I recall having heard of rituals on the White House rooftop and bits and pieces of claims that Hillary Clinton was involved in witchcraft—claims which range from vague (as in referring to virtually everything she does as being connected to witchcraft) to utterly outlandish (based on unnamed White House insiders).
I thus sought to looks into one particular aspect of this issue since Bill Clinton mentioned it. I found that it may be much ado about not very much, but that there may be more to it and also found most interesting what I found out about her mentors and/or advisers.
In 2012 AD Bill Clinton stated:
I know that because, as all of you famously learned when I served as president, my wife, now the secretary of State, was known to commune with Eleanor on a regular basis. And so she called me last night on her way home from Peru to remind me to say that. That Eleanor had talked to her and reminded her that I should say that.
The claims of Hillary’s occultism largely stem from Bob Woodward’s book The Choice. Considering that it is claimed that she practices necromancy, it is ironic that Woodward’s source was Hillary’s ghost-writer Barbara Feinman Todd who was subsequently, stunned by Woodward’s “breathtaking betrayal” in terms of a breach of journalistic ethics. Around 1995 AD she met with Woodward, had him assure her that he would repeat nothing the told him and “related a bizarre scene she had witnessed earlier that year, when a New Agey spiritual adviser led Clinton through imaginary conversations with Eleanor Roosevelt and Mahatma Gandhi, apparently as a way to help relieve the pressures of White House life” as it was reported, as well as “Hillary Clinton’s strange conversations with the dead.” And with this, we see the slippery nature of the reporting of this as we go from “imaginary” to “conversations with the dead” with “conversations” apparently not actually being “with the dead” but “imaginary” “conversations.”
Having been outed as a source, “Feinman Todd suddenly found herself on the outs with the Clinton White House, which ordered the publisher of ‘It Takes a Village’ to withhold her final payment. And, when the book came out, Feinman Todd was given no credit, despite a requirement in her contract that she be included in the acknowledgments.” And this part of it ends with a she said, he said as Todd refers to Woodward’s “breathtaking betrayal,” about which Woodward said, “‘What she says is just not true.’ He described an entirely different encounter…‘She said she was troubled by this thing she’d seen in the White House’” and “I talked to other people who were there,” Todd is said to have been “more fascinated than upset by what she called Clinton’s ‘therapeutic exercise” and it was a “weird episode.”
Another report puts it as “Book says Hillary talks to dead. First lady acknowledged ‘imaginary’ chats.” So what is this all about? “Hillary Rodham Clinton held imaginary conversations with Eleanor Roosevelt and Mahatma Gandhi as a therapeutic release…The first lady declined a personal adviser’s suggestion that she address Jesus Christ, however, because it would be ‘too personal,’ according to Woodward’s book.”
This styled therapy was conducted by “influential adviser” Jean Houston who “‘virtually moved into the White House’ for days at a time” as she helped Hillary edit her book. Houston headed, “a group that studies the psychic experience and altered and expanded consciousness.” Also, “Houston claims a first grade teacher in a Catholic school treated her so harshly she escaped into some kind of profound mystical experience that was described as ‘pantheistic’ and ‘monistic’” (paraphrased from the New Age Encyclopedia).
Well, I can affirm that having researched the claims made by all of the top psychics, one thing they have in common is that they ALL have Catholic backgrounds—I posted the evidence here.
Houston later married Robert Masters, the psychotherapist and sexologist who co-authored the notorious Masters-Johnson report. The Encyclopedia states that she and her husband experimented with LSD and other hallucinogenic drugs, believing that drug-induced altered states of consciousness were the best way to convey ‘psychic truth’ to people.
The point about “LSD and other hallucinogenic drugs” is interesting as one of Hillary’s advisers was Rabbi Michael Lerner stated, “Until you’ve dropped acid, you don’t know what socialism is,” and former FBI Agent, Gary Aldric, who was stationed at the Clinton White House reported on drug use by staffers. Thus, Hillary may have very well been tripping and, in one way or another, calling upon spirits. In fact, Houston “attempt[s] to teach students how to make contact with an entity called ‘Group Spirit’ which is supposedly the collective consciousness” and so it is no surprise that someone who believe in a Group Spirit collective consciousness would end up with a book titled, “It Takes a Village.”
Woodward noted that Jean Houston, “was a believer in spirits, mythic and other connections to history and other worlds.” Reportedly, “Houston believed that her personal archetypal predecessor was Athena, the Greek goddess of wisdom. She conducted extensive dialogues with Athena on her computer that she called ‘docking with one’s angel.’” In the end, “Houston reached the conclusion that Eleanor was Hillary’s archetypal, spiritual partner.” Reportedly, “It was a strong personal outpouring — virtual therapy, and unusual in front of a large group.”
So are these “dialogues” actually just imaginary monologues or was she engaged in a high-tech form of automatic writing? Also, perhaps they were docking with their angel or an angel, “Satan disguises himself as an angel of light” (2 Corinthians 11).
“Houston asked Hillary to imagine she was having a conversation with Eleanor. In a strong and self-confident voice, Houston asked Hillary to shut her eyes in order to eliminate the room and her surroundings, and to focus her reflection by bringing in as many vivid internal sensory images as she could from her vast knowledge of Eleanor,” according to Woodward’s source” who we now know to be Barbara Feinman Todd and “other people who were there.” These include anthropologist Mary Catherine Bateson who “joined her in sessions of imaginary conversations.” Jean Houston “said that the exercise was more akin to brainstorming than a religious ritual…an imaginative exercise to force her ideas, to think about how Eleanor would have responded to a particular problem.” Also, Eric Barger, of Stand Up Ministries, claims that “psychic, Marianne Williamson, participated in some of the sessions,” she is the author of the New Age book Course in Miracles. It is also noted that “In 1994 Esquire magazine reported that Hillary Clinton was a devotee of Williamson.”
I will state it this way: even if this is all just imaginative therapy it is a very bad idea. Demons do not seem to have much of a sense of humor, in a manner of speaking, and so if you get yourself into a meditative state and call upon someone in a visualization form (and possibly on drugs) then demons do not begin to conjure up the likeness of that person only to go, “Oh, hey, this is just therapy—so we are not really being summoned?!?! Oh boy, this is embarrassing. Okay, never mind.” Rather, whether you meant it or not, when you are already mere inch away from straight up necromancy, demons will be glad to move on inch closer.
In fact, Jean Houston could very well have been leading Hillary to actual necromancy in watered down terms such as claiming that it is merely imaginary, merely therapy, etc. as “Houston and Bateson met with Hillary in the rooftop solarium, set atop the White House with windows on three sides…they all sat around a circular table with several members of the first lady’s staff.” Woodward also referred to these as “deep, reflective meditation session.” Even though these events had all of the trappings of a séance, Houston stated, “I have never been to a seance.”
“Woodward suggests the White House hoped to keep Mrs. Clinton’s relationship with Houston and her talks with the dead a secret” since it “could trigger politically damaging comparisons to Nancy Reagan’s use of astrology…Mrs. Clinton’s spokeswoman, Lisa Caputo, is quoted in the Sun-Times as saying the first lady’s interest in Houston is no secret.” In fact, “Clinton herself wrote about her imaginary conversations with Eleanor Roosevelt in her June 10 column. She said she talked to Roosevelt” and related how Eleanor “responds by telling me” this and that, mostly about “the ways in which women in different societies attempt to fulfill their responsibilities to their families, jobs and communities.”
Woodward had noted, “Houston regarded it as a classic technique, practiced by Machiavelli, who used to talk to ancient men. What might Eleanor say? What is your message to her? she asked Hillary.” Thus, these events are said to have been “distorted by Bob Woodward” and “deeply distorted in newspaper accounts.”
The other issue is that of media bias since, for example, one time Senatorial candidate Christine O’Donnell “confessed dabbling in witchcraft during her high school years” about which Congressman Bob Beauprez noted, “Hillary isn’t so much as questioned about her witchcraft dabbling while living in the White House.”
And there is also the aforementioned, “conservative First Lady Nancy Reagan was skewered in the press for consulting with astrologers” such as Joan Quigley. Of Hillary, the author of God And Hillary Clinton: A Spiritual Life, Paul Kengor, noted “they were definitely bizarre and far more out-of-line than anything First Lady Nancy Reagan did with her astrologer in the 1980s.” He also claims that “Hillary was involved in ‘clairaudient channeling,’ which ‘involves relaxing oneself in either a fully conscious or mildly altered state of consciousness and then listening to one’s ‘inner-self.’”
“Dr. Robert E.L. Masters, said his wife used a technique for stimulating fresh approaches to problems by pretending to conduct a dialogue with an expert in a particular field, even one who is dead…They didn’t hold seances or raise the dead.” And, “Dr. Houston said that Mrs. Clinton would never engage in spiritualism because she is ‘a very committed Christian’ and a ‘serious, reflective and prayerful’ woman.” Indeed, Hillary claims to be “‘old-fashioned’ Methodist” yet, note that her Methodist pastor, Rev. J. Philip Wogaman, has stated, “The Scriptures, like the Washington Post, contain both truth and error” well, it contains errors in as far as it reports wrong statements made by people but this is not what he means. He also stated, “‘The government, not the church, is the answer for the poor,’ and ‘Drug abuse, murder, unethical business practices, family breakup and homelessness’ were created by ‘unrestrained laissez-faire capitalism.’” Well then, pray tell, what was the answer for the poor before big enough governments existed or in places today where the governments are not very large or simply care not for the poor? Of course, the church has a 2,000 year old history (and the Jews an additional 3,000 years) of caring for the poor. But this shows the thoughts of those who had Hillary’s ear.
He also, preached, “‘revenue sharing on a world scale.’ He also taught that God is both he and she and talked about one-world government and building a world religion.” Well, God is a spirit and is neither he or she but chose to express Himself in the masculine. Also, it is true that God talked about one-world government and building a world religion: as the doings of the anti-Christ.
It is also noted that J. Philip Wogaman “put the homosexual couples in the front row of the church” which is great if you seek to ensure that they hear the gospel yet, that was not the point.
We then come back to “leftist rabbi, Michael Lerner” who, of course, is involved in the Kabbalah (Jewish mysticism), has stated, “I dig [Karl] Marx…He professed the Communist Manifesto was the best thing you could read and that rabbi, Michael Lerner psychedelic drugs were mandatory to find your way. He said, ‘Until you’ve dropped acid, you don’t know what socialism is’…Lerner quickly became a source for Hillary Clinton. He was a frequent guest in the White House” and preached “the politics of meaning.”
Paul Kengor concludes that Hillary is “a lifelong committed Methodist, albeit a very liberal Christian, a Religious Left Christian…Her denomination, the United Methodist Church, supports legal abortion.
In essence, some “Christians,” “Pastors” and “ministries” are merely fronts for political activism which enjoys the prestige and tax benefits of being “religious”—which they are, in a manner of speaking, as for many: politics is a religion and a worldview philosophy.
It has also been claimed, “Mrs. Clinton had conjured conversations with Eleanor Roosevelt long before she met Dr. Houston. Mrs Clinton is not even the first First Lady to dabble in psychics or mediums: the wives of Presidents Abraham Lincoln, Ulysses S. Grant, John Tyler, Woodrow Wilson, and Warren G. Harding all tried, in one way or another, to communicate beyond the grave.”
Now, the aforementioned former FBI Agent, Gary Aldrich wrote the book Unlimited Access: An FBI Agent Inside The Clinton White House. He had been assigned to the Bush White House as the FBI Liaison and was there for part of the Clinton admin. He refers to the Blue Room’s Christmas decore for 1993-1994 AD, “The first lady’s tree is the ‘Mother of All Trees’, and the one that’s supposed to capture the ‘message’ of the first lady herself.” And this is where we get a window at Hillary’s message as Aldrich describes the ornaments she chose as being “pornographic” and I will add, occultic. Here are his descriptions:
A “Fertility god, made of carved dark wood, and put together so they look like stick figures…Twelve Lords a-leaping. The ornament consisted of tiny clay male figurines. Each was naked and had a large erection…Two Turtle Doves, but they didn’t have shells this time — they were joined together in an act of bird fornication…Five Golden rings — sex toys known as ‘cock rings’…Another mystery ornament was the gingerbread man. There were five small, gold rings: one in his ear, one in his nose, one through his nipple, one through his belly button, and of course, the ever-popular cock ring….another five golden rings ornament — five gold-wrapped condoms…other condom ornaments, some still in the wrapper, some not. Two sets had been ‘blown’ into balloons and tied to small trees…On top of the tree, there was a large stainless-steel ball pierced by colored shafts…Crack pipes hung on a string…Three French hens were French-kissing in a menage a trois…many of the ornaments didn’t celebrate Christmas as much as they celebrated sex, drugs, and rock and roll…Some ornaments were constructed out of various drug paraphernalia, like syringes, heroin spoons, or roach clips…used to hold marijuana joints”
Also, “Bertha was a statue that Hillary had selected to be placed along the public tour line … Bertha was twice life-size and was very naked. Bertha had enormous buttocks, far out of proportion to the rest of her body” which I take to represent an ancient fertility idol (or, maybe an ancient dude just checked out a lady and thought, “Baby got back and I cannot lie…”).
On the left, this may be Bertha and it may
be based on the ancient one on the right.
In fact, Jean Houston’s “views on altered states of consciousness and reincarnation would strike many Americans as outlandish” yet, by reincarnation, “she does not literally mean the reappearance of dead people in different bodies but the idea that the myths and stories of previous generations have a timeless relevance and in that sense re-emerge in experiences of modern generations.” So when one plays fast and loose with terms then it becomes more difficult to believe them when they claim that A (as in a séance) is really just B (an imaginative therapy).
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Sources:
Clark Hoyt , “She said, he said: journalist accuses Woodward of ‘breathtaking betrayal’,” Washington Post, April 14, 2017 AD
CNN, “Book says Hillary talks to dead. First lady acknowledged ‘imaginary’ chats,” June 22, 1996 AD
Snopes, “With Her in Spirit.”
S. Brinkmann “The Occult, the New Age and Politics,” Women of Grace, September 21, 2010 AD
Mark Ellis, “Hillary Clinton: Has her faith been influenced by New Age spirituality?,” March 21, 2016 AD
Tim Graham, “Double Standard Rewind: Nancy Reagan’s Astrologer vs. Hillary’s White House Chats with the Dead,” Newsbusters, March 7, 2016 AD
Joseph Berger, “Performing Seances? No, Just ‘Pushing the Membrane of the Possible’,” New York Times, June 25, 1996 AD
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