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White Cyclosa

Revision as of 20:46, 18 June 2013 by 70.195.2.184 (talk) (baba yaga:West Slavic peoples, Ježibaba::trade wind:dead black beauties, majestic equine car)

Behind the scaling tones and the eerie chord pitches it really sounds like helicopter blades. Could this song be related to Split Your Infinities?

If you watch the video where they took the background monologue from (or read about FEMA Camp conspiracy theories) the theme of helicopters comes up a lot. This includes the possibility that the government will use them to transport people to the camps in the event of martial law or a major disease outbreak. Maybe this is the point in the album's 'plot' in which the government has begun to intern people at these camps due to disease outbreak (because of other song titles i.e. "Sick Times", "Cold Earth", and "Come to Dust"). Gemini was the name of the disease created by the government to diminish the population and give a front for why citizens must report for relocation to FEMA camps via helicopter.

White Cyclosa is a spider that sets up decoys or scapegoats of in its likeness to draw attention away from itself and successfully kill, just as the government might set up scapegoats of "terrorism", "disease outbreak", or other instances to sustain its survival in the face of threat.


[Trigger Warning, BDSM] Given that Ai Wei Wei is associated with grass mud horses, you could extract both "Wey-Te Cyclosa" and "Jacquard Cause-Wey" are mathematical postulates containing the keyword "Wey" for some mini-EP, suppose <AI> <Cyclosa><Jacquard>, perhaps ABB'A' motiv. Adding A.I. to Way Way is funny because Deux Ex Machina from Looking Glass dealt with FEMA camps and also A.I. assassin cyborgs. It's fookin' fringe: http://mediamatters.org/search/index?qstring=fema+beck&tags=&tags=&tags=&issues=&from=MM%2FDD%2FYYYY&to=MM%2FDD%2FYYYY Also, A.I. (Stanley Kubrick) had an ARG associated with its release, so perhaps we're sititing on a Warp video game. http://www.hivplusmag.com/magazine/2010/05/01/issue-76-may-june-2010 deals with AIDS/LifeCycle fund raiser, which coincided with Tomorrow's Harvest's release date, and http://www.hivplusmag.com/magazine/2010/05/01/issue-76-may-june-2010 deals with Golden Gate Bridge. There are also a few zines that deal with DIY sex toys, like http://www.qzap.org/v5/gallery/main.php?g2_view=core.DownloadItem&g2_itemId=1899 and http://www.qzap.org/v5/gallery/main.php?g2_view=core.DownloadItem&g2_itemId=375, all while http://www.qzap.org/v5/gallery/main.php?g2_view=core.DownloadItem&g2_itemId=259 deals with "going between the spindles" with early notions of safe sex, AIDS virii, and condoms in the Duesberg report. "Come to Dust" also looks like "Comte de Sade."