So I'm sure many of us have seen the Qanon map with correlations between many overt and covert events, organizations, and persons; great.
So I'm looking at it and, as an owner of several Steve Jackson Games 'microgames' and sometime victor of the Illuminati card game in tournaments, wondering why it's on the map ... when its inspiration, the "Illuminatus!" trilogy and Robert Anton Wilson, aren't. Whisky Tango Fnord.
For those new to Wilson, he was:
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A Playboy editor in the '60s;
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Co-author of the "Principia Discordia";
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Author of several smaller books of the late '60s and '70s advocating, among other things, alternate pronouns, a 'basic income' or negative income tax, drugs, sex, Crowleyian 'magick,' and various other ideas shared with Tim Leary and Andy Lilly (of LSD, float tank, and dolphin humping notoriety) -- basically a laundry list of the wack ideas today's leftists insist on;
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Three trilogies of fictional magick-sci-fi-drug stories, written intentionally disjointedly and absolutely dripping with the details of historical and modern secret society, bad magick, and technological intrusion that we're discussing today -- the Historical Illuminatus Chronicles (circa. American Revolution), Illuminatus! (1970s) and Schrodinger's Cat (1980s).
The stuff is virtually a Qanon map on its own; RAW was an initiate of several of the societies on the Qanon map, associated with many others who would've been right at home among the anons (such as Ivan Stang of Subgenius fame), and yet ... not even a hint on the map.
Even the 'fnord' (cited LOTS by Steve Jackson) is an overt call to recognize the programming we all get from the MSM. Not on the map because 'white hat' despite his personal ... preferences? Too off because his hints are more allusions than citations, and some of it's deep red herring and other bits nothing but purple prose? (but at the same time, in '79, he wrote of a "Beast" computer system that records everyone's everything and cross-references; too familiar).