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Even *if* there were "backwards masking", human beings cannot understand it, neither at the
conscious or subconscious level.
Go listen to the backwards masking on the Iron Maiden album, "Piece Of Mind". It is between the
songs The Trooper and Still Life. Even knowing that it is there, that it can clearly
be heard with no competing sounds to block it, and with the words written for you to read, no
rational person can actually claim to understand the backwards recording.
Http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Piece_of_Mind
Edit:
Comparing a backwards written message with a reversed recording shows just how uneducated you are. |
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K9  20 May 2008 19:02
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Just another dig at people who don't listen to "Jesus-Music". |
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I believe subliminal messages to be placebo in most cases, there are few out there intentionally put
and which are real.
But if a person had never heard it before and listened they wouldn't hear anything but gibberish,
however stick "lyrics" to it and people believe. |
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Some of these people are just plain dumb. They are just trying to get the world to listen to them.
All they want is attention. They are also just trying to get people to join their religions. What
better way to turn to religion than to find out your son has been listening to pro-saten music. They
try to ruin these people by saying idiotic stuff once again, what they do not realise is that the
more they preach on how bad this music is, the more people will listen to the music. They are just
feeding a fire, a fire they will never put out. |
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I hear it. Not all is clear, but it is there. You just don't want to believe that the music you love
has "satan" in it. At one time, I did not want to believe that Disney had subliminals, but I looked
into it. The truth should be accepted whether you like it or not. |
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Although I'm generally sceptical of such claims from Christians, in the case of Led Zeppelin I think
the possibility is not entirely to be dismissed. Led Zep's lead guitarist, Jimmy Page, was
fascinated by the occult and by Aleister Crowley. Crowley was an esotericist, some say a satanist,
but I defer judgment about such things to those who know better. "Do what thou wilt shall be the
whole of the law" was his motto.
Jimmy Page bought Boleskine House which Crowley had owned and where he had attempted to perform some
magical ritual to make contact with his guardian angel or the devil depending on whose account you
read. He also collected Crowley memorabilia. So it's not at all far-fetched to think that something
satanic might have crept into Led Zeppelin's songs, even that some message might have been
mischievously inserted backwards into the song. |
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