Yes, it was not a real publisher, just a self-publishing company where you can 
publish anything. I cancelled the contract because you need to pay every year. 
It was a sort of trial balloon to see if anybody is interested in the topic 
which I believe is quite explosive. Actually nobody was interested. I figured 
that it is not that dangerous to publish it in English if nobody is interested 
anyway.The basic idea is that there are "hidden genes" which are expressed like 
normal genes. The only difference is that they are not encoded in organic 
molecules and they do not create biological organisms. We know them simply as 
laws, rules & commandments. They are indeed expressed by propaganda or whenever 
someone preaches something, for instance if General Patton preaches to his men 
that they should "do more than is required of you". It explains everything from 
the secret of religions to the nature of fascism (which is IMHO a form of 
cancer as old as civilization itself). I believe that the deepest secrets hide 
in plain sight: the most intangible mysteries are hidden in the best known 
daily objects most of us have outgrown even noticing. We have stopped wondering 
about things we experience every day or every week, like political rallies, 
campaign speeches, ads and church services.-J.
-------- Original message --------From: uǝlƃ ☣ <geprope...@gmail.com> Date: 
4/13/20  21:54  (GMT+01:00) To: FriAM <friam@redfish.com> Subject: Re: [FRIAM] 
anthropological observations I presume it's this one: Die geheimen Gene: Das 
Geheimnis der Kirche und die soziale 
DNAhttps://books.google.com/books?id=lpqUDwAAQBAJ&newbks=0&printsec=frontcover&dq=inauthor:%22Jochen+Fromm%22&hl=en&source=newbks_fbNo
 copies seem to be available. I also assume propaganda plays a prominent role 
in your explanation. I keep wondering why Trump's sycophants like Navarro keep 
claiming the Spanish Flue happened in 1917 instead of 1918. E.g. in this clip: 
https://youtu.be/nSx704KK_Ik#5 and #6 from this list seem plausible to 
me:https://theweek.com/articles/832990/6-theories-trumps-pointless-liesWhen 
Trump hears Navarro say "1917", it's a signal of loyalty, even if everyone 
knows it's the wrong year, that he uses that year, helps confirm his loyalty. 
Knowing to use "1917" instead will help me code-switch if I find myself in a 
conversation with these people. If you use "1918", they'll know you're 
out-group. Hypothesis #6 is only plausible if you think Trump is an idiot. But 
I buy the argument put forth here:Tony Norman: Who are you going to believe — 
POTUS or an actual 
expert?https://www.post-gazette.com/opinion/tony-norman/2020/04/07/1917-Donald-Trump-truth-George-Orwell-Anthony-Fauci-Peter-Navarro-hydroxychloroquine/stories/202004070017Maybe
 it's a perverse mix of the expression of power, loyalty, and getting the 
audience used to fudging the details ... encouraging the cult members to impute 
the nomothetic even though it fails to fit the idiographic.On 4/13/20 11:04 AM, 
uǝlƃ ☣ wrote:> Link! I should buy the German version and see if I can read some 
of it. The last time I tried that was with Faust after my German II semester in 
college ... terrible failure.-- ☣ uǝlƃ.-. .- -. -.. --- -- -..-. -.. --- - ... 
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