Ok…Everyone lie down on the floor and keep calm.
I am reading this book and it is FREAKIGN CRAZY!! Bill
and Jimmy took their Modus operandi straight
from this book. THE JAMMs, 23, all of that stuff. I freaked out today
when I read all of the sayings. It is all in the book. It is a good read but
hard to follow sometimes and it bounces back and forth, but it is worth the
reading if you have not done so. It takes so much lore and blends it all
together.
From the Book:
"I got into the JAMs in Michigan
City Prison," (John)Dillinger, much relaxed and less arrogant, was saying
as he, Simon, and Joe sat in his living
room drinking Black Russians.
"And Hoover knew, from the beginning?"
Joe asked
.
"Of course. I wanted the bastard to
know— him and every other high-ranking Mason and Rosicrucian and
Illuminati front-man in the
country." The old man laughed
harshly; except for his unmistakable eyes, which still held the strange blend
of irony and intensity that Joe had
noted in the 1930s photos, he was
indistinguishable from any other elderly fellow who had come to California to
enjoy his last years in the
sun. "The first bank job I pulled
off, in Daleville, Indiana, I used the line that I always repeated: 'Lie down on the floor and keep calm.'
Hoover couldn't miss it. That's been the
motto of the JAMs ever since Diogenes the Cynic. He knew no ordinary bank
robber would be
quoting an obscure Greek philosopher.
The reason I repeated it on every heist was just to rub it in and let him know
I was taunting him."
“The basic book to confirm our
tradition," he said, "is The Seven Tablets of Creation, which
is dated
at about 2500 B.C. the time of Sargon.
It describes how Tiamat and Apsu, the first gods, were coexisting in Mummu, the
primordial chaos.
Von Junzt, in his Unausprechlichen
Kulten, tells how the Justified Ancients of Mummu originated, just about
the time the Seven Tablets were
inscribed. You see, under Sargon, the
chief deity was Marduk. I mean, that was what the high priests gave out to the
public— in private, of
course, they worshipped lok-Sotot, who
became the Yog-Sothoth of the Necronomicon. But maybe I'm going too
fast. Getting back to the
official religion of Marduk, it was
based on usury. The priests monopolized the medium of exchange and were able to
extract interest for
lending it. They also monopolized the
land, and extracted tribute for renting it. It was the beginning of what we
laughingly call civilization,
which has always rested on rent and interest.
The old Babylonian con.
"The official story was that Mummu
was dead, killed in the war between the gods. When the first anarchist group
arose, they called
themselves Justified Ancients of Mummu.
Like Lao-Tse and the Taoists in China, they wanted to get rid of usury and
monopoly and all the
other pigshit of civilization and go
back to a natural way of life. So, grok, they took the supposedly dead god,
Mummu, and claimed he was
still alive and was actually stronger
than all the other gods. They had a good argument 'Look around,' they'd say,
"what do you see most of?
Chaos, right? Therefore, the god of
Chaos is the strongest god, and is still alive.'
"Of course, we got our ass whipped
good. We were just no match for the Illuminati in those days. Didn't have a
clue, about how they
performed their 'miracles,' for
instance. So we got our asses whipped again, in Greece, when the JAMs got
started again, as part of the Cynic
movement. By the tune the whole thing
was happening again in Rome— usury and monopoly and the whole bag of
tricks— the truce took
place. The Justified Ancients became
part of the Illuminati, a special group still keeping our own name, but taking
orders from the Five. We
thought we'd humanize them, like the
anarchists who stayed in SDS after last year. And so it went until 1888. Then
Cecil Rhodes started the
Circle of Initiates and the big schism
occurred. Every meeting would have a faction of Rhodes boys carrying signs that
said 'Kick out the
JAMs!' It was the parting of the ways.
They just didn't trust us— or maybe they were afraid of being humanized.”
Dillinger laughed. "Yes," he
said. "I'm the president of Laughing Buddha Jesus Phallus Inc. You've seen
them— 'If it's not an LBJP it's NOT
an L.P.'?
"Laughing Buddha Jesus
Phallus?" Joe exclaimed. "My God, you put out the best rock in the
country! The only rock a man my age can listen
to without wincing."
"Thanks," Dillinger said
modestly. "Actually, the Illuminati own the companies that put out most
of the rock. We started Laughing Buddha
Jesus Phallus to counterattack. We were
ignoring that front until they got the MC-5 to cut a disc called 'Kick Out The
Jams' just to taunt us
with old, bitter memories. So we came
back with our own releases, and the next thing I knew I was making bales of
money from it. We've
also fed information, through third
parties, to Christian Crusade in Tulsa, Oklahoma, so they could expose some of
what the Illuminati are
doing in the rock field. You've seen the
Christian Crusade publications—Rhythm, Riots and Revolution, and Communism,
Hypnotism and the
Beatles, and so forth?
Adaptations - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Illuminatus!_Trilogy
The 23-strong cast featured several actors, such as Jim
Broadbent, David Rappaport and Chris
Langham, who went on to successful film, stage and television careers.
Broadbent alone played more than a dozen characters in the play.[36] Bill Drummond designed sets for the show, and it was
eventually seen (when it moved to London, with Bill Nighy
then joining the cast) by the young Jimmy Cauty.
The duo later went on to form the Illuminatus!-inspired electronica band
The KLF.
The Illuminatus Trilogy! is steeped with references
to the 1960s popular music scene (at one point a list of 200 fictional bands
performing at the Walpurgisnacht rock festival is reeled off, and there
are numerous references to the famous rock and roll song, "Rock Around the Clock"), and has
influenced many bands and musicians. The anarchic British band The KLF was
named after one of the secret societies from the trilogy.[42]
They released much of their early material under the name "The Justified Ancients of Mu Mu"
(JAMs), also from the trilogy, and much of their work was Discordian in nature.
They mirrored the fictional JAMs' gleeful political tactics of causing chaos
and confusion by bringing a direct, humorous but nevertheless revolutionary
approach to making records.
RMStringer
++++++++++++++++++
My
BLOG: BOB's
Thoughts...
Link
- http://renigade.blogspot.com/
Other BLOG: Random Falling Trees
Link - http://randomfallingtrees.blogspot.com/