Tuesday, 7 October 2014

Book review: Black Terror White Soldiers: Islam, Fascism & the New Age


Author: David Livingstone
Publisher: Sabilillah Publications
Released: June 2013


There’s too much information presented in this book, and at over 600 pages in length it’s an interminable chore to slog through it all.

Simply put, there’s too much going on here, and there’s no narrative thread that ties everything together. The research carried out for this one book could easily be used to create 10,000 other books. The books created from this information would be far more valuable than their original source as they could look at their individual subject matters in a far more satisfying manner than the original.

Bin Laden the acknowledged CIA agent
A typical sentence in ‘Black Terror White Soldiers’ goes something like this:

‘Bob knew Arnold, who knew Fred, who knew Charlie, who worked for X who believed in Y, and Y is related to W and W discusses the idea of Tom and Tom is related to Tracey who was connected on her maternal side to Trevor who was influenced by the teachings of Bob.’

This sentence structure is extremely taxing to follow, and it makes the end point almost completely redundant as you forget what it was all about in the first place. This is probably the least reader friendly book that I’ve ever read. From page to page it goes on and on in this highly complicated, scatological manner, barely bothering to link one idea to the other or putting anything of a narrative or ideological branch around any of it.

This is not a story. It’s a list, and who wants to read a list that goes on for over 600 pages? I’ve climbed a bloody mountain here, and it kind of sucked the entire way up. Crap, I’m not even sure why I bothered climbing the mountain in the first place.

But now that I’ve done it, what did I make of it all? What did I learn?  In one sentence, I learnt the following:

Everybody is lying, and those not deliberately lying are foolish dupes, and there’s not much that you can do about it.

That’s all I could get out of the book. Everybody who is trying to spread some truth into the world are linked to some group or other that we shouldn’t trust, so even when people are trying to tell us the truth they are just useful idiots being manipulated by shadowy occulted groups.

Corporate fascism, all wrapped up in political correctness
I did enjoy the part of the book that covers the occult theology of the elite’s, as it ties into my growing realisation that western democracy is a fraud, and that we are being manipulated by a tiny group with ties to intelligence agencies and occult secret societies.

I also enjoyed the section of the book that exposed how the Salafi/Wahabi death cults originating from Saudi Arabia have been manufactured from the start to serve western imperial objectives. However, this informative material is contained within reams and reams of dense, almost unreadable text, so the enjoyablity factor I got from reading this book, as a whole, was very, very low.

Despite all of the valuable information that it undoubtedly contains, I cannot recommend this book. It might even put you off exploring some of the topics discussed as it is so coldly and humourlessly written it’s almost like it was put together by a team of researchers rather than one human individual. If you want to read about any of the subjects collected within the chapters of this book then I’d strongly suggest you get a book that focuses exclusively on that one subject.

‘Black Terror White Soldiers’ will give you lots of references, but it’s almost unreadable and comes to no definitive conclusions about anything, other than the already painfully obvious fact that most of the people with mainstream platforms are lying to you. It doesn’t even try to present the subject matter in an enjoyable, reader friendly narrative form and is an absolute slog to get through, from beginning to end.

Rating: 5/10 (For the research material that it contains) 



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