Genesis: Prog Illuminati Pt 2
Wow, on the verge of tears listening to later Genesis. With the confirmation on his new album that Peter Gabriel definitely is Illuminati (I'll cover this in a future post), it adds a whole new context to his rivalry with his former bandmates.
Peter Gabriel struggled in the early 80s with 3 albums that influenced all of rock and pop because of their influence on Genesis, but they did nothing commercially. It was so bad that he was deep in debt and forced to do a one-time reunion concert with Genesis in the early 80s.
But Genesis were probably 10x bigger without Gabriel. They dropped all the occult/religious/conspiracy theory lyrics Gabriel brought and actually made music promoting and condoning the NWO. They were the biggest band of the 80s while Gabriel floundered.
Then Gabriel comes back in the late 80s with a totally different style, dropping all the darkness and conspiracy stuff as this happy guy in a suit singing white RnB and pop - basically what Phil Collins had been doing. Not coincidentally, Genesis were becoming more outspoken and critical about the Illuminati.
Their album "Invisible Touch" is a masterpiece. Its all about growing cynical with the materialistic 80s pop culture the Illuminati wanted them to sell. Each song has a deep message below all of the seemingly simple and vapid love lyrics. That speech from "American Psycho" is 100% right.
Notice how Gabriel replaced Collins at this time. I believe his album literally knocked Invisible Touch from the #1 on the charts. And Genesis only made one more album after that which is blatantly "Killuminati" while Gabriel really hasn't been outspoken ever again.
That song "Something Happened On the Way to Heaven" is all about Collins apologizing for selling out to the Illuminati. The lyrics:
"I want you back. How many times can I say I'm sorry?" "How can something so good go so bad? How can something so right go so wrong?" "You can run but you can't hide. But I'm not leaving unless you come with me" "We had our problems, but I'm on your side. Please believe in me" "Something happened on the way to Heaven. It got a hold of me and wouldn't let go. I want you back. How many times can I say I'm sorry?" "I'm not leaving until its all over" "They say you can't take it with you with when you go. And I believe that. But taking all I got or being here with you. You know I'd rather leave it"
Its all about rejecting the depopulation agenda and also the racism of the New World Order. Thats why Collins' later solo music is mostly blue-eyed soul music - a white version of black music. Which Genesis makes clear is songs like "Land of Confusion" and "Tell Me Why", which is why their star fell afterwards. This is where lots of mega successful people fall out with each other. Kanye (a huge Genesis fan) and Kim, Bill Gates and his wife, Jeff Bezos and his wife, Elon Musk and Grimes (who has a big song called "Genesis"). One of them sells out to the Illuminati while the other doesn't. And they all broke up around the same time - the pandemic.
Gabriel warned his friends about getting too big because of the Illuminati and he was right. The same thing that happened to The Beatles. But Gabriel also sold out as soon as it meant getting personal revenge and equaling his ex band's success without him. To be fair, they did make that success on his genius too.
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