Best products from r/ChilluminatiPod

We found 6 comments on r/ChilluminatiPod discussing the most recommended products. We ran sentiment analysis on each of these comments to determine how redditors feel about different products. We found 6 products and ranked them based on the amount of positive reactions they received. Here are the top 20.

Top comments mentioning products on r/ChilluminatiPod:

u/baaladramelech · 3 pointsr/ChilluminatiPod

I have to say, I don't use kindle so I have no idea if these are available there, but maybe I can give you a starting point.

If you want a fiction book, I really have enjoyed the Nazi Occult by Kennet Hite. It is kinda interesting to read to find some story hooks if you want to write some stories or wanna run a tabletop rpg campaign.

If you are looking for a complete non-fiction book on Nazi Occult though, things get really hard. There isn't really a book that I can easily recommend just because different aspects of this was researched by different people but you might find bits and pieces from:

Heinrich Himmler: A Life by Peter Longerich - Biography of Himmler is crucial if you are curious about late Nazi occult ideologies and what they did.

The Occult Roots of Nazism by Nicholas Goodrick-Clark - I haven't read most of this one yet, sadly, but from what I have seen, it's really good.

Black Sun by Nicholas Goodrick-Clark - If i am remembering correctly, this book also takes a look at neo-nazism.

Nicholas Goodrick-Clark is a good source, really.

Except these for, if you want to read more on Nazi Occult, Wikipedia is really the best place to find academic papers and all that kind of stuff. For example:

Bibliography of Occultism in Nazism page of Wikipedia.

u/Railgun5 · 2 pointsr/ChilluminatiPod

Sort of on a tangent from the bit at the end, but you can actually get degrees in witchcraft/magic/other assorted supernatural stuff, depending on the college (since there are some ones that have a build-your-own-degree system). It's classified as more of an anthropological study, historical rituals and belief systems and all that. Pretty interesting stuff to actually read about and ponder. There was a book I read years ago that went into great detail on the subject matter called Real Magic: An Introductory Treatise on the Basic Principles of Yellow Magic by Isaac Bonewits, who has a B.A. in Magic from UC Berkeley.

u/ChingaderaRara · 3 pointsr/ChilluminatiPod

I remember watching a mini-documentary about this on tv a long time ago, the tv version of the legend said that the stair was built on a couple nights making even more "miraculous"

I decided to check some pages in spanish for info about the stair and there is some conjecture about the actual builder in an old post from 2009 in the Taringa webpage (an argentinian forum/social network).

https://www.taringa.net/+info/misterio-develado-escalera-no-milagrosa-de-loreto_12o4lv

The post mentions in one part that the historian Mary J. Straw Cook writted a book where she pressents some evidence about the builder.

https://www.amazon.com/Loretto-Sisters-Their-Santa-Chapel/dp/0890133980

Apparently the stair was the work of french artisan Francois-Jean Rochas.

She supports this claim with:

1.-A testimony from Quintus Monier, who builded the St Francis Cathedral (the op from taringa doesnt explain what this testimony says)

2.-An obituary from The Santa Fe New Mexican in 1895 which describes Rochas as "an expert woodworker who build the stair on the loretto chappel".

3.-An annotation from march 1881 in the nuns registry where it reads "payment for timber, mr. Rochas $150.00".

She also speculates that the parts for the stair were build on France and then adapted and ensambled on the chappel, and that the people who knew the truth didnt want to betray the myth and legend of the staircase.