cullors, one of the co-founders of BLM. She believes in it.


Now maybe she doesn't have the conscious intent of the particular dark spell just explained above. Maybe not. But she understands that rituals have power. If she knows it, perhaps we shouldn't be so quick to discount it.


When you combine all of this together:


1. The double-entendre about darkness incarnating into matter

2. The elements of group ritual (chanting, marching, hand gestures, etc)

3. The black square

4. The phrase about not being able to breathe, during a time when that's millions of people's greatest fear



...don't you think the combination of all of this could be designed for an occult purpose?


It wouldn't be out of character for the corrupt elites to foist this kind of psychological operation onto us, or to exploit people of color for such a purpose. They've been exploiting everyone - of all colors - for centuries.


And if you do what they want you to do, then you're aiding your own oppressors.


Liberation doesn't come from copying rituals. It comes from taking back your own power from those who are exploiting you. People of color: stop allowing yourselves to be used as pawns in the elites' games.


Stop using their language. Stop using their labels. Stop using their identities. The entire notion of "blackness" was invented by slave-traders, for the purpose of dividing humanity. Africans don't think of themselves as "black." They think of themselves as people.


And you, likewise, are not "black." You're a person.


The sooner we all realize that, the sooner we can heal.


Further reading: Blackness Is A Psyop - Just Like Whiteness



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