Here’s the thing about this video. I found it very interesting. This former law enforcement officer in Mexico talks about how prevalent Santa Muerte and other occult practices are in both the Mexican government and the Cartels. (Is there a difference?)
Tim Pool, who does a very good job on a great many stories, doesn’t seem to take it seriously but he should. I’m not sure he takes any religion seriously, to be honest.
But if the occult has a grip on the most powerful people in Mexico this would explain a great deal about the state of Mexico today, the drug trade, and sex slavery. It’s especially disconcerting when one realizes that the US no longer has a functioning southern border.
Worth a watch but NSFW.
September 29, 2021 at 8:53 am
Some of what he says is interesting, but it is also VERY anti-Catholic. I’m surprised and disappointed this is something you choose to publicize.
September 29, 2021 at 12:10 pm
We have to take what we get. I’m not endorsing this guy’s viewpoint but I found it interesting and alarming. Thought I’d share.
September 29, 2021 at 12:29 pm
I agree with you Matt.
September 29, 2021 at 3:58 pm
thanks.
September 29, 2021 at 9:17 am
This really needed more of a disclaimer. For example, he claims that Our Lady of Guadalupe is portrayed on the tilma of St. Juan Diego giving birth (apparently) to the Aztec war god, which thus identifies her with the Aztec goddess of death; and he “knows” this because seraphim do not have eagle wings. News flash: angels are spirits, and they do not literally have wings; the wings described in Scripture and portrayed in art are purely symbolic. Too much of what he says fits neatly into a certain kind of Protestant conspiracy theory, in which Catholicism is nothing but disguised paganism (“Easter” shows that the celebration of the Resurrection is really goddess worship, Christmas trees are pagan rituals, etc.) and the USA is itself nothing but a front for Masonic control. Someone with this kind of conspiracy theory is going to see things that are not there — along with things that ARE there. The problem with most conspiracy theories is not that they get nothing right, but that some of what they say is obviously right, which gives them too much confidence in dubious or even nonsensical evidence and too much confidence in rejecting evidence that shows the real situation is more complicated or even completely different than their simple system implies.