By: Jay Darren Aronofsky’s Noah has become the talk of the Internet and religious folk. As a film, I found it flawed and a little odd in its pacing, but...
Read MoreBy: Jay Dyer While reading John Marks’ famous book The Search for the Manchurian Candidate, the chapter on drugs and MKULTRA elucidated a deep insight. Some of the earliest...
Read MoreFabian socialist H.G. Wells set the stage for the sci fi deception of the new world order.[Many readers have requested some articles that are more readable and simple. This is...
Read MoreBy: Jay Dyer Lost Highway is a bizarre, psychical film that has mystified most. Reviews and analyses abound with endless questions and speculations that often fail to transcend the most...
Read MoreIn this installment, fellow student of philosophy Josh Dale joins me to hash out the question of Darwinism. Is Darwinism scientific and philosophically defensible? I argue in the negative, he...
Read MoreIn Part 1 of this discussion, I introduce metaphysics (the branch of philosophy, not witch books), and explain why it has been suppressed in the West. I argue that a...
Read MoreBy: Jay Dyer The Matrix, as I’ve joked many times, is one of those perennial topics in philosophy 101 classes that tends to evoke the most inane and mindless “philosophizing”...
Read MorePart two of “Deconstructing Darwinism” In part 2, I pick up where I left off, devling deeper into the Darwinian and evolutionary paradigms. I focus more on the philosophical problems,...
Read MoreWhen Vergil wrote the Aeneid, he was writing Imperial mythology to vindicate Rome as the new civilization chosen by the state-approved gods. When Spenser wrote The Faerie Queen, he was admittedly...
Read MoreThe technocratic, panopticon Eye of Big Brother watches you. By: Jay Dyer All the smart dummies, upper class and yuppies go along with and/or join the Outer Party thinking they’ll...
Read MoreBy: Jay Dyer Dune is an amazing novel: There is a reason it’s the best-selling science fiction series of all time. Prescient for his time (1965), author Frank Herbert was able...
Read MoreBy: Jay Dyer I have highlighted fake news recently, and in a fit of 80s mania, I decided to watch the Charlie Sheen/Michael Biehn Navy Seals because I had never seen...
Read MoreBy: Jay Dyer I started this out as a long comment, but I decided it would make for a good post, as I’ve been seeking an educated atheist to debate...
Read MoreBy: Jay What is “reason”? Dr. Bahnsen made a great point several years ago about the mass equivocation on the subject of “reason.” It’s a common word, used by everyone,...
Read MoreBy: Jay Dyer Vertigo is the best place to start a Hitchcock analysis. While many themes repeat in his films, Vertigo is most memorable for its psychological depth and mystique. ...
Read MoreAuthor and historian James Kelley returns to JaysAnalysis to discuss his groundbreaking research on the history of the Frankish empire and its relationship to various developments in western theology and...
Read MoreThe Dooms Chapel Horror director John Holt and producer Chris Bowers return to JaysAnalysis to discuss more details of the upcoming film. We joke about directors and some of the funny...
Read MoreBy: Jay Dyer Now You See Me is, on one level, a silly, contrived film about a group of magicians invited to be part of a large-scale heist and con operation. ...
Read MoreNeo-conservative Lluminary and political genius, Mr. Johnsonius, shares some Lloyd Llogic refuting the Putin “op ed” with his own wisdom. By: Lloyd Johnsonius I find it extremely troubling in our modern era to see that...
Read MoreBy: Jay Dyer J.J. Abrams’ Star Trek: Into Darkness differs quite a bit from the original reboot with a much deeper, esoteric geo-political plot. While Star Trek was much better rated, and in ways...
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