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The Robots' Rebellion – The Story of Spiritual Renaissance: David Icke’s History of the New World Order
Unavailable
The Robots' Rebellion – The Story of Spiritual Renaissance: David Icke’s History of the New World Order
Unavailable
The Robots' Rebellion – The Story of Spiritual Renaissance: David Icke’s History of the New World Order
Ebook504 pages11 hours

The Robots' Rebellion – The Story of Spiritual Renaissance: David Icke’s History of the New World Order

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David Icke’s strongest book to date, The Robots’ Rebellion reveals the alarming extent to which people of all nations are programmed by the ideas fed to them by those in power. We live in a world which is increasingly dominated by technology but, according to Icke, it is we who are the robots.

Fearlessly, he tears down the veils of hypocrisy, built up for generations by the corrupt forces of Church, State, science and commerce — and reveals the true pathos of the human condition beneath. He points, too, to the frightening influence wielded throughout the planet by a merciless and manipulative network of secret societies.

The existence of long-established links between Earth-bound humanity and beings from other dimensions and planets in the Universe has been suppressed for years, says Icke, by the world’s power-broking hierarchy. When ordinary people learn the real role they have to play within a rich and varied cosmic society, rebellion against those who have kept this extraordinary truth from them will, he predicts, be inevitable.

The author is no stranger to controversy. Formerly best-known as a TV sports commentator and leading spokesman for the British Green Party, he is gaining increasing authority as a tireless campaigner for truth. His widely-publicised spiritual transformation has given him the courage to speak out fearlessly against lies deceit.

Hidebound politicians, bankers, economists, educationalists, scientists and the leaders of the world’s established religions are not going to welcome Icke’s challenging book. But it is not intended for those who wield and abuse power. This book is for the world’s unwilling robots who, says Icke, in an upbeat conclusion, have it within themselves to rise up — and take control of their own exciting destiny.

The Robots’ Rebellion: Table of Contents
    Introduction
    Remember Who You Are

    PART ONE: The Darkness
  1. The Takeover Bid
  2. Collective Amnesia
  3. The Brotherhood of Clans
  4. Bible Stories
  5. Hell on Earth
  6. Arabian Knights
  7. The Cracks Appear
  8. Eagle Tails
  9. The Rule of Science
  10. The World at War
  11. Big is Beautiful
  12. The New World Order
  13. When Will We Ever Learn?

  14. PART TWO: The Light
  15. Goodbye to All That
  16. The Economics of Enough
  17. The Politics of People
  18. The Science of Sanity
  19. Bricks in the Wall
  20. Exploitation of the Spirit
  21. The World Needs Rebels
LanguageEnglish
Release dateAug 26, 1999
ISBN9780717159109
Unavailable
The Robots' Rebellion – The Story of Spiritual Renaissance: David Icke’s History of the New World Order
Author

David Icke

Formerly best known as a TV sports commentator and leading spokesman for the British Green Party, David Icke is a world renowned philosopher, social visionary and tireless campaigner for truth. He credits a widely publicised spiritual transformation with giving him the courage to speak out fearlessly against lies and deceit. These days, he travels extensively, offering public talks and discussions about the belief systems and clandestine interests that shape our world. He is the author of several acclaimed titles, including Heal The World, The Robots' Rebellion and Truth Vibrations.

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  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
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    The 3 stars is more because it was compelling to read for a conspiracy theory fan like me. It's definitely not for how believable I found it. I also get how he got condemned for using the discredited Protocols of Zion, (for which he doesn't blame Jewish people but the shadowy Brotherhood who control the world, where goyim is a word for those who do not belong, rather like the way knitters sometimes use muggles to refer to non-knitters)Yes, there is a core of interesting ideas about how we're unthinkingly walking into a world of being controled by the 1%, where we look to today and not to tomorrow and the damage being done. Where Walmart employees have to rely on handouts to survive instead of having a living wage. Yes these things are not good, but I don't think there's an alien race imposing this on humanity, I think we need to take ownership of the situation and actually do something about it rather than trying to blame someone else.Yes, there is probably propaganda and people who work at keeping people accepting of the status quo, and there are always going to be people who want others to make their decisions for them, whether that's through religion, science or whatever but there are also a lot of frustrated people who are too tired to make changes.Made me angry where it needs citations, he makes claims or uses the phrase "I believe..." and doesn't offer expliantions, he's saying throughout that you should questions received wisdom but then saying that you should trust him. I really did want a "citation needed" stamp throughout. He also has a bibliography that doesn't reflect the book, text that appear in your work should be in the bibliography, otherwise it's "extra reading" or "recommended further reading" or "recommended reads". In many instances there are quotes from people that lack sources which is just not good enough. He also talks about religion as being wrong and evil but fails to see the people within many of those religions who have strived for good.Interesting, wrongheaded, with some food for thought and eyerolling moment as well.