The Axis of Madness

Part 1

by Roger Jackstone


Formats

Softcover
$37.95
Hardcover
$57.95
E-Book
$5.95
Softcover
$37.95

Book Details

Language : English
Publication Date : 31/01/2019

Format : Softcover
Dimensions : 6x9
Page Count : 692
ISBN : 9781984575852
Format : Hardcover
Dimensions : 6x9
Page Count : 692
ISBN : 9781984575838
Format : E-Book
Dimensions : 6x9
Page Count : 692
ISBN : 9781984575845

About the Book

The book is not like anything that’s ever been written. Hopefully, it’s not too disturbing that it drives those who need to read it away. Its subject is sex and abortion, which have become politically divisive since Roe, and the Right and Left fighting over the solution to problems caused by sexual repression are portrayed as wings of the beast, working together like the ratchet and cogs of a medieval rack. Also the thread is compressed; it covers a wide range of topics and branches from the story line to make points in many places. The book’s intention is to warn people the path the elite have us on leads to disaster. It does it in four parts; the first establishes the framework, and the others are a dream sequence by the central character Thomas Warden, an attorney who prosecutes sex criminals and has political ambitions. In the beginning, his intentions are pure. The evil he fights against is real, and it needs to be stopped, but he, like most people, doesn’t realize that Satan has found a way into the world, that Satan is smarter than him, and that he’s being used.


About the Author

I was born near the end of WW2 and grew up in a large family in a small town in the NW. My parents gave us the freedom to explore, and I was born with desire to know how things worked. When I was two I nipped the tip of my finger off studying a push lawnmower, which taught me to be careful, but it didn't dampen my curiosity at all. No one in school shared my interests and classes were boring, so I immersed myself in fantasy and later reading science fiction. By my senior year I had read most every SF book in the library, and my greatest academic accomplishment was getting an A in English for a story I wrote. My teacher encouraged me to become an author but my interest was in computers.I built a crude one for the Science Fair my senior year, and in the late seventies a real PC from scratch that I used to support environmental and human rights groups I belonged to, until I saw them taken over and their purpose perverted; which started me thinking about the true nature of evil in the world. I was raised Catholic but lost my faith as I grew older like most of my peers. A survey of other religions didn't reveal any that were better, so I set out to find the truth on my own. Starting from the materialistic perspective, in light of relativity and the paradoxes of quantum mechanics, using basic geometry, algebra, and information theory, I applied my knowledge of how things worked to the question, `What caused reality to exist?'. Over time it became obvious the only mechanism able to do it was an information process. The conclusion was unavoidable but was rejected by materialists because it meant God was real. Instead they proposed the Multiverse; an incalculable number of universes without cause, and we happened to live in one, a ridiculous theory that any intelligent person should immediately recognize was nonsense, yet brilliant people with millions of followers believed it, and they ruled the world today. To me the existence of the Creator was incontrovertible. What bothered me was why God didn't appear to care. Scripture claimed God intervened in man's affairs many times in the past, yet in the present with orders of magnitude more people and danger threatening the essence of man, all I could hear in response to pray was the sounds of silence. Years ago I had dreams that felt like interventions, but since discovering Satan's plan, it felt like I was on my own. That too was puzzling and it took years to understand that the reason was, we were made to learn how to love. Love is not what one gets but what one gives. God is like a mirror. The feeling of being loved by God is an amplified reflection of one's love for God. In my mind the truth of Quantum Physics and Christ's teachings had merged. I could see that reality was the product of a hierarchy of beings who love God carrying out God's Will, that Satan was real and had power to deceive, and God would allow it to destroy the world if we didn't stop killing children. It wouldn't be to punish sinners but to save them from eternity in Hell. From my perspective, the book is just as much a prophetic warning as a science fiction story.