An image from Fox's infamous "mannequin" photo shoot for "Interview" magazine |
Tila Tequila tells the "Illuminati" to eff off |
Deep in her house, Megan Fox and I are discussing human sacrifice. I tell her about an Aztec ritual practiced five hundred years ago in ancient Mexico during the feast of Toxcatl, when the Aztecs picked a perfect youth to live among them as a god. He was a paragon, beautiful and fit and healthy, with ideal proportions...The sacrifice's year was filled with constant delight, I tell her. He danced through the streets adorned in luxurious clothes given to him by the master, decked in flowers and incense, playing magical flutes that brought prosperity to the whole world. He had eight servants and four virgins to attend to his every need, and could wander wherever he pleased. But at the end of the year, when the feast of Toxcatl came around again, the perfect youth had to smash his flutes and climb the stairs of the great temple, where the priests would cut out his heart and offer it, still beating, to the sun... At the end of the year, the beautiful youth had to go up by himself. He had to go up willingly. That was part of the deal.
Now she is shaking her head.
"Not everyone understands that that's the deal," she says.
Megan Fox will not go willingly to have her heart cut out.
and, just to drive home the "human sacrifices" theme:
American movies expressed that great fusion of sex and art, too. They are magnificent pagan dreams, utterly profane and glorious. Such movies need bombshells. They need to consume beautiful flesh in their sacrifices. They need women like Megan Fox.The whole article almost reads as Fox literally attempting to "save herself" by consciously acknowledging the whole "sacrifice" theme -- and, in doing so, "protecting" herself from it. She also goes quite in detail about her dealings with the church -- using that newfound religious feeling to also protect her, its symbology literally lining her house as to keep the "demons" out:
On the way out, I notice something I hadn't seen on the way down. In the hallway sits a tall pedestal topped by a red-and-gold Byzantine icon of a crucified Christ and rows of white candles.
Or is it all, as I wondered before, just a pre-constructed narrative to make her seem "dramatic," reeling in believers in the "Hollywood Illuminati" as Tequila has done. Both Fox and Tequila initially sound as crazy as loons in their articles/posts, claiming some degree of spiritual enlightenment; Fox clearly describes what sounds like a Kundalini activation:
"It feels like a lot of energy coming through the top of your head — I'm going to sound like such a lunatic — and then your whole body is filled with this electric current."
On the other hand, is it possible that both Fox and Tequila have indeed reached some understanding of how they've been manipulated in their lives and how the "system" -- if there is indeed such a "system" -- works? And, as in the case of David Icke, does such a realization dovetail with the sort of "crazy" that only Kundalini/spiritual awakenings trigger off?
Well, at worst this is just another mass-media appropriation of conspiracy/esoteric themes. At best -- if "best" is the right word to use here -- maybe there's something a bit more going on. And by a "bit more," it might mean religiously-induced delusions, a massive Kundalini opening, a self-conscious declaration of "freedom" from various secret society/"MK" bugaboos...or all of the above, in a sort of simmering stew of "maybes".
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