Is Rowling tied to, or a front for, Intel?
All this is highly suspicious, and leads me to believe Rowling was simply hired to front this project. I would say it is very doubtful she wrote any of it, a better guess being it was written by a committee in Vauxhall, Langley, or elsewhere. In support of that, we find the Harry Potter books selling many of the same points of other Intelligence projects, including the destruction of the family. Harry has no family, being adopted by “muggle” relatives who don't like him and whom he finds both ridiculous and contemptible. He is glad to leave them and go off to a boarding school where he never sees them. So the books are selling an updated version of Plato's The Republic, where children are taken from their parents by the State, divided into classes, and raised to serve the interests of the Elders. Children today are being taught to look upon their own parents as contemptible muggles and upon themselves as a superior class of magicians, who can potentially get whatever they wish with the proper spell. They will be happy to be taken from their witless parents and placed in fortified castles, as long as they are issued fake wands and are presided over by people in black robes. If you think that is a recipe for a healthy society or home life, you need to cut your fluoride dosage.
Harry Potter is often compared to The Lord of the Rings, but the comparison could not be less apt.Potter is actually an inversion of LOTR. In LOTR, the heroes are hobbits—short and unattractive common folk living on the land. They are the muggles of their time and place. But Potter reverses this, making common folk less than useless. Without a few high-born wizards like Harry to fight for them, the muggles would soon be wiped out. But in Potter, it is hard to understand why this wouldn't be good riddance. Tolkien made the hobbits ignorant and provincial, but through the actions and explanations of both Gandalf and Frodo, we understand why they are worth saving from the Dark Lord. In Potter, we have none of that, the muggles as described being completely expendable. This is no accident, since it is exactly how the current Elders see it.
This is also useful in understanding muggles:
"If, by unfortunate means, non-magical people do happen to observe the working of magic, the Ministry of Magic sends Obliviators to cast Memory Charms upon them causing them to forget the event." [From the Wiki page on muggles].
Just substitute “agent” for “Obliviator”, “non-agent” for “non-magical person”, “Intel hoax” for“magical event”, CIA for “Ministry of Magic”, and “propaganda blitz” for Memory Charm.
If, by unfortunate means, non-agents do happen to see through obvious hoaxes, the CIA sends agents to confuse and misdirect them, causing them to forget the event.
As you see, the Harry Potter project is stupidly transparent in a thousand places, and only readers that had been sucking on blue pills their whole lives could fail to see through it.
Once again, we have Intelligence writing about itself, and pretty much telling you what is going on straight to your face, even as they do it to you. They know that, as a muggle, you won't figure out you are being fucked with, even as you are being fucked with, and as they tell you you are being fucked with. The standard muggle response in such a situation is, “What, you mean I am being fucked with? No way, Dude!”
Throughout the entire seven books in the series, “magic” is always just a pointer to Intel. They are the magicians. The agents are wizards in training, and the muggles are civilians. Everything in all the plots has a pretty transparent analogy to something in Intelligence, with Hogwarts being the Intel Academy, and so on.
You will say I could make analogies like that to Intel with any book. OK, so try it with The Lord of the Rings. What is the analogy to Intel there? Where is the academy, who are the agents, where are the competing cadres, etc.? Although Tolkien assured us the book was not an allegory, I agree you can find allegorical elements if you try. But unlike Harry Potter, LOTR is not just a thin palimpsest through which you can see Intel at every point. LOTR is a full-fledged work of fiction, not just an amateurish romanà clef. I am sure if we could pinpoint the office of writing of Potter, we would find the real Weasley, Hermione, Dumbledore, and so on.
Is Rowling tied to, or a front for, Intel?
All this is highly suspicious, and leads me to believe Rowling was simply hired to front this project. I would say it is very doubtful she wrote any of it, a better guess being it was written by a committee in Vauxhall, Langley, or elsewhere. In support of that, we find the Harry Potter books selling many of the same points of other Intelligence projects, including the destruction of the family. Harry has no family, being adopted by “muggle” relatives who don't like him and whom he finds both ridiculous and contemptible. He is glad to leave them and go off to a boarding school where he never sees them. So the books are selling an updated version of Plato's The Republic, where children are taken from their parents by the State, divided into classes, and raised to serve the interests of the Elders. Children today are being taught to look upon their own parents as contemptible muggles and upon themselves as a superior class of magicians, who can potentially get whatever they wish with the proper spell. They will be happy to be taken from their witless parents and placed in fortified castles, as long as they are issued fake wands and are presided over by people in black robes. If you think that is a recipe for a healthy society or home life, you need to cut your fluoride dosage.
Harry Potter is often compared to The Lord of the Rings, but the comparison could not be less apt.Potter is actually an inversion of LOTR. In LOTR, the heroes are hobbits—short and unattractive common folk living on the land. They are the muggles of their time and place. But Potter reverses this, making common folk less than useless. Without a few high-born wizards like Harry to fight for them, the muggles would soon be wiped out. But in Potter, it is hard to understand why this wouldn't be good riddance. Tolkien made the hobbits ignorant and provincial, but through the actions and explanations of both Gandalf and Frodo, we understand why they are worth saving from the Dark Lord. In Potter, we have none of that, the muggles as described being completely expendable. This is no accident, since it is exactly how the current Elders see it.
This is also useful in understanding muggles:
"If, by unfortunate means, non-magical people do happen to observe the working of magic, the Ministry of Magic sends Obliviators to cast Memory Charms upon them causing them to forget the event." [From the Wiki page on muggles].
Just substitute “agent” for “Obliviator”, “non-agent” for “non-magical person”, “Intel hoax” for“magical event”, CIA for “Ministry of Magic”, and “propaganda blitz” for Memory Charm.
If, by unfortunate means, non-agents do happen to see through obvious hoaxes, the CIA sends agents to confuse and misdirect them, causing them to forget the event.
As you see, the Harry Potter project is stupidly transparent in a thousand places, and only readers that had been sucking on blue pills their whole lives could fail to see through it.
Once again, we have Intelligence writing about itself, and pretty much telling you what is going on straight to your face, even as they do it to you. They know that, as a muggle, you won't figure out you are being fucked with, even as you are being fucked with, and as they tell you you are being fucked with. The standard muggle response in such a situation is, “What, you mean I am being fucked with? No way, Dude!”
Throughout the entire seven books in the series, “magic” is always just a pointer to Intel. They are the magicians. The agents are wizards in training, and the muggles are civilians. Everything in all the plots has a pretty transparent analogy to something in Intelligence, with Hogwarts being the Intel Academy, and so on.
You will say I could make analogies like that to Intel with any book. OK, so try it with The Lord of the Rings. What is the analogy to Intel there? Where is the academy, who are the agents, where are the competing cadres, etc.? Although Tolkien assured us the book was not an allegory, I agree you can find allegorical elements if you try. But unlike Harry Potter, LOTR is not just a thin palimpsest through which you can see Intel at every point. LOTR is a full-fledged work of fiction, not just an amateurish romanà clef. I am sure if we could pinpoint the office of writing of Potter, we would find the real Weasley, Hermione, Dumbledore, and so on.
Is Rowling tied to Intel?
All this is highly suspicious, and leads me to believe Rowling was simply hired to front this project. I would say it is very doubtful she wrote any of it, a better guess being it was written by a committee in Vauxhall, Langley, or elsewhere. In support of that, we find the Harry Potter books selling many of the same points of other Intelligence projects, including the destruction of the family. Harry has no family, being adopted by “muggle” relatives who don't like him and whom he finds both ridiculous and contemptible. He is glad to leave them and go off to a boarding school where he never sees them. So the books are selling an updated version of Plato's The Republic, where children are taken from their parents by the State, divided into classes, and raised to serve the interests of the Elders. Children today are being taught to look upon their own parents as contemptible muggles and upon themselves as a superior class of magicians, who can potentially get whatever they wish with the proper spell. They will be happy to be taken from their witless parents and placed in fortified castles, as long as they are issued fake wands and are presided over by people in black robes. If you think that is a recipe for a healthy society or home life, you need to cut your fluoride dosage.
Harry Potter is often compared to The Lord of the Rings, but the comparison could not be less apt.Potter is actually an inversion of LOTR. In LOTR, the heroes are hobbits—short and unattractive common folk living on the land. They are the muggles of their time and place. But Potter reverses this, making common folk less than useless. Without a few high-born wizards like Harry to fight for them, the muggles would soon be wiped out. But in Potter, it is hard to understand why this wouldn't be good riddance. Tolkien made the hobbits ignorant and provincial, but through the actions and explanations of both Gandalf and Frodo, we understand why they are worth saving from the Dark Lord. In Potter, we have none of that, the muggles as described being completely expendable. This is no accident, since it is exactly how the current Elders see it.
This is also useful in understanding muggles:
"If, by unfortunate means, non-magical people do happen to observe the working of magic, the Ministry of Magic sends Obliviators to cast Memory Charms upon them causing them to forget the event." [From the Wiki page on muggles].
Just substitute “agent” for “Obliviator”, “non-agent” for “non-magical person”, “Intel hoax” for“magical event”, CIA for “Ministry of Magic”, and “propaganda blitz” for Memory Charm.
If, by unfortunate means, non-agents do happen to see through obvious hoaxes, the CIA sends agents to confuse and misdirect them, causing them to forget the event.
As you see, the Harry Potter project is stupidly transparent in a thousand places, and only readers that had been sucking on blue pills their whole lives could fail to see through it.
Once again, we have Intelligence writing about itself, and pretty much telling you what is going on straight to your face, even as they do it to you. They know that, as a muggle, you won't figure out you are being fucked with, even as you are being fucked with, andas they tell you you are being fucked with. The standard muggle response in such a situation is, “What, you mean I am being fucked with? No way, Dude!”
Throughout the entire seven books in the series, “magic” is always just a pointer to Intel. They are the magicians. The agents are wizards in training, and the muggles are civilians. Everything in all the plots has a pretty transparent analogy to something in Intelligence, with Hogwarts being the Intel Academy, and so on.
You will say I could make analogies like that to Intel with any book. OK, so try it with The Lord of the Rings. What is the analogy to Intel there? Where is the academy, who are the agents, where are the competing cadres, etc.? Although Tolkien assured us the book was not an allegory, I agree you can find allegorical elements if you try. But unlike Harry Potter, LOTR is not just a thin palimpsest through which you can see Intel at every point. LOTR is a full-fledged work of fiction, not just an amateurish romanà clef. I am sure if we could pinpoint the office of writing of Potter, we would find the real Weasley, Hermione, Dumbledore, and so on.