10:31:24
Here is Celia Farber on the Menendez Brothers’ possible re-sentencing and prison release.
As you know, I have also been very touched by the Menendez Brothers case. I have been thinking about it a lot, namely what it says about the way we treat the ritual abuse and traumatization of children, a subject I write about constantly here. Is it because I was also a sexually abused and bullied kid? Maybe. It’s not something I tend to think about very much. Maybe I can’t. That’s not how I process trauma. There are other ways to do it, and this is my way. I suppose it does play a role in how profoundly outraged these stories make me, how I cannot and have never been able to stand the abuse of power, and how deep my empathy goes to things that are morally unjust. I never had children of my own and yet my instincts and values are deeply protective (Mars in Cancer, Saturn in Cancer). In a spiritual sense, I love children more than ever. After everything I have learned the past few years, and after years of having what I would now call a mild Leftist resentment of people who have children, I cherish babies and kids. I feel extremely connected to children and their open energy. My own relationship with my mother has been a lifelong saving grace and anchor for me. I also always had a very clear understanding that to have a child in this sick and dangerous world would require enormous dedication and vigilance and I wasn’t ever sure this kind of protection was even possible, or that having a child was my path in life, despite having always taken care of children in some capacity as a teenager and in my 20s (babysitting, counseling, tutoring, teaching). If I could do it differently, I would. I always felt that if I couldn’t do these things properly, or if something happened to my child, or they ended up hating me, I wouldn’t survive it. Interestingly, as I have written on this blog before, as I become increasingly invisible to the NPCs and zombies of the world, I have become more noticeable to children, who constantly stare at me. It is sweet, and reassuring.
My bullshit detector is also why I can smell fake injustice, or as I like to call them false flags of injustice, from a mile away. The cry bullies. The professional victims. The paper thin egotists. The reality gaslighters. No one gives a fuck about children unless they can weaponize them, brainwash them, ideologize them, or use them for personal gain. Even the so-called “good” parents are just coddlers and virtue signalers looking to exorcise their own childhood beefs and demons by becoming the “perfect” parent who never says no and sets no protective boundaries or limits for their child, in turning feeding them directly to the wolves of the State and the medical industrial complex. These parents are narcissists and cowards. As my mother always says, “These parents didn’t raise their children. The media did, the computer did, the Iphone did, the internet did. So are you surprised?” I am surprised. Always. But that’s my innocence, which is also, I’d like to believe, my superpower—that Chironic wounded healer.
Farber: “The Menendez documentary (NOT the series) is a crash course in how the system works, to conceal sexual abuse—protect abusers, scapegoat and sacrifice victims, for media profit. But also, it reveals how (this is my personal interpretation) the brothers were sent to prison for life in part because it was part and parcel of the ‘woke’ of that era—the 90s—to deny incest and sexual abuse of males, especially handsome, white, affluent “jocks” like Lyle and Erik.”
By “woke’ of that era” I think Farber means the way we cancelled, punished, drugged, and locked up any child/person who spoke out against the abuse and exploitation of children in our society. Especially when the abusers were powerful people tied to powerful industries and posts that profit off of abusing children. It’s an entire system not just one person.
It is no accident that this case has re-entered the zeitgeist at this time when so many other high-profile child trafficking rings and child abuse stories are finally being exposed on a daily basis.
It’s taken a very long time for this horrible truth to come to light.
Farber: “I now realize the version that got ‘planted’ in our collective minds in the 90s had far greater mind control implications than a premeditated murder verdict alone: What if people started looking into José Menendez, CEO of RCA records at the time of his death, and then the music industry itself? That could happen easily—if they took their foot off the Hate The Menendez Brothers gas pedal. We would have found industrial scale, ritual rape of young artists, prior to contracts being awarded—common knowledge now in these P Diddy days.”
This is such an important point that I have also tried to argue in my posts, and why Roy Rosello of the Menudo boy band (the Menudo’s band manager/creator was a known and highly protected/connected pedophile in Puerto Rico), who was raped by Jose Menendez, is such an important addition to repairing the Menendez case and the brothers’ public reputations as soulless party boys and liars. Rosello’s testimony points to what and who is really being protected and hidden, and how mind control always plays a role in this criminal concealment. Our pedophiliac economy—everything always comes back to that. Do we even have an economy/culture without it? It seems we don’t. It seems everything was just a cover for that.
The ritual abuse, rape, and exploitation of children is a profound existential crisis and threat that has become the most important injustice of our times, despite what the Boo-hoo Left wants us to believe, and who remain silent on this issue of all issues while whinging endlessly about every insult, bad joke, and faux pas ever made about appearances, identity politics, and pronouns. But not a word on Diddy? That should tell us that something deeply sinister is at play, and that again, cover-ups and covers are involved. The future of our civilization rests on bringing these horrendous crimes to justice and to public attention.
If we torture children for pleasure, then we don’t deserve to live.
Like me, Farber seems to hate Ryan Murphy’s 2024 series on the Menendez Brothers, Monsters, writing: “Nobody resembles a real human being, the dialogue is campy and impossible to believe, and the brothers are made to look like gay porn stars, or models.”
Right on the money. And Ryan Murphy loves his money and his gay propaganda. What is the difference, we should ask, between the way former Abercrombie & Fitch’s CEO Mike Jeffries, arrested on sex trafficking charges, photographed the bodies of his male models and the way Ryan Murphy does? Not much. What do we call this predatory, pornographic aesthetic?
Here are my recent posts on the Menedez Brothers: