UnSpun 006 – Prof. Jay Fikes – Weaponized Anthropology & Manufactured Religion – with Jan Irvin & Joe Atwill

UnSpun_006
Aired December 08-09, 2015.

Prof. Jay Fikes is our guest and we discuss Carlos Castaneda, recent FOIA requests on Prof. Peter T. Furst, fraud, and illegal archaeology, Weaponized anthropology and the manufacture of new age religions.

Alt stream:
[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ztkq7Mj4_vA]

Audio only:

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  4 comments for “UnSpun 006 – Prof. Jay Fikes – Weaponized Anthropology & Manufactured Religion – with Jan Irvin & Joe Atwill

  1. RogerArno
    December 12, 2015 at 5:11 am

    Regarding the degradation of the black people.
    See the Boule, this is probably the main control/connection.

    A quote from the link below.
    “This black “secret society” is called the Boule’ aka Sigma Pi Phi Fraternity, Incorporated, founded May 15, 1904 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. This is the 1st black fraternity in america and before the 1st black “college” frat, Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity, Incorporated which was founded December 4, 1906.
    The Boule’ is a black GREEK secret society based on another secret society founded at Yale University called Skull & Bones. The Boule’s primary founder was Dr. Henry McKee Minton — along with Dr.’s Eugene T. Henson, Edwin Clarence Howard, Algernon Brashear Jackson, Robert Jones Abele and Richard John Warrick; all of Philadelphia.
    The founding member of the New York City chapter, WEB DuBois, said the Boule’ was created to “keep the black professional away from the ranks of Marcus Garvey.” (One thing that needs to be pointed out is the time period. Just over a decade after the founding of the Boule’, Marcus Garvey’s ‘Back to Afrika’ movement (also known as the ‘Colonization Movement’) and his newspaper, the Negro World, was reaching a million-plus people without tv or radio. DuBois emphasized, as Cokely stated, ”

    Some will speak of it as whites against blacks, which in my opinion is superficial, but the info is gold.
    One overview here:
    http://daghettotymz.com/rkyvz/articles/bouleseries/BCover.html

  2. RogerArno
    December 14, 2015 at 2:59 am

    A short addendum to my post above.
    I find it Interesting
    1. Hoover talking about a black messiah.
    2. the Harlem Renaissance in the 1920s.

    Is this the creation of another messiah.
    http://mandela.southafrica.net/map/overview

  3. Nordølum
    December 14, 2015 at 7:40 am

    Funny he mentioned Zora Hurston. I first read her (I think overrated) novel “There Eyes Were Watching God” for a university Ethnic and Minority Lit class. I know that she was rather obscure until Alice Walker (hardcore light skinned black feminist whose most famous book the Color Purple is about black male misogyny abuse and rape against women, while promoting lesbianism and since disproven out-of-Africa myths) allegedly found her unmarked grave in FL and wrote an article in (again) Ms. Magazine “In Search of Zora Neale Hurston” which apparently launched a Hurston revival.

    Since then I read her book on Voodoo in Haiti “Tell My Horse” (which is OK, there is much better stuff out there, I like Alfred Métraux’s book, even though his background might be questionable, or even Wade Davis, who often quoted Hurston) and the one on Southern black folk tales (Gullah, Hoodoo, Marie Laveau) Mules and Men, I think it was called.

    Hurston used to travel around the south, measuring people’s heads and collecting folklore. She studied under Frantz Boas as well. I seem to remember Gnostic Media (or maybe it was Red Ice… ) talking about Boas in an unfavorable light, how he changed Anthropology to value all cultures of the world as equal instead of recognizing any kind of hierarchy or judging one or another as good or bad. I believe he was a Jew from or influenced by the Frankfurt School.

    Anyway, I find Hurston’s books to be more like travelogues, full of half-truths and unsupported declarations, such as saying that “Southern black folk are like such and such… (can’t remember exact quotes offhand) – and THAT is right” or calling certain Haitian divinities/loas “the black Joan of Arc”. She had some interesting things to say about the Haitian secret societies and about zombies, even though her case example has been proven false (Félicia Félix-Mentor).

    More interestingly, she was involved in the Harlem Renaissance “movement” with questionable people such as Langston Hughes and Wallace Thurman. She had a falling out with Hughes and I think was ultimately a Republican politically, wrote an article against Brown vs. Board called “Court order can’t make the races mix” or something like that. Died poor and is now taught in University as a great black feminist hero and militant for leftist causes.

  4. j sorrien
    December 14, 2015 at 8:49 pm

    Just watched “All Night Long” 1962 http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0054614/
    “The film, based on Othello, is neatly positioned as a vehicle to showcase some of the best Jazz musicians of the period”
    This was fun to watch after hearing your podcast, it had everything you guys were talking about. Even in the very beginning there is a large spinning lower case e that clearly shows a subliminal Star of David.

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