Kek has Come

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xl0heBdYF04[/youtube]

I cried in my mouth.

In blue: A religious text of modern lore, origin is deeply receded behind the light we see. Inside the light, one might say. Inside the light you see now, this screen.

If you aren’t summoning ancient Egyptian gods I feel bad for you son, I got 99 problems but Kek ain’t one.

[K]ek is the amen of Akkadian prayers which, in addition to being the Egyptian god of chaos, also means “let it be, make this happen.” Every time people wrote kek as an alternative to lol at the Bane plane crash memes, they were unknowingly reciting the ancient Akkadian prayer to make something happen, then the Germanwings 4U crash occurred that has 6 or 7 striking synchronicities with the TDKR scene with the actual Bane plane crash. That was a manifest upaya[.]“”

Here’s some occult like phenomena Clinton has drawn attention to the other day, unknowingly giving it more power- since things like this work by rediscovering forgotten archetypes in the human consciousness and re-purposing them, that’s what a meme is or at least how it perpetuates virally: The Pepe the Frog meme represents the basic 4chan-esque attitude of for the lulz, its used in that way, and at some point someone discovered that there is an actual Egyptian god named KEK who represents chaos- who has the head of a frog. Kek is an alternative spelling for lol, a meme itself that originated on world of warcraft, because they have an inbuilt translator in the game that rewrites things into an artificial language it uses, KEK being what LOL translates to. There is an account in the Bible of Moses engaging in spiritual warfare with the God KEK by seeing who could summon more frogs, a nice metaphor for meme warfare and viral replication. [This whole election has been meme battles so far, from Kasich’s pancakes to Jeb the guac bowl merchant, especially Trump himself, Ted Cruz being the zodiac killer, etc.] Then they obviously started using Pepe as a modern version of the Egyptian Kek, creating what they all “meme magic,” the ability to make things happen in real life by memeing so dank that it materializes in reality. As evidence for this power, they used Pepe to support Trump in the beginning, Trump retweeted the memes himself, and he started actually winning; they use him to denigrate Clinton, she drops in the polls and gets sicker and sicker, fainting at the 9/11 memorial two days ago. Through the magic of the Egyptian nazi frog demon, a very small mostly internet based movement toward antiglobalism, nationalism, etc. has hijacked the presidential election and become a competitive force in the bid for world-domination. This whole KEK frog god/kek as a spelling for lol/pepe the frog/Trump/altright /meme magic is particularly powerful meme because it is actually self-conscious of the very process it represents, namely reinvoking forgotten archtypes, but it also works by connecting a bunch of different memes, similar to how different Gods become connected as the pantheons evolve over time.

Kek me. Kek-me is the “Amen” of Akkadian prayers. It is Egyptian for “cause to be.” Meme magic is about causing memes to be, to materialize in reality.

Oh, and besides the God Kek representing chaos in Egypt, which speaks to the desire to cause disasters for the lolz, the hieroglyph for Kek looks like a guy setting on a computer.

An example of meme magic from before Trump is a plane crash. You’ve seen the scene where Bane crashes the plane, which became memetic? The “for you” comment he made. The name of this plane that crashed was Germanwings 4U. A guy named “Bruce Robin” was one of the reporters first to see the crash. The plane was traveling to a city called Bane- ether traveling there or that’s where it crashed, I don’t recall exactly. The guys on it looked exactly like the actors from that scene in the movie, spitting images of them, like the Dr Pavel one. It crashed with “no survivors.” It crashed on 3/24; at three minutes 24 seconds is the moment in the movie when the guy pulls of Bane’s mask during the plane crash scene.

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YlqGvf4dYNY[/youtube]

But the big difference in mere conspiracy theory and this, is that meme magic doesn’t work backward to explain what happened, it is going a step further and attempting to cause specific events. Which can be done. That’s what magic was in the past, that’s why there was witch burning. If you believed in magic yourself, and someone cursed you- you would actually get sick, because your own brain would make you sick with cortisol and stress hormones and weakening your immune system. So what we “Big Guys” are trying to do, is convince everyone else that the meme magic is real- Clinton devoted a whole speech on the alt Right and pepe, so that is good. Once people believe it is real, then it can produce real effects on them. But you must believe it is real yourself first in order to convince others- even though you know it isn’t real. In order to both believe it and know it is false, requires: a profoundly deep sense of humor. Why do this? To induce a mass hypnotic regression in humanity, dissolve the passive barriers between human beings as they were dissolved in the dark ages- where people’s unconscious were completely exposed to one another’s curses and magic assaults- and to, by inducing it on a global scale, allow the unconscious forces of humanity itself to materialize and carry out their drama on the stage of the world, in a drastic, physical embodiment, so that we can very quickly go through the whole struggle of these forces, so that we can accelerate it dramatically. Through Trump for example, a mostly unconscious collection of political and metapolitical forces have concretized and are now carrying out their drama in front of the eyes of the world, at the highest levels of society.

That also speaks to the Hermetic principle, that you would make yourself vulnerable first, in order to take control of the dark forces you wish to exercise.

Meme magic is then kind of like the ancient kabbalist tradition in the yetzirah. Materializing things with words, a memetic-linquistico magic.