Efforts to Obscure Nazi Occultism in Academia
A Face-Value Analysis of Historiographical Suppression and Historical Continuity
Abstract Mainstream academic historiography has consistently sought to decouple the Nazi regime, the Thule Society, the Vril Society, and the Ahnenerbe from any literal contact with non-human entities. This paper examines the methodological, institutional, and ideological mechanisms behind this decoupling and contrasts it with the face-value framework presented in The War Against Aliens and How to Win It. When viewed through the lens of long-term historical continuity, the academic effort to frame Nazi occultism as mere ideological fantasy or racist mysticism appears as a deliberate soft-pedaling that obscures the connection between ancient “devils/demons” and modern Grey aliens under a directing horned/reptilian tier.
Introduction The historiography of Nazi occultism is dominated by a strong consensus that any involvement with esoteric or supernatural elements was symbolic, ideological, or propagandistic rather than literal. Scholars such as Nicholas Goodrick-Clarke (The Occult Roots of Nazism, 1985) have set the standard by acknowledging the influence of Ariosophy and groups like the Thule Society while firmly rejecting claims of actual contact with non-human intelligences. This academic position effectively decouples the Nazi regime from any genuine reaching out to, communication with, or alignment with higher beings (demons, reptilian entities, or other non-human intelligences). The face-value framework developed in this book reveals this decoupling as part of a broader pattern: the long-term suppression of historical continuity between ancient “devils/demons” and modern Grey aliens operating under a technologically superior horned/reptilian directing tier.
1. Methodological Materialism Academic history operates under strict materialist assumptions that automatically reclassify any claim of non-human agency as myth, delusion, or propaganda. Goodrick-Clarke’s seminal work acknowledges the ideological links between Ariosophy, the Thule Society, and certain Nazi figures but treats all supernatural elements as symbolic or psychological rather than literal. Subsequent scholars routinely cite this work to dismiss literal contact with higher beings as “sensational fiction” or “modern mythology.” This methodological choice is not neutral; it systematically excludes the possibility that Nazi occult circles were attempting to contact and align with the same non-human intelligences described in ancient texts.
2. Selective Source Interpretation Surviving primary documents — Ahnenerbe records, Thule correspondence, Vril materials, and captured wartime technical intelligence reports — contain ritual invocations, blood oaths, serpent-dragon symbolism, and references to higher powers. These are consistently interpreted as cultural or political metaphors rather than evidence of actual contact. The widespread destruction of records at the end of the war further enables this selective reading. The result is a sanitized narrative that strips away the invocatory and ritualistic dimensions that align with ancient accounts of horned/reptilian beings and modern abduction reports.
3. Institutional and Career Pressure Scholars who explore the possibility of literal non-human contact risk being labeled fringe or conspiracy theorists, losing funding, or being marginalized in academic circles. This creates a self-reinforcing consensus that treats the entire topic as taboo. The encyclopedia.pub entry on “Occultism in Nazism” exemplifies this approach: it acknowledges ideological links but firmly rejects any supernatural or non-human interpretation as sensationalism. This institutional pressure ensures that the historical continuity between ancient “devils” and modern Grey aliens remains obscured from public and scholarly view.
4. Contrast with the Face-Value Framework The face-value framework reveals the opposite pattern. Nazi occult circles were actively attempting to contact and align with the same higher intelligences described in ancient texts — the Watchers in the Book of Enoch, incubi/succubi in medieval grimoires, and serpent-dragon beings in Sumerian and Vedic literature. The Greys appear as a recent bio-engineered operative class under the direction of an ancient horned/reptilian tier that maintains a clear technological advantage (portable phase-shift field-generation technology). The academic effort to obscure this continuity serves to maintain the materialist worldview and prevent the public from recognizing the long-term non-human influence on human affairs. This decoupling is not neutral scholarship — it is part of the broader degradation system described in this book, ensuring that humanity remains unaware of the directing intelligence behind both ancient “devils” and modern Greys.
Conclusion The academic soft-pedaling of Nazi occultism is part of a larger, long-term effort to sever the historical continuity between ancient non-human entities and their modern manifestations. When examined through the face-value lens — combining primary religious and occult sources, Nazi archival material, and thousands of modern abduction regressions — the probability is high that the “devils of old” and the Grey aliens represent the same intelligence operating under a directing horned/reptilian tier. Recognizing this continuity is essential for understanding the full scope of the threat and for reclaiming human sovereignty.
References
- Goodrick-Clarke, N. (1985). The Occult Roots of Nazism. I.B. Tauris.
- Jacobs, D. M. (1998). The Threat. Simon & Schuster.
- Jacobs, D. M. (2015). Walking Among Us. Disinformation Books.
- Hopkins, B. (1996). Witnessed. Pocket Books.
- Mack, J. E. (1994). Abduction. Scribner.
- Charles, R. H. (1912). The Book of Enoch. Oxford University Press.
- Nickelsburg, G. W. E. (2001). 1 Enoch: A Commentary on the Book of 1 Enoch. Fortress Press.
- Heidel, A. (1951). The Babylonian Genesis. University of Chicago Press.
- Dolan, R. M. (2000). UFOs and the National Security State, Vol. 1. Keyhole Publishing.
- Dolan, R. M. (2009). UFOs and the National Security State, Vol. 2. Keyhole Publishing.

