- ISBN13: 9780307390677
- Condition: NEW
- Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.
Product Description
Did you know?
• Freemasonry’s first American lodge included a young Benjamin Franklin among its members.
• The Knights Templar began as impoverished warrior monks then evolved into bankers.
• Groom Lake, Dreamland, Homey Airport, Paradise Ranch, The Farm, Watertown Strip, Red Square, “The Box,” are all names for Area 51.
An indispensable guide, Cults, Conspiracies, and Secret Societies connects the dots and … More >>
Tags: Black, Bones, Conspiracies, Cults, Freemasons, Helicopters, Illuminati, many, More, Order, Scoop, Secret, Skull, Societies, Straight, World

To be honest I have not read the whole book, only read the first 50 pages. I was expecting a historical or philosophical issue. However, this is an alphabetical list of brief descriptions of the organized cults and conspiracies. There seems to be no overarching theme or draw conclusions. I only know what you’re getting into.
Rating: 2 / 5
The long title and subtitle of the book by Arthur Goldwag, “cults, conspiracies and secret societies: the ball straight Masons, the Illuminati, Skull and Bones, the black helicopters, The New World Order, and many, many more,” denies the brevity with which addresses most of the book covers many subjects. It is true also an avid researcher can find something online or in a public library or a library well stocked with large amounts of detailed material for each subject exhaustively in his book Goldwag research. This is an advantage rather than disadvantage, Goldwag approach. Goldwag book only provides attractive breadcrumbs. It leaves the reader to follow the way, if you’re hungry for more information on the issues that interest, many of whom she had never met before work can explore Goldwag. Goldwag experts writing is fresh and clean, often tongue in cheek, and he is not afraid to express his personal opinion about some of the absurd cults, conspiracies, secrets and present of the company in his book. It is a guide, informative and entertaining read, which I think is exactly what the author intended.
Rating: 3 / 5
People who criticize this book are not the “conspiracy nuts.” This kind of damage reflects a problem with the Goldwag book that covers a range of groups within its provocative closing tag slapped on them. Given this pattern, because I am not the Catholic Church? Obviously, the book addresses the reader sees all kinds of secret societies as strange or “marginal” and likes to have a new partner in Goldwag gossip. The book has no Index, and is the definition of cults is simplistic and too short. At least acknowledges Goldwag – or suggestion – the legitimacy of skepticism has felt about 9 / 11 and the government’s failure to prevent these attacks (after many warnings). Instead of just listing all these companies and give a brief description of your preview, in some cases, a long history, why not include a sociological study of why people, being social creatures, so that groups some cases rest with “cults” or “secret societies”? Why conspiracy group of thinkers who can not “groups” in the formal sense of the term, sects and secret societies? They are those who believe that Oswald was, as he put it, a “Patsy” nuts conspiracy or pawn? The Committee considered the case Gobo 70 years, left open that possibility and supports the conclusions of the Warren Commission. The founding fathers were skeptical of the government and large corporations. They were a sect, too?
Part of my complaint with this book is easy reading, disposable packaging. A provocative title is a slap in an orange cover, all indexes and tables of contents for quick reading and sloppy, and a bag full of groups of 384 pages in total. S airport is a purchase, designed to seduce us with its catchy, it seems, the research title and subtitle. Notice how quickly recycle the used category. Readers may have found that lack of substance? This book preaches to his choir of pragmatic readers, and the author got his “information” from all sources, Internet, making this another quick-buck operation by the author and publisher.
Rating: 2 / 5
Shallow, vain and value judgments. This book is a joke. “Look inside” the table of contents and use of the Internet (real source of Goldwag) – see more and save a tree in the process.
Rating: 1 / 5
No notes? No index? A confession of having used the Internet as a “source”? And in another interview that you see is not Mason. Wow. You have balls to admit so freely that you’re not a real expert you are selling.
Anyone interested in a little “more” refined “volume might be interested in Mark Masons of Tabberts America.” It reads like a textbook, and sorry, no secrets dark and deep.
Do you want the real scoop on Freemasonry? Join a Lodge.
Rating: 2 / 5