Loki: .."... and finally it must be said it is simply human cowardice of the international war crimes Tribunal judgement at Nuremburg order to not address Zionism as.. as an age-old evil as old as the hills.. is their another Zionism?.. a good Zionism.. the Zionism of Herzl?... undoubtedly.. but Zionism.. is in fact evil.. and it is an evil which began before the twentieth century.. in the 1800's.. probably much earlier... perhaps William Blake wrote about Zionism and described it as an apocalypse which.. he felt.. despite the beautiful poetic imagery of the book of Saint John of Revelations.. William Blake may have felt the philosophy of Saint John's Revelations was gravely lacking and that Saint John persecuted innocent individuals with the worst, most heinously orchestrated stigmata of imputed, falsely imputed and alleged evil.. innocent individuals, innocent goddesses are FRAMED by Saint John, goddesses who are GOOD are called EVIL by Saint John, and this is a mortal sin he commits.. one of the deadly sins Saint John commits in doing this in the book of Revelations... I'm not sure if Saint John is trying to by some Machiavellian mechanations to posit a goddess he calls evil as a goddess we will resultantly see as good and sympathetic.. I don't approve of such methods.. I don't.. I don't.. I'm not a fan.. not a fan.. So William Blake.. who was also not a fan.. wrote his chronicle of the apocalypse.. and he almost... ignored evil.. William Blake wrote about an apocalyptic universe as if evil didn't exist... but see .. I liked the Orcs in Peter Jacksons movies.. I liked them as people.. and that is a fatal flaw in a Lord of the Rings movie.. because in Tolkiens books.. the Orcs are evil.. if you read "The Two Towers", you will find the Orcs SCARY.. you would NEVER want to meet an Orc.. the goblins were victims.. ONLY victims in "The Hobbit".. so Tolkien replaced them with Orcs.. who are victimizers.. and only victimizers.. they are scary.. the orcs are scary in "The Two Towers" by Tolkien especially.. it is a deep shame to have to feel that Orcs are goblins.. because this feeling is inevitable.. and the Orcs would have victimized goblins as much as hobbits.. so WHY did William Blake name one of his archetypical hero's, "Orc", of all names ... was he thinking of "Mork and Mindy".. that Mork was from a planet called "Orc".. was that it?.. was that it?.. Was William Blake trying to do something so elusively impossible with the word "Orc".. wait.. so Orc represents to of the most murderous historical phenomena of the last five centuries.. the American Revolution and the French Revolution.. Orc is the motive, instigater and mastermind of both "Revolutions", shall we say.. their is a demonic motive to Orc in this.. yet Orc IS a rebel.. and these Revolutions are not honest rebellions or insurgencies.. they couldn't be further from being such.. Orc WANTS the American and French Revolutions to be real revolutions of civilization.. and they both Revolutions seems so much depressingly the status quo and about reasserting the status quo.. William Paine knew this.. his first name was "William" I believe.. Paine's was.. Paine knew that conquest of other peoples was how countries came into being.. and he said since the time of Norman this had been the case.. William Paine I believe he talked about the conquest of the Native Americans as well in the founding of America.. and William Blake felt Paine was e'en as just a man as e'er his conversation coped withal... So, was Orc's a kind of demonic energy which motivated Orc which Blake ever the romantic still romanticized as Blake would always romanticize the demonic principle in Energy... How did William Blake see the Revolutions of Orc.. demonic, murderous, depressing in the final analysis.. yes, this was Orc to Blake.. Orc, the fiery boy..."...
This Loki monologue was written for Ralphe Fiennes's Loki in Lars Van Tiers's "The Mighty Avengers".. this Loki monologue was written by Scott Snyder...
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