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ANTIFICTION



Last Updated: 11/4/2009

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City: OAKLAND
State: California
Country: US
Signup Date: 8/2/2006

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Saturday, August 15, 2009 

Current mood:  awake
Category: Religion and Philosophy
"The relationships of Apollo to Zeus, are exactly like those of Taht to Osiris, the supreme being. It is Taht who gives the Ma-Kheru, or Word of Truth, to the sun-god himself. As representative of Ra, his lunar logos, his light in the darkness, he is the Word whose promise is fulfilled and made truth by the Supreme Being, the sun that vivifies and verifies for ever. By his Word, he drives the enemies from the solar horizon, the insurgent powers of darkness which are fighting eternally against Ra. This is the character of Apollo as the defender of heaven against every assault. These powers of darkness, continually in revolt, ever warring with the sun, were called the giants which Taht-Khunsu, the giant-killer, slays by night, or during the lunar eclipse. Apollo also figures as the destroyer of the giants who were at war with heaven. It is said in the Egyptian texts that Ra created this god, Taht, as "a beautiful light to show the name of his evil enemy".  Apollo is the god of knowledge, past, present, and to come; Taht is the deity of knowledge, past, present, and future--the founder of science, lord of the divine words, and secretary of the gods. Apollo is the god of poetry and music. So was Taht. He is the psalmist and singer; he is fabled to have torn out the sinews of Sut-Typhon to form the lyre--the lyre or harp with seven strings being an image of the new moon, like the bow.Apollo was the god of healing. Taht is the supreme physician and healer; "He who is the good Saviour," as it is written on a statue in the Leyden Museum. Apollo was the bringer of death in a form that was serene and beautiful, as became the lunar Lord of light, and enlarger of the lunar light to the full,--the character and function being afterwards applied to the light of life that suffered the passing eclipse of death. One name of Taht is Tekh, which signifies to be full." - MASSEY
Wednesday, November 28, 2007 
Wednesday, July 18, 2007 

Category: Music
Monday, July 16, 2007 
BOHEMIAN CLUB ENTRANCE ANTIFICTION.TV

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Dark Secrets inside Bohemian Grove

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At these gatherings men representing the government, military-industrial, and financial sectors meet and make major policy decisions. The Manhattan project, which produced the first atomic bombs, was conceived at the Grove in 1942. Other decisions made at the Grove include who our presidential candidates will be. There are speeches, known as "Lakeside Talks", wherein high-ranking officials disseminate information which is not available to the public-at-large.

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Monday, July 16, 2007 

Category: Movies, TV, Celebrities
SETSTV is officially on the air. Watch SETSTV every monday night on San Francisco channel 29 at 9pm. Soon episodes will be online at ANTIFICTION.TV

INTRO Filmed by Blaise Rea Taddune, Produced by Scott, Featuring SETS from the west.



ANTIFICTION.TV
Saturday, June 02, 2007 
Friday, June 01, 2007 
Tuesday, May 15, 2007 
Tuesday, May 15, 2007 
Wednesday, May 09, 2007 
ANTIFICTION.TV SWASTIKA AT THE US MINT



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The Cutting Edge: Sterilization and Eugenics in California, 1909-1945.




By Jon Gottshall


Few people today realize that at one time in this century it was not uncommon for mental institutions to order the sterilization of those they deemed unfit for parenthood, with or without the consent of the patients or their families. These operations were often justified in the name of eugenics, a branch of science that arose around the turn of the century and which posited that the control of human reproduction could improve both individuals and society. Although the eugenic policies of Nazi Germany, which included sterilization, are fairly well-known, America paved the way. In the years before WWII, thousands of people in the United States underwent forced sterilization. But this policy was not applied uniformly in the United States. One state led all others in the scope of implementation: California.

The state of Indiana enacted the first sterilization legislation in 1907. Other states were to eventually enact similar legislation, but the hub of activity soon moved to west coast, where that state's first sterilization law was enacted in 1909. Like many Midwestern transplants, this practice found itself less restricted in the Golden State, and by 1921 more eugenic sterilizations had been performed in California than in the rest of the United States combined (see table 1). Also, unlike in many other states, California's sterilization laws suffered no judicial setbacks in the years before 1927, when such eugenic legislation was upheld as constitutional by the United States Supreme Court. The policies endured and became a model for others, both American and foreign, to imitate.

Although it was carried out on a significant scale well into the 1930's and even beyond, eugenic sterilization arose as a policy issue in California and the rest of the nation during the Progressive Era, which began around the beginning of the twentieth century and lasted until 1920. This was a time of reform movements stretching across many fronts, most stemming from a desire to purify or ameliorate the conditions of a changing nation. The role of the state was being redefined in response to a society under the stress of urbanization, industrialization, heavy immigration, and other forces. In this context, eugenics promised a straightforward plan for eliminating disorder and degeneracy. Eugenics stressed the application of science to human heredity and breeding in order to improve the human species both mentally and physically. Some Progressives referred to eugenics as "the science and the art of being well born." Human sterilization may be carried out for many reasons. It may be as punishment, perhaps in the form of castration for repeat sex offenders. It may be for social reasons, when individuals are kept from having children because they are completely unable to care for them, either physically, emotionally or financially. But when the state sterilizes an individual because he is seen to be genetically defective and therefore likely to pass his defects on to offspring, this is eugenic sterilization. And this was the type of sterilization that many California policymakers wanted to carry out.

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July 1997
Margaret Sanger, Sterilization, and the Swastika
[article in the PUBLIC DOMAIN]
Submitted by Mike Richmond to Tetrahdron, Inc. and Dr. Len Horowitz

" to give certain dysgenic groups in our population their choice of segregation [concentration camps] or sterilization", advocated the founder of Planned Parenthood, Margaret Sanger in April 1932 ("A Plan For Peace", Birth Control Review; see 'appendix' for this full unabridged seminal article). Which country pioneered forced sterilization in the 20th century, Germany or the United States of America? The German program began in January 1934, but the U.S. state of Indiana passed a forced sterilization law (for mental defectives) in 1907 (when Adolf Hitler was 18 years old). Before the German program began, at least seventeen U.S. states (including California) had 'forced sterilization' laws. Before 1930 there were 200-600 forced sterilizations per year (in the U.S.A.) but in the 1930s the rate jumped to 2,000-4,000 per year. (1)

Who 'Inspired' the architects of the German Sterilization law?

"The leaders in the German sterilization movement state repeatedly that their legislation was formulated after careful study of the California experiment as reported by Mr. Gosney and Dr. [Paul] Popenoe. It would have been impossible, they say, to understake such a venture involving some 1 million people without drawing heavily upon previous experience elsewhere." (2) Who is Dr. Paul Popenoe? He was a leader in the U.S. eugenics movement and wrote (1933) the article 'Eugenic Sterilization' in the journal (BCR) that Margaret Sanger started. How many Americans did Dr. Popenoe estimate should be subjected to sterilization? Between five million and ten million Americans. "The situation [in the U.S.A] will grow worse instead of better if steps are not taken to control the reproduction of mentally handicapped. Eugenic sterilization represents one such step that is practicable, humanitarian, and certain in its results."

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Tuesday, May 08, 2007 
Monday, April 09, 2007 
Wednesday, March 14, 2007 
Sunday, March 11, 2007 
SETS
Sunday, March 11, 2007 
SETS

SETS IN THE BUCKET