Diseased Neo-Pagans / Witches on the Internet / Witchblr - SMT IRL, but with fatties

Yt people stole pine-sol!

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Pine trees don't even grow in Africa. How does she think it was possible that whitey spent 70,000 years around pine trees and didn't notice you can make turpentine and pine oil out of it? Come on lmao. It was being used as an industrial solvent by "yt peepo" before the Pine-Sol trademark was even applied for.
 
It's a troon, so they are probably a fake jew anyways.
How do Jewish witches make sense when there are many verses in the Torah that condemn witchcraft, such as:

Leviticus 20:6: "I will set my face against anyone who turns to mediums and spiritists to prostitute themselves by following them, and I will cut them off from their people"
Leviticus 20:27: "A man or woman who is a medium or spiritist among you must be put to death. You are to stone them; their blood will be on their own heads."
 
How do Jewish witches make sense when there are many verses in the Torah that condemn witchcraft, such as:
Bernard Lazare wrote in Antisemitism Its History and Causes, 1894 that in previous centuries jewish witchcraft had actually been common, which gave rise to the Jewish Ritual Murder claims.

The first instance of such an accusation being brought against the Jews occurred at Blois, in 1171, when they were accused of having crucified a child during their celebration of Passover. Count Theobald of Chartres, after having caused the accuser of the Jews to undergo the ordeal by water, which proved favourable to him, condemned thirty-four Jewish men and seventeen Jewish women to be burnt.
We can see clearly enough why the Romans should have brought the identical charge against the early Christians. It arose from a materialistic conception of the Lord’s Supper, from a literal interpretation of the words employed in consecrating the flesh and blood of Jesus. But how could the Jews, whose sacred books breathe forth a horror of blood, have given occasion, and still give occasion, for such a belief? This question must be discussed to the very bottom. We must examine the theories advanced by those who would have it that human sacrifice is a Semitic institution, whereas, as a matter of fact, it is found among all peoples at a certain stage of civilization. In this manner we would prove, as has in fact been proven, that the Jewish religion does not demand blood. Can we, however, prove, in addition, that no Jew ever shed blood? Of course not, and throughout the Middle Ages there must have been Jewish murderers, Jews whom oppression and persecution drove to avenge themselves by assassinating their persecutors or even perhaps their children. To this general belief there were added the accusations, often justified, which were brought against the Jews as being addicted to the practice of magic. Throughout the Middle Ages the Jew was considered by the common people as the magician par excellence. As a matter of fact, a number of Jews did devote themselves to magic. We find many formulas of exorcism in the Talmud, and the demonology both of the Talmud and the Kabbala is very complicated. Now it is well known the blood played always a very important part in the arts of sorcery. In Chaldean magic, it was of the utmost consequence; in Persia it was considered as a means of redemption, and it delivered all those who submitted themselves to the practices of Taurobolus and Kriobolus. The Middle Ages were haunted by the idea of blood as they were haunted by the idea of gold; for the alchemist, for the enchanter blood was the medium through which the astral light could work. The elemental spirits, according to the magicians, utilized outpoured blood in fashioning a body for themselves, and it is in this sense that Paracelsus speaks when he says that “the blood lost by them brought into being phantoms and larvae.” To blood, and especially to the blood of a virgin, unheard of powers were assigned. Blood was the curer, the redeemer, the preserver; it was useful in the search for the Philosopher’s Stone, in the composition of potions, and in the practice of enchantments. Now it is quite probable, certain, in fact, that Jewish magicians may have sacrificed children, and thence the genesis of ritual murder. The isolated acts of certain magicians were attributed to them in their character as Jews. It was maintained that the Jewish religion which approved of the Crucifixion of Christ, prescribed in addition the shedding of Christian blood; and the Talmud and the Kabbala were zealously searched for text that might be made to justify such a thesis. Such investigations have succeeded only through deliberate misinterpretation, as in the Middle Ages, or through actual falsifications like those recently committed by Dr. Rohling, and proven spurious by Delitzch. The result, therefore, is this, that whatever the facts brought forward, they cannot prove that the murder of children constituted, or still constitutes, a part of the Jewish ritual any more than the acts of the marechal de Retz and of the sacrilegious priests who practiced the “black mass” would prove that the Church recommends in its books assassination and human sacrifice.


Of course jewish magic is still practiced, at least by some:

Far from rejecting magic practitioners, Judaism — or at least Kabbalistic strands of it — has long embraced them. But these aren’t the pagan dark arts associated with Halloween

Occult practices and totems are a mainstay of Halloween season, and sage bundles, altars and crystals are an increasingly trendy way to dabble in divination and witchcraft. But the spooky supernatural world also has a long history in Judaism, and modern “Jewitches” are encouraging the connection — though their practices often slightly differ from their non-Jewish contemporaries.

“I do not burn sage,” said Zo Jacobi, who runs Jewitches, a popular blog and podcast that deep dives into ancient Jewish myths and folkloric practices. The sage-related ritual of “smudging,” an Indigenous ceremony popular among modern witches for cleansing a person or place of negative energy, “is not a Jewish practice,” she said. “But Jews had crystals. Actually, they were called ‘gems.’”

Jacobi and her peers are revitalizing ancient Jewish practices of witchcraft, which have been seeing something of a revival as of late. Far from having an uneasy relationship with magic practitioners, Judaism — or at least Kabbalistic strands of it — has long embraced them.

Jacobi, based in Los Angeles, studies those gems’ role in Jewish ritual, along with the connections between assorted other magical artifacts and Judaica. Eight shelves in her home are filled with books on Judaism as well as Jewish magic, witchcraft and folklore.

Her studies have revealed the historical ways that items like gems have been used in Jewish magical correspondences. Like healing crystals, gems are meant to protect and heal based on their properties, according to the Midrash (Numbers Rabbah 2:7), or rabbinic interpretation of the Bible. For example, sapphire was thought to strengthen eyesight.

JTA — Occult practices and totems are a mainstay of Halloween season, and sage bundles, altars and crystals are an increasingly trendy way to dabble in divination and witchcraft. But the spooky supernatural world also has a long history in Judaism, and modern “Jewitches” are encouraging the connection — though their practices often slightly differ from their non-Jewish contemporaries.
“I do not burn sage,” said Zo Jacobi, who runs Jewitches, a popular blog and podcast that deep dives into ancient Jewish myths and folkloric practices. The sage-related ritual of “smudging,” an Indigenous ceremony popular among modern witches for cleansing a person or place of negative energy, “is not a Jewish practice,” she said. “But Jews had crystals. Actually, they were called ‘gems.’”
Jacobi and her peers are revitalizing ancient Jewish practices of witchcraft, which have been seeing something of a revival as of late. Far from having an uneasy relationship with magic practitioners, Judaism — or at least Kabbalistic strands of it — has long embraced them.

Jacobi, based in Los Angeles, studies those gems’ role in Jewish ritual, along with the connections between assorted other magical artifacts and Judaica. Eight shelves in her home are filled with books on Judaism as well as Jewish magic, witchcraft and folklore.
Her studies have revealed the historical ways that items like gems have been used in Jewish magical correspondences. Like healing crystals, gems are meant to protect and heal based on their properties, according to the Midrash (Numbers Rabbah 2:7), or rabbinic interpretation of the Bible. For example, sapphire was thought to strengthen eyesight.
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“It’s in a medieval text called the ‘Sefer Ha-Gematriaot,’” Jacobi said. “But even if we go to the Torah, we see crystals on the breastplates of the kohanim [high priests of Israel].”

Illustrative: Volunteers dressed to depict Pagan-style white witches at the Hampton Court Palace Garden Festival in London, July 1, 2019. (AP Photo/Matt Dunham)
Many Jewish rituals today have their roots in warding off demons, ghosts and other mythological creatures. When we break glass at a wedding, scholars say, we’re not just remembering the destruction of the Temple; we’re also scaring off evil spirits that may want to hurt the bride and groom. Likewise, ancient Jews believed that the mezuzah — a small box affixed to the doorpost containing biblical verses on parchment — protected them from messengers of evil, a function parallel to that of an amulet or good-luck charm.
“The mezuzah is absolutely an amulet,” said Rebekah Erev, a Jewish feminist artist, activist and kohenet (Hebrew priestexx, a gender-neutral term for “priest” or “priestess”) who uses the pronouns they/them and teaches online courses on Jewish magic. “I consider it to be a reminder of the presence of spirit, of goddess, of shechinah [the dwelling or settling of the divine presence of God]. Much of magic is about reminding ourselves that we’re all connected and that everything is alive and animate.

The moniker “Jewitch” itself can be seen as controversial within the group. Erev first heard the term while attending a 2014 “Jewitch Collective” retreat in the Bay Area.

“I feel that any word that identifies someone as a witch is controversial in nature because of how society, including Jewish society, has demonized witches leading to violence and ostracizing,” Erev said, even though they do consider both witchcraft and Judaism to be major tenets of their life.

“To be a Jew and to be a witch has had serious repercussions throughout time. I hope the recent popularity of the term ‘Jewitch’ will bring more acceptance and understanding of both identities and help to make our practices more widely accessible,” they said.


Cooper Kaminsky, a Denver-based intuitive artist and healer, concurred that the portmanteau was “revisionist” to some, but added, “Many, including myself, are empowered by identifying as a Jewitch.”

Historically, as Judaic practices grew more patriarchal, women were exempt from studying the Talmud and Torah. They knew little Hebrew, so they created their own prayers in Yiddish, used herbal remedies and centered their religious practices around the earth.

Erev mirrors these customs by creating magical rituals, like meditating on cinnamon sticks during the Jewish month of Shvat, hearkening back to how cinnamon trees in Jerusalem scented the land during the harvest.

“There’s a Kabbalistic idea of making oneself smaller for creation to emerge. Connecting with a cinnamon stick is a simple ritual. The cinnamon folds in, and the bark contracts in on itself,” Erev said. “Sometimes contracting inward can give us space to emerge and create.”

They also do spellwork, creating spells for new love, pregnancy protection and social justice; on their blog, they shared an incantation designed to bring more awareness to Indigenous Land Back movements.

The goal of many “Jewitch” educators and practitioners, they say, is to shine a light on rituals that have been forgotten or buried for self-preservation. Jacobi believes that many folkloric practices died out following the 13th-18th centuries because, at the time, Jews were viewed as demonic witches.

“Jewish communities did what they thought would protect them from literal certain death. Some of that came at the expense of some of these practices,” Jacobi said. “Instead of the supernatural reasons, they tried to give rational reasons for what they were doing. Ashkenazi Jews routinely tried to debate with their oppressors in the hopes that they could out-logic antisemitism.”

This traumatic history, the Jewitches say, is often papered over or dismissed as “myths” and “superstitions.” “Saying ‘superstition’ is a way that we downplay our magic,” Kaminsky said. “We protect ourselves because, historically, a huge part of our oppression has been because we’re magical.”

Kaminsky, who uses the pronouns they/them, does spiritual readings for clients that draw upon Kabbalah, Tarot and the Akashic records — a reference library of everything that has ever happened, which spiritual mediums believe resides in another dimension. Kaminsky incorporates Jewish prayers into their spellwork, like reciting the Psalms of David when doing candle spells and the B’sheim Hashem as a magical invocation.

Kaminsky grew up in a Conservative Jewish household and learned the basic concepts of Kabbalah in Jewish day school.

“Kabbalah looks at Judaism through a cosmic, mystical lens that clicked for me a lot more than looking at a story from the Torah,” they said. “As I read more Kabbalah, I started feeling more connected to my Judaism.”

Various scholars and rabbis have linked Kabbalah to Tarot, a deck of cards originally used in the mid-15th century to play games that evolved to divinatory practices in the 18th century (though Jacobi, for one, refutes this idea, claiming the connection has never been proven). The Tarot’s Major Arcana — the trump cards of the deck, which detail the evolution of one’s soul — usually make up 22 cards in any given pack, a meaningful Jewish number: the same as the number of letters in the aleph-bet, and the number of pathways on the Kabbalistic Tree of Life.

For their energy work, Kaminsky draws parallels between the chakras, energy points in the body discussed in Hinduism, and the Kabbalistic Tree of Life.

“The Tree of Life is an energy network,” they said. “There’s the meridians of energy, and the chakras are like the middle pillar.”

Mystical practices were a part of Jacobi’s upbringing. Her parents practiced Kabbalah, metaphysics, folklore and folk mythology. They have attended the same local Chabad since Jacobi was three years old.

Thanks to these experiences, Jacobi is comfortable living out of the (broom) closet — a tongue-in-cheek term that some modern witches use to refer to openly practicing witchcraft. She grew up with astrology, used tarot cards on Shabbat and played with her mother’s rose quartz crystal ball while her father led Havdalah prayers. The Jewitches blog and podcast are filled with mythological creatures with origins in Jewish beliefs, like dybbuks, werewolves, dragons and vampires.

Some creatures are unique to Jewish lore: the vampiric Alukah, a blood-sucking witch referred to in Proverbs 30, turned out to be Lilith’s daughter, while a Broxa originated as a bird from medieval Portugal that drank goat’s milk and sometimes human blood during the night.

“Whenever there have been dire times throughout history, people have turned to mysticism; that’s how Kabbalah emerged,” Erev said. “We need to look to our ancestors for guidance. There are a lot of tools in our human community for healing and re-dreaming and creating a world that is safe and generative for all beings.”

Kaminsky thinks magic has the power to repair the world: “Almost all of our Jewish spells are for the sake of healing. Tikkun olam, using our magic to repair the world, is beautiful.”
 
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Imagine wanting to be oppressed so badly you make up an entire fake religion and history of Karelians and pass it off as "authentic traditions." If they want to be oppressed so badly, why not just go to Karelia and start petitioning the Russian government to rejoin Karelia to Finland? Is being a pretend Sami not cool enough anymore in Scandinavia these days? I know there has to be a fuckton of those like there are Pretendians in the US/Canada.

Puppet masters in Kremlin obviously wouldn't like that. This situation is not really unique to Finland, for example Baltic countries also have semi-fictional ethnicities that want more rights, autonomy or independence. Many of them are also "anti-imperialist", which usually means anti-USA and pro-Russia.

I don't think that they are bought by Kremlin, but there is certainly a hand in the shadows guiding them and delivering talking points.
 
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Damn I'm over here using this like an idiot, maybe I should switch to China
If it isn't china you want, you might be better served by something else:
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(I'm not so sure about the efficacy of magical liquids, but man do I love the label design.)


There are a lot worse things than "neo-pagans" doing any ritual housecleaning. Heck, hoodoo practice also includes washing laundry in a special way, in case you might have been crossed. Someone should prepackage a few "cleansing ritual kits" and sell them at Hot Topic; guarantee the moms of teen witches would be willing to spring for them.
 
A few quick thoughts on neo-paganism, and witchesvspatriarchy.

First let me start with an excerpt from the book "The Ancient City" by Fustel de Coulanges(originally published in 1882, and available to read in full for free Here )

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I'm sure it will come as no shock to anyone reading this that modern "pagan" practices are at major variance with the progenitor's of their respective deities. Their disposition is completely anathema to the original practices, and their conception of these deities has been filtered through countless generations of scholar's and writer's who have romanticized the sparse and sporadic hymn's and folklore that have been passed down to us through the ages. Man did not invoke god's flippantly, or even at all for the majority of the population. Ironically the individuals that tend to drift towards this modern interpretation of ancient religion also tend to be the type that prattle on endlessly about the importance of science, and trusting the experts. Cognitive dissonance is no new feature in the human race, but I doubt I could conjure from my mind a more comical juxtaposition than what has been laid before us.

Speaking specifically about r/WitchesvsPatriarchy, it perplexes me, it's at once a place for supposed witches to meet and converse about "witchy"(what ever the fuck that means) things, and also an arts and crafts showcase for lonely women. Unironic idolatry is mixed with "Glamour Magic" which literally just means makeup; they've created their own little code to convey idea's and concepts that are already widely popular with women, but now it's "witchy". It's hard to get a grasp of how many of these women actually believe any of this nonsense(all though I've heard women I know irl speak in this language which is quite frankly alarming), but it's obvious to me that this is nothing more than an aesthetic predilection shared by a nerdy and awkward subgroup of women; a natural progression or perhaps extension of the women who loved jack skeleton from a nightmare before Christmas.
 
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LadySpeech Sankofa aka QuiAnna Ray (she/they/king) "a Black, queer, genderfluid poet, public speaker, activist, healer, lover, and dominatrix"
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she is now "neuro spicy"
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retarded SJW posting
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practices voodoo


she promotes "spiritual activism" such as warding movie theaters to protect black people when they are seeing Wakanda Forever


she's a magical negro, but not YOUR magical negro

comments are mainly white people thanking her
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every time she answers questions she starts by asking for payment, and particularly guilt-ridden white women confirm they've paid her



hilarious video telling white women to shut up about Roe vs Wade and stand back for "black, brown, and indigenous women, femmes, and non-men"


she is also a dominatrix of course


She was interviewed by OutFront Magazine, here are some choice quotes:
  • “I got censored for being fucking fat, Black, and pansexual on Instagram."
  • "my childhood rape was particularly kink-filled,"
  • "Healing through sex positivity and kink, Lady Speech sees working with their clients in the sex-work realm as a form of reparations. In their sex work, LadySpeech does not charge Black and Indigenous people for these scenes, but they do charge white people; the reason being that they do a lot of ancestral work and address privilege through this spiritual and monetary exchange."
  • “As a witch, as a healer, as a priestess, I actually have some sex magic workshops"
“That’s when I was like, ‘You can’t ever go back; you can’t ever not tell your truth; you can’t ever not speak your story. No matter what it cost you. Both my parents have suffered their own abuse, and didn’t focus on their healing, and that awarded me with some fucking bullshit. But, being able to bring that all on stage, releasing it, it was something that I couldn’t back up from.” — LadySpeech Sankofa

LadySpeech Sankofa (she/they/king) is a force to be reckoned with and makes that strength clear in every breath, every movement, every mantra, and every moment. It has been a long, rough, and unyielding road that has brought them to this place of Kingdomhood, and yet, they remain steadfast in the pursuit of healing.

In the first moments of conversation, LadySpeech takes us to a depth so far down, most dare never reach, much less allow others to bear witness. The topic at hand is identity, and as a Black, queer, genderfluid poet, public speaker, activist, healer, lover, and dominatrix, there is so much more emotion embedded in their identity than words can truly describe. There is nothing surface-level about LadySpeech, and we dig into a fully-embraced personhood that stems from an historical and personal foundation of trauma and triumph.

“My identity is centered around healing, because for so long, my identity and my life revolved around oppression,” LadySpeech states, taking a long moment to pause while allowing the tears to stream down their cheek. “My life revolves around life, and the things that give me life. I owe it to my ancestors, my very Black and my very queer ancestors, to be defined in my joy because there are so many things hell-bent on my destruction.”

Wearing vulnerability and truth like armor, LadySpeech leans far into the discomfort of those oppressive, destructive forces, and has turned it into intense opposition to the societal construct. Unafraid, uncensored, and resilient as fuck, they have gained power in taking back that personal agency and authority over their voice, their body, and their magic.

“Our healing is our ancestors’ healing. Connecting with all of that, and the in-between story, is a horrific thing, but the story of our magic emerges from that as well,” they say.

After growing up in a Jehovah’s Witness household, LadySpeech’s dad was physically abusive and kicked them out of the house, requiring them to live at the houseless, youth shelter Urban Peak. They talk of feeling extremely isolated and craving a safe space where they could delve into a spirituality that felt more authentic, more connected, and more personal. They began to explore other realms, invited internal honesty, and discovered their own, inner magic.

“My spiritual path really made it OK for me to admit all the other aspects of me,” they explain. “It really made it OK to be like, ‘You’re queer; you’re gay as fuck.’ From there, all my definitions from being an artist, being sex-positive, being into kink, from also being able to admit how fucking broken I was from being abused … being able to admit the pain, and the trauma, and the intersections, and intricacies really came from a place of isolation when I was in a fucking homeless shelter and had to really fend for myself.”

It was through these realizations that LadySpeech started taking to the art of spoken word and performance as a way to process, protest, and demand respect. Refusing to remain silenced as they had with their father growing up, as they had by the molestation that happened to them as a child, as they had been muted by the terror that was their life experiences, art became life-saving.

Describing the night that everything changed, LadySpeech remembers a performance of their spoken word poetry at Brother Jeff’s Cultural Cafe at the age of 17. Having already built a reputation of being a pristine, technical performer, they explain how that night was uniquely different than all the others. With the realization that there was nothing more to lose, they poured it all out on the stage and transcended their own story, reaching into the story of their ancestors, and manifesting a divine understanding of what their powers truly were.

“That’s when I was like, ‘You can’t ever go back; you can’t ever not tell your truth; you can’t ever not speak your story. No matter what it cost you,’” they explain. “Both my parents have suffered their own abuse, and didn’t focus on their healing, and that awarded me with some fucking bullshit. But, being able to bring that all on stage, releasing it; it was something that I couldn’t back up from.”

LadySpeech’s activism and art is based on speaking that authentic truth, regardless of the outcome. They describe how there is a performance aspect to how they present story; their vulnerability is not performative. It is multi-dimensional; it is honest; it is raw; it is raunchy; it is nasty; it is sexual; it is courageous; it is political; it is confrontational, and it does not go without criticism.

“It’s really important as a Black, pansexual femme that I’m seen for my whole truth,” LadySpeech emphasizes. “I got censored for being fucking fat, Black, and pansexual on Instagram. It’s a political statement for me to be seen as fully as I am, for me to speak my truth.”

Part of what motivates LadySpeech to be so unapologetic is the fact that they have confronted their inner self and risen above surviving, arriving at a place of thriving. LadySpeech is empowered through BDSM and kink, and asserts themself through sex work, reclaiming personal agency and power in areas of their life that were taken from them at such a young age.

“Being a survivor, my childhood rape was particularly kink-filled, and there was a level of brutality … I was also introduced to roleplaying, so because of that, in my development, I associated violence with sexuality,” they explain. “When I was coming into my peak, I associated that in a very nasty way, put myself in some fucked-up positions, and was attracting people who were there to take advantage of me. So, kink helped me, along with therapy and spiritual healing; it gave me an outlet for that.”

“It’s really important as a Black, pansexual femme that I’m seen for my whole truth.”

Now, LadySpeech can act out those scenes with boundaries that don’t re-traumatize them, and they explain that in the event that it does trigger a traumatizing moment, there is a space where they can work through it. Healing through sex positivity and kink, Lady Speech sees working with their clients in the sex-work realm as a form of reparations.

In their sex work, LadySpeech does not charge Black and Indigenous people for these scenes, but they do charge white people; the reason being that they do a lot of ancestral work and address privilege through this spiritual and monetary exchange.

“As a witch, as a healer, as a priestess, I actually have some sex magic workshops, and part of that is about using sex to access different parts of our psyche to address things. There’s a lot of work that I do around power dynamics.

“It’s a space where I’m very clear with my clients that there is a reason why they are called to me; we’re here to work some things out. We agree spiritually their ancestors did some shit, so we’re gonna address that. Kink is a space where people get real vulnerable, and a lot of truth can be addressed and spoken,” they say.

For photographer Julius Garrido, he saw the strength, the courage, the bravery, the unashamed ferocity in LadySpeech and knew he wanted to feature her in the “Fierce Femmes” issue of OFM.

“LadySpeech brings to the table this fresh perspective on self-awareness, affirmation, appreciation to your body,” he says. “She’s changing that self-perception, like, ‘Be who you are.’ They’re for self-appreciation, and their energy is what we need right now.”

Garrido explains that LadySpeech was a unique type of model because they walked in with no barriers, no walls to have to push through; they were comfortable with themselves, and that was easy to capture on film.

“Their aura was helping the collaboration; they send out this emotionality, which is like a gift to the people that they can feed upon,” he explains.

Grabbing spontaneous snapshots became a fast-paced game between the two, encapsulating the various sides, personalities, and expressions that LadySpeech evokes in their poetry and art. While the pandemic and the civil rights movement of 2020 still weigh heavily on all of us, the pair were able to unveil tenderness, softness, playfulness, sensitivity, and wildness. Never bashful, the images convey the heedless confidence that LadySpeech embodies.

“I’m gonna live this shit out loud. I’m gonna live the fuck out loud and be unapologetic because that’s what the hell it takes,” LadySpeech affirms. “I see what happens when you die and they misrepresent your story. I’m gonna leave as much evidence as possible, like this was the true, the good, the bad, the ugly of it, the glittery, and the gritty, and the pretty, and the ghetto, and the bougie; all of this is what it is, and it’s a beautiful thing to fucking behold.”

Allowing the gift of life, community, love, and support, there also comes the need to accept the bad, the need to make space for the ugly, and to make space for mending the pain. LadySpeech finds the balance of understanding that the nasty doesn’t cancel out the beauty, and we must embrace it all in order to thrive.

“Being able to partake in your joy, being able to partake in your love, being able to partake in your softness. Being able to have times in spaces where your trauma, your oppression, your mental health and things aren’t centered; when there is an innocence that is rediscovered. When we can begin to recover these parts of ourselves that indicate a life that is thriving.”

she was also a Slut Walk march leader
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A few quick thoughts on neo-paganism, and witchesvspatriarchy.

First let me start with an excerpt from the book "The Ancient City" by Fustel de Coulanges(originally published in 1882, and available to read in full for free Here )


I'm sure it will come as no shock to anyone reading this that modern "pagan" practices are at major variance with the progenitor's of their respective deities. Their disposition is completely anathema to the original practices, and their conception of these deities has been filtered through countless generations of scholar's and writer's who have romanticized the sparse and sporadic hymn's and folklore that have been passed down to us through the ages. Man did not invoke god's flippantly, or even at all for the majority of the population. Ironically the individuals that tend to drift towards this modern interpretation of ancient religion also tend to be the type that prattle on endlessly about the importance of science, and trusting the experts. Cognitive dissonance is no new feature in the human race, but I doubt I could conjure from my mind a more comical juxtaposition than what has been laid before us.

I think it is not realistic that there wasn't lots of variance from village to village (or even from house to house) back in the day. Especially before written language, and some cultures never developed it.
 
Cultural appropriation sperging is a never ending thing. Mention "sage" and some dumbass will go on and on about shit they know nothing about. Makes for good dumbassery though.

Yt people stole pine-sol!

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As of 2016 PINE-SOL® sold in stores no longer contains pine oil so I think whitey is all cleared to appropriate that.

"LadySpeech" - She/it will be keeping Libs of Tik Tok in business indefinitely with this content.
 
A few quick thoughts on neo-paganism, and witchesvspatriarchy.

First let me start with an excerpt from the book "The Ancient City" by Fustel de Coulanges(originally published in 1882, and available to read in full for free Here )


I'm sure it will come as no shock to anyone reading this that modern "pagan" practices are at major variance with the progenitor's of their respective deities. Their disposition is completely anathema to the original practices, and their conception of these deities has been filtered through countless generations of scholar's and writer's who have romanticized the sparse and sporadic hymn's and folklore that have been passed down to us through the ages. Man did not invoke god's flippantly, or even at all for the majority of the population. Ironically the individuals that tend to drift towards this modern interpretation of ancient religion also tend to be the type that prattle on endlessly about the importance of science, and trusting the experts. Cognitive dissonance is no new feature in the human race, but I doubt I could conjure from my mind a more comical juxtaposition than what has been laid before us.

Speaking specifically about r/WitchesvsPatriarchy, it perplexes me, it's at once a place for supposed witches to meet and converse about "witchy"(what ever the fuck that means) things, and also an arts and crafts showcase for lonely women. Unironic idolatry is mixed with "Glamour Magic" which literally just means makeup; they've created their own little code to convey idea's and concepts that are already widely popular with women, but now it's "witchy". It's hard to get a grasp of how many of these women actually believe any of this nonsense(all though I've heard women I know irl speak in this language which is quite frankly alarming), but it's obvious to me that this is nothing more than an aesthetic predilection shared by a nerdy and awkward subgroup of women; a natural progression or perhaps extension of the women who loved jack skeleton from a nightmare before Christmas.

Witches v patriarchy is post-modernism with an occult aesthetic plastered over it. Like many contemporary identities (besides race, weird that's the only one that's not subjectively determined...), all you have to do to be a witch is say you are one. Anything is permissible except cultural appropriation. People ask for advice and you always get "do whatever feels right" or "there is no wrong way". Of course there's no substance with this approach. It's really a shame because I do think some of these women seriously want to embrace their spiritual side, but they're so religiously retarded, they think superficial consumerism (or coomerism, like Mx. Black Magic above) is going to get them there.

God damn white people! Weird that a niche built out of European traditions and full of white people hate white people so much. Virtue signal ho!

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Crapping on dead people who were probably just peasants.

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"white" people originated from Europe which is in fact a place with some cultures. This occult moment comes out of the Western tradition, but really, it takes from many other traditions as well because cultural appropriation wasn't an issue.

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This guy is repulsive. I wonder when he's going to give up the ill-gotten gains of his sinful ancestors.

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Witches v patriarchy is post-modernism with an occult aesthetic plastered over it. Like many contemporary identities (besides race, weird that's the only one that's not subjectively determined...), all you have to do to be a witch is say you are one. Anything is permissible except cultural appropriation. People ask for advice and you always get "do whatever feels right" or "there is no wrong way". Of course there's no substance with this approach. It's really a shame because I do think some of these women seriously want to embrace their spiritual side, but they're so religiously retarded, they think superficial consumerism (or coomerism, like Mx. Black Magic above) is going to get them there.

God damn white people! Weird that a niche built out of European traditions and full of white people hate white people so much. Virtue signal ho!

View attachment 3635576

Crapping on dead people who were probably just peasants.

View attachment 3635581

"white" people originated from Europe which is in fact a place with some cultures. This occult moment comes out of the Western tradition, but really, it takes from many other traditions as well because cultural appropriation wasn't an issue.

View attachment 3635601

This guy is repulsive. I wonder when he's going to give up the ill-gotten gains of his sinful ancestors.

View attachment 3635605
Ancestor worship was the first religion of the indo european race; the hearth of the home was the center of the religion, the flame was always kept alight, and tended to day and night as extinguishing of it would draw the ire of the manes(their ancestors). Before the conception of higher beings entered the European's mind he feared his ancestors and his ancestors alone; no other families lineage haunted his mind. From this point religion evolved and began to incorporate higher deities(zeus, apollo, etc...) which established a religious bond between the inhabitants of the cities and would eventually come to usurp ancestor worship, but never completely smother its flame. It wasn't until the advent of christ that the european finally moved away from ancestor worship, but you wont find any of that in the percy jackson novels so I don't know why I expect them to know this.

I think it is not realistic that there wasn't lots of variance from village to village (or even from house to house) back in the day. Especially before written language, and some cultures never developed it.
Yes, there were countless athena's, Jupiter's, and venus's sharing only their name in likeness. The myths and archetypes of the gods that have been passed down to us have been curated by time.
 
Witches v patriarchy is post-modernism with an occult aesthetic plastered over it. Like many contemporary identities (besides race, weird that's the only one that's not subjectively determined...), all you have to do to be a witch is say you are one. Anything is permissible except cultural appropriation. People ask for advice and you always get "do whatever feels right" or "there is no wrong way". Of course there's no substance with this approach. It's really a shame because I do think some of these women seriously want to embrace their spiritual side, but they're so religiously retarded, they think superficial consumerism (or coomerism, like Mx. Black Magic above) is going to get them there.

God damn white people! Weird that a niche built out of European traditions and full of white people hate white people so much. Virtue signal ho!

View attachment 3635576

Crapping on dead people who were probably just peasants.

View attachment 3635581

"white" people originated from Europe which is in fact a place with some cultures. This occult moment comes out of the Western tradition, but really, it takes from many other traditions as well because cultural appropriation wasn't an issue.

View attachment 3635601

This guy is repulsive. I wonder when he's going to give up the ill-gotten gains of his sinful ancestors.

View attachment 3635605
It's amazing when people like this talk about 'white people' as though everyone with a complexion lighter than milky coffee shared exactly the same religion and culture throughout all of human existence. They're so woefully ignorant and narrow minded that they can't possibly conceive of anything outside their own very rigid and binary view of the world.
 
It's amazing when people like this talk about 'white people' as though everyone with a complexion lighter than milky coffee shared exactly the same religion and culture throughout all of human existence. They're so woefully ignorant and narrow minded that they can't possibly conceive of anything outside their own very rigid and binary view of the world.
It's because Americans are so deracinated due to the consequences of mass immigration that they can't identify anything genuine in their ancestral culture anymore. It was all killed off by social atomization and the spreading of Europeans out into a sea of other, foreign cultures.
 
I'm entering this thread as a noob to this cringe occult shit, so I'm curious what we can make fun of or bring attention to. Say I want to mock something more mainstream, like the Bohemian Grove? They burn effigies to a giant owl in the woods, so even though it's not internet driven, it seems like it should count.
 
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