Advice for an absolute MUST read book list?
🧐 Research Wanted 🤔
I guess it doesn't have to be a book. This is the list of the ones I've read/listened to so far that I think are tremendously interesting or important (I know, it's a short list):
World Without Cancer, by G. Edward Griffin,
The Creature from Jekyll Island, by G. Edward Griffin,
Borax Conspiracy (article: https://pforlife.com/borax-conspiracy.html)
Currently I'm listening to Tragedy and Hope 101 by Joseph Plummer (if you're familiar with Tragedy and Hope by Carroll Quigley, this is just a synthesis of that long and difficult to find book.) Additionally I'm planning on reading The Real Lincoln by Thomas DiLorenzo next.
If you have any strong recommendations, please share!
The Bible
Saul Alinsky - "rules for radicals" read to learn their tactics and then devise a moral way to overcome
Dale Carnegie - "How to win friends and influence people" read to gain skill. I recommend audio book, it's 8+hrs, listen to it while doing yard work or something. Also listen to it 3,4 times over a couple years. Invaluable skills in that book.
Mark Levine - "The liberty amendments" read to gain incontrovertible ammunition to fire back at reeeetards and also reinforce limited government.
Marcus Aurelius - "meditations"
Jordan Peterson - "12 rules for life"
That's where I would start. Should last a while. After you read these, you'll seek out what you need independently. Good luck fren!
Piggybacking on top comment here, but just wanted my 2c worth, since you listed the Bible as #1. Many on here would agree with that, and I don't disagree. However, TGA is also a movement to return to God. If you're a fledgling Christian like myself and want to dip your toes in, I'd personally recommend Mere Christianity by CS Lewis - over just sitting down and reading the Bible from page 1 Genesis.
While this forum should be our wakeup call, many are still uncertain and diving straight into the Bible can look overwhelming. Some folks probably can, but if you're reading King James "best" Version, it's just another hurdle to overcome for someone new.
Mere Christianity makes the logical case for God and relates in a different way, to bring folks onboard. CS Lewis originally did radio shows during WWII London and that's where it originated.
Too many great recommendations in this thread overall!
The synopsis sounds right up my alley lol. Couple reviews on it call it a conspiracy theorists wet dream....guess wanting to know the truth is a bad thing! USA was well on our way to destabilization before WWII, but WWII allowed the Cabal to ramp up their agenda. The "Crime of 1873" comes to mind, in particular, since this book talks about the banking elites.
Yes...I agree...never read it...first time hearing about this book, but I don't think we can know enough about the history of the Synagogue of satan! Ordering a copy now...
I’m re-reading this (via audiobook) - and I agree. Also, I’m listening to the Hillsdale CS Lewis course (they have many free courses online) and it’s very good.
"The Conscious Universe" by Dean Radin.
Man I love Dean Radin, the random number generator stuff is fucking fascinating
Agreed that reading the Bible will be a daunting task for most.
Cover to cover is likely not the best way to go about it. Starting with something more easily readable such as the Gospel of John might be a better place to start.
Additionally, using a guide such as "How to Read the Bible for All It's Worth" and/or "How to Read the Bible Book by Book" can be helpful for beginning to understand the rhetorical and cultural issues that can make understanding difficult.
My friend who has been coaching me along (blessed to have him - no coincidences!) gave me a normal Bible and a study version, where the bottom half of the page will be filled with insight on the particular verse/chapter and have references to other books/chapter/verses. That would probably be helpful to some. Also, he recommends, as you are, to start off by reading Gospel of John.
I'll have to check out your references as well, so thank you!
A study Bible is also a great tool - somewhat similar to the books that I mentioned in that it can give you some of the necessary background knowledge necessary to reduce the problems created from reading a text from another era, from another culture, with a rhetorical style that is unlike what we are used to today.
The Gospel of John is a great starting place because not only does the message of John summarize the entire Bible, but John's writing style is quite accessible.
That is not to say that John is simplistic. The Gospel of John is a literary masterpiece with many connections within itself and with the Old Testament. Some of these connections are explicitly stated, but most require reflection.
Really appreciate the advice here. I'm reading the English Standard Version and from the research I've done, it seems to be a "decent" version, compared to some of the other versions out there. KJV seems to be the gold standard around here and I've read blogs where that's the version they tout. Any commentary on that?
Some people are diehard KJV. They may even go so far as to say that other versions are defective and/or untrustworthy. My position on this is that understanding of Biblical languages is better today than it was at the time the KJV translation was made, so I prefer a more modern translation.
As for the popular translations, KJV included, I think they can all be useful. Because one language never translates perfectly into another, making a perfect translation is often next to impossible, and for a text as large and varied as the Bible, I think that it is impossible. Therefore reading from multiple translations with varying translation methods can be helpful.
For example, the ESV claims to be the most literal (word-for-word) version. This may be true, but that does not necessarily make it the best. If you take the English sentence "He's in hot water." and translate it word-for-word into another language, you may have a literal translation, but it is likely that the actual meaning of the sentence would be lost if the receiving language did not have the same idiom.
Additionally, I have found that the literal-style translations, in their quest to faithfully translate word-for-word, often result in complicated English, which can make them more difficult to understand.
In contrast, a translation such as the Good News Bible, seeks to understand the meaning of the original text and then convey that in plain English. This results in a translation that is much easier to read, but you are often at the mercy of the interpretation of the translators because they are trying to give you (what they think is) the meaning of the text rather than just changing vocabulary and grammar from one language to another.
A middle-of-the-road approach is the New International Version (my preference) which tries to incorporate both translation philosophies. The NIV has its own problems - it's not perfect - but it is more readable than the ESV while being more literal than the Good News.
For the most part, translation is a preference. All of the major ones try to be faithful to the original text, but the nature of the translation task means that all of them have to make choices along the way. In spite of this, the overall content is more-or-less consistent. A good commentary (or two) will help to identify the small areas of difference so that you can decide for yourself which is better in each instance.
If I were a beginner, I would simply want a translation that I could read as easily as possible, and my preference would be the NIV. If I already had an ESV study Bible, I would just stick with that because I'm frugal, and the ESV is also a good translation.
I can see a certain appeal to KJV, due to the somewhat poetic nature of Old English and some verses coming across more biblical than plain modern English - it just doesn't "hit" the same.
Our pastor last Sunday, pointed out some differences in the original Greek vs the ESV translation, with a passage in Ephesians (believe it was that book). I appreciate that kind of commentary, that someone might not understand was "lost in translation" over to English, literally lol.
I guess a person can argue for and against different translations, but for a newbie just starting out, reading and getting the gist of the entire Bible is more important than breaking down the semantics. It's hard going off of translations of translations and humans are clearly not perfect. Personally, since this is The Great Awakening and all, it wouldn't surprise me if new information is revealed about the Bible once the Vatican is dismantled....
Really appreciate you taking the time to educate me and provide your thoughts on everything literary :) A lot of great people and educated minds peruse these boards. God bless you fren!
There is a podcast called 66/40 by Chuck missler. During the weekdays they upload a 20 minute daily overview of a chapter in the Bible. Right now we are just starting the book of psalms. You read the passages in your Bible then listen to the podcast which gives you a detailed overview of the passage, it’s history, it’s author, it’s context, it’s translation, it’s application to today.
Excellent point...Start with the Gospel of John
Agreed! Also “The Shack” really helped me. It’s a little far out but it helps when dealing with grief from a Christian perspective.
I'll have to pass this along to someone I know (and check it out myself), as I bet it could help them out - thank you!
Lee Strobel's The Case for Christ.
Thanks, I'll check this one out! This might be the book my friend mentioned where there was a guy who went to disprove there was a God and ended up being converted to Christianity in the process?
Yes! He was an athiest. As a journalist, he went at it trying to disprove it and basically convinced himself. He has many titles, but Case for Christ has always been my favorite.
Ah, awesome! My friend mentioned that one to me as well. Yet another one to add to the reading list lol. Thanks fren.
Great list!
Get yourself a good book on edible wild plants / herbs and healing herbs.
Atlas Shrugged, by Ayn Rand. It's eerily prophetic.
Behold A Pale Horse by Bill Cooper
came here to say this....also its been "rumored" the Q drops specifically mention this book and reference many pages ...I can't find the thread on said sauce..it was many months ago but it is searchable.. hope more of us on this thread can also jump in on this book!
MAGA4EVA
https://greatawakening.win/p/141YNIIarX/bill-cooper-author-of-behold-a-p/c/ it's Q post #782
thank you super genius!
The Brothers Karamazov is one book that stunned me. Also mind blowing: Paul LaViolette's "Antigravitics" which is about the hidden physics of T. Townsend Brown, the electromagnetic flight engine, all non-fiction.
The Gulag Archipelago
SAS survival handbook
If you are an electrical engineer: transients Charles Steinmetz. This explains the real theory of electricity, being described mathematically as a vector sum of dielectric and magnetic fields. If you can grasp the theory, it is eye opening. I have a feeling this will become important in years future.
Nathaniel Branden - Six Pillars Of Self-Esteem. Seminal work on self esteem that blows the modern leftist idea of pandering to delusions out of the water. Good for your own knowledge.
Richard Bandler - Frogs Into Princes THE original NLP book. Read and be alarmed that 40 years later the entire world runs on this. But with your knowledge of six pillars you will have an understanding about how this has ruined people. The technology of NLP is mostly misused. Bander did a lot of talks too, some of which are legendary. Very interesting character for the autist. Also see books with Grinder his co-author. You should keep going until you discover Milton Erickson. The most famous user of the tech is the Wolf-of-wallstreet Jordan Belfort - Straight Line Persuasion is his video course, its excellent.
The Adam and Eve Story - The Story of Cataclysms - Chan Thomas. Real history of the world, very interesting.
Any Marketing book by Dan Kennedy is hilarious. And his talks, he reprinted psycho-cybernetics by Maxwell Maltz too, which is brilliant. Same with Jay Abraham, everyone should have listened to one of his talks. In the same vein Derek Sivers - Anything You Want. This is Marketing - Seth Godin good marketing books are essential to understand the world.
Earl Nightingale - The Strangest Secret (get the audio, an ancient classic) this is a massive area of very interesting "internal" power.
Don Beck - Spiral Dynamics Integral - an interesting model of humanity that will blow your mind. Find the audio presentation.
I'm happy to see transients by Charles Steinmetz on here. Haven't read it yet personally, but it's on my list. I do find Steinmetz to be very knowledgeable and I believe his views to be accurate.
Also, I must ask, what are your opinions on Eric Dollard? He talks very highly of Steinmetz and from what I can tell has followed and expanded on his theories. From what I can see he seems really good too, but I'll admit currently a lot of this goes over my head cause I still have a lot to learn.
A good book on fermenting, canning, drying, smoking = all arts of preserving food = vegetables, fruits and meat.
The Foxfire books are full of good info on all these topics. :)
This is probably obvious but these are the books that must be read by everyone, at some point in their lives (I've read most of these in high school or college, but it's never too late to start!):
Animal Farm, 1984, Brave New World, Fahrenheit 451, The Communist Manifesto (you have to know exactly the kind of trash these people read and believe. This one is a slog to get through but it's laughable how stupid Marx's ideas are.), Plato's Republic, etc. The only one I never got around to was 1984, but I've read so many small excerpts from it that I feel like I've already finished it.
If you don't have time to read 1984, go watch the movie with John Hurt as the lead. It's well done.
Also, I always recommend that people read Yevgeny Zamyatin's 1924 novel We. It was one of the inspirations for Orwell writing 1984. The Soviets considered it slanderous against socialism. Yes, it skewered socialism. And Zamyatin had been a Bolshevik until he got a good look at how that was all shaping up.
Apparently, there is a new version being sold on Amazon which subtly alters the meaning of the original text. Get an old edition.
Orwell and Huxley, for sure.
I don't think I've ever seen it mentioned when book recommendation threads pop up, so I'll throw out "Captains and the Kings" by Taylor Caldwell. Written in 1972, it's loosely based on the life of JFK. It's been years since I've read it, so dunno if it still holds up. There is a 1976 miniseries of it, for people who prefer watching stuff, but I've never seen it.
I read that book many years ago, which prompted me to read every book that she wrote, because I'm a bit obsessive.
The Brother Karamazov is a must.
Never got around to reading it, will do :)
I've plowed through nearly all of it. Tough going for me.
audio book read by Constance Gregory makes it a much more enjoyable read or listen.
Thanks, I'll try it.
One of the best tips I hot was to look up the character names and which character they are. Russian sur names can get confusing and you forget who they are talking about sometimes.
Great idea. Thanks!
Iodine: Why You Need It and Why You Can't Live Without it, David Brownstein, can download here.
Could It Be B12? An Epidemic of Misdiagnoses, download here.
Irresistible Revolution, download here.
Dementia Myth, download here.
The Case Against Fluoride: How Hazardous Waste Ended Up in Our Drinking Water and the Bad Science and Powerful Politics That Keep It There, download here.
The Lord of the Rings and The Silmarillion
Came here to give nearly an identical list a u/One_Man_Militia & found a new Levin book I want to read. Seriously, his list is vital reading.
Add: "Art of War" by Sun Tsu
"The Art of the Deal" by Donald Trump
"The Law" by Frédéric Bastiat
"None Dare Call It A Conspiracy" by Gary Allen
"The Naked Communist" by Cleon Skousen
"Pilgrim Hypothesis" by Timothy Ballard (even if you don't agree with his conclusions, he pays himself as a history researcher & author of books, which allows him to set up pedo stings globally & train local law enforcement unpaid via Operation Underground Railroad. I buy his books for that reason alone & enjoy the theories he brings to the table).
Man that was a longer list than I anticipated LoL edit format: Thank you u/cee8hooz typed it up way too late & didn't even think about the format.
"The Naked Communist" and "None Dare Call it Conspiracy" were two of the most important books I ever read.
So glad I had Ezra T. Benson recommend them to me. He was a former secretary or Agriculture & saw first hand how the deep state/secret combinations worked to destroy America.
Terrible formatting of text friend.
I agree about that:
Sun Tzu - Art of War
VERY IMPORTANT, EVEN Q MENTIONS IT. ANONS SHALL READ IT.
Ok,so as I comment here now:
Other political worth reading not mentioned
"Two hundred years together" - by Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn
"The Culture of Critique: An Evolutionary Analysis of Jewish Involvement in Twentieth-Century Intellectual and Political Movements" - by Kevin B. McDonald
Big and important part of cabal is claimed to be jewish, exact relation is not known but it is enough to read it and be warned.
Probably worth reading:
"True story of fake news" by Mark Dice
"Trust Me, I'm Lying: Confessions of a Media Manipulator" by Ryan Holiday
Surely worth reading NOW:
"Invisible Resistance To Tyranny: How to Lead a Secret Life of Insurgency in an Increasingly Unfree World" by Mack Jefferson
"101 Things to Do 'Til the Revolution: Ideas and Resources for Self-Liberation, Monkey Wrenching and Preparedness" by Claire Wolfe
Thanks for your input. Sorry to everyone about the formatting: it was late, I was tired, I was on mobile and I don't post much.. not a good combo.
Thank you!
Alan Watt. Different from the philosopher “Alan Watts.”
https://cuttingthroughthematrix.com/
This guy was dealing red pills for 20 years.
He haunts me. I relistened to a talk he gave in 2009 or something, during the peak of covid hysteria, and it was about swine flu. Spooky, he had the covid timeline figured out perfectly BACK THEN. The man had the real deal info, the history going back decades. Highly recommend the old talks. He had plenty and they are ALL good. Although, he was a little jaded, understandably, having been warning the world for so long, in relative obscurity. Everyone must listen a few hours to him, seriously he deserves the highest respect, I've poured out a drink for him on occasion.
I’ve listened to hundreds of hours. He knows these psychos better than they know themselves. This guy is Bill Cooper tier, perhaps higher.
Great topic, OP. Thanks for asking. I would like to see more things like this on the board, since we don't talk about the drops as often these days. Posts that help, that inform and that edify the ga community are welcome, imo. Better than 50 posts about the mpox or shitposts. It's good for the frens to help out other frens.
Surprised not to see The President Makers by Don Fotherigham on here. Don’t have a pdf link unfortunately, it’s a rare book.
The Franklin Cover-Up
https://wikispooks.com/w/images/8/8e/The_Franklin_Cover-Up.pdf
Regina Louf’s book, victim of the Belgium network
https://storageunit.home.blog/2019/12/17/silence-you-kill-children-the-testimony-of-regina-louf-about-the-dutroux-affair/
My book list for financial freedom:
Rich Dad Poor Dad https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=wp7Lz1svVro
Rich Dad Poor Dad Cashflow Quadrant https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=grVD6e4NILw
The Richest Man in Babylon https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=wglndSWrvsM
Think and Grow Rich https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=ZUbfskQ-GAY
The Magic of Thinking Big https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=p13s38JW9ng
The 4-Hour Workweek https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=taCl3MLVSVU
Tax-Free Wealth https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=43GBsvmcRj4
Well, there's the Bible. Namely the 4 Gospels, Both Corinthians, and Revelations. Those books alone you could read decades and not fully decode them. They're incredibly powerful, not just as a record of history, but in healing the heart and in learning to command intent. Promise you as soon as you turn to the first page, demons tremble in fear.
Everything by Nietzsche, in order. it's literally the Great Awakening for one man. Imagine critiquing and mocking Christianity your entire career only to come to the conclusion that without God life is meaningless and He created us in His image so we could act in His image. Determinism, Uberman, the complete rebuking of nihilism and lukewarmness (which is what Jesus commands)
I do find value in the rest of that brand of philosophy. Plenty of relevant concepts in Jung, Kafka, and Kant.
Fiction (very little of worth out there in literary form)
Phantom Tollbooth by Norman Juster A Little Princess by Frances Burnett Anna Karenina by Leo Tolstoy Three Musketeers and The Count of Monte Cristo by Alexander Dumas Ender's Game and Xenocide by Orson Scott Card
I picked these not just for their amazing stories but for the themes and quotes so incredibly relevant to us as Christians, anons, frens, and pedes
also 1Q84 by Haruki Murakami
I haven't read this one but my wife raves about it and the original cover of the book is a gigantic Q. She's always suggested I or someone else well versed in Q read it for decodes (because off what she's told me, there's a lot)
The rest of what you need isn't in books. It's in anime and video games. I'm not joking, but if opera and theatre defined one era of fiction, the "Great American Novel" defined another, hundreds of years later the interactive and visual fiction of today will be seen as the high art it actually is.
It is easy to scoff at your recommendation of anime and video games, but they play an important role if you are actively seeking Comms once you are Comms Aware.
DecodingSymbols has done some incredible decodes of One Piece, Dragonball manga, Speed Racer, Final Fantasy, Dragon Quest, Secret of Mana, Street Fighter, Halo, Donkey Kong.
If it was culturally relevant aka very popular, it 100% contains Comms.
That's why I'm sincere when I say VERY popular aka normie books are well worth a read once you attain some level of Comms fluency. You will quickly learn that we are the Muggles.
Hinds Feet on High Places Hanna Hurnard
It’s a small paperback, and an allegory about life.
Pilgrims Progress The books pretty big, but you can probably just watch a movie with your family. There’s several of them out there, and I’ve watched all of them. Another allegorical story about life, and how to stay on the right path. A very enjoyable story for your entire family.
This present darkness by Frank Peretti.
Mark of the Lion series by Francine Rivers
The Ranger's Apprentice by John Flanagan
God's Smuggler by Brother Andrew
Anything rather everything by Susan Wise Bauer should be on your list
she's a woman
Undaunted Courage
"Live Not By Lies" by Rod Dreher
Oh another one more thing.
If you have smaller children, The chronicles of Narnia series that I think you can get on YouTube or something like that, it’s fantastic. There’s an older version done in England that’s OK, but the newer one is really great.
I second the Chronicles of Narnia. I also recommend reading the Lord of the Rings.. start with The Hobbit. PFFT to Prequels.
1.The entitlement to rule - Stephen Baca y Kerr;
2.Free sea - Hugo Grotius;
3.Law of Nations - Emer de Vattel;
4.History of Central Banking - Stephen Mitford Goodson;
5.Clerke' s praxis part of the praxis & jurisdiction of the court admiralty;
6. The last World War - the US to ove and lose - Sergei Glasyev;
7. Thesis on natural law - Michael Gleeson;
8. The controversy of Zion - Douglas Reed;
9. The not self - Ra Uru Hu;
10. Hamlet' s Mill - Giorgio de Santillana/ Hertha von Dechend;
From my notable book list:
"Murder by Injection" by Eustace Mullins
https://www.amazon.com/Virus-Mania-COVID-19-Hepatitis-Billion-Dollar/dp/3752629789
https://www.amazon.com/New-Deal-Raw-Economic-Damaged/dp/1416592377
https://www.amazon.com/Endless-Frontier-Vannevar-Engineer-American-ebook/dp/B077721CMV/ref=sr_1_2?crid=1A4JBMNPFVEAH&keywords=endless+frontier&qid=1642983740&s=books&sprefix=endless+frontier%2Cstripbooks-intl-ship%2C307&sr=1-2
https://fouryoureyesonlyoo7.files.wordpress.com/2011/06/strawman.pdf
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Silent_Coup
https://ia802509.us.archive.org/5/items/iygagtw-ebook-review-copy/IYGAGTW%20digital%20book.pdf
https://www.amazon.com/Mass-Control-Engineering-Human-Consciousness/dp/1931882215
The Power of Now by Eckhart Tolle (life changing)
The Real Anthony Fauci by John F Kennedy Jr (eye opening)
…and here’s a very interesting Dave Rubin interview of Eckhart Tolle (he’s on our side boys & girls, and talks about the mass psychosis, even before Malone): https://www.bitchute.com/video/drrLeWCOmCg/
I recommend searching web.archive.org for free copies. Many books are out of print or only available at very high prices.
The Miraculous Results of Extremely High Doses of Vitamin D3
The Optimal Dose Restore Your Health With the Power of Vitamin D3
Iodine Why You Need it, Why You Can't Live Without It
Iodine Remedies: Secrets From the Sea
Gerson A Cancer Therapy - Results of Fifty Cases and the Cure of Advanced Cancer
Secrets of The Federal Reserve The London Connection
Z-library is a good place to look for free books online as well, or at least it used to be, I haven't used it in a while.
https://usa1lib.org/
Thanks - Will check it out!
The Curse of Canaan by Eustace Mullins. He also wrote Secrets of the Federal Reserve, the first book exposing the fed. In the 1950s.
Secrets of the Federal Reserve seconded. Here if you need it: https://drive.google.com/file/d/12O7VpB08eAmlMyJmkeSZtxpWcvmTdYrR/view?usp=sharing
Gulag Archipelago, Brave New World, 1984. Currently reading "1776" by David McCullough. I've been enjoying Cormac McCarthy lately too; Blood Meridian, All the Pretty Horses etc.
Bible....
Babylon mystery religion None Dare call it a conspiracy The myth of six million
Yes, None Dare Call It Conspiracy is a must read. Written in 1972 and describes exactly what these DS assholes have been up to.
6 gormillion
Bush Family Secrets: Bush Family unleashed, Confessions of an Economic Hitman: modern day slavery , The Gold Warriors: CIA unleashed, Red Notice: How the NWO Oligarchs took over Russia by stealing the voucher system.
Unintended Consequences by John Ross. Good luck getting a copy though.