Babylon NOW!
The ancient Mesopotamian civilisation of Babylon is regarded as a defunct empire, yet analysis of theological, sociological, and historical patterns shows that Babylon never truly fell.
The Continuity of the Babylonian System
The ancient Mesopotamian civilisation of Babylon is regarded as a defunct empire, yet analysis of theological, sociological, and historical patterns shows that Babylon never truly fell. Instead, it metamorphosed into a pervasive world system that continues to govern contemporary society.
The political, economic, and spiritual structures established in the cradle of civilisation persist in the modern era, manifesting through technocracy, globalism, and cultural degeneracy.
Western civilisation, traditionally built upon Christian and Byzantine Orthodox foundations, currently undergoes a degradation phase reminiscent of the cycles described by Oswald Spengler.
As authentic tradition erodes, society returns to the primitive and irrational superstitions of the ancient world, signalling that the Babylonian ethos remains the dominant operating system of the fallen world.
Pre-Flood Origins and the Watchers
To understand the nature of this enduring system, one must examine its antediluvian origins. Historical and biblical texts, including Genesis and the Book of Enoch, indicate that the foundations of these civilisations were laid by the Watchers, angelic beings who descended to earth and hybridised with humanity.
This union produced the Nephilim, or giants, described in scripture as men of renown. The great cities of the pre-flood world, such as Eridu and Uruk, were inhabited and governed by these deities and their offspring.
Each city operated as the dominion of a specific god; for instance, Uruk was the domain of Inanna, while Eridu belonged to Enki. Following the cataclysm of the flood, the direct presence of these entities diminished, necessitating a transition to priestcraft.
This new class of intermediaries mimicked the supernatural powers and advanced technologies of the pre-flood gods through rituals, prestige, and sleight of hand, thereby maintaining control over the burgeoning post-flood populations.
The Tower of Babel and Global Governance
The archetype of the Babylonian system is most clearly defined in the account of the Tower of Babel. This endeavour was not merely an architectural feat but the first attempt at a unified world government, a tribute to autonomous man in defiance of the Divine.
The objective was to create a monoculture where distinct people groups were melded into a singular, undifferentiated mass. This ancient ambition mirrors the modern push for a global technocratic order, like today's Great Reset or New World Order.
Just as the builders of Babel sought to dissolve borders and distinctions, contemporary globalist movements seek to eradicate the nation-state, favouring a federation of mega-cities populated by rootless citizens.
The breaking of nations into distinct languages and groups in Genesis was a divine countermeasure against this centralisation, yet the spirit of Babel persists, seeking to reunite humanity in a false, rebellion-based solidarity.
The Economics of the Temple State
In ancient Babylon, religion and economics were inextricable. The city-state functioned effectively as a temple estate, where the deity was the ultimate owner of all land and resources.
The populace were viewed essentially as slaves to the god, a status that required constant supplication and tribute to avoid divine wrath. This structure created a rigid caste system where the temple served as the heart of the economy.
Taxes and food tributes were collected in such vast quantities that they exceeded what the human priesthood could consume, suggesting these resources were intended for the non-human entities governing the city.
Justice and economic relief, such as the forgiveness of debts (Jubilee), were dispensed at the whim of the king, who acted as the god's vice-regent.
This centralised control of resources and the population's indebtedness to the state-temple complex serves as the blueprint for modern economic systems, where citizens are bound by debt and dependent on the state for their very existence.
Sacred Kingship and the Cult of Ishtar
The legitimacy of the Babylonian king was derived from the ritual of sacred marriage. In this ceremony, the monarch would engage in intercourse with a high priestess who embodied the goddess Inanna (later Ishtar).
This act was believed to invoke the deity into the king, granting him the divine right to rule. Ishtar, the goddess of love and war, represents a central figure in this mystery religion. She was known as the Lady of the Open Holes, a title referencing the worship of bodily fluids and genitalia.
Her cult was characterised by extreme perversions, including the practice of turning men into women and women into men. The priesthood of Ishtar, known as the Gala or Galli, consisted of individuals who engaged in cross-dressing and ritual self-harm.
This ancient transgenderism was viewed as a powerful form of magic, a demonstration of the ability to alter reality itself. The modern explosion of gender identity politics and the normalization of transgenderism are not novel social developments but the re-emergence of these ancient liturgical practices.
Ritual Prostitution and Human Sacrifice
The moral depravity of the Babylonian system was institutionalised through temple prostitution and human sacrifice. As recorded by the historian Herodotus, every woman in Babylon was required, once in her life, to sit in the temple of Aphrodite (Ishtar) and have intercourse with a stranger in exchange for a silver coin.
This act was considered a religious duty, a surrender to the goddess. Beyond sexual rites, the system demanded blood. The exposure of unwanted infants to the elements was a ubiquitous practice, decided solely by the patriarchal head of the family.
More active forms of sacrifice included offering children to deities like Moloch and Baal to ensure fertility and prosperity. Foundation sacrifices, where individuals were slaughtered and placed into the structures of new buildings, were also common.
Today, these practices continue under different guises; the modern abortion industry acts as a ritual of child sacrifice, promoted by some as a magical act of empowerment, mirroring the ancient dedication of offspring to demonic entities for personal gain.
Demonology and the Spirit World
The Babylonians inhabited a world teeming with spiritual entities, both benevolent and malevolent. Demons such as Pazuzu, the lord of the hot desert winds, and Lamashtu, a she-demon who threatened nursing mothers, were feared and propitiated.
The populace relied heavily on amulets, sigils, and divination to navigate this hazardous spiritual landscape. Idolatry was not merely the worship of stone and wood; it was the belief that a spirit could be trapped within a physical object or statue through specific rituals.
This concept of possession extends to the modern era, where technology acts as the new medium for these entities.
The notion of trapping a consciousness or spirit within a machine, a core theme of transhumanism and artificial intelligence, is a direct continuation of the Babylonian practice of animating idols.
Ancient intelligence networks were comprised of priests who utilised espionage, honey traps, and mind control techniques, anticipating the methods of modern intelligence agencies.
The Seat of Satan and Western Decline
The geographical and spiritual lineage of Babylon can be traced through history. The Ishtar Gate, the portal for these cosmic currents, was excavated and transported to Berlin, where it resides in the Pergamon Museum.
This museum also houses the Altar of Pergamon, referred to in the Book of Revelation as the seat of Satan. The relocation of these artefacts symbolises the transference of the Babylonian spirit into the heart of Europe.
The degradation of Western civilisation, as noted by Spengler, allows for the re-entry of these ancient forces. As the West abandons its Christian heritage, the only force that successfully dethroned these entities and cleansed the temples, it creates a vacuum filled by the return of the primitive.
The rise of the occult, witchcraft, and neo-paganism among younger generations indicates that the protective restrainer has been removed, allowing the old gods to reclaim their territory.
Conclusion
While the political empire of Hammurabi or Nebuchadnezzar may have crumbled, the spiritual and systemic machinery of Babylon endured.
It survived through the Greek and Roman empires and persists today in the structures of global finance, entertainment, and governance. The modern world, with its celebration of sterility, confusion of gender, centralised control, and technological idolatry, is a mirror image of the ancient city-state.
The system that rules the contemporary world is not a new invention but the continuation of a rebellion that began on the plains of Shinar. It is a system that stands in direct opposition to the divine order, seeking to unite humanity in a collective delusion of autonomy and power, just as it did at the Tower of Babel.