Please send as far and wide as possible.

Thanks,

Robert Sterling
Editor, The Konformist
http://www.konformist.com

Kirby the Konspiracy Boy says, "Don't read this
magazine!!! It's all a diabolical brainwashing plot!!!"

If you are interested in a free subscription to The Konformist Newswire,
please visit http://www.eGroups.com/list/konformist/ and sign up. Or, e-mail
[EMAIL PROTECTED] with the subject: "I NEED 2 KONFORM!!!"
(Okay, you can use something else, but it's a kool catch phrase.)


From:  [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Book Review: 'The Secret Behind Secret Societies:

Liberation of the Planet in the 21st Century'

                              by Jon Rappoport

                        Truth Seeker Company, Inc.

                              P.O. Box 28550

                            San Diego, CA 92198

                          http://truth-seeker.com

            (as heard on Jeff Rense's Sightintings on the Radio

        http://www.broadcast.com/shows/endoftheline/98archives.stm

                             archive 10/12/98)

                       Reviewed by: Frank Altomonte

     Jon Rappoport, for those unfamiliar with him, is one of those men for all
seasons. An investigative reporter by trade, he is really a philosopher at
heart. His previous publications, 'Aids Inc.:The Scandal of the Century',
'Oklahoma City Bombing:The Suppressed Truth' and 'Madalyn Murray O'hare: "The
Most Hated Woman in America' were all investigative in nature, but this latest
work is not one of those, entirely. The subject category printed on the back
cover is Self Actualization. His more recent book, Lifting the Veil: David
Icke Interviewed by Jon Rappoport, is a preview of the  format for this latest
publication.

     In Rappoport's down to earth 'man on the street' style of journalism, we
are taken on a journey through one man's time and memory of early experiences
that created the foundation for his quest for truth and individual freedom.
Along the way we are treated to interviews with people who have belonged to
secret societies and those from a different camp, one where the innate power
of the individual is manifested and practiced. We are shown how these two
camps are in direct opposition to one another, i.e., how the secret societies
keep this power from the individua herding all of society along as common
cattle.

     The journey begins in Greenwich Village, New York in 1961. Fresh out of
Amherst College with a degree in Philosophy, Rappoport was working his last
day at a bookstore. In walks a man who asks about books on healing. All they
had were books by Wilhelm Reich, if that was what he wanted. The man claimed
he had all of those in French and German despite the US ban having been
lifted. He makes a remark about Reich being 'on the inside' but having found
out a lot for someone in his position. Rappoport, a bit of a skeptic, points
out Reich was a student of Freud who breaks away and dies in jail. The man
explains that 'inside' is a relative term but compared to Reich the healing he
is referring is '...on Mars. These people don't write books.' This man
explains he makes his living by treating sick people. Rappoport, very curious,
now has to find out what this man, Richard Jenkins, is talking about. He
invites Rappoport to his apartment to watch as he performs on his clients.

     For the next year Rappoport is introduced to an unwritten tradition of
healing where someone lies down on a table and the practioner, Jenkins in this
case, appears to move energy around the person's body using his hands. The
people report many things besides a return to health. Some are there simply to
explore the effects of this energy manipulation on their minds. Rappoport
begins to apprentice. After that year, Jenkins and his wife leave New York to
finish their long time  search for the origins of this tradition, having told
Rappoport of what they had learned so far.

      Rappoport continues to treat clients on his own, learning from his own
silent inner dialogue when practicing and listening carefully to accounts of
their physical and psychic experiences. This 'Tradition of Imagination', as he
grew to identify it, becomes the major theme in  this book contrasted in depth
with its antithesis, the  'Formula of the Secret Society'. We are beckoned to
join in a search for the beginnings of this tradition. Where did it originate?
Who originated it? What else did they know? Rappoport reveals the clues he was
given from a personal source, a contact to the forebearer of Richard Jenkins,
and looks to the present and reaches back into history and time immemoriam
chasing down avenues and corridors for this priceless understanding of a
hidden tradition in human history. We visit the Dead Sea Scrolls, advanced
paranormal powers, Dean Radin, Giordano Bruno and mystical Tibetan Buddhism.

     Alongside this theme of the 'Tradition of Imagination' we are also guided
through a detailed anatomy lesson on the 'Formula of the Secret Society'. With
X-Ray perception, Rappoport spells it out for us. "The tradition is the
opposite of the formula of the secret society, a cult, a religion and
institution that creates art in order to imprison the mind. The opposite."
Being a painter himself, Rappoport attributes  the brushstroke of imagination
to the powers secret societies weild to create a picture in which everyone of
us is framed among the powerful system of archetypal symbols. We are told
nothing exists outside the frame and the only way to achieve bliss is through
'us' and our construction of leaders and hierarchies.

     We are presented with several eyewitnesses, people who have left cults, a
hypnotist and deprogrammer and their stories in first hand interviews of how
manipulation according to the formula and its emerging corollaries is
effected. Here we get close looks at  the Roman Catholic Church, Masonry, The
Knights Templar, Theosophy and of course this wouldn't be complete without
Nazi Germany and collusion with US investors, CIA and MKULTRA, CFR,
Trilateralists and American multinational corporations. That last category is
stunning. Rappoport believes and exposes as fact that today our major
multinational corporations, e.g, Dow, DuPont, Monsanto, etc., function no
differently than secret societies of old.

     In the last parts of the book we look at contemporary pesonalities that
personify this 'Tradition of Imagination'. Most memorable was an interview
with Ted Clarke, US space program engineer for JPL, who tells us about his
fantastic vision for the future. Also text is devoted to hypnotist and
deprogrammer, Jack True, who has personally witnessed the affects of the
'Formula of the Secret Society', and further help describe the function and
dynamics of this tool.  There are in addition several case studies presented
of individuals who have chosen to develop their own 'Tradition of
Imagination'. The sessions documented by the author are most intriguing,
offering the needed motivation for one to experiment on his own.

     In summation, this is one man's Opus Magnus. It comes from deep inside,
incorporating nearly all of his adult life's work. The book is more than
investigative journalism. It is a wake up call; not in the typical sense to
become aware of what is going on around you, but a call to wake up to who you
really are.  It will entertain and at the same time cause you to think and
ponder your position in the grand scheme ot things as a rational human being,
who may have on one occaision considered what this 'rat race' is all about and
questioned: 'Is that all there is?'

------------------------------------------------------------------------
Fresh flowers are the perfect way to say "I love you".
Shipped direct from the grower, Proflowers.com has
arrangements from $29.95 plus S&H.
Click here: http://offers.egroups.com/click/216/0

eGroup home: http://www.eGroups.com/list/konformist
Free Web-based e-mail groups by eGroups.com




Reply via email to