Aleister Crowley

Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law.

Aleister Crowley was born Edward Alexander Crowley on October 12, 1875, in Royal Leamington Spa, Warwickshire, into a wealthy and intensely religious Plymouth Brethren family. His father, Edward Crowley, was a successful brewer turned lay preacher whose death in 1887 profoundly affected the young Crowley, fostering both a lifelong rebellion against evangelical Christianity and an obsessive engagement with religion in transformed, esoteric forms.

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Geomancy

Golden Dawn

Geomancy, derived from the Greek words geo (earth) and manteia (divination), literally means “divination by the earth.” It involves interpreting patterns formed by tossing soil, pebbles, or other materials on the ground. Known across various cultures, geomancy’s roots likely trace back to Arabic and African traditions, particularly in ancient Berber and Bedouin communities,

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The Jet Propulsion Laboratory was founded by a Satinist?

His experiments with solid rocket fuel led to significant advancements in propulsion technology, laying the groundwork for future space missions.

John “Jack” Whiteside Parsons, a founder of the legendary Jet Propulsion Laboratory and a maverick visionary honored with a moon crater bearing his name, gave no early hint of the inner stirrings that propelled him to worship the devil and lead an extraordinary double life: respected scientist by day, dedicated occultist by night.

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The Black Cat (1934)

I watched the 1934 the Universal Pictures psychological horror movie “The Black Cat” on Svengoolie. It stars two of the greatest in horror, Béla Lugosi as Dr. Vitus Werdegast and Boris Karloff as Hjalmar Poelzig. This was the first of this pairing with seven more movies to come. Black Cat was the number one movie for Universal in 1934. They hyped the move as an Edgar Allan Poe story but actually had little, more like nothing, to do with the famous writer. The name on the posters and other promotion certainly helped the movies appeal.

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