In the name of- Anonymous 02/08/15 (Sun) 02:49:57 No. 5
We Satanists are a marginalized group. Our kind are often disparaged, ostracized, and heavily propagandized against by associates and strangers alike. The media is infused with nonsense pertaining towards seekers of darkness. Legends often paint the narrative of normalized justice as a condition not capable of occurring by the antics or strategies of those who stray too far from the mainstream. Games reflect this, as do movies, and folklore is often no different. As such, the concept of the Satanist is subaltern. In relation to this systemic isolation, the concept of the Satanist is not solely regulated to just the agent. The Satanist, as a regular recipient of disinformation and historical/present propagandizing, exists in the same nature as other exiled, previously persecuted, presently demonized orientations. Thus, the spectacle of the Satanist is one also shared by the bastardized, the outcast, the alienated. This lounge represents but a small marking upon the matrix which exists around us: it is a statement, a phrase uttered into the cybersphere, stepped into and occupied but for a moment by curious explorers. The marginalized have a home here; the disciple and guide both find a union in their shared lust for the shadow.
Anonymous SAGE! 05/09/15 (Sat) 20:38:28 No. 163
Thought for the day:
What does it mean to become marginalized?
Anonymous 07/01/15 (Wed) 23:30:40 No. 176
The subaltern must continually refresh the cycles of resistance or else become assimilated within the stratum of populist consciousness.
Anonymous 08/04/15 (Tue) 19:18:46 No. 181
>>163
I think marginalizing is mostly a public action that occurs when people are least involved with some one else. This could be psychically, physically, emotionally.
>the spectacle of the Satanist is one also shared by the bastardized, the outcast, the alienated
I'm not certain what you mean by this. What does spectacle mean in this context?