With the Epstein revelations, replete with intimations not just of sexual predation upon youngsters, but of their torture, sacrifice, and ingestion, by men and women who stand at the apogee of wealth and power in our world (and who therefore stand in no need of any additional mundane advantage, so that their participation in such liturgies cannot be motivated by need, but rather only by greed (or lust, or … terror)), the ancient dragon who gnaws always at the root of human affairs has lurched again to the surface of current events.
He has been always at work, eating away at us since Babylon; since the earliest human settlement. The basic and perennial conflict of history, upon which all others supervene, is constant, albeit usually hidden: on the one hand, cults and cultures of one sort or another, that have in common their utter abhorrence and hatred of human sacrifice (and, so, of all who practice it), and on the other, cults that celebrate such immolations … and, as with all sacrifice, partake of the meat produced thereby.
It comes down at bottom to the worship of demons, or of the Most High; of death, or of life. Whether it’s Israel versus the Amalekites, or Rome versus Carthage, or Spain versus the Aztecs, it’s the same antagony in operation. Perhaps indeed, as we now, seeing the pattern again rear its hideous head, dare to think … the witch hunts and inquisitions, the crusades against secret societies, indeed perhaps even the ancient pattern of the scapegoat, manifest all some horror endemic and inimical to human social life, against which we all ever struggle, whether or not we know it.
It’s not just the conspiracy theories that are now revealed to be true. It goes much deeper. The very fairy tales – Hansel & Gretel, e.g., or Jack the Giant Killer – are now shown to be simply realistic; common sense. Stay away from witches! Let no vampire within your pale!
And, Carthago delenda est.