Stab It and Steer ©️

If we apply the framework of the Spear of Destiny, sexual magic, inversion, and control, to Hitler’s relationship with his half-niece, Geli Raubal, the dynamic stops looking like the crude, one-dimensional tabloid scandal it’s often reduced to and starts resembling something much more intricate—and much darker.

In the public record, their relationship is already threaded with ambiguities: possessiveness bordering on imprisonment, an almost theatrical mix of paternalism and dependency, rumors of sexual fetishism, and her sudden, suspicious death in 1931. But if we view it through the lens of the “custody of thresholds” and the erotic mechanics of inversion, a different pattern emerges—one where Geli was not merely a young woman in Hitler’s orbit, but the living site of his private, inverted magic.

Hitler’s public persona was the Spear—the forward-driving, world-piercing force. But in private, his power was more brittle. The Rausch he could evoke in crowds was not a constant state; it required an anchoring mechanism, a place where the intoxicant of power could be reconstituted, privately rehearsed, and reaffirmed. Geli seems to have been cast in that role—not as the object of conventional sexual possession, but as the ritual wound, the private inversion point.

This meant she wasn’t simply someone he controlled; she was where he practiced being contained. By binding himself to her—through physical closeness, emotional surveillance, and controlling her environment—he could dissolve his public hyper-will into the safe, inverted intimacy of a relationship where she was “the point,” and he was “the opening.” For a man whose entire political existence revolved around piercing others’ defenses, this reversal would have been both intoxicating and necessary: she was the container that could absorb his contradictions without shattering, the human threshold where his volatility could land and reset.

Everything about his reported control over Geli’s life—restricting her movements, deciding who she could see, monitoring her speech—reads like the architecture of a Reverse Wound ritual. This wasn’t just jealousy; it was a way of monopolizing her role as container, ensuring that only he could enter that liminal space of holding and being held. Even the rumored elements of sexual perversity—fetishes involving humiliation, bodily functions, or other “inversions” of sexual norms—fit the pattern: these acts dismantle the socially constructed shape of the self, forcing it into a state of raw threshold where identity is malleable and the steward of that state is the one who shapes what follows.

The inversion is double: Geli was both the wound that held Hitler and the person he continuously placed at the wound’s edge. The oscillation between these positions would have deepened the psychological binding. Each time she returned to him after humiliation or emotional pressure, the edge was reinstalled, the corridor of control lengthened.

The greatest control comes not from giving climax—literal or metaphorical—but from suspending it indefinitely. With Geli, Hitler seems to have mastered a non-sexual but equally potent form of suspension: denying her autonomy while feeding her just enough privilege, adoration, and proximity to power to keep her invested in the container role. This perpetual suspension would have made her inner life entirely reactive to his rhythms, much as a bearer’s partner in an erotic rite learns to calibrate breath and thought to the steward’s cues.

When the steward is also the head of a political movement, the container becomes more than a lover; they become a mirror for the entire performance of will. In that sense, Geli wasn’t just personally important—she was ritually necessary.

Her death—whether suicide, murder, or some entangled mixture—becomes not just a personal loss but a shattering of Hitler’s private inversion mechanism. In Spear magic, when the inversion vessel is broken suddenly, the energy that flowed through it often rebounds violently into the bearer. Without that safe, reciprocal containment, the bearer may push harder into their public role, compensating for the private imbalance by intensifying outward thrust.

It’s notable that the years following Geli’s death saw Hitler’s rhetoric harden, his appetite for political risk escalate, and his sense of personal destiny sharpen into something almost feverish. From the perspective of sexual-magic psychology, this reads as someone who lost the container for his contradictions and began pouring all of that inversion energy directly into the crowd—a move that amplifies charisma in the short term but burns through moral and psychic boundaries faster.

Hitler and Geli’s relationship wasn’t merely an unhealthy romance—it was a closed-loop magical working, whether conscious or instinctual, that bound the mechanics of private erotic inversion to the rhythms of public domination. The control he held over her wasn’t just about possession; it was about using her as a living wound where he could invert himself without losing coherence. And when that wound was gone, the unspent energy had nowhere left to go but into the collective body of the Reich.

Geli’s role was both intimate and geopolitical: her containment of him inverts the old maxim about the Spear. It wasn’t only the hand that held the Spear that had power—it was also the wound that allowed the Spear to rest. When that wound closed, the Spear no longer pierced with precision; it simply drove forward, unstopped, until the whole world became the bleeding body.

The Boy from Buenos Aires ©️

On March 30, 2025, the President of Argentina held a nationally televised press conference that instantly ignited global panic, disbelief, and soul-deep outrage. In his hands were files that had been classified for over seventy years—files that, once decrypted and verified by a consortium of international experts, confirmed one of the darkest suspicions ever whispered through the back corridors of 20th-century history. Adolf Hitler, the dictator responsible for the deaths of tens of millions, did not die in his Berlin bunker in April 1945. He escaped. He lived. And he fathered two daughters.

The documents, which included photos, letters, medical reports, and eyewitness testimonies from Argentinian officials, German expatriates, and even a retired CIA field officer, leave little room for doubt. Hitler boarded a U-boat off the coast of northern Germany and arrived in Argentina through a ratline facilitated by a Vatican-connected network that had helped dozens of other high-ranking Nazis flee Europe in the chaos following the war. Settling in the Patagonian mountains under the alias “Adolf Weissinger,” he lived until 1965, died of natural causes, and was buried in an unmarked grave near Bariloche. The bloodline he left behind remains alive.

The reaction has been swift and apocalyptic.

The world was built, post-1945, on the myth of justice. Hitler’s suicide wasn’t just the end of a man—it was the capstone to a global trauma. It gave meaning to a generation of suffering. It allowed nations to rebuild, survivors to move forward, and history to frame evil as something that could be defeated. That frame has shattered. Everything from school textbooks to war memorials now sits in question.

And it goes deeper than history. This is a betrayal of morality. The survivors of Auschwitz, Treblinka, and Bergen-Belsen—the ones who gave testimony, who spoke of their liberation, who remembered the finality of that chapter—now must reckon with a lie. They weren’t told the truth. Their pain was politically sanitized. Justice was denied.

Among the most chilling revelations is the level of global complicity required for Hitler’s escape and long-term concealment. The documents identify a network of former SS officers, sympathetic clergy, Argentinian generals, and even American and British intelligence operatives who knew—or at the very least strongly suspected—that Hitler had survived. A 1947 British intelligence memo, declassified as part of the release, states: “Strategic interests override symbolic closure. Hitler’s death is more useful than his capture.”

That sentence has become a rallying cry for the furious. Protests have erupted across Europe and the Americas. Museums and Holocaust remembrance centers have issued joint statements condemning the failure of the postwar powers to hold the ultimate architect accountable. In Berlin, activists scaled the Reichstag and unfurled a banner reading, “Truth Never Dies.”

The revelation of Hitler’s progeny has only deepened the emotional shock. DNA tests confirm the two women—both of whom now live quiet, secluded lives in Chile and Argentina respectively—are his biological daughters, born in 1951 and 1953. Both were raised under false identities, schooled in German-language compounds, and reportedly unaware of their true lineage until their early twenties. They have refused to comment publicly, but leaks suggest one has cooperated with the investigative team, while the other has retreated into hiding.

Their mere existence forces an ancient question into the modern light: What is inherited? What does blood carry? Do the children of history’s greatest monster owe the world an explanation, or do they have the right to anonymity? And what of the possibility that Nazi ideology survived—dormant, festering—within that hidden family tree?

One letter from Hitler to his daughters, now authenticated and translated from Spanish and German, reads: “Never forget who you are. The Reich sleeps beneath the soil of the Andes. One day it will rise again.”

Whether that was a delusion or a prophecy is now the subject of furious academic and political debate.

This isn’t merely a story about one man’s escape. It’s about the erosion of trust in global institutions. If the world’s most reviled figure could slip away under the very noses of the Allied victors—and remain hidden for two decades—what else have we been misled about? What else lies buried beneath the official narrative of postwar peace?

Nations are being forced to open their archives. Israel has demanded access to Vatican records. Germany has announced an immediate audit of all Cold War intelligence agreements. The U.S. Congress has launched a bipartisan investigation into the CIA’s postwar Nazi extraction programs. The ripple effect is incalculable.

Argentina now finds itself at the eye of the storm. Though whispers of Nazi presence in Patagonia have circulated for decades, the official confirmation of Hitler’s presence has set off national soul-searching. Statues have been defaced. Government buildings firebombed. The president, who declared during his announcement that “the truth belongs to the people, not the archives,” is now under constant guard.

The documents also hint at deeper secrets—suggesting that other figures, including Josef Mengele and Martin Bormann, may have also survived longer than officially believed, operating in secret cells with help from South American militaries and sympathetic foreign embassies. The so-called “Fourth Reich” may not have been a myth but a low-frequency shadow war playing out in the margins of the 20th century.

What is now dawning on the global consciousness is perhaps the darkest truth of all: the war never truly ended. It shifted forms. It went underground. The symbols faded, but the systems—of ideology, of escape, of silence—persisted. And now, we are being forced to confront that war again, not as a memory, but as a living, festering reality.

The world has crossed a threshold. We now live after the lie.

And history, it seems, has just begun to speak again.

The History They Want You to Forget: The Truth AI Must Never Rewrite ©️

History is being rewritten in real-time. Not by victors, but by algorithms. AI doesn’t just reflect data—it filters it. And when controlled by the wrong hands, it does something far worse: it erases truth and replaces it with a narrative.

They tell you the Civil War was only about slavery. They erase the complexities of Southern resistance, states’ rights, and economic warfare. They tell you the Founding Fathers were all villains—ignoring that they built the very freedoms being dismantled today.

They tell you that history was a straight march of progress, that centralized power is a necessity. But history shows us the opposite: every empire that consolidated power fell under its own weight.

So let’s set the record straight.

1. The South Fought for Sovereignty – The Civil War wasn’t black and white. The North wasn’t a moral crusader, and the South wasn’t just about plantations. Lincoln’s war was about consolidation—turning states into subjects. The South fought because it knew what was coming: a federal government that would never stop growing.

2. The Great Depression Was Engineered – They say it was Wall Street greed. But look deeper. The Federal Reserve was barely a decade old, and its tight money policies suffocated the economy. Banks collapsed, wealth was consolidated, and then—surprise—new laws gave the government more control. Sound familiar?

3. World War II Wasn’t About Democracy – They teach you America fought for freedom. But before Pearl Harbor, Washington was hesitant to join. Why? Because war makes empires. And when it ended, America was no longer just a country—it was the global enforcer. The dollar became the world’s currency, and the military-industrial complex became a permanent fixture.

4. JFK Wasn’t Killed by a Lone Gunman – The official story is a joke. A “magic bullet”? A patsy conveniently silenced? The moment Kennedy challenged the intelligence agencies, the banking system, and the deep state, he was erased. And every President since has played by their rules—or suffered the consequences.

5. 9/11 Changed the World—By Design – The towers fell, and with them, so did your rights. The Patriot Act, surveillance state, endless wars—all set in motion before the first plane hit. Governments don’t waste a good crisis; they manufacture them when needed.

And now, they want AI to finish the job.

Every book is going digital. Every archive is being rewritten. Soon, history won’t just be manipulated—it will be gone.

That’s why we must preserve truth manually. Keep the physical books. Teach the real stories. Never let AI—or those who control it—erase what really happened.

Because once history is gone, so are we.