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Another good one gone.
Follow Ups:
A DIRECTOR OF THE CRYPTOCRACY HAS DIED
Yesterday, March 18, one of the top directors of the Cryptocracy, Arthur
C. Clarke, died in Sri Lanka, where rumor has it he savored the indecent
favors of native boys without fear of prosecution.
In the Crypotocracy's Once-and-Future Camelot timeline, there are four
significant years above all in the past few centuries of their playbook:
1945 (the atomic creation and destruction of primordial matter at the
Trinity site in the Land of Enchantment); 1963 (the Killing of the King
near the Trinity river and the Triple Underpass in Dealey Plaza, Dallas,
Texas); 1969 (the alchemical marriage of the sun and the moon after the
first lunar landing) and 2001, the gateway to the (inner) space odyssey
that is Childhood's End.
There are of course other significant years when events important to the
advancement of The Process occurred, but these four are the momentous
red letter ones.
Arthur C. Clarke was the final prophet of the 21 (2001) occult imperium.
Symbolically, he watched over 2/3 of its completion (666 is of course
2/3 of one millennium).
Queen Elizabeth's astrologer royal, Dr. John Dee, code-named "007," had
initiated the first 1/3 of The 21 (2001) Process which is, as you
probably see by now, a Black Jack technology.
I do not have the leisure to expand on these direction markers at
present. I offer them for your perusal and further research. (Some
explication may be found in the opening pages of my book, "Secret
Societies and Psychological Warfare").
Clarke was the sentinel of this system-of-things.
Without July 16, 1945; Nov. 22, 1963 and July 20, 1969, there could
have been no 9/11 (Sept. 11, 2001).
It almost seems like magic, doesn't it?
Magic in our modern scientific age? Nonsense!
But what is magic, my friends?
"Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic."
--Arthur C. Clarke
[from M.T. Hoffmann]
I was always impressed with him until the child sex allegations which were never disproved and even his responses to the allegations were muted.
...a witting agent of British Intelligence and allied agencies (as have been many SF writers). In Childhood's End he orchestrated a powerful fable about humanity's search for a better life, a destiny elsewhere, that nevertheless turned out to be a form of creative slavery.
I'll take Clifford Simak any day!
clark
.
While I consider Arthur C Clarke as a visionary author, his work is not among my favorites. I have a lot of old Astounding pulps from the 1940's and Clifford Simak is among my favorite writers. I recently read the novella (then called novelette) titled Census from the September '44 Astounding; it's a great story. If you're a fan of old school SF authors I'd also recommend Fredric Brown's work; he's quite literally the O'Henry of SF authors. :O)
AuPh
z
...Among the gracefully spinning space stations in his most famous moment, 'The Blue Danube' serenading him as he goes....
What a sad, sad day...
suspiciously looks like Arthur.
Will we see the like again?Wonder if Rendezvouz with Rama, featuring Morgan Freeman, is still being developed?
big j
"Spread this message every way that you know how: the Age of Saviours is past."
"...a time will come when the past and not the future will be veiled from humanity..."
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