Order Of The Nine Angels - The
Most chillingly, the 2014 arrest of a German far-right terrorist cell—the Oldschool Society —revealed an ONA training manual titled The Satanic Protocols . Their plan: bomb asylum centers and mosques, then use the chaos to seize power. What makes the ONA uniquely dangerous to law enforcement is its structure—or lack thereof. The ONA explicitly rejects the pyramid model of terrorist groups like Al-Qaeda or ISIS. Instead, it promotes the “acausal” cell: small, autonomous groups of 3-9 people who never communicate with other cells. They derive their ideology from public ONA texts but operate independently.
For decades, the ONA remained a rumor whispered among chaos magicians and far-right circles. But following a string of brutal murders and terrorist plots in the 2000s and 2010s, intelligence agencies across the globe began paying attention. What they found was not a traditional Satanic cult, but a decentralized, leaderless “acausal” network designed to breed warriors for a coming cosmic war. The ONA first emerged in the English shires during the late 1970s and early 1980s. Its founding figure is widely believed to be David Myatt—a former British neo-Nazi turned occultist—though the Order itself denies any single founder, claiming instead to be a manifestation of ancient “Nexions” of dark energy. the order of the nine angels
The ONA calls this Opfergeld : “sacrifice money.” An action does not need to be large. A single murder, properly mythologized, creates ripples of fear that weaken the “mundane system.” The ONA’s influence has grown disproportionately to its actual membership—which experts estimate at no more than a few hundred globally. Their writings have been republished by extremist presses in the US, Russia, and Eastern Europe. The internet has allowed their ideology to metastasize, with teenagers in the US and UK self-initiating via PDFs downloaded from darknet forums. Most chillingly, the 2014 arrest of a German
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