Ok, back on the Farm. I planned to do this power piece on ‘India, China, and Israel’, but it quickly got out of hand. So I separate it. India comes first.
The Human Farm: India
The subcontinent of Greater India once was a thousand rajahs (monarchs), dynasties, languages, and kingdoms. The people there were spiritually far more holistic and deductive than the Europeans; they knew good from bad, and that a crane was not a peacock, and a cow was not a horse, and that humans came in all forms and shapes, all of them different, yet all of them one with the human family universe. The universe is one, they said, and humans were part of it. Not more they could think up down in India, but also no less.
The Northern empires had records on the Aryans [proto-White boys], the Greeks and the Chinese, and the Romans, yet there never developed within India the urge to conquer these foreign people, why because they were already one! It would not have occurred to Krishna (God) and the gurus that the Science people of the West were coming to get us, or that London bankers would declare India a British Raj, or that all fake gurus were to be lined up as clowns to the Crown—no, none of it occurred to the Bodhis and Brahmans, and Hindus, why because all was one [with the Queen of England anyway].
No, the Indians were never conquered, the Buddha said so. He said, “there is no person.” If there is no person, no Indian could be conquered by nobody. The Western scientists and bankers made that up, by the way: There is no Buddhism in India, that’s in Eastasia, in China, Siam, Nippon. India has a cow god Greece Aryan monkey syndrome. Some say the Indian civilization is a puzzled Western civilization but with elephants, but who could prove such ideas? They simply said, this is so, and the Indian Brahmin, conditioned by Hinduism that ‘that is that’ and ‘all is one’, said this is so and no other. The conquest of India was perhaps the greatest hoax played on these backward people since Aristotle of Athens declared Alexander of Macedonia the Ruler of Mother India [the Father was Greece]. At last, Alexander won a battle near Punjab, we hear. If you believe that this is all it takes, then you also believe in the ‘One-Civilization Theory’, straight out from the Mahabharata: “What is found here, can be found elsewhere.” Oh but we digress…
The conclusion to India’s zero resistance policy, namely, that the lesser races of the East are susceptible to mind control by the greater mind controllers of the West, is self-evident: You can read this in thousands of books about the Indians, that they are mind, ego and intelligence before the reality of this world. We can and will import hundreds of their wisecracks—Guru Wiseswami, Guru Satchpain, Guru Teleport—for our general entertainment; however they could never impose on our reality because they have none.
PREVIOUSLY World Domination Through Organized Crime
It was said that all it took to take everything away from India was legal magic. Most techniques of Colonialism came from legal magic. A London campaigner issued a random decree, say, that this or that Raj [a primitive king with feathers and a club] was now under British jurisdiction at the discretion of the City’s money lenders and all those middlemen of European aristocracy. Unbeknownst to half a billion Indians, the Imperial scribblers of Westroid started on the spot and scribbled away and onwards and on all accounts that India indeed was indebted to a certain British Trading Company nobody had ever heard about. It was decided that Raj better needed a British law firm. In legal magic, you simply have to tell Raj who rules him, and he, they I mean, there were thousands of them, will be ruled henceforth from afar or become outlaws in their own country. Tat tvam asi—And this is that. It is so and could not be no other. Oneness.
The logistics of conquest were less impressive. London could barely spare twenty thousand uniforms to control two hundred million brown skins in far away Maha “the Great” Bharat, now Romanized in best of Oxford-English: ‘India’—a dictionary term more Americans than Indians were familiar with. The few Englishmen in India must have felt superhuman ruling over the subhumans with spells and scrolls and word magic. This was a superstitious country. There was one white English owner for every ten thousand or so dark-brown Orientals, so try to imagine what that did to his Anglo-Saxon ego victoriani imperialis—his Imperial mindset.