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The Caretaker
The Caretaker

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SECRET DESTINY OF AMERICA v0.2

SECRET DESTINY OF AMERICA

CHAPTER 1: THE ORIGIN OF THE DEMOCRATIC IDEAL

CHAPTER 2: THE WORLDS FIRST DEMOCRAT

CHAPTER 3: WESTWARD OCEAN TRAVEL TO THE EARTHLY PARADISE

CHAPTER 13: BACONS SECRET SOCIETY

CHAPTER 14 - A PROPHECY WRITTEN IN THE YEAR OF WASHINGTONS BIRTH

“Tis Chaldee says his fate is great

who se stars do bear him fortunate

Of they near fate, Amerika,

I read in stars a prophecy

Fourteen divide, twelve the same

Sixteen in halves-each olds a name

Four eight seven six- added ten-

The life lines mark of four gt. Men”

Some bullshit numerolgy about george washington, Abraham Lincoln. Benjamin Harrison, and William McKinley

CHAPTER 15 - THE UNKNOWN MAN WHO DESIGNED OUR FAN

CHAPTER 16 - THOMAS PAINE AND THE RIGHTS OF MAN

CHAPTER 17 - THE UNKNOWN WHO SWAYED THE SIGNERS OF THE DECLARATION OF INDEPENDENCE.

CHAPTER 18 - THE SYMBOLS OF THE GREAT SEAL

CHAPTER 19 - THE PROPHETIC DDREAM OF GENERAL MCCLELLAN

CHAPTER 20 - THE END OF THE QUEST

AMERICAS ASSIGNMENT WITH DESTINY - 1951

--

History will tell you that America was born on July 4th, 1776 in a sweaty and melanin-deprived room in Philadelphia. According to Manly P. Hall, history is wrong.

To understand this book, we have to understand the year it was published. 1941 saw America at its most American. The bombing of Perl Harbor had broken the chrysalis of isolationism to reveal a new America, one still dripping the ichor of neo-colonialism and eager to lay the eggs of empire in the brains of anything with a flag, and by golly did many Americans think that was just cracker-jack.

“America can not refuse the challenge of leadership in the post-war world.”  is the first sentence of the text. Hall makes his intentions known. This book has an explicit and topical political purpose. However, to linger too long on Hall’s political intent is to miss the forest for the trees. When hall says “American Democracy” he does not mean “The political system of liberal democracy as the country of the USA practices it.” He means “The 2000 year old extradimensional spell conducted by a Dionysian cult that the unenlightened call America.”

“Our world is ruled by inflexible laws which control not only the motions of the heavenly bodies, but the consequences of human conduct. These universal motions, interpreted politically, are impelling human society out of a state of autocracy and tyranny to democracy and freedom.This motion is inevitable,” To Hall, America is inevitable. It is a physical constant of the universe. Fire is hot, electrons have a negative charge, the moon orbits the  earth, and American Liberal Democracy is the ideal system of governance. Which begs the question: How did he get there?

Hall’s story of America begins with the invention of Democracy, with a single man, an ancient and glorious historical leader who Hall dubs The First Democrat. That man is Akhenaten.

Akhenaten was a despotic priest-king known for actively and explicitly turning against the wishes of the people by establishing a new religion with himself at the head. Records indicate he was almost universally reviled by his subjects for trampling on the existing religious practices of Egypt. Of all the historical figures that could be given the title of The First Democrat, Akhenaten is maybe the worst possible choice. It is difficult to find a historical ruler who is less of a Democrat than Akhenaten. Ghengis Kahn is more of a democrat than Akhenaten.

While the state of Egyptology at the time was still young, and rose-tinted views of Akhenaten were not uncommon, Hall’s unorthodox views on egyptian history are only a single brick in his temple to America. Most of those bricks are the Order of the Quest.

Hall paints an image of an ancient and nameless secret society, one dedicated to the ideals of republic and utopia as set forth by Plato, a group that has been working behind the scenes of history since Athens to guide the lives of Great Men with the ultimate goal of Doing an America. For lack of a better name, Hall calls them the Order of the Quest. Hall seems to understand that the idea of The Order is a bit far-fetched, and spends the remainder of the text pulling from history, mythology, and folklore in an attempt to provide evidence for their existence.

“Calculations based upon Plutarch’s description of ancient voyages seem to indicate that the Greeks not only reached the coast of America, but explored the St. Lawrence River and part of the Great Lakes area.” No they almost certainly did not.

“It was in an old book which is in the British Museum that I found another and even more important key to the meaning of the Golden Fleece. It was known to the Greeks as the Golden Fleece was in reality a parchment on which was written the secret of human immorality.” I will say I would be fascinated to know what book Mr. Hall is referencing here. This clever omission of a name is the beginning of an unfortunate pattern. Hall avoids citing his sources with a brazen confidence that I find admirable. If there is anything to respect about Manly P. Hall, it is his penchant for making wild claims with brazen confidence. For instance:

“We have now in America, enshrined in the Congressional Library, a Golden Fleece--the American Declaration of Independence, written on the skin of an animal and preserved as the magic formula of human hope.”

Delightful.

“The real name of Christopher Columbus was Prince Nikolaso Ypsilantis, and he came from the Greek island of Chios.” Hall actually does cite his source here, pointing to a text called “Christopher Columbus Was a Greek” privately published in 1937 by a man named Spyros Cateras. While the origins of Christopher Columbus are the subject of some academic speculation, the general consensus is that Columbus's family was from the coastal region of Liguria, that he spent his boyhood and early youth in the Republic of Genoa, and that he subsequently lived in Savona, where his father Domenico moved in 1470. I was unable to locate a copy of the text claiming he was a Byzantine prince, but Hall seems to overlook a crucial detail: many people are greek. Even if Christopher Columbus was a secret Byzantine prince, that doesn’t mean he was a member of an ancient secret society of Platonic philosophers.

Next on the historical chopping block is mesoamerica. Hall spends a chapter relaying anecdotes about several indigenous nations. He covers the Maya, the Inca, the Aztecs, but also lumps in the Haudenosaunee Confederacy. Halls claims are fairly stock-standard repetitions of old Colonialist narratives, but they serve a purpose. The existence of the Haudenosaunee Confederacy is a roadblock to the idea that Democracy itself was the result of some ancient Greek conspiracy.

As an occultist, I would expect him to use the confederacy as further evidence that the ancient greeks had visited America, but to my surprise, this is not the avenue that Hall takes. “It resulted from the simple discovery by aboringinal minds that one lived longer, more safely, and more happily if disputes among peoples were solved by arbitration rather than open strife.” Hall goes a step further, and takes the naturalistic approach, using the existence of the confederacy as proof that the republic is a natural and ideal


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