A.k.a. Russell Pine (real name)
Jordan Maxwell is a grand old man of
American conspiracy theory,
crackpottery and nonsense. His work is largely responsible for the nonsense
peddled in the incoherent, made-for-the-Internet “documentary” Zeitgeist,
and he has apparently been an important influence on David Icke:
Maxwell has long claimed that the world is secretly run by lizards from another
dimension. He was also, for a while, editor of the Truth Seeker Magazine, has produced “documentaries” for CBS, and –
of course – hosted his own radio show. Maxwell considers himself the world’s
leading expert in the occult, based on his powers of imagination and inability
to comprehend the significance of aligning one’s belief with reality. He is accordingly notable for
having pushed more or less any conspiracy theory or branch of pseudoscientific
nonsense you could think of, from ancient aliens and the claim that there is a star-gate in Iraq that teleports people to a military base on Mars, to 9/11 conspiracies.
A main strain of Maxwell’s, uh, thought is astro-theology, an astrological reinterpretation of theology according to which religious doctrines are based
on astronomical events. He is also notable for pushing the (rather popular)
idea that Christianity is really a variant of the cult of Horus, a conclusion
reached by focusing on some similarities and disregarding the vast number of
dissimilarities. Maxwell is known to rant for hours about these issues, backed
up with a couple of Bible quotes and perceived connections between various events
and his presuppositions. Maxwell, however, has little actual knowledge of
ancient cultures and belief systems, which is an advantage since it means that
there will be fewer facts available to him that would constrain his
interpretations.
Much of his work is (in the grand tradition
of the insane rantings unfettered by reality or accountability starting with
Isidore of Seville) based on drawing ridiculous conclusions about the world
based on often imagined etymological connections and similarities in names and
expressions. Of course, Maxwell arguably knows even less, if possible, about
linguistics than about history, and the technique he applies is the one commonly
known as paleo-babble. Some examples
of Maxwell’s paleobabble are discussed here.
One example: According to Maxwell, “[m]agic
wands were always made out of the wood of a Holly tree. It’s made out of Holly
wood. Hollywood is a Druidic establishment and the symbols, the words, the
terms, the stories, are designed. Think about it. Think about how Hollywood
does what they do. I’m not saying they’re evil, I’m just explaining how
Hollywood works.” Calling for readers to think for themselves is an
effective trick given the critical reasoning abilities required to listen to
Maxwell in the first place. Of course, druidic cultures using magic sticks didn’t in fact make these sticks of holly.
Bah. Details.
From his website you can currently purchase
a set of 28 DVDs containing “the entire
works of Jordan Maxwell” for the neat price of $ 570.
Of course, like so many conspiracy
theorists of his ilk, Maxwell is himself the target of numerous deranged
conspiracy theories (an example),
and is often accused of being a tool for the New World Order.
Diagnosis: Utterly ridiculous, of course,
yet Maxwell’s influence on contemporary conspiracy theories is significant –
he’s been through them all, using techniques and assertions unconstrained by
truth, evidence or rules for rational inference.
Yup, pretty much nailed it.
ReplyDeleteYou have to do some study. To think he's a crackpot, you have to have zero knowledge of etymology, theology, architecture, geography. and so on....
ReplyDeleteI actually know something about architecture and about philology. I suspect you don't.
Delete(The fact that you are unable to recognize Maxwell's nonsense for what it is, is pretty solid evidence for the claim that you don't.)
Jordan Maxwell is the Zodiac killer.
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