Tyb
https://mythologyexplained.com/necronomicon-the-worlds-most-dangerous-book/
What is the Necronomicon?
The Necronomicon, commonly known as the Book of the Dead or by its supposed original Arabic title of Kitab al-Azif, is a fictitious grimoire that appears in works by H. P. Lovecraft and his followers. Over the years, other additional authors, including Clark Ashton Smith, Brian Lumley, Ramsey Campbell, and Keith Herber, have contributed to its material. Lovecraft endorsed other writers who drew on his work, feeling that such common allusions created “a backdrop of diabolical verisimilitude.” Many readers thought it was legitimate work, and booksellers and libraries received numerous requests for it; pranksters included it in rare book catalogues, and a student slipped a card for it into the Yale University Library’s card catalogue…
Lovecraft states that there are only five copies of the original translated Necronomicon held in five institutions worldwide and these are as follows:
The British History Museum in London
The Bibliothèque Nationale de France
The Widener Library of Harvard University in Cambridge Massachusetts
The University of Buenos Aires in Argentina
The Last is in Lovecraft’s fictional town of Arkham Massachusetts in the Miskatonic University, which is also in possession of the Latin translation.
Never forget
because communists and rebellious youth are atheistic, doesn’t make atheists communists.
We’ll said
It doesn’t matter in what name they segregate you for internment- Jews, native Americans, African Americans, Japanese Americans, unvaccinated - the common denominator is control of your resources- how they get away with the mass extraction of your resources before they kill, encamp or sterilize you
It doesn’t matter in what name they segregate you for extinction- Jews, native Americans, African Americans, Japanese Americans, unvaccinated - the common denominator is control of your resources- how they get away with the mass extraction of your resources before they kill, encamp, or sterilize you.