I find Linda Gordon's quote very interesting. One of the most interesting books of the 20th century was
Brave New World by English author
Aldous Huxley, who came from a very establishment family - his Victorian ancestors had, for example, financially backed Charles Darwin the father of modern evolution theory. The name of his book is taken from a quote from Shakespeare's play
The Tempest, which, as I have just posted on the
Alton Towers thread, was most probably written by Sir Francis Bacon, as were all Shakespeare's plays, and is full of references to Freemasonry and Masonic thinking. Some critics have even considered
Brave New World to be, ultimately, a futuristic parody of
The Tempest.
Huxley's dystopian view of the future, as depicted in
Brave New World, was quite shocking for its day (it was written in 1931 and published in 1932). The book starts with a scene where young naked children are enjoying sexual relations. In the future, sex is viewed simply as a recreational activity for pleasure purposes. Nobody is born into a family anymore since life starts in a test tube and babies are grown in an artificial womb at the Central London Hatchery and Conditioning Centre (cloning in other words). One's future status in this society is determined by the hormones and chemicals pumped into the developing foetus during its artificial gestation. All emotions and individuality are conditioned out of children at a young age.
The society Huxley depicts is very hierarchical with each class group having clearly defined roles to play and where people are expected to stay within the boundaries set for them by their chemically determined status. These classes, in order from highest to lowest, are Alpha, Beta, Gamma, Delta, and Epsilon. The Alphas are bred to be leaders, and the Epsilons are bred to be menial labourers. The aim of this society though is to keep everyone happy and productive, with the higher classes enjoying a hedonistic existence in their spare time. Marriage and long term relationships are banned and people are expected to have multiple relationships - “every one belongs to every one else” (a common World State dictum). In order to deal with depression, the state makes available a drug or happy pill called 'soma' in the novel.
Interestingly, one of the main characters in the book is an alpha class member called Bernard Marx. which was obviously a nod to the Marxist/Socialist underpinnings behind Huxley's perfect state. Huxley himself was a member of the avant guarde Bloomsbury Group that contained leading writers, poets and artists etc. of the age. They were the movers and shakers of their time and would be equivalent today as social influencers. Quoting from the website Britannica:
Brave New World was written between World War I and World War II, the height of an era of technological optimism in the West. Huxley picked up on such optimism and created the dystopian world of his novel so as to criticize it. Much of the anxiety that drives
Brave New World can be traced to a widespread belief in technology as a futuristic remedy for problems caused by disease and war. Unlike his fellow citizens, Huxley felt that such a reliance was naïve, and he decided to challenge these ideas by imagining them taken to their extremes.
When Huxley was interviewed on television late in his life, he made it clear that his book was intended as a warning. Since his death, test tube babies have become a reality and children are now even being produced with the DNA of three people. Artificial wombs do exist - I recall seeing a baby goat being gestated in one. Cloning has become a reality, and I have no doubt that human clones are being created behind the scenes (mind you as an identical twin, I am a clone myself

).
It used to be a good examination question to compare and contrast
Brave New World with that other great dystopian, futuristic novel, George Orwell's
1984. Which vision did the deep state wish to bring into being?
Hence, Gordon's quote: "
No woman should have to deny herself any opportunities because of her special responsibilities to her children... Families will be finally destroyed only when a revolutionary social and economic organization permits people's needs for love and security to be met in ways that do not impose divisions of labour, or any external roles, at all.", could almost be lifted from Brave New World.
As I have written previously, it seems to be the goal of our deep state masters (controlled by 4D STS beings themselves) to undermine the nuclear family. Divorce and loose, short term relationships are at an all time high here in the west. Many children now grow up without a father's presence and influence. Homosexuality and lesbianism are being heavily promoted in the media and the movies as an alternative lifestyle. Transgenderism is the new flavour of the moment. This is all intended to produce dysfunctional people who can be more easily manipulated by the state.
In the widespread use of cannabis in nearly all western countries today, we effectively have Huxley's soma and that is before you consider the role of prescribed anti-depressant pills such as Prozac, which are dolled out by doctors like sweets or sugar coated candies to take the edge of people's soul destroying existences.
The question I would pose is whether the PTB are actively seeking to bring about Huxley's dystopian vision of humanity's future? Was Huxley someone in the know, who could see where things were headed or did he just have a good imagination?
Huxley did not, insofar as I am aware, foresee transhumanism and the advent of nanotechnology. Although I joked about Star Trek's the Borg in an earlier post, are the PTB moving in that direction, where many humans will be reduced to emotionless drone workers like the Epsilons in Huxley's novel. Afterall, the C's have said that the alien 4D Grays from Zeta Reticula are grown almost like plants (think of the 'pod people' in the movie Invasion of the Body Snatchers, which I watched again recently) in large maturation chambers. If so, it may well be an attempt to recreate the former Atlantean, pre-Deluge society where they seem to have had drone workers like Huxley's Epsilons:
So, unless people fight back against the erosion of family life and its place as the fundamental bedrock of our society, is Huxley's vision of the future going to become a reality?