I cannot say much about the article beyond the fact that it is the convergence of verbose "fan boys" and overpaid "public relations" trolls.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Lord_ ... s_of_Power
A banned sock seems to be the progenitor of this massive missive;
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Disa ... r102020939
I double dare Amazon to create a series on "Mission Earth" a posthumously published series that was prescient about today's state of affairs; including using gender, lesbians, and transsexuals as mass distraction to lock down dissent...
Wikipedia does not have much to say about "Mission Earth;" (hence no link)
So essentially; "Mission Earth" confronts manipulation by gender-politics , the power of public relations propaganda and marketing, misuse of law to subvert justice, the power of big business, and just about every aspect of life today laid out in plain detail forty years ago! The main characters are both heroes and villains depending on how you look at things.When read as entertainment Mission Earth is disappointing: it does not entertain. Many of the scenes (especially some sexual encounters) are incredibly grotesque, not in a pornographic sense, but they are violently aggressive about modern American ideals.The Mission Earth novels on the whole are a subversive, harsh, poignant attack on American society.
In 1991, the town of Dalton, Georgia attempted to remove the Mission Earth books from its public library, citing what was described as "repeated passages involving chronic masochism, child abuse, homosexuality, necromancy, bloody murder, and other things that are anti-social, perverted, and anti-everything".
The point is very Scientology "to save earth, hence Mission Earth."
https://www.amazon.com/Mission-Earth-10 ... B074BTWXQL