Nordic mythology
2020-05-11
That’s what it should look like!
Marcus Ljunggren
"Nordic mythology is in principle a handbook on how to establish and maintain a power structure if we look at the moral of its characters and stories about them.
First we have the king of the “gods” Odin who gained his wisdom by sacrificing one eye in Mimer’s well and thus got to see what has been and therefore got the ability to predict the future. A clear reference to the fact that knowledge is power, and how through his sacrifice he gained a new overall perspective of how the universe works.
To know where you are going, you must first familiarize yourself with where you come from over time - your history. And as George Orwell once so elegantly put it
“Who controls the past controls the future. Who controls the present controls the past.”
That is, those who have the opportunity to control the description of history and thus the narrative, will be able to act without being seen for themselves.
Turned into real time, Wallenberg is thus the equivalent of Odin the omniscient, with the big difference that he has a telecom infrastructure available to control the information flows in modern times.
To his aid, Oden has an intelligence service collective called Hugin - Hågen eller thought - and Munin - memory - in the form of 2 ravens, who keep track of him about what is happening over Yggdrasill’s tribe - the universe. In modern times the equivalent of SÄPO, MUST, FRA etc. (Server halls must also be a good way to keep track of memories such as thoughts.)
Odin also has 2 wolves to help him, one is called Geke - the greedy - and Freke - the voracious. These are the equivalent of those who are willing to go over corpses for their individual profit maximization benefit. These 2 thus describe in modern times the business leaders and puppet leaders who work for Odin - Wallenberg - and who are thankfully allowed to plunder the world on their own behalf.
At the same time, however, these must be protected from those who may pose a threat to this basic power structure - the giants - ie those who are considered a threat to the “gods” with great intellectual- such as violence capital and have the power to expel them from the polls - which means that one must establish as control the monopoly of violence which in Nordic mythology is represented by Tor with his hammer.
In other words, Tor is a description of the Police and the military, and exactly the personality you look for in these organizations, ie people who are not too smart, sees all problems as a nail - why Tor has a hammer - and therefore “only” follows orders. At the same time, those who are to be ruled must experience the “giants” as bad and those who hold this monopoly of violence as “gods” - the Stockholm syndrome is called that.
Furthermore, the “gods” also need various gatekeepers who can warn of the “giants” who can pose a threat to the power structure and this gatekeeper who fits the rainbow bridge - Bi-frost - in Nordic mythology is called Heimdall.
Heimdall can see from a distance of 50 miles, hear how the grass grows and see how the hair in the sheep’s wool grows. The moral behind this is that he can hear the grassroots organizations that are about to emerge and see the sheep that are about to become wolves long before they can pose a threat to the “gods”.
Rewritten in modern times, ie Heimdall represents all the opinion-forming bodies that work for the maintenance of the power structure. Journalists, economists, the Riksbank, etc. and in Sweden mainly Expo, whose warnings are "anti-Semitic and which set the stage for the corridor of opinion.
At the same time, one needs a divided and ruling structure that everyone can divide into - in modern times ideology - and this in Nordic mythology is controlled and described by the god of war Tyr who has the task of controlling Odin’s army, an army that is not meant to coexist then conflict which is always the very goal. So why does the NMR (Swedish far right)Tyr rune actually have a symbol and the AFA(antifa) a Banner as its symbols? Could it be that both parties are controlled by the same power structure? Just as Mathias Wåg - AFA’s army commander put it in a thread a few years ago - the fight is the goal. Soldiers of Odin should consequently be more accurately translated as Soldiers of Wallenberg.
In Idun the most beautiful of all goddesses, we in turn have the unattainable ideal, the woman that all women want, and the woman that all men want. A direct reference to the model and the acting industry, bread and acting, ie. and needed to keep people in a passivated state. Her male counterparts are Frej and Brage.
And last but certainly not least, we have Loki the wordy - the politician - who always manages to put both gods and humans on the edge of the pot with his bad morals and his continuous instigation but who always manages to get on his feet every time he steps on the piano.
The personalities described here are thus what is required to establish a power structure, and the sense moral behind the tales in turn are instructions on how to preserve it, by exploiting human weaknesses described in Christian mythology in the 7 deadly sins.
With this in mind, one can think a little about why we up in the cold north got this obscure little “religion” while the rest of Europe was Christianized from the reminiscences of the Roman Empire, and about the spread of the Vikings in the strategic places to control trade throughout the Baltic Sea such as The North Sea was really done without an overarching operational strategic planning.
Stenaline recently named one of its ships the Edda, maybe the answer lies in that? "