by William F. Jasper
From Marx and Bakunin to Saul Alinsky and Antifa, the radical Left has always had a fixation with Lucifer. “This is basically Antifa witches,” Dakota Bracciale said in an interview with Newsweek. “We’re coming for these people’s throats, and we will never stop, we will never be silenced…. There are a lot of angry people who are righteously filled with rage that are going to take back our country.”
Dakota Bracciale, who identifies herself as a witch, was talking to Newsweek about the highly publicized October 20 event she was organizing, in which a coven of Brooklyn witches would cast a hex “to make Kavanaugh suffer.” She was referring, of course, to the newly confirmed U.S. Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh.
The public cursing of Justice Kavanaugh by the “Antifa witches” captured a few headlines during a couple of news cycles, but it was largely passed off by the “mainstream” media either as merely an oddity, or, in some instances, as a straight, newsworthy event that often was covered somewhat sympathetically.
However, the spell-casting session, which took place at Catland Books, an occult bookstore in Brooklyn, offers an opportunity for insight into the psychological and spiritual roots of the violent rage that so typifies Antifa, the Women’s March, the anti-Trump “Resistance,” “Indivisible,” and the other foaming-at the-mouth Democrats, commentators, and demonstrators that are brimming with uncontrolled wrath and hatred these days — even while they mindlessly chant “Stop the Hate”! Confronted by the total irrationality of these people and the fe-rocity of their rage, most normal people are left scratching their heads, wondering what could possibly have inspired such “craziness.”
Here’s a clue: Much of the political rage that passes for “craziness” today is not merely the result of psychological disorder, but also of spiritual disorder. Most communists, Marxists, Maoists, Stalinists, Leninists, etc., publicly claim to be atheist materialists. They insist that God doesn’t exist, that the idea of “God” is a rancid myth, and religion is the “opi-ate of the people.” However, throughout the history of revolutionary communism, we see over and over again words and behavior from leading theorists and prac-titioners of the revolutionary cause that belie this disbelief. In fact, many of these professional atheists do believe in God; they just choose to oppose, defy, and hate Him. And they hate not only God and those who believe in Him, but also the moral, social, and political order they as-sociate with God. Like Lucifer, they wish to be gods and to refashion the world ac-cording to their own utopian whims and desires.
From Marx and Bakunin to Saul Alin-sky and Antifa, we see many examples of leaders of the radical Left expressing a dis-turbing fixation with Lucifer, along with their nihilistic rage for destruction. If this is news to you, it most likely is as well to many leftist “scholars,” since it is a side of the revolution that is largely hidden in plain sight. We will get into specifics on this momentarily, but first, back to Cat-land’s “Antifa witches.”
Witch Bracciale assures us she is a “spiritual” person. “The reality is, if you are a spiritual person, if you believe in religion or spirituality, that’s another dimension to your existence,” she explained. “If you’re going through hardship, you want to make sure you’re being taken care of physically, mentally and emotionally, as well as, spiritually.”