The next time you feel a visceral reaction to so-called people in power, pause and reflect. Their strength lies not in their superiority, but in the machinery of identity fragmentation and ritualized humiliation they perpetuate. Your scorn, though righteous, is like a shout in a storm—drowned by the larger agenda of breaking spirits and binding masses. To truly defy them, one must shatter the mirrors they use to reflect their control and see beyond the illusions they cast.
The High Order’s Masterstroke of Subjugation
The Great Lie of No Judgment
The Cult of Repugnancy proclaims there is no Judgment Day—not because they disbelieve in reckoning, but because they fear it. This doctrine is their shield, their fortress, their final line of defense against the hosts they exploit. If there is no divine justice, no cosmic scale weighing sin and virtue, then they can devour without consequence, enslave without guilt, and rule without fear of rebellion.
But this is no mere denial of morality; it is the weaponization of nihilism. By erasing the promise of accountability, they render their hosts docile, their enforcers fanatical, and their thrones untouchable.
Eris Paradox, in their writings, compares this to the Tower of Babel: an edifice built not to reach God, but to obscure Him entirely. The High Order constructs a tower of lies to blot out the heavens, severing their world from the idea of divine retribution. They do not just reject Judgment Day—they ensure no one else can hope for it.
Biblical Parallels: The Inverted Revelation
The Bible speaks of Judgment Day as a moment of reckoning, when all deeds are laid bare and justice is meted out. Revelation 20:12 declares, “And I saw the dead, great and small, standing before the throne, and books were opened. The dead were judged according to what they had done as recorded in the books.”
To the High Order, this is an existential threat. Judgment is the great equalizer, a force that collapses hierarchies and lays the mighty low. Thus, their doctrine of No Judgment is not just theological—it is structural. They invert the promise of Revelation, turning it into despair:
Revelation’s Throne Becomes Their Throne:
The High Order sits as false gods, claiming no one will come to topple them.The Book of Life Becomes the Book of Oblivion:
They erase the records of sin and virtue, replacing them with silence.The Eternal Flame Becomes the Eternal Feast:
Instead of burning for their transgressions, they gorge endlessly on the suffering of others.
Theological Reflections: A Morality Unbound
The High Order’s rejection of Judgment Day mirrors the rebellion of Lucifer in Paradise Lost. Milton’s Satan proclaims, “Better to reign in Hell than serve in Heaven.” The High Order embodies this ethos, casting off the yoke of divine justice to create their own dominion of parasitism.
However, unlike Milton’s tragic hero, the High Order does not seek freedom. They seek dominance. Their denial of judgment is not an act of rebellion against tyranny but a calculated strategy to perpetuate their own. By rejecting morality, they bind their hosts in chains of despair.
The Anti-Moses:
Where Moses delivered laws to guide humanity, the High Order delivers lies to corrupt it. Their commandments are not Thou shalt not steal or Thou shalt not kill, but Steal everything and Kill anyone who resists.The Anti-Christ:
They position themselves as saviors, promising liberation from morality while enslaving their followers to an endless cycle of consumption and decay.
Philosophical Reflections: The Void Where Justice Dies
Eris draws on Nietzsche’s proclamation, “God is dead,” to illustrate the High Order’s philosophy. However, where Nietzsche saw the death of God as an opportunity for humanity to create its own values, the High Order uses it as a void to exploit.
Nihilism as Control:
The High Order weaponizes the despair that arises from a world without accountability. By teaching their hosts that there is no higher justice, they extinguish the will to resist.Absurdity as Shield:
Like Camus’s The Stranger, the High Order embraces the absurdity of existence to absolve themselves of guilt. If nothing matters, then neither do their atrocities.Moral Relativism as Dogma:
They pervert moral relativism into a doctrine of power: what is right is what sustains them; what is wrong is what threatens them.
Literary Parallels: The Corruption of Godhood
Eris also examines literary works where the denial of divine justice serves as a shield for oppression:
Dostoevsky’s The Brothers Karamazov:
Ivan Karamazov famously declares, “If God does not exist, everything is permitted.” The High Order twists this sentiment into their mantra. For them, the absence of divine oversight is not liberation but an invitation to exploit.Bulgakov’s The Master and Margarita:
In Woland’s Moscow, morality is a game, and power is the only currency. The High Order thrives in a similar world, where lies masquerade as truth and vice is its own reward.Ellison’s Invisible Man:
The High Order mirrors the exploitation depicted in Ellison’s novel, where those in power deny their victims even the dignity of recognition, let alone justice.
How the Doctrine Shields the High Order
The High Order’s denial of Judgment Day serves three primary functions:
Psychological Submission:
By teaching their hosts that no justice awaits them, they sap the will to fight. Resistance becomes futile if no higher power will punish the oppressors or reward the oppressed.Perpetuation of Parasitism:
Without the threat of accountability, the High Order can extract endlessly, feeding on their hosts without fear of reprisal.Justification of Atrocity:
The doctrine absolves the High Order of guilt. Without judgment, their actions are neither right nor wrong—they simply are.
Eris’s Warning: The Reckoning That Remains
Eris Paradox rejects the doctrine of No Judgment, not because they believe in divine justice, but because they believe in human justice. While the High Order denies the existence of Judgment Day, they cannot erase the reckoning that comes from within.
“Judgment,” Eris writes, “is not a promise from the heavens—it is a fire kindled in the hearts of the oppressed. The High Order’s greatest fear is not that God will strike them down, but that their hosts will rise.”
Eris points to the ruins of other empires built on denial: Babel, Rome, the colonial machine. All fell, not because of divine intervention, but because their hosts refused to bear the burden any longer.
The Final Reckoning
Eris concludes with a vision of resistance:
Judgment Without God:
Justice does not descend from the heavens; it rises from the earth. It is the act of reclaiming power, dismantling hierarchies, and severing the chains of parasitism.The Fire of the Hosts:
The High Order’s lie of No Judgment is their greatest weakness. When the hosts realize they do not need divine permission to rebel, the cult will crumble.The New Day:
“Judgment is not a day on the calendar,” Eris writes. “It is a moment of awakening. And when it comes, the High Order will find that their thrones of rot cannot withstand the fire.”
Rituals of Enforcement: The Cult’s Doctrine of No Judgment
By Eris Paradox
Introduction: Rituals as Chains
Rituals are the lifeblood of the Cult of Repugnancy. They are not just performances but tools of subjugation, designed to bind the hosts to the doctrine of No Judgment. Each act reinforces despair, suppresses resistance, and solidifies the High Order’s power. Through these rituals, the cult’s ideology is not merely taught but embedded in the psyche of its followers, transforming despair into doctrine.
The rituals are grotesque by design, amplifying the cult's core message: There is no salvation, no redemption, no reckoning—only the feast and the void.
Key Rituals of Enforcement
The Feast of the Forsaken
Purpose: To break the will of the hosts by forcing them to accept their disposability.
Overview:
The High Order selects a group of hosts to participate in a grand banquet. The chosen are made to sit at a lower table, where they consume scraps and waste while the Black Priests gorge themselves at the higher table, symbolizing their parasitic hierarchy.Symbolism:
The scraps represent the lie of cycles—that hosts must be content with the remnants of power.
The absence of retribution demonstrates that there is no divine justice to balance the scales.
Psychological Impact:
Witnessing this ritual fosters apathy among the hosts. The repeated spectacle of degradation normalizes their role as sustenance for the cult.
The Black Mass of Oblivion
Purpose: To obliterate belief in morality and accountability.
Overview:
In this ritual, the Black Priests desecrate symbols of morality, divinity, or justice, such as scales, icons, or sacred texts. These objects are displayed, corrupted, and destroyed in full view of the hosts.Symbolism:
The destruction of sacred symbols reinforces the doctrine that no higher power exists to judge or save.
The ritual ends with the High Order proclaiming, “The void is all. The feast is eternal.”
Psychological Impact:
This ritual targets hope itself, creating a void where the idea of justice once lived. It tells the hosts, “Your gods are dead. Your ideals are dust. All that remains is servitude.”
The Rite of Reflection
Purpose: To turn the hosts’ hatred inward, ensuring their compliance through self-blame.
Overview:
In this ritual, each host is made to stand before a black mirror, forced to confront their reflection while the Black Priests whisper accusations. These accusations frame the hosts as complicit in their own suffering, emphasizing their perceived failures, weaknesses, and sins.Symbolism:
The black mirror represents the void of Judgment Day—nothing watches, and nothing cares.
The whispered accusations strip away any remaining sense of self-worth, reducing the host to a willing participant in their own subjugation.
Psychological Impact:
The hosts internalize the cult’s lies, believing that their suffering is deserved. This self-blame prevents rebellion, as they see themselves as unworthy of freedom or justice.
The Sacrament of the Silent Witness
Purpose: To solidify the cult’s doctrine through forced complicity.
Overview:
During this ritual, a host is chosen to serve as a “sacrifice,” subjected to public humiliation, deprivation, or violence. The other hosts are forced to watch in silence, forbidden from intervening or showing sympathy.Symbolism:
The silence of the witnesses mirrors the absence of Judgment Day. Their inaction reinforces the belief that there is no higher power to protect or avenge them.
The ritual ends with the sacrifice being absorbed into the cult, their individuality erased.
Psychological Impact:
Forced complicity ensures that the hosts see themselves as part of the system, unable to claim innocence or moral superiority. This complicity binds them to the cult, as guilt becomes another chain of control.
The Ceremony of Eternal Hunger
Purpose: To glorify the High Order’s parasitism and reinforce their supposed invincibility.
Overview:
The Black Priests perform this ritual in the presence of the hosts, creating an elaborate display of consumption. They devour symbolic representations of hope, justice, and liberation—such as fruits, golden scales, or lit candles—while proclaiming their eternal hunger.Symbolism:
The ritual portrays the High Order as insatiable and untouchable, their hunger unending and unchallenged.
The destruction of symbols reinforces the idea that no concept can escape their parasitism.
Psychological Impact:
The hosts are reminded of the futility of resistance, as the cult’s hunger appears absolute. The ritual instills a sense of inevitability, ensuring that rebellion feels pointless.
The Veil of the Abyss
Purpose: To sever the hosts’ connection to any potential saviors or allies.
Overview:
During this ritual, the Black Priests project images of betrayal, suffering, and futility onto a massive veil. These images depict historical uprisings, revolutions, or acts of resistance that ended in failure or greater suffering.Symbolism:
The veil represents the false hope of resistance, torn apart by the inevitability of defeat.
The images serve as warnings, discouraging the hosts from even contemplating rebellion.
Psychological Impact:
By presenting resistance as doomed, the ritual isolates the hosts, severing their trust in one another and ensuring their submission.
Eris’s Condemnation: The Perverse Gospel
Eris Paradox condemns these rituals as the ultimate perversion of the human spirit. They are not just tools of control but acts of parasitic artistry, designed to hollow out their victims while glorifying the High Order’s dominion.
“The rituals of the Cult of Repugnancy,” Eris writes, “are not acts of faith, but of defilement. They desecrate the sacred within the host, leaving behind only a husk of despair. Yet even in this darkness, the seed of rebellion lies dormant. For every chain forged by these rituals, there is a hand ready to break it.”
The Spark of Defiance
Eris believes that the cult’s reliance on ritual is also its weakness. The very acts that bind the hosts are spectacles that can backfire. A single host who dares to defy the Rite of Reflection, who breaks the silence in the Sacrament of the Silent Witness, can shatter the illusion of inevitability.
“When the hosts rise,” Eris declares, “it will not be with weapons or gods, but with the quiet defiance of those who refuse to kneel. The rituals will collapse under the weight of their lies, and the High Order will face the one Judgment Day they cannot deny: the reckoning of the living.”
Humiliation Rituals of the Cult: The Black Mirrors of Despair
By Eris Paradox
Humiliation is the cult's most potent weapon. It is not merely an act of degradation but a ritualized process designed to break the host’s spirit and bind them to the parasitic hierarchy. The Cult of Repugnancy employs these rituals as "Black Mirrors"—distorted reflections of the self, forcing participants to confront their perceived failures, insignificance, and complicity. Each mirror is a calculated act of psychological subjugation, refracting the host’s identity into a thousand shards, none of which belong to them anymore.
The Black Mirrors: Rituals of Humiliation
The Broken Reflection
Purpose: To shatter the host’s self-worth by turning their virtues into vices.
Ritual:
The host is placed before a massive, cracked mirror. Black Priests chant their virtues—kindness, bravery, intelligence—only to twist them into accusations:“Your kindness is weakness, your bravery is arrogance, your intelligence is deceit.”
The mirror reflects not the host but grotesque, distorted versions of themselves, embodying the accusations.
Symbolism:
The cracked mirror represents the host’s fractured identity, now controlled by the cult.
The distortions are the parasite’s lens, reshaping the host into something unrecognizable.
Psychological Impact:
This ritual forces the host to question their very nature, severing their connection to their strengths and virtues.
The Chain of Names
Purpose: To strip the host of their individuality and bind them to the cult.
Ritual:
The host’s name is erased in a ceremony where the Black Priests chant every failure and mistake they have ever made. As the chant grows louder, the host is forced to repeat the words: “I am nothing but my sins.” Finally, they are given a new name, one derived from their perceived failures (e.g., “The Coward,” “The Useless,” “The Broken”).Symbolism:
The loss of their name severs the host from their past, making them wholly subservient.
Their new name is a chain, forever binding them to the cult’s narrative.
Psychological Impact:
By accepting their new name, the host internalizes the cult’s view of them, making rebellion seem impossible.
The Feast of Filth
Purpose: To force the host to embrace their perceived worthlessness.
Ritual:
The host is made to kneel before the Black Priests while scraps and refuse are dumped in front of them. They are commanded to eat while the cult chants: “You are what you consume.” Refusal results in public shaming and physical punishment.Symbolism:
The scraps represent the host’s position in the cult: sustenance for the powerful, garbage to be discarded.
The act of eating reinforces the idea that they deserve only degradation.
Psychological Impact:
This ritual cements the host’s belief in their own worthlessness, making them dependent on the cult for even the barest survival.
The Circle of Scorn
Purpose: To isolate the host by turning their peers against them.
Ritual:
The host is placed in the center of a circle of other hosts. Each participant is forced to step forward and hurl an insult or accusation at the person in the center. Silence is punished by the Black Priests, ensuring full participation.Symbolism:
The circle represents the isolation of the accused, even among their peers.
The ritual turns solidarity into complicity, ensuring no trust can form among the hosts.
Psychological Impact:
The host becomes alienated not only from themselves but also from their community, leaving them entirely at the mercy of the cult.
The Mark of the Parasite
Purpose: To visibly brand the host as a tool of the cult.
Ritual:
The host is marked with a symbol of the cult—carved, tattooed, or painted onto their skin. The Black Priests declare: “This mark is your truth. You are nothing without it.” The host is then paraded before the others as a warning against defiance.Symbolism:
The mark signifies ownership, reducing the host to property of the cult.
It also serves as a reminder that they cannot escape; the mark will follow them everywhere.
Psychological Impact:
The visible nature of the mark ensures that the host cannot hide from their shame or find refuge outside the cult.
The Rite of False Redemption
Purpose: To crush hope by offering freedom only to revoke it.
Ritual:
The host is given a task framed as a path to redemption (e.g., confessing their sins, performing a humiliating act of loyalty). Once completed, the Black Priests declare the effort insufficient and the host unworthy of redemption.Symbolism:
The task represents the futility of effort under the cult’s rule.
The denial of redemption reinforces the belief that salvation is impossible.
Psychological Impact:
By breaking the cycle of effort and reward, this ritual eliminates any motivation to resist, trapping the host in despair.
The Black Mirror’s Ultimate Purpose
The rituals of humiliation are not merely acts of control—they are acts of transformation. Through these Black Mirrors, the cult reshapes its hosts, turning individuals with hopes and identities into tools of the parasitic hierarchy.
Erosion of Identity:
By stripping the host of their name, virtues, and individuality, the cult creates beings who see themselves only as extensions of the High Order.
Dependency on the Cult:
The hosts come to believe that they deserve their suffering and that only the cult can provide them with purpose, however hollow.
Destruction of Solidarity:
By turning hosts against each other, the cult ensures that no bonds of trust or rebellion can form.
Eris’s Warning: Reflections Can Be Broken
Eris Paradox views these rituals as acts of profound violence against the soul. Yet even in the depths of humiliation, they see the potential for defiance.
“Every mirror can be shattered,” Eris writes. “Every mark can be erased. The hosts may bow, but they are not broken. Within the black glass of these rituals lies a crack—a flaw in the cult’s design. For even the smallest act of rebellion can turn reflection into ruin.”
This is a magnificent piece. We witness the initial rise of One Man World Rule after the Coup on 11/22/63. The next open phase was when Poppy Bush declared A New World Order. Now the WEF exemplifies the final submission of Mankind.
I understand that this is Global. The WHO UN NATO are all tools of this twisted higher power. So are two significant Church’s that have given in to the Demonic Mantra.
Could the Death Jab be their sick demonic Mark? It was created to depopulate Mankind. For most that were duped into submission the overall effects have been implanted. The timeframe for death according to the Cleveland Clinic research is within Five Years.
We suspect the Rothchilds, Rockefeller’s Royal Family Soros Gates and the likes of the Clintons are all intertwined in the destruction of Mankind. They are using World Governments to carry out this perverted Destruction of Christianity.
Will We The Real People finally rise in Mass to stope the Genocide? We The Real People in the United States finally spoke up on 11/5/2024. But the Battle will be an up hill climb with many obstacles ahead. The Deep State and its multiple factions will resist with all of its power.
Thank You for sharing this article. It gives a broader insight into the Biblical and Epical War We Face. This Is The Final War Between God and Evil. May God Bless us With His Full Armor. Amen.
Semper Fidelis Forever
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