Tag Archives: satanic

Musk rips ‘Satanic’ ESG as World Economic Forum meets and discusses controversial investment regime

Elon Musk weighed in with his thoughts on the World Economic Forum’s plans to incorporate “environmental, social and governance,” or ESG, criteria into its investment strategy on Sunday, saying the “S” should stand for something else.

“The S in ESG stands for Satanic,” the Twitter CEO tweeted.

The tweet was in response to author and former California gubernatorial candidate Michael Schellenberger, who posted a series of tweets about the WEF’s Davos summit launch and rumors that the group is seeking global domination.

TESLA OWNERS FEEL ‘DUPED’ AFTER COMPANY SLASHES PRICES

Schellenberger tweeted that the WEF and its founder, Klaus Schwab, are fighting back against those who say they are seeking global domination through a “great reset” that could strip the masses of private property, de-industrialize the economy and make everyone eat bugs.

He highlighted a statement from a WEF spokesperson in August, who said, “‘Own nothing, be happy’ – you might have heard the phrase…It started as a screenshot, culled from the Internet by an anonymous anti-Semitic account on the image board 4chan. ‘Own nothing, be happy – The Jew World Order 2030’…”

NEW YORK, NEW YORK – MAY 02: Elon Musk attends The 2022 Met Gala Celebrating “In America: An Anthology of Fashion” at The Metropolitan Museum of Art on May 02, 2022, in New York City.  ((Photo by Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images for The Met Museum/Vogue) / Getty Images)

Schellenberger said the spokesperson’s statement was not accurate, though, and that the phrase “Own nothing, be happy,” originated from the WEF’s website, not 4chan.

TESLA APPLIES FOR $776M EXPANSION OF TEXAS GIGAFACTORY

He also explained in the tweets WEF can hardly be considered a conspiracy, crediting Davos as “one of the most heavily publicized events in the world,” and it attracts celebrities, world leaders and billionaires.

Schellenberger said WEF has proven to be highly secretive, and when the public asked WEF how Klaus Schwab Foundation invests its assets, a spokesperson said, “Swiss law does not require financial reporting for foundations.”

“WEF says its wealth is managed by an internal Investment Committee that seeks to incorporate ‘environmental, social and governance (ESG) criteria in its investment strategy to manage the foundation’s long-term strategic reserves,’” Schellenberger tweeted.

Which is when Musk tweeted the “‘S’ in ESG stands for Satanic.”

CLICK HERE TO READ MORE ON FOX BUSINESS

Musk later said, “There should be a game show: ‘4Chan or Davos, who said it?’”

Read original article here

Satanic Temple asks Boston to fly flag after court ruling

BOSTON (AP) — The Satanic Temple is requesting to fly a flag over Boston City Hall after the U.S. Supreme Court ruled this week that the city violated the free speech rights of a conservative activist seeking to fly a Christian flag outside the downtown building.

The Salem-based group tweeted a request filed Tuesday with the city property management department to raise a flag marking “Satanic Appreciation Week” from July 23-29.

Mayor Michelle Wu’s office declined to comment on the group’s request other than to say it’s reviewing the high court’s decision while also evaluating its flag-raising program.

Lucien Greaves, the organization’s co-founder, said in an email Wednesday that the group wants to show that religious liberty must mean respect for “all forms” of religious practice and religious opinion.

“When government officials are able to impose arbitrary restrictions on claims of conscience, or to abridge the civic capacities of some based on their religious identity, we fail to be a free, democratic republic,” he wrote in part.

The organization hasn’t decided which of its official flags it will ask the city to fly, Greaves said, but one likely option echoes the American flag, only with black and white stripes and an emblem of a pentagram and goat skull where the 50 stars would be.

The Satanic Temple is separate from the Church of Satan, which was founded in the 1960s. Founded in 2013, the Satanic Temple doesn’t believe in Satan and describes itself as a “non-theistic religious organization” that advocates for secularism.

It has lodged freedom of religion challenges nationwide, including a federal lawsuit arguing the Boston City Council’s traditional opening prayer at its public meetings is discriminatory and unconstitutional.

The Supreme Court ruled unanimously Monday that Boston discriminated against activist Harold Shurtleff because of his “religious viewpoint,” even though it had routinely approved other flag raising requests.

In 2017, Shurtleff and his Camp Constitution wanted to fly a white banner with a red cross on a blue background called the Christian flag to mark Constitution Day on Sept. 17.



Read original article here

Spanish bishop who married author of satanic erotica is stripped of powers | Spain

Spain’s youngest bishop has been stripped of his church powers, the country’s episcopal conference said on Saturday, after he married a psychologist-turned-author of satanic erotica.

“As is publicly known, Bishop Xavier Novell Goma, bishop emeritus of Solsona, has contracted a civil marriage with Ms Silvia Caballol, on 22 November, 2021 in the town of Suria, in the province of Barcelona,” the conference wrote in the statement.

Any cleric attempting to get married, even if only civilly, is subject to suspension, the statement added.

The churchman will retain his title as a bishop but will not be permitted to carry out any of the roles associated with the post, including the administration of the sacraments. “Any teaching activity, both in public and private, is prohibited,” it said.

Novell became Spain’s youngest bishop when he was appointed to Solsona in 2010 aged 41, and was a highly regarded conservative who reportedly endorsed gay conversion therapy and practised exorcisms. He also attracted controversy with his support of Catalan independence.

Novell stepped down in August this year citing personal reasons, and the scandal broke weeks later, when the 52-year-old bishop’s relationship with Caballol, the author of works including The Hell of Gabriel’s Lust, became known publicly.

At the time, Novell was quoted by website Religión Digital as saying “I have fallen in love and want to do things properly.”

On the site of Caballol’s publisher Lacre, the 38-year-old writer and qualified clinical psychologist is described as “a dynamic and transgressive author who made her mark in the challenging world of literature upsetting our moral and ethical mores”.

Novell is now prohibited “from exercising all the rights and responsibilities inherent in the episcopal function”, said the conference, which did not rule out “other possible consequences”.

Novell has reportedly been seeking work as an agronomist in the Barcelona region.

Read original article here

Astroworld disaster fuels wave of satanic conspiracy theories on TikTok | Houston

Videos of the Astroworld crowd crush that killed eight people flooded TikTok over the weekend. But conspiracy theories have also flourished alongside the graphic footage, accusing the rapper Travis Scott, who founded and performed at the festival, of orchestrating a massive satanic ritual.

“This ain’t a festival, it’s a sacrifice,” reads one typical comment. “The music industry is demonic and collects souls,” reads another comment with 34,000 likes.

Despite its absurdity, the theory has steadily gained traction – with phrases such as “astroworld demonic”, “astroworld illuminati” and “astroworld upside down cross” trending among other AstroWorld content on the platform.

Experts say the viral misinformation illustrates how young social media users are increasingly susceptible to fringe conspiracy theories, despite their reputation as savvy “digital natives”.

How the Travis Scott Astroworld festival tragedy unfolded – video report

“We have this stereotype of conspiracy theorists being older people on social media, but young people can in some ways be more susceptible,” said Jennifer Stromer-Galley, a professor studying social media platforms at Syracuse University.

“We know that human brains really like sensational content, and teenage brains even more so because they are still developing,” she added.

Internet users have seized on several far-fetched “symbols” present at the concert, including imagery of flames and burning doves. Some TikTok users described the stage as “an inverted cross leading to hell”.

Others cited numerology, falsely claiming that Travis Scott and his fellow performer Drake “were born 66 months 6 days apart”.

Joseph Russo, who teaches a class on the anthropology of conspiracy theories at Wesleyan University, said such wild claims bore links to QAnon, a conspiracy theory that claims a secret cabal of pedophiles controls the government and is trafficking children.

“It is mutating and taking different forms, but it goes back to the idea there is a shadowy group of people in control behind it all,” Russo said. “It is super seductive, and always comes back – but it is surprising young people are following this script more and more.”

Gen Z – the name for the generation born after 1996 – faces a number of risk factors for misinformation. It has far higher rates of mistrust in traditional institutions such as the news media and the government compared with past generations and uses social media to get its news coverage at much higher rates than its counterparts.

The Astroworld main stage where Travis Scott was performing on Friday evening when a surging crowd killed eight people. Photograph: Mark Mulligan/AP

The algorithms used to increase user engagement on these platforms presents an additional risk, according to Ioana Literat, an associate professor of communication studying social media at Teachers College, Columbia University.

“This is an indication of just how fertile of a ground TikTok is for creating and sharing misinformation and conspiracy theories,” she said, adding that while conspiracy theories were common after tragic events, it was now easier to share them.

“With the reign of social media platforms like TikTok, there’s the potential for greater and further spread, and a certain rise in sophistication in terms of the deployment of media resources to craft these arguments,” she said.

It’s not the first time that TikTok has enabled the spread of misinformation among young users. In 2020, a debunked theory that the online furniture outlet Wayfair was involved in a child sex trafficking ring was shared hundreds of thousands of times.

A spokesman for TikTok said the conspiracy theory content violated its community guidelines and it was taking action against the material.

While many of the theories might seem harmless, they could still present problems offline, said Abbie Richards, a TikTok disinformation researcher.

“We’ve seen that time and time again this can absolutely translate to real-world harm,” she said.

In 2016, a man radicalized by online conspiracy theories related to QAnon stormed a restaurant in Washington DC with a weapon. The 2021 insurrection at the US Capitol was largely fueled by online conspiracy theories and resulted in five deaths.

The rise of conspiracy theories, among Gen Z and its elders, appears only to be worsening in the wake of tragedies like the concert in Houston, said Russo.

“In a moment in which young people feel they’re living in a really chaotic world where not much makes sense, certain conspiracy theories can feel like a security blanket, because they tell us there is actually an order underneath it all,” he said.

Read original article here

Bishop quits church after love with satanic erotica writer

This church official has chosen corsets over crucibles.

A Spanish bishop, known for supporting gay conversion therapy and performing exorcisms, has left the Roman Catholic Church after becoming smitten with a writer of Satanic erotic fiction, Silvia Caballol.

“I have fallen in love and want to do things properly,” said the now-ex-bishop, Xavier Novell, according to a report by BBC, which picked up the story from Spanish media outlets after the news of why Novell quit broke last month.

In addition to widespread media attention, the 52-year-old’s decision has also led to much internal criticism within the church. Some of his former colleagues told the Spanish media that they believed Novell to be possessed by demons. The situation is “not a problem of celibacy but rather of infestation,” one said, as reported by the National Post.

Before his scandalous resignation from the church, Novell was considered one of its rising stars, having become Spain’s youngest bishop in 2010 at the age of 41. His August departure reportedly shocked the religious community, although BBC reported that he had met multiple times with Vatican officials — even the Pope himself — ahead of his resignation.

Now in love but out of work, Novell is now looking for employment as a crop expert or agronomist in the Barcelona area, Religión Digital reported.

The woman he broke his vow of celibacy and commitment to Christ to be with, Silvia Caballol, is a divorced psychologist and erotic novelist whose titles include “The Hell of Gabriel’s Lust” and a trilogy called “Amnesia.” Caballol’s work has explored themes of madness, lust, sadism, God and Satan. Her publisher describes her as a “dynamic and transgressive author [who] turns upside down our ideas of morality and ethics,” according to the National Post. 

Novell has admitted in previous interviews that his infatuation with Caballol is not his first: Before becoming a man of God, he fell in love with and for a time wanted to marry and have children with an 18-year-old girl.

Read original article here