Showing posts with label Politics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Politics. Show all posts

Friday, March 29, 2013

Mozart's The Magic Flute: Illuminati Brainwashing


           
Brainwashing? Just a little night music. . .
I recently saw a performance of Mozart’s brilliant comic opera The Magic Flute put on by the Utah Opera. The Magic Flute is a favorite for opera lovers because of its remarkable contrapuntal score and rich coloratura arias. The most famous of these arias is the “Der Hölle Rache kocht in meinem Herzen” or “Hell’s vengeance boils in my heart” aria sung by the Queen of the Night. This aria requires a virtuosic soprano able to ascend several octaves with very little breath and hit a very rare, and very high, F6 note. It is notoriously grandiose, and I’m happy to report that renowned soprano Audrey Luna, who was most recently in The Tempest at the Met, sang this aria with aplomb. Take a look at the great Diana Damrau absolutely slaying this aria here, and you’ll get an idea of how difficult this type of singing can be.
            Before seeing this opera I was aware of Mozart’s Masonic background. I knew him to be a basically observant Roman Catholic and a member of a Roman Catholic lodge. However, I was struck by The Magic Flute’s elaborate deployment of Egyptian symbols and signs, and the story seemed very much in accordance with my rather limited experience in secret rituals as a former Mason. The opera’s allegorical libretto seemed infused with esoteric messaging that I could only speculate on. I knew that I had to investigate further.
            Mozart was a member of not only a Roman Catholic lodge but several other lodges in Austria and Bavaria. In the course of graduating through the various rites of Freemasonry, Mozart met and befriended the infamous founder of the Bavarian Illuminati,
The Kissinger of the 1700's
Adam Weishaupt. In May, 1776, Weishaupt established a lodge within Freemasonry with its own particular rites. This lodge welcomed deists, agnostics, and atheists alike. The Illuminati focused on man’s potential and insisted that if mankind was meaningfully governed by a secret clique of wise, enlightened men within the order then a utopia of peace and happiness on earth could be established. Weishaupt’s ambition was none other than the covert takeover of governments in Europe and around the world by initiating the rich and powerful into his order and making them pledge allegiance to his cause of benevolent autocracy. This is merely the continuance of the proto-fascist visions of Plato and Rousseau that called for a new order of the ages controlled by a secretive inner coterie of philosopher kings.
            In the 1780’s Mozart grew to prominence quickly within the Illuminati owing to his international celebrity. Along the way he aggressively recruited other members into the order including his father and the composer Joseph Haydn.  
            On its surface The Magic Flute is the story of a handsome young prince, Tamino, and his sidekick, Papageno, who wish to gain entrance into a magical order and be united with their future brides. In order to join this benevolent order dedicated to wisdom, rationality, and harmony the two characters must overcome a series of trials and maintain their faith in the order to protect them from danger. They must outwit the forces of darkness commanded by the Queen of the Night if they are ever to attain entrance into the sacred brotherhood and get the girl.
            Aside from being shot through with Masonic ideology, another interpretation of The Magic Flute is that it is a bildungsroman; an allegory for maturation and the development of human sexuality. Tamino wishes not only to attain the knowledge of the sacred rites of the Temple of Sarastro; he also wants to attain knowledge in the biblical sense by wedding and bedding Pamina, the beautiful daughter of the Queen of the Night. Papageno represents the goyim, the uninitiated man, who only wishes to gratify his senses. This means that Papageno can be only partially initiated into the rite as a means of fulfilling his sexual imperative. He can discover carnal knowledge through ritual, but because he remains attached to the senses he cannot become a full-fledged member of the order. According to Enlightenment era Masonic philosophy sensual perception stands apart from reason and rationality. So, Papageno cannot enter into the secret society led by the wise and charismatic sorcerer, Sarastro.
            Tamino and Papageno are each given a magic flute and magic bells respectively by Sarastro’s followers. The acolytes promise the two adventurers that they will be protected from harm if they play the instruments. According to Masonic doctrine, music played a certain way can be used to subdue the dark side of man’s nature and enhance man’s faculty for reason and virtue. This, no doubt, was one of the reasons that Mozart became interested in Freemasonry in the closing years of his life. Entrance into the order meant access to an occulted musical tradition that few composers would ever know about. The Magic Flute incorporates Masonic music throughout but particularly in the opening overture, which relies heavily on the melodic restatement of three notes; three being a significant number in Freemasonry.
            The sexual double entendre of these magical instruments in the opera should not be overlooked. The instruments are played by the adventurers not just to keep them out of danger and lead them to the temple of knowledge, but also to lead them to their brides who will confer upon them the knowledge of the flesh. The flute, carried by Tamino, is a stand-in for the penis. The bells, carried by his sidekick Papageno, are a stand-in for testicles. A boy is led to his sexual awakening by manipulating and masturbating his instrument, his penis. Similarly, Tamino must play with his flute and Papageno his bells if they are to awaken their libidinal desires that will put them on the hunt for eligible mates. The very name of the opera is a sexual joke, immortalizing the cock as a sacred totem. This is well within the standard of Mozart’s other ribald comic operas and reflects the eighteenth century tradition of picaresque.
            The Magic Flute seems to also treat the nature of masculinity and its relation with the feminine. Sarastro encourages Tamino to keep the secrets of the order a secret from the uninitiated, but especially from women. He also encourages him not to spend too much time with women or allow women to occupy too much of his thoughts, lest his faculty for reason and intellect become impaired. Tamino must rescue Pamina from her mother, The Queen of the Night, who is an irrationally violent and vengeful shrew. Tamino must have faith in the order of Sarastro and the magic flute to achieve this task. His quest is to release Pamina from the bondage of spiritual darkness and superstition that she lives in with her mother, and initiate her into the lightness of good and reason that will be their marriage. In this context, masculinity can be seen as the oldest and most nefarious of secret societies in which boys are initiated into the order of men whose conspiracy is to seduce and abduct girls from their homes and their mothers and enlist them into the order of women who will fulfill the rites of wives and mothers. The oedipal conflict is dramatized. Maturation is a journey guided by libido whose object is independence from the family and the foundation of a fully realized sexuality with a monogamous partner.
Relax. I'm a sorcerer.
            The character Sarastro may represent several different people. The first and most obvious possibility is that he represents Zoroaster, or Zarathustra, the prophet and founder of the first monotheistic religion in ancient Iran. Zarathustra, along with other religious founders, is a prominent figure in Freemasonry. Another possibility suggested by Katherine Thomson is that Sarastro represents Mozart’s friend Ignaz von Born. Born was a famous metallurgist and probable alchemist who initiated Mozart into the Illuminist lodges. Still another and most compelling possibility is that Sarastro represents the charismatic and mysterious adventurer, Count Cagliostro.
            While accounts of Cagliostro’s life vary widely he is believed to have been a grifter and occultist of low birth who rose to the level of aristocrat and international celebrity in the eighteenth century due to his powerful associations among the Bavarian Illuminists. Mozart would have no doubt heard of Cagliostro and may have had occasion to meet him, though there are no accounts of this. Cagliostro was a conjurer who developed a specific rite within Freemasonry known as the Egyptian Rite. This is a rite that makes use of various Egyptian symbols and cosmology, particularly the cults of Isis and Osiris who are mentioned throughout The Magic Flute. The opera takes place in an Egyptian, Middle Eastern, or Near Eastern setting very similar to the regions invoked in the Egyptian Rite.
            In Cagliostro’s séances that he performed for his Illuminist friends and their various hangers-on, Cagliostro would wear a turban and an iridescent cape, not unlike Sarastro. He would summon two virginal youths, a boy and a girl around a crystal globe of clarified water and he would describe their destinies and perform various miracles, according to Masonic lore. This is very close to the story of The Magic Flute. Sarastro summons two virginal youths, Tamino and Pamina, to join him in his temple. If they trust in the sorcerer then no harm will befall them and they will each discover one another and fulfill their destiny to be married.
            It is quite possible that Cagliostro was a key figure in The Affair of the Diamond Necklace. This is an event that eventually led to the French Revolution and the execution of Louis XVI. It is almost indisputable that the Illuminati were instrumental in the French Revolution and that their senior members presided over the subsequent Reign of Terror. An excellent late eighteenth century account of these events can be found in Abbé Barruel’s “Memoirs Illustrating the History of Jacobinism.” Cagliostro was formerly charged and convicted for his collusion in the affair, but was later acquitted.  
            The official story of The Diamond Necklace Affair is that Marie Antoinette commissioned some jewelers to make an extravagant diamond necklace worth over 20,000 livres directly from taxes collected from the French people. This enraged the people of France when it was discovered and thus eased the way for a coup orchestrated by the Jacobins, a franchise of the then disbanded Bavarian Illuminati.
            However, according to Henry Evans’s official Masonic book “Cagliostro and the Egyptian Rite of Freemasonry” it was Cagliostro who presented the necklace to the powerful French nobleman, Cardinal de Rohan. De Rohan’s lover was a grifter and a prostitute who finagled her way into Marie Antoinette’s court. It was she that discovered the commissioning of the necklace and leaked its existence to authorities. Is Henry Evans suggesting that The Diamond Necklace affair was a frame-up orchestrated by Cagliostro, de Rohan, and the Jacobins? Could this event have been an elaborate false-flag operation to undermine the throne and pave the way for the French Revolution? Is The Magic Flute meant to memorialize Cagliostro and the Egyptian Rite? Is it meant to be propaganda worshipping the Illuminists and the Jacobins who were the wicked architects of the French Revolution; the very same puppet masters who were, by 1791, administering the Reign of Terror against the French people? 

Freedom has arrived.
            The Magic Flute is regarded today as an arch masterpiece of high culture, but we must see it for what it was originally meant to be. This was a pop-culture phenomenon that was meant for mass consumption and designed to have mass appeal. The opera exploits many cultural fads that existed in 1791. The Egyptian setting would have appealed to the cultural fascination with extinct empires as popularized by Marmontel’s novel The Incas. Yet, although meant to cater to the lowest common denominator, The Magic Flute also contains occult music, numerous symbols, and references that would have only been visible to the Illuminati clique of insiders. It was none other than Goethe, a fellow Illuminist, who had this to say of The Magic Flute “It is enough that the crowd would find pleasure in seeing the spectacle; at the same time its high significance will not escape the initiates.” One can only wonder if there are any 21st century spectacles meant for mass consumption that might also have occulted significance to those who have been initiated into the dark mysteries.  

Egypt: The Old World New World Order

Bibliography:




            The Affair of the Diamond Necklace

            Mozart and Freemasonry


            Mozart: A Life by Maynard Solomon



            Alesandro Cagliostro

                     
           
                    

Sunday, January 27, 2013

Notes on "Tragedy and Hope"



I am currently reading Dr. Carroll Quigley’s landmark 1966 book, Tragedy and Hope: A History of the World in our Time. This is a history book that covers the major events of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries up until almost the time of the book’s publication. It is also a favored text for conspiracy researchers because a small portion of the book is devoted to the foundation of influential policy groups by major forces in the world of financial capitalism. The goal of these policy groups was, and is, nothing less than to manage the economies of every country in the world using the leverage of central banking.
            These revelations are really only a small portion of a very exhaustive (1348 pgs.) political history provided by an interpretative historian, but the discovery of the machinations of these financial scions is immensely valuable because Dr. Quigley discovered their objectives through exclusive access to primary documents. He was granted access to the complete records of the Council on Foreign Relations, which have now been made public, and the records of its even more secretive parent group The Round Table in the early 1960’s. This access was granted to him, no doubt, because he was an establishment intellectual who was writing a book that puts world government by bankers and technocrats in a mostly favorable light. Although Dr. Quigley disagrees with the secrecy and subterfuge employed by the global elite, it’s clear that he has no problem with world government controlled by experts, per se.
            Dr. Quigley’s research reveals the Council on Foreign Relations as a front group for the powerful Anglophile secret society known variously as the Round Table or the Milner group, after one of its founders, Lord Alfred Milner. This group was headed by various figures emanating from JP Morgan’s circle of influence and is described by Dr. Quigley as “cosmopolitan, Anglophile, internationalist, Ivy League, eastern seaboard, high Episcopalian, and European-culture conscious.” (937) In short, a secretive power bloc emanating from the WASP upper echelons much like the Order of Skull in Bones as researched by Dr. Antony Sutton.
            This group maintained members in editorial positions at some of America’s most prestigious magazines and newspapers including “The New York Times, New York’s Herald Tribune, The Christian Science Monitor, and The Washington Post.” (953) Their members also headed the powerful Institute of Pacific Relations in the 1950’s, an influential, communist-leaning think tank that sent some of its members to important State Dept. appointments. Dr. Quigley reluctantly speculates that due to the IPR’s influence, the way was eased for the communists’ accession in China after the defeat of Chiang Kai-Shek.
            Curiously, given his overwhelming evidence of a conspiracy headed by banking elites and their tax exempt foundations, Dr. Quigley dismisses the idea that these men have designs for world hegemony. He summarily dismisses these notions as the pabulum of paranoid, right-wing, “professional anti-communists.” He insists that these men are using their vast fortunes in good faith, and he lovingly describes them as merely “gracious and cultured gentlemen of somewhat limited social experience who were much concerned with the freedom of expression of minorities and the rule of law for all.” (954)
            This apologetic point-of-view is all the more confusing given Dr. Quigley’s grim outlook on the world’s future that reads today like prophecy. He writes that “in the twentieth century, the expert will replace the industrial tycoon in control of the economic system even as he will replace the democratic voter in control of the political system. . . (the private citizen’s) freedom of choice will be controlled within very narrow alternatives by the fact that he will be numbered from birth and followed, as a number, through his educational training, his required military or public service, his tax contributions, his health and medical requirements, and his final retirement and death benefits.” (866)           
            The role of the Council on Foreign Relations in our present government cannot be overstated. Obama's White House is loaded with lifetime members of the organization including Susan Rice, Zbigniew Brzezinski, and Stephen Flynn. In 2009, outgoing Secretary of State Hillary Clinton had this to say about the opening of the CFR’s Washington office near the White House, “We get a lot of advice from the Council (on Foreign Relations), so this will mean I won’t have as far to go to be told what we should be doing and how we should think about the future.”
Dr. Carroll Quigley
            Private citizens should take a vigilant interest in the influence of tax exempt foundations, think tanks, and banking institutions on their government. Doing so may mean the difference between living as constitutionally protected, free individuals or as a numerical value to be taxed, controlled, and propagandized to by a shadowy technocratic oligarchy.