Subversive Use Of Occult Symbolism in the Media Pt 7
Top Comments
All Comments (30)
-
Is it just me, or are these videos begging to become out of sync?
-
This information is full of paranoia! While the truth is obvious about secret societies, etc, what good is this overload of information? And for the record, half of the info is by coincidence and there is no deliberate scheme involved. Paranoia will destroya!
-
These companies/familes are having fun at our expense. Functioning in this world, at a very different level than most humans.
-
waht about teh word aristacrat? any relvence?
-
at 09:54 Tsarion said; "... if you go back 25 000 years the word for satan was pepsi..."
Now how does he know what was the word for that, if there is not writen documents?
did I miss something?,
don't get me wrong here, I just love Tsarion but sometimes I think that even our great teatchers make big mistakes.
Peace
-
@bobbygray100 Go to the store.... it says Miller "LITE"... look it up in the dictionary.
-
@bobbygray100 [I] am a creative who created logos before, and they were not based on occult or masonic symbols, but often on the Latin letters of the company name in a "creative" way. We just need to ask ourselves 2 questions: Which companies did I, or current better creative professionals, create logos for? And which companies is Tsarion talking about? He's talking about companies that shape our very culture, while we dealt with local law offices etc. And crass is another word for "corporate".
-
@bobbygray100 I'll tell you since when...since the people who created England ditched England and Oxford to go to create America and Harvard, then they created a Merriam-Webster that defines what English is, and created many other things that defines what should be and what culture is. Internet wasn't a word either when your dad was in school, but today it is a word, and so is lite, thanks to corporations defining culture, language, and life. Too bad you're in denial, pal.
-
@bobbygray100 If you cared to do some homework or spend seconds on research before dismissing what doesn't agree with your current belief system, you would've found out that actually "lite" is commercially used a lot more than "light". Don't take my word for it, here is Webster's exact definition of "lite" pasted:
lite
[lahyt] Show IPA
–adjective
1.
an informal, simplified spelling of light, used esp. in labeling or advertising commercial products: lite beer.
-
@kscuteflute Also remember that non-Arabs sometimes replace the "H" in the end of some Arabic words with the "T", due to lack of knowledge on when the H is pronounced as T. Like, you know, how Pakistanis refer to "salah" as "salat" or "zakah" as "zakat", even when there is no word after zakah or salah. So many non-Arabs may refer to the singular snake as "hayyat" instead of "hayyah".
...thats not how you spell bologna.
heysheeple 3 years ago 4
@LinaGalina871030
haya = snake
hayyat = snakes
he's right.
kscuteflute 1 year ago 2