LIMINALIST: I agree with a lot of what you're saying, (and I've downloaded some of your podcasts, they sound very interesting---are you the host?)
I agree with most of your approach, and I do appreciate it a great deal! Although honestly I find it a bit ludicrous that you dismissed my "indignation" by saying that there's no point in being indignant since social-engineering is "nothing personal."----that's patently absurd, since society is composed of individuals, and for each affected individual such matters are indeed quite personal. It's like the government saying to victims of the Tuskegee syphilis experiments, "Hey guys, don't be so offended, it was nothing personal!"
Now I don't claim to have been as adversely affected to the degree of something as extreme as a Tuskegee subject, but SOME people have been , in this wasteland we call a culture---some have quite literally lost their minds, many more have at lost least their direction in life; I personally see "couch-surfing", unemployed men well into their 40's still posting Terrence McKenna quotes & memes, as if they know something about freedom & enlightenment, when they're clearly just lost, confused, depressed souls still clinging to the belief that such drug use benefited their lives! But I do agree with you that Jan Irvin's approach (mainly his anger and impatience) has indeed alienated many, and enabled them to turn away from his good information by giving them too many "Screw that guy, he's a jerk!"-type reasons to ignore him.
BURNT STATE: as for your comments defending Aldous Huxley----several years ago, I would have agreed with your viewpoint, but by now I'm afraid that such a stance is just too naive. It begins to crumble when you see more of Huxley's own words, his family connections, etc. So I'll repeat in case you missed it the first time: his brother Julian Huxley was a leader of the British Eugenics Society, and their uncle Thomas Huxley was a Social Darwinist famous for the type of beliefs argued in his essay "The Natural Inequality of Men." This is the elitist, control-freak milieu Aldous was a part of.
How could he write a book in 1932 (_Brave New World_) where he's supposedly warning society about being controlled & distracted by bliss-inducing drugs, and then turn around and be suddenly writing private letters to Dr. Osmond literally coming up with marketing jingles to re-brand psychomimetic (psychosis-mimicking) drugs as something cool & appealing & hip that would open up heavenly realms to the masses? Shouldn't that contradiction give you pause? It really appears, upon closer examination, that _Brave New World_ wasn't a warning, but a game-plan, and its publicity didn't steer the public away from that fate; it merely desensitized them to it, allowing them to go down that slippery slope with the false confidence that, "Hey, we've got guys like Huxley looking out for us, that future won't befall us...." He wasn't advocating those drugs for their verified, helpful uses, such healing alcoholics or traumatized people---he was concerned with making them appealing to the masses who would *dose themselves*, RECREATIONALLY, which is why he and Dr. Osmond came up with clever, appealing, rhyming jingles like modern commercials, and also why they went to interview and assess Dr. Timothy Leary for their marketing program:
Dr. Osmond, as quoted in his own words audible in the YouTube clip "A Conversation on LSD":
"We [Osmond & Aldous Huxley] went out to this place. And Timothy [Leary] then was wearing his gray flannel suite and his crew cut. And we had this very interesting discussion with him. And when we went.. and I don’t think I told you this, Timothy. But the night we went we both said 'what a nice fellow he is.' He says 'he’s a very nice man,' and Aldous said, 'It’s very, very nice to think that this is what’s going to be done at Harvard.' He said 'it would be so good for it.' And then I said to him, 'I think he’s a nice fellow too. But don’t you think he’s just a little bit square?' Aldous said 'you may be right,' he said 'but after all isn’t that what we want?' "
Read that quote carefully and ask yourself what they're talking about! "It's very, very nice to think that THIS IS WHAT'S GOING TO BE DONE at Harvard...IT WOULD BE SO GOOD FOR IT." " 'Don't you think he's [Leary] just a little bit square?' 'You may be right, but AFTER ALL ISN'T THAT WHAT WE WANT?' " They assessed Leary and found that he would be a good asset/agent, they found him to be a 'square' with a buzz-cut, and chose him to become the tie-dyed hippy promoting willy-nilly, recreational drug use----not as a form of psychiatric, guided therapy to actually help people, and not as a means of political protest, but instead as a mystifying diversion for the masses----the exact type of thing Huxley was supposedly "warning" people about a few decades earlier! Consider Huxley's letter to his former student, Eric Blair (George Orwell), congratulating him on his book _1984_ but basically bragging, "Good book, but MINE is more accurate about the coming dictatorship." He's not fretting about how it "might" happen if we're not careful, he's saying THIS IS WHAT'S GOING TO HAPPEN:
Letters of Note: 1984 v. Brave New World
Also watch that same video ("A Conversation on LSD") to hear Dr. Timothy Leary use the phrase "our undercover agents" and also to admit that the so-called mystical experience of LSD was a "California invention." This is all part of the lie that the banker R. Gordon Wasson helped promote with his MK-Ultra funded popularization of magic mushrooms------Freedom of Information Act-released documents prove that "Seeking The Magic Mushroom",
Life magazine, May 13, 1957) was MK-Ultra funded, specifically MK-Ultra Subproject 58.
Consider this Huxley quote from _Brave New World Revisited_:
“The real hopeless victims of mental illness are to be found among those who appear to be most normal. Many of them are normal because they are so well adjusted to our mode of existence, because their human voice has been silenced so early in their lives, that they do not even struggle or suffer or develop symptoms as the neurotic does. They are normal not in what may be called the absolute sense of the word; they are normal only in relation to a profoundly abnormal society. Their perfect adjustment to that abnormal society is a measure of their mental sickness. These millions of abnormally normal people, living without fuss in a society to which, if they were fully human beings, they ought not to be adjusted.”
IF THEY WERE FULLY HUMAN BEINGS, THEY OUGHT NOT TO BE ADJUSTED----this is his eugenicist background coming out; he's basically saying, "If you fall for this zeitgeist, then you deserve it." Implying that so many people are not fully human beings, that some are more human than others? That's "The Natural Inequality of Men", eugenicist mindset for you.
Lastly, consider this Aldous Huxley quote which can be applied so aptly to UFOs & the 'paranormal' in general:
"An unexciting truth may be eclipsed by a thrilling lie."