The Mike Pence visit to the Mayo Clinic in Rochester leads to the Eureka Lodge and The Masonic Child ID Program which started back in 2006 https://searchvoat.co/v/pizzagate/3799165
Isabelle Paul, head of the Order of Saint John in Florida, and her husband lived in Cincinnati (and she also supports the Mayo Clinic). They owned a hotel for the jet set in Jamaica which has its own private island, now owned by the Sandals group. Isabelle was on the board of the Cincinnati Historical Society along with Jeff Koons of the Pepsi-Cola Company as described in the post Matt Hancock, the Epstein-connected futurists of the Lifeboat Foundation, & the Queen's Order of St. John viewtopic.php?f=16&p=9999#p9999 . Koons daughter Deborah was Jerry Garcia's third wife and very much involved with the counterculture movement.international adoption wisconsin childrens hospital/Mayo Clinic by @fogdryer
..Eureka Lodge ....links to the United Way of Greater Cincinnati Resource Database ... The Masonic ID program. https://searchvoat.co/v/pizzagate/1624281
They were part of the group known as the Merry Pranksters. Isn't that just another name for the Royal Order of Jesters? I'm just asking...https://files.catbox.moe/n8bdvv.jpg Bob Weir (L to R) Wavy Gravy, and Deborah Koons Garcia attend the Jerry Garcia Memorial at the Polo Fields in Golden Gate Park on August 13, 1995 in San Francisco California. (Photo by Tim Mosenfelder/Getty Images)
At the first Woodstock Festival, Wavy Gravy and the Hog Farm collective accepted festival executive Stan Goldstein's offer to help with preparations. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wavy_Gravy
One Legendary Party: The Hell’s Angels and the Merry Pranksters Meet at Kesey’s https://electrickoolaidblogtest.wordpre ... seys-1965/
The description in the article of a gang 'rape' of a young woman who was said to be a willing participant sounded more like a ritualistic event. In addition, the Pranksters and the Hell's Angels both provided services for Woodstock which ended in that 1969 debacle with the Rolling Stones and was said to herald the end of the Sixties . I'm almost completely convinced that the pranksters are jesters.. so I went looking...For the last six years or so, one party has been haunting me. It wasn’t any soiree I’d attended—this party took place on Saturday August 7, 1965 at Ken Kesey’s LSD-laced ranch in La Honda, California. ..What made this party special wasn’t its mix of intellectuals—poet Allen Ginsberg and Harvard psychology professor Richard Alpert (aka Baba Ram Dass) among them—and countercultural icons such as Hunter S. Thompson and Neal Cassady; it was the 15-foot-long, red white and blue sign strung up outside the ranch: THE MERRY PRANKSTERS WELCOME THE HELL’S ANGELS.
.....Rosenfeld points out that this party—during which the tie-dyed psychedelic community and the swastika-sporting motorcycle gang effectively coexisted without any fatalities—came only two months before the Angels gave an unequivocal beatdown to a members of the Vietnam Day Committee (VDC) as they attempted to peacefully march into Oakland in protest of the war. The parade was led by “a chanting, cymbal-clanging Ginsberg,” but all the ohms in the world weren’t going to stop the Angels, whom the FBI allegedly allowed to commence attacking protesters before police intervened. Rosenfeld reports that it took a subsequent LSD-fueled meeting between Ginsberg, Kesey, and Hell’s Angels leader Sonny Barger to get the Angels off the VDC’s back.
Given this, and the subsequent tensions with the VDC, it seems odd that the Hell’s Angels/Merry Pranksters party at La Honda is portrayed as such a celebratory event—particularly in The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test. Coming across the party in Subversives inspired me to take a closer look back at other accounts of the event. One aspect stood out like a sore thumb: the portrayals (or nonportrayals) of an alleged gang rape that took place at the party...
Royal Order of Jesters https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Royal_Order_of_Jesters
See: Royal Order of Jesters' Idol/god, the BILLIKEN, is Mascot of Jesuit ST. LOUIS UNIVERSITY, and inspired by Poet whose works include "PIPES OF PAN"( the goat-god) https://searchvoat.co/v/pizzagate/2124065The Royal Order of Jesters is a male fraternal organization, allowing only Shriners in good standing to join. .."Whereas most Masonic bodies are dedicated to charity, The Royal Order of Jesters is a fun "degree," with absolutely no serious intent. The motto, "Mirth is King,” is sufficient to give voice to the purpose of the organization. ...The icon of the Order is the Billiken.
A University of Cincinnati article on billikens https://web.archive.org/web/20121103222 ... lliken.htm
Steven Spielberg's father attended the University of Cincinnati : was Arnold Spielberg, Stevens Father, in on the beginings of NSA? https://searchvoat.co/v/GreatAwakening/2663048UC won't even be playing Saint Louis until Jan. 22 and Feb. 12, but already the campus has been besieged by billikens. You can thank assistant professor of geography Wendy Eisner for that. She has a passion for billikens - with a small "b," the tiny good luck imps from which the college sports team took its name in 1911. Her curiosity has nothing to do with basketball and everything to do with geography and the quirky little figures that define what became a popular culture item nearly 100 years ago. ..
The key event spreading the billiken phenomenon to Alaskan territory seems to have been the Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition in Seattle in 1909, when billikens served as the expo's "patron saint," Eisner theorizes. "From there they relocated to Nome." ..In Alaska, billiken popularity never really disappeared as it did on the mainland. In fact Eisner first stumbled upon billikens on a research trip to the Arctic in the early 1990s. She tends to travel to northern Alaska twice a year, most recently to research thaw lake basins. She is working to gain a greater understanding of the influence of climate on the evolution of these lake basins and on the possible effects if these basins are adversely affected by global warming.
..Eisner also theorizes there might be a connection between billikens and two other figurines she came across. If you don't like toilet humor, stop reading now. Both figures show boys on the toilet - one says "Billy Can" and the other, "Billy Can't," with accompanying facial expressions. Given as carnival prizes, the statuettes probably predate the first Chicago billiken, so Eisner wonders if the woman who designed the first billikens modeled them after the Billy Can/Can't.
That point of sale system developed by Arnold Spielberg is highly significant because those point of sale tutorials are all over the internet to show database developers how to make a database for companies and the example often used is for.. a pizzeria. An example given in the post: On Prince Philip.. and cracking the 222 Pizza Express Puzzle viewtopic.php?f=50&t=2626Arnold Spielberg is the son of Jewish parents Rebecca (Chechick) and Samuel Spielberg,[5] who were both born in Ukraine, and immigrated to the United States. They met and married in Cincinnati, where Arnold was born...
After training as a radio-gunner for the Air Corps his skills in the design of new airplane antennas elevated him to Communications Chief of a B-25 Squadron in India...After graduating from the University of Cincinnati with a BS in Electrical Engineering, he joined RCA Advanced Development Department in 1949 where he did early work on servo and guidance systems...In 1957, Spielberg began working for General Electric. Here he was instrumental in developing the G.E. 200 series.[9] The GE-225 was derived from the GE-312 and 412 Process control computers.
He did quite well at UC and was recognized for his academics and was elected to Eta Kappa Nu International Electrical and Computer Engineering Honor Society of the IEEE his pre-junior year, Tau Beta Pi Engineering Honor Society his junior year, and he won an electric engineering award. One of his co-ops was at the former Crosley Corporation..Mr. Spielberg was recognized by the IEEE in 2006 as a Computing Pioneer for his work on developing a computerized Point of Sale System while working for RCA. The system was tested in Cleveland, Ohio at the former Higbee's Department Store. Higbee’s was made famous in the movie “A Christmas Story” and now is the site of the Horseshoe Casino Cleveland.
..RCA, a London corporation with an American front..Serco is a prime example of the super spider in a web of deception, acting as king in all things contingency governance and as a subsidiary of RCA, for all appearance for the masses it would seem to be an American affair, but this is certainly not the reality of the situation...
In the late 1950s, Arnold Spielberg, the father of Hollywood director Steven Spielberg, helped revolutionize computing when he designed the GE-225 mainframe computer. The machine allowed a team of Dartmouth University students and researchers to develop the BASIC programing language....(Young Bill Gates, Paul Allen, Steve Wozniak and Steve Jobs all used the language when they started building their digital empires..
Getting back to Arnold : Iowa WWII veteran befriends war buddy’s famous son, Steven Spielberg (yes, the director) https://www.thegazette.com/life/iowa-ww ... -director/INFOSYS 222 - Case Study Dante's Pizzeria https://canvas.auckland.ac.nz/courses/2932/files/546769
Theater (warfare) https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theater_(warfare)Glen 'Red' Henton, 98 of Maquoketa, holds up a 'Saving Private Ryan' poster May 16 signed by actor Tom Hanks and director Steven Spielberg. Henton and Spielberg's father, Arnold, served together in the U.S. Army Air Forces during World War II in the 490th Bomb Squadron stationed in India and Burma....Their history goes back a generation, to World War II, where Henton and Arnold Spielberg, Steven's father, served in the 490th Bomb Squadron in Burma and India, part of the war's China-Burma-India Theater. Henton served there for 2½ years in administration, doing payroll, courts martial and the worst task - writing to inform families that a loved one was killed in action.
Arnold Spielberg, now 102, was an electronics specialist with the B-25 medium bomber planes.
So, where did the word theater come from? https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_theatreIn warfare, a theater or theatre (see spelling differences) is an area in which important military events occur or are progressing.[1][2] A theater can include the entirety of the airspace, land and sea area that is or that may potentially become involved in war operations...
Sacred mysteries https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sacred_mysteriesThe history of theatre charts the development of theatre over the past 2,500 years. While performative elements are present in every society, it is customary to acknowledge a distinction between theatre as an art form and entertainment and theatrical or performative elements in other activities. The history of theatre is primarily concerned with the origin and subsequent development of the theatre as an autonomous activity. Since classical Athens in the 6th century BC, vibrant traditions of theatre have flourished in cultures across the world..
Theatre arose as a performance of ritual activities that did not require initiation on the part of the spectator. This similarity of early theatre to ritual is negatively attested by Aristotle, who in his Poetics defined theatre in contrast to the performances of sacred mysteries: theatre did not require the spectator to fast, drink the kykeon, or march in a procession; however theatre did resemble the sacred mysteries in the sense that it brought purification and healing to the spectator by means of a vision, the theama. The physical location of such performances was accordingly named theatron
Stage School: What Is Theatre of the Absurd? https://www.theskinny.co.uk/theatre/opi ... the-absurdSacred mysteries are the areas of supernatural phenomena associated with a divinity or a religious ideology. Sacred mysteries may be either:
- Religious beliefs, rituals or practices which are kept secret from non-believers, or lower levels of believers, who have not had an initiation into the higher levels of belief (the concealed knowledge may be called esoteric).
Although the term "mystery" is not often used in anthropology, access by initiation or rite of passage to otherwise secret beliefs is an extremely common feature of indigenous religions all over the world.
- Beliefs of the religion which are public knowledge but cannot be easily explained by normal rational or scientific means.
A mystagogue or hierophant is a holder and teacher of secret knowledge in the former sense above. Whereas, mysticism may be defined as an area of philosophical or religious thought which focuses on mysteries in the latter sense above.
Wilfred Bion’s analysis of Samuel Becket https://100years.tavistockandportman.nh ... cba1185463What is Theatre of the Absurd, and why does it speak to us? As a new production of Samuel Beckett's Endgame by Citizens Theatre director Dominic Hill comes to theatres in 2016, we find out more about a genre that holds a mirror up to ourselves...
Many of the European playwrights associated with the absurdist movement, including Samuel Beckett, Eugène Ionesco, and Jean Genet, rejected the phrase – which was coined by a critic – altogether. Rather, these men saw themselves as individual artists, not members of a collective, and viewed their plays as nothing more than an expression of their personal vision of the world.
So if absurdist playwrights worked independently of each other, how did they produce plays that were so strangely similar in their rejection of the conventions of traditional theatre?
It’s not a coincidence; it’s all in the timing.
Where does absurdist theatre come from?
Born from the ashes of postwar Europe, absurdist theatre reflects an era of spiritual emptiness, a time when the precariousness of human existence was palpable. Following the atrocities of World War Two, to some the world itself had become absurd: a frightening and illogical place in which life had lost all meaning and human existence seemed futile.
The growing popularity of Existentialism in Europe (notably in Paris, where many of the absurdist playwrights lived as exiles), will also have been influential. The philosophy of Albert Camus, who is credited with first using the word absurd in this sense, certainly had a role to play in the creation of this kind of theatre...
How does absurdism work?
When absurdist plays first came to the stage, it was a groundbreaking moment in the history of theatre. Although an exciting and progressive movement, critics didn't know what to make of it and many were outraged. Even by today’s standards, absurdist plays flout all theatrical conventions; everything we know drama to be is turned on its head.
For a start, the whole premise of a plot is subverted. A beginning, middle and end structure, which underpins all conventional narrative, is abandoned in favour of a non-linear – and often cyclical – approach, and there is a deliberate absence of the cause-and-effect relationship used to link scenes. The plays assume a dream-like state, operating in images rather than in coherent dialogue and action. All meaning remains ambiguous.
Samuel Beckett was Wilfred Bion’s first case at the Tavistock Clinic.
The analysis, which began in 1934, was difficult, lasted for nearly two years and had a profound reciprocal influence on both men.
The analysis, which began in 1934, was difficult, lasted for nearly two years and had a profound reciprocal influence on both men.
Beckett had come to London for analysis, because it was illegal in Ireland at the time. He was a relatively young man with considerable anxiety, much of which had to do with his bad relationship with this mother.
Both men were known to be difficult and intractable characters, but they respected each other and had a rapport. A “psychic twinship” developed between them that culminated in Bion famously inviting his patient to dinner and a lecture by Carl Jung.
Beckett got through his writers block and emigrated to Paris where he began work on his most important series of novels. He made radical use of free association as a literary form in his novellas and his Trilogy, before making his hugely creative transition from prose to drama and going on to win a Nobel Prize.
Bion in turn, re-worked his clinical contact with Beckett, who became the ‘patient zero’ of his pioneering postmodern psychoanalytic clinical theories.
Both men became instrumental in launching the post-modern age in their respective fields.