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Raymond Foster

High Elder Warlock

Power Poster

The Forbidden Books the Lefties don't want you Reading!

THE REAL FORBIDDEN BOOKS WORTH READING
THE REAL FORBIDDEN BOOKS WORTH READING

This is a list of recommended reading I have been informed about. I can say after reading some of them and completing them, taking time to process the information and taking the time to learn terms and expressions I was not familiar with, I can truly see a lot of the warnings playing out and the massive Psi-Ops we're being subjected to globally.


The Crowd: A Study of the Popular Mind  

Gustave Le Bon, 1895


A foundational manual in crowd psychology, this book outlines how individual reasoning collapses in group settings, making masses impulsive, irrational, and easily manipulated. Le Bon describes how leaders can override logic and implant belief through repetition, symbolism, and emotional appeal. He emphasizes that crowds respond not to facts but to imagery and conviction. The text details how to:


  • Erase individual identity through collective emotion

  • Replace critical thought with suggestive influence

  • Exploit fear, myth, and ritual to maintain control

  • Create mass obedience through charismatic authority


Used as a reference by authoritarian figures across history, it remains a favorite blueprint for psychological control and mass persuasion


The books feared, banned or buried


The Tyndale Bible  

William Tyndale, 1526  


The first English translation of the Bible directly from Hebrew and Greek texts. Tyndale’s work laid the foundation for later Protestant theology and was banned by the Catholic Church.


The Egyptian  

Mika Waltari, 1945  


A historical novel set in ancient Egypt, exploring themes of power, fate, and human nature through the life of physician Sinuhe. Based on extensive archaeological and historical research.


The Gulag Archipelago  

Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, 1973  


A nonfiction exposé of Soviet labor camps, based on Solzhenitsyn’s own imprisonment and testimonies from other victims. It documents the machinery of repression under Stalin’s regime.


1984  

George Orwell, 1949  


A dystopian novel depicting a totalitarian state where surveillance, censorship, and psychological control dominate. Introduced concepts like Big Brother and thoughtcrime.


Brave New World  

Aldous Huxley, 1932  


A futuristic society engineered through genetic manipulation, conditioning, and pleasure-based control. Contrasts freedom with stability and critiques consumer-driven conformity.


Fahrenheit 451  

Ray Bradbury, 1953  


A dystopian tale where books are banned and burned. Explores censorship, anti-intellectualism, and the consequences of passive media consumption.


The Mass Psychology of Fascism  

Wilhelm Reich, 1933  


Analyzes how authoritarianism and fascism arise from sexual repression and mass psychological conditioning. Combines psychoanalysis with political theory.


Medical Nemesis  

Ivan Illich, 1975  


A critique of institutionalized medicine, arguing that modern healthcare often harms more than it heals. Challenges the medicalization of life and loss of autonomy.


The Sovereign Individual  

James Dale Davidson & William Rees-Mogg, 1997  


Forecasts the decline of nation-states and rise of digital autonomy. Predicts how technology will reshape economics, governance, and personal freedom.


The Creature from Jekyll Island  

G. Edward Griffin, 1994  


Investigates the origins of the U.S. Federal Reserve, alleging secretive control by banking elites. Frames central banking as a mechanism of systemic manipulation.


Reality Transurfing  

Vadim Zeland, 2004  


A metaphysical framework proposing that reality is shaped by intention and energy alignment. Blends quantum theory with esoteric philosophy.


The Adam and Eve Story  

Chan Thomas, 1963 (declassified version 1993)  


A speculative narrative about cataclysmic Earth resets and lost civilizations. Originally classified by the CIA; now circulated in fringe and alternative history circles.


Closing Statement:


Those who reject or discourage the reading of these books do so because the material confronts systems of control, exposes mechanisms of manipulation, and challenges the narratives that preserve institutional power. Each text demands that the reader think critically, question authority, and reclaim ownership of their own mind.


That alone makes them dangerous to those who benefit from obedience, distraction, and intellectual passivity. To read them is to step outside the boundaries imposed by manufactured consensus; and that is precisely what those in power fear.

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