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TOPICAL INDEX |
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The Babylon Observer places his observations and
research material under the following main
topics.
Click the pictures to find out more. |
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BABYLON OBSERVER TOPICAL
RESEARCH - THE GAME OF GLOBAL ENGINEERING - PAGE 1 |
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ALEX JONES AND THE CHIP
IMPLANTERS |
| WWW,
APRIL-DECEMBER 2004 (ARCHIVES) - In two
parts, we hear Alex Jones interviewing the
head of the Baja Beach club as well as
people actively involved in chipping
people.
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Fiction as a Precursor to Fact: Sci-fi "Predictive Programming" and the Emergent World Religion |
| FROM
THE ARCHIVES - Aldous
Huxley first presented the "scientific
dictatorship" to the public imagination
in his book Brave New World. In Dope, Inc.,
associates of political dissident Lyndon
LaRouche claim that Huxley's book was
actually a "mass appeal"
organizing document written "on behalf
of one-world order" (Dope, Inc. 538).
The book also claims the United States is
the only place where Huxley's "science
fiction classic" is taught as an
allegorical condemnation of fascism (Dope,
Inc. 538). If this is true, then the
"scientific dictatorship"
presented within the pages of his 1932 novel
Brave New World is a thinly disguised roman
a clef--a novel that thinly veils real
people or events--awaiting tangible
enactment.
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Neoconservativism:
The Cult of Techno-socialism |
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THE ARCHIVES - The
actions taken by the Bush Administration in
the aftermath of 9-11 have caused muckrakers
from across the political spectrum to take a
closer look at the hidden hand guiding the
current President. Researchers, both left
and right, have identified the same enemy: a
faction of the elite known as
neoconservatives. The exposure has led to
mounting opposition against the
neoconservative agenda from numerous
grassroots activists.
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EXTREME
BIRTH DEFORMITIES FROM DEPLETED URANIUM
AMMUNITION |
| FROM
THE ARCHIVES - This article contains
disturbing pictures of exactly that which
the title claims. Please be advised that
these pictures are extremely disturbing and
to be viewed with discretion.
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THE BALLAD OF MP3.com |
| WWW,
2001/2001 (From the Archives) - MP3.com,
the biggest collection of music from
independent online artists. Not anymore,
though. In what seems to be a final and
perhaps lethal strike against the online
artist community, VIVENDI UNIVERSAL
destroyed around three terabytes of music
before selling the MP3.com domain to
CNET.com. This is the story, the ballad, of
MP3.com as told by one of the pioneers in
the online artist community.
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