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Pisces Moon: The Dark Arts of Empire

Current price: $22.95
Pisces Moon: The Dark Arts of Empire
Pisces Moon: The Dark Arts of Empire

Barnes and Noble

Pisces Moon: The Dark Arts of Empire

Current price: $22.95

Size: Audiobook

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Pisces Moon: The Dark Arts of Empire
is a sweeping critical analysis of Western colonialism, its foundational beliefs in militarism, patriarchy, Christianity and white supremacy; and its destructive impact on the nations of Southeast Asia and, ultimately, America.
Valentine focuses on the "dark arts" of empire: the black bag of CIA covert operations, including bribery, right-wing coups, assassinations, disinformation, and intimate relationships with drug, sex and artifact traffickers. He pays especially close attention to the CIA’s use of psychological warfare to play upon the beliefs of people to shape their political and social movements. Pisces Moon shines a light on the central role played by missionaries, academics, writers, and filmmakers in assisting and promoting Western imperialism.
In the mid-1990s, based on his book
The Phoenix Program
(Wm. Morrow) the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) hired Valentine as a consultant to a documentary series it was making about the CIA’s activities in South Vietnam. Valentine embarked for London in February 1991 as the sun was about to enter Pisces, the astrological sign which rules deception, espionage, foreign things, prisons and religion. The month-long trip began with five days in London, where Valentine was asked to carry ten thousand dollars in cash to the BBC crew in Vietnam. After a memorable week in Vietnam, Valentine spent two weeks traveling around Thailand interviewing expat CIA officers for his books on CIA drug smuggling. Unique in every respect,
Pisces Moon
features many prominent, historically significant CIA officers he with whom he has interacted with while conducting his original research.
Throughout the narrative,
explains how decades of propaganda and disinformation directed against them by war planners, religious leaders and corporate institutions have made it nearly impossible for Americans to distinguish fact from fiction; a descent into mass delusion that William Burroughs called "the backlash and bad karma of empire."
will grab you from page one and won’t let go.

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