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Wikipedia

David Icke

David Vaughan Icke (/vɔːn k/; born 29 April 1952) is an English conspiracy theorist and a former footballer and sports broadcaster.[1][2][3][4][5] He has written over 20 books, self-published since the mid-1990s, and spoken in more than 25 countries.[6][7][8]

David Icke
Icke in 2013
Born
David Vaughan Icke

(1952-04-29) 29 April 1952 (age 71)
Leicester, England
Occupation(s)Conspiracy theorist,[1] former sports broadcaster and football player
MovementNew Age conspiracism
Websitedavidicke.com

In 1990, Icke visited a psychic who told him he was on Earth for a purpose and would receive messages from the spirit world.[9] This led him to claim in 1991 to be a "Son of the Godhead"[5] and that the world would soon be devastated by tidal waves and earthquakes. He repeated this on the BBC show Wogan.[10][11] His appearance led to public ridicule.[12] Books Icke wrote over the next 11 years developed his world view of a New Age conspiracy.[13] Reactions to his endorsement of an antisemitic fabrication, The Protocols of the Elders of Zion, in The Robots' Rebellion (1994) and in And the Truth Shall Set You Free (1995) led his then publisher to decline further books, and he has self-published since then.[8]

Icke contends that the universe consists of "vibrational" energy and infinite dimensions sharing the same space.[14][15][16] He claims that there is an inter-dimensional race of reptilian beings, the Archons or Anunnaki, which have hijacked the Earth. Further, a genetically modified human–Archon hybrid race of reptilian shape shifters – the Babylonian Brotherhood, Illuminati or "elite" – manipulate events to keep humans in fear, so that the Archons can feed off the resulting "negative energy".[14][17][18][19] He claims that many public figures belong to the Babylonian Brotherhood and propel humanity towards a global fascist state or New World Order, a post-truth era ending freedom of speech.[13][14][20][21] He sees the only way to defeat such "Archontic" influence is for people to wake up to the truth and fill their hearts with love.[14] Critics have accused Icke of being antisemitic and a Holocaust denier with his theories of reptilians serving as a deliberate "code".[22][23][24] Icke strongly denies this.[25]

Early life, family and education

The middle son of three boys born seven years apart, Icke was born in Leicester General Hospital to Beric Vaughan Icke and Barbara J. Cooke, who were married in Leicester in 1951. Beric Icke served in the Royal Air Force as a medical orderly during World War II,[26] and after the war became a clerk in the Gents clock factory. The family lived in a terraced house on Lead Street in the centre of Leicester,[27] an area that was demolished in the mid-1950s as part of the city's slum clearance.[28]

When David Icke was three, around 1955, they moved to the Goodwood estate, one of the council estates the post-war Labour government built. "To say we were skint", he wrote in 1993, "is like saying it is a little chilly at the North Pole."[27] He recalls having to hide under a window or chair when the councilman came for the rent; after knocking, the rent man would walk around the house peering through windows. His mother never explained that it was about the rent; she just told Icke to hide. He wrote in 2003 that he still gets a fright when someone knocks on the door.[29] He attended Whitehall Infant School, and then Whitehall Junior School.[30][29]

Football

Icke has said he made no effort at school, but when he was nine he was chosen for the junior school's third-year football team. He writes that this was the first time he had succeeded at anything, and he came to see football as his way out of poverty. He played in goal, which he wrote suited the loner in him and gave him a sense of living on the edge between hero and villain.[31]

After failing his 11-plus exam in 1963, he was sent to the city's Crown Hills Secondary Modern (rather than the local grammar school), where he was given a trial for the Leicester Boys Under-14 team.[32] He left school at 15 after being talent-spotted by Coventry City, who signed him up in 1967 as their youth team's goalkeeper. In 1968 he played in the Coventry City youth team that were runners up to Burnley in the F.A. Youth Cup. He also played for Oxford United's reserve team and Northampton Town, on loan from Coventry.[33]

Rheumatoid arthritis in his left knee, which spread to the right knee, ankles, elbows, wrists and hands, stopped him from making a career out of football. Despite stating that he was often in agony during training, Icke managed to play part-time for Hereford United, including in the first team when they were in the fourth, and later in the third, division of the English Football League. But in 1973, at the age of 21, the pain in his joints became so severe that he was forced to retire.[34]

First marriage

Icke met his first wife, Linda Atherton, in May 1971 at a dance at the Chesford Grange Hotel near Leamington Spa, Warwickshire. Shortly after they met, Icke left home following one of a number of frequent arguments he had started having with his father. His father was upset that Icke's arthritis was interfering with his football career. Icke moved into a bedsit and worked in a travel agency, travelling to Hereford twice a week in the evenings to play football.[35]

Icke and Atherton married on 30 September 1971, four months after they met.[36] Their daughter was born in March 1975, followed by one son in December 1981, and another in November 1992.[37] The couple divorced in 2001 but remained friends, and Atherton continued to work as Icke's business manager.[38]

Journalism, sports broadcasting

The loss of Icke's position with Hereford meant that he and his wife had to sell their home, and for several weeks they lived apart, each moving in with their parents. In 1973 Icke found a job as a reporter with the weekly Leicester Advertiser, through a contact who was a sports editor at the Daily Mail.[39] He moved on to the Leicester News Agency, did some work for BBC Radio Leicester as its football reporter,[40] then worked his way up through the Loughborough Monitor, the Leicester Mercury and BRMB Radio in Birmingham.[41]

In 1976, Icke worked for two months in Saudi Arabia, helping with the national football team. His position on the team was planned to be a long-term position, but Icke decided to stay in the UK after his first holiday back.[42] After his return to the UK, BRMB decided to give him his job back, after which he successfully applied to Midlands Today at the BBC's Pebble Mill Studios in Birmingham, a job that included on-air appearances.[43] One of the earliest stories he covered there was the murder of Carl Bridgewater, the paperboy shot during a robbery in 1978.[44]

In 1981, Icke became a sports presenter for the BBC's national programme Newsnight, which had begun the previous year. Two years later, on 17 January 1983, he appeared on the first edition of the BBC's Breakfast Time, British television's first national breakfast show, and presented the sports news there until 1985. In 1983 he co-hosted Grandstand, at the time the BBC's flagship national sports programme.[45] He also published his first book that year, It's a Tough Game, Son!, about how to break into football.[46]

Icke and his family moved in 1982 to Ryde on the Isle of Wight.[47] His relationship with Grandstand was short-lived. He wrote that a new editor arrived in 1983 who appeared not to like him, but he continued working for BBC Sport until 1990, often on bowls and snooker programmes, and at the 1988 Summer Olympics.[48] Icke was by then a household name, but has said that a career in television began to lose its appeal to him; he found television workers insecure, shallow and sometimes vicious.[49]

In August 1990, his contract with the BBC was terminated when he initially refused to pay the Community Charge (also known as the "poll tax"), a local tax Margaret Thatcher's government introduced that year. He ultimately paid it, but his announcement that he was willing to go to prison rather than pay prompted the BBC, by charter an impartial public-service broadcaster, to distance itself from him.[50][51]

Green Party, Betty Shine

 
Icke moved to Ryde on the Isle of Wight in 1982.

Icke began to engage with alternative medicine and New Age philosophies in the 1980s in an effort to relieve his arthritis, and this encouraged his interest in Green politics. He joined the Green Party and became a national spokesperson within six months.[52] His second book, It Doesn't Have To Be Like This, an outline of his views on the environment, was published in 1989.

Icke wrote that 1989 was a time of considerable personal despair, and it was during this period that he said he began to feel a presence around him.[53] He often describes how he felt it while alone in a hotel room in March 1990, and finally asked, "If there is anybody here, will you please contact me because you are driving me up the wall!" Days later, in a newsagent's shop in Ryde, he felt a force pull his feet to the ground and heard a voice guide him toward some books. One of them was Mind to Mind (1989) by Betty Shine, a psychic healer in Brighton. He read the book, then wrote to her requesting a consultation about his arthritis.[54][55][52][56]

Icke visited Shine four times. During the third meeting, on 29 March 1990, Icke claims to have felt something like a spider's web on his face, and Shine told him she had a message from Wang Ye Lee of the spirit world.[57][58]

Icke had been sent to heal the earth, she said, and would become famous but would face opposition. The spirit world was going to pass ideas to him, which he would speak about to others. He would write five books in three years; in 20 years a new flying machine would allow us to go wherever we wanted and time would have no meaning; and there would be earthquakes in unusual places because the inner earth was being destabilised by having oil taken from under the seabed.[55][59][54]

In February 1991, Icke visited a pre-Inca Sillustani burial ground near Puno, Peru, where he felt drawn to a particular circle of waist-high stones. As he stood in the circle he had two thoughts: that people would be talking about this in 100 years, and that it would be over when it rained. His body shook as though plugged into an electrical socket, he wrote, and new ideas poured into him. Then it started raining and the experience ended. He described it as the kundalini (a term from Hindu yoga) activating his chakras, or energy centres, triggering a higher level of consciousness.[60][13]

Turquoise period

 
Icke's turquoise period followed an experience by a burial site in Sillustani, Peru, in 1991.

There followed what Icke called his "turquoise period". He had been channelling for some time, he wrote, and had received a message through automatic writing that he was a "Son of the Godhead", interpreting "Godhead" as the "Infinite Mind".[61] He began to wear only the colour turquoise, often a turquoise shell suit, a colour he saw as a conduit for positive energy.[62][63] He also started working on his third book, and the first of his New-Age period, The Truth Vibrations.[citation needed]

In August 1990, before his visit to Peru, Icke met Deborah Shaw, an English psychic based in Calgary, Alberta, Canada. When he returned from Peru they began a relationship, with the apparent blessing of Icke's wife. In March 1991 Shaw began living with the couple, a short-lived arrangement that the press called the "turquoise triangle". Shaw changed her name to Mari Shawsun, while Icke's wife became Michaela, which she said was an aspect of the Archangel Michael.[64][65]

The relationship with Shaw led to the birth of a daughter in December 1991, although she and Icke had by then ceased their relationship. Icke wrote in 1993 that he decided not to visit his daughter and had seen her only once, at Shaw's request. Icke's wife gave birth to the couple's second son in November 1992.[66][67]

Green Party resignation and press conference

In March 1991, Icke resigned from the Green Party during a party conference, telling them he was about to be at the centre of "tremendous and increasing controversy", and winning a standing ovation from delegates after the announcement.[51]

A week later, shortly after his father died, Icke and his wife, Linda Atherton, along with their daughter and Deborah Shaw, held a press conference to announce that Icke was a son of the Godhead.[68][69] He told reporters the world was going to end in 1997. It would be preceded by a hurricane around the Gulf of Mexico and New Orleans, eruptions in Cuba, disruption in China, a hurricane in Derry, and an earthquake on the Isle of Arran. The information was being given to them by voices and automatic writing, he said. Los Angeles would become an island, New Zealand would disappear, and the cliffs of Kent would be underwater by Christmas.[70]

Wogan interview

News headlines following Icke's press conference attracted requests for interviews from Nicky Campbell's BBC Radio One programme, for Terry Wogan's prime-time Wogan show, and Fern Britton's ITV chat show.[71]

Wogan introduced the 1991 segment with "The world as we know it is about to end". Amid laughter from the audience, Icke demurred when asked if he was the son of God, replying that Jesus would have been laughed at too, and repeated that Britain would soon be devastated by tidal waves and earthquakes. Without these, "the Earth will cease to exist". When Icke said laughter was the best way to remove negativity, Wogan replied of the audience: "But they're laughing at you. They're not laughing with you."[71][72][73][74] The BBC was criticised for allowing it to go ahead; Des Christy of The Guardian called it a "media crucifixion".[75][76]

The interview led to a difficult period for Icke. In May 1991, police were called to the couple's home after a crowd of over 100 youths gathered outside, chanting "We want the Messiah" and "Give us a sign, David".[77] Icke told Jon Ronson in 2001:

One of my very greatest fears as a child was being ridiculed in public. And there it was coming true. As a television presenter, I'd been respected. People come up to you in the street and shake your hand and talk to you in a respectful way. And suddenly, overnight, this was transformed into "Icke's a nutter." I couldn't walk down any street in Britain without being laughed at. It was a nightmare. My children were devastated because their dad was a figure of ridicule.[63][78]

In 2006, Wogan interviewed Icke again for a special Wogan Now & Then series. Wogan was apologetic for his conduct in the 1991 interview.[79] However, in his autobiography, Mustn't Grumble, Wogan described Icke as being a "ranting demagogue convinced we were all manipulated sheep".[80]

Writing and lecturing

Early books

The Wogan interview separated Icke from his previous life, he wrote in 2003, although he considered it the making of him in the end, giving him the courage to develop his ideas without caring what anyone thought.[81] His book The Truth Vibrations, inspired by his experience in Peru, was published in 1991.

Between 1992 and 1994, he wrote five books, all published by mainstream publishers, four in 1993. Love Changes Everything (1992), influenced by the "channelling" work of Deborah Shaw, is a theosophical work about the origin of the planet, in which Icke writes with admiration about Jesus. Days of Decision (1993) is an 86-page summary of his interviews after the 1991 press conference; it questions the historicity of Jesus but accepts the existence of the Christ spirit. Icke's autobiography, In the Light of Experience, was published the same year,[82] followed by Heal the World: A Do-It-Yourself Guide to Personal and Planetary Transformation (1993).

The Robots' Rebellion

 
In his 2001 documentary about Icke, Jon Ronson cited this cartoon, "Rothschild" (1898), by Charles Léandre, arguing that Jews have long been depicted as lizard-like creatures who are out to control the world.[83]

Icke's The Robots' Rebellion (1994), a book published by Gateway, attracted allegations that his work was antisemitic. According to historian Nicholas Goodrick-Clarke, the book contains "all the familiar beliefs and paranoid clichés" of the US conspiracists and militia.[84] It claims that a plan for world domination by a shadowy cabal, perhaps extraterrestrial, was laid out in The Protocols of the Elders of Zion (c. 1897).

The Protocols of the Elders of Zion is an anti-Semitic literary forgery,[85] probably written under the direction of the Russian secret police in Paris, purporting to reveal a conspiracy by the Jewish people to achieve global domination. It was exposed as a forgery in 1920 by Lucien Wolf and the following year by Philip Graves in The Times. Once exposed, it disappeared from mainstream discourse until interest in it was renewed by the American far right in the 1950s.[86] Interest in it was further spread by conspiracy groups on the Internet.[87] According to Michael Barkun, Icke's reliance on the Protocols in The Robots' Rebellion is "the first of a number of instances in which Icke moves into the dangerous terrain of antisemitism".[88][89]

Icke took both the extraterrestrial angle and the focus on the Protocols from Behold a Pale Horse (1991) by Milton William Cooper, who was associated with the American militia movement; chapter 15 of Cooper's book reproduces the Protocols in full.[90][91][92] The Robots' Rebellion refers repeatedly to the Protocols, calling them the Illuminati protocols, and defining Illuminati as the "Brotherhood elite at the top of the pyramid of secret societies world-wide". Icke adds that the Protocols were not the work of the Jewish people, but of Zionists.[93][94]

The Robots' Rebellion was greeted with dismay by the Green Party's executive. Despite the controversy over the press conference and the Wogan interview, they had allowed Icke to address the party's annual conference in 1992 – a decision that led one of its principal speakers, Sara Parkin, to resign – but after the publication of The Robot's Rebellion they moved to ban him.[90][95][96][97][98] Icke wrote to The Guardian in September 1994 denying that The Robots' Rebellion was anti-Semitic, and rejecting racism, sexism and prejudice of any kind, while insisting that whoever had written the Protocols "knew the game plan" for the twentieth century.[99][100]

Self-publishing

Why do we play a part in suppressing alternative information to the official line of the Second World War? How is it right that while this fierce suppression goes on, free copies of the Spielberg film, Schindler's List, are given to schools to indoctrinate children with the unchallenged version of events. And why do we, who say we oppose tyranny and demand freedom of speech, allow people to go to prison and be vilified, and magazines to be closed down on the spot, for suggesting another version of history.

— And the Truth Shall Set You Free (1995)[8]

Icke's next manuscript, And the Truth Shall Set You Free (1995), contained a chapter questioning aspects of the Holocaust, which caused a rift with his publisher, Gateway.[94][101][22] In the book Icke suggested that Jews funded the Holocaust by quoting and seconding Gary Allen's claim that "The Warburgs, part of the Rothschild empire, helped finance Adolf Hitler". In his view, schools "indoctrinate children with the unchallenged version of events" with the mainstream account of the Holocaust thanks to their use of free copies of the film Schindler's List (1993).[102][23] After borrowing £15,000 from a friend, Icke established Bridge of Love Publications, later called David Icke Books. He self-published And the Truth Shall Set You Free and all his subsequent books.

According to Lewis and Kahn, Icke aimed to consolidate all conspiracy theories into one project with unlimited explanatory power. His books sold 140,000 copies between 1998 and 2011, at a value of over £2 million.[103] Thirty thousand copies of The Biggest Secret (1999) were in print months after publication, according to Icke,[104] and it was reprinted six times between 1999 and 2006. His 2002 book Alice in Wonderland and the World Trade Center Disaster became a long-standing top-five bestseller in South Africa.[6] By 2006, his website was gaining 600,000 hits a week, and by 2011 his books had been translated into 11 languages.[103]

Lecturing

 
Icke speaking in June 2013

Icke has held public lectures around the world, and by 2006 had spoken in at least 25 countries.[6] He spoke for seven hours to 2,500 people at the Brixton Academy, London, in 2008,[15] and the same year addressed the University of Oxford's debating society, the Oxford Union.[105][106][107] His book tour for Human Race Get Off Your Knees: The Lion Sleeps No More (2010) included a sold-out talk to 2,100 in New York City and £83,000 worth of ticket sales in Melbourne. In October 2012, he spoke for eleven hours to 6,000 people at London's Wembley Arena.[108]

Second marriage, politics, television

In 1997 Icke met his second wife, Pamela Leigh Richards, in Jamaica. He and Linda Atherton divorced in 2001,[109] and he and Richards were married the same year.[citation needed] They separated in 2008 and divorced in 2011.[79]

Icke stood for parliament in the 2008 by-election for Haltemprice and Howden (a constituency in the East Riding of Yorkshire), on the issue of "Big Brother – The Big Picture". He came 12th out of 26 candidates, with 110 votes (0.46%), resulting in a lost deposit.[110][111] He explained that he was standing because "if we don't face this now we are going to have some serious explaining to do when we are asked by our children and grandchildren what we were doing when the global fascist state was installed. 'I was watching EastEnders, dear' will not be good enough."[112][113]

In November 2013, Icke launched an Internet television station, The People's Voice, broadcast from London. He founded the station after crowdsourcing over £300,000 and worked for it as a volunteer until March 2014. Later that year the station stopped broadcasting.[114][115]

Conspiracy theories

Icke combines New Age philosophical discussion about the universe and consciousness with conspiracy theories about public figures being reptilian humanoids and paedophiles. He argues in favour of reincarnation; a collective consciousness that has intentionality; modal realism[16] (that other possible worlds exist alongside ours); and the so-called law of attraction[116] (that good and bad thoughts can attract experiences).[117][14]

In The Biggest Secret (1999), he introduced the idea that many prominent figures derive from the Anunnaki, a reptilian race from the Draco constellation.[118] In Human Race Get Off Your Knees: The Lion Sleeps No More (2012), he identified the Moon (and later Saturn) as the source of holographic experiences, broadcast by the reptiles, that humanity interprets as reality.[119][14]

Icke is an opponent of the scientific method, describing it as "bollocks" in 2013. When asked by The Sunday Times to explain the existence of television, he said "It's not that all science is bollocks," but rather "[t]he basis of the way science judges reality is bollocks."[120] He also thinks climate change is a hoax.[121]

Infinite dimensions

Icke believes that the universe is made up of "vibrational" energy, and consists of an infinite number of dimensions that share the same space, just like television and radio frequencies, and that some people can tune their consciousness to other wavelengths.[16][14] He stated in an interview with The Guardian that:

Our five senses can access only a tiny frequency range, like a radio tuned to one station. In the space you are occupying now are all the radio and television stations broadcasting to your area. You can't see them and they can't see each other because they are on different wavelengths. But move your radio dial and suddenly there they are, one after the other. It is the same with the reality we experience here as "life". What we call the "world" and the "universe" is only one frequency range in an infinite number sharing the same space.[15]

Icke believes that time is an illusion; there is no past or future, and only the "infinite now" is real, and that humans are an aspect of consciousness, or infinite awareness, which he describes as "all that there is, has been, and ever can be".[14]

Reptoid humanoids

 
The Draco constellation from Firmamentum Sobiescianum sive Uranographia (1690) by Johannes Hevelius. Icke's "reptoid hypothesis" posits that humanity is ruled by descendants of reptilians from Draco.[122]

Icke believes that an inter-dimensional race of reptilian beings called the Archons have hijacked the earth and are stopping humanity from realising its true potential.[14][19] He claims they are the same beings as the Anunnaki, deities from the Babylonian creation myth the Enûma Eliš, and the fallen angels, or Watchers, who mated with human women in the Biblical apocrypha.[18]

He believes that a genetically modified human/Archon hybrid race of shape-shifting reptilians, known as the "Babylonian Brotherhood" or the Illuminati, manipulate global events to keep humans in constant fear, so the Archons can feed off the "negative energy" this creates.[14][123] In The Biggest Secret, Icke identified the Brotherhood as descendants of reptilians from the constellation Draco, and said they live in caverns inside the earth.[124]

Icke said in an interview:

When you get back into the ancient world, you find this recurring theme of a union between a non-human race and humans – creating a hybrid race.
From 1998, I started coming across people who told me they had seen people change into a non-human form. It's an age-old phenomenon known as shape-shifting. The basic form is like a scaly humanoid, with reptilian rather than humanoid eyes.[125]

Icke claims the first reptilian-human breeding programmes took place 200,000–300,000 years ago (perhaps creating Adam), and the third (and latest) 7,000 years ago. He claims the hybrids of the third programme, which are more Anunnaki than human, currently control the world. He writes in The Biggest Secret, "The Brotherhood which controls the world today is the modern expression of the Babylonian Brotherhood of reptile-Aryan priests and 'royalty'". Icke states that they came together in Sumer after "the flood", but originated in the Caucasus. He explains that when he uses the term "Aryan" he means "the white race."[126]

Icke has stated that the reptilians come from not only another planet but another dimension, the lower level of the fourth dimension (the "lower astral dimension"), the one nearest the physical world. From this dimension they control the planet, although just as fourth-dimensional reptilians control us, they in turn are controlled by a fifth dimension.[16] Michael Barkun argues that Icke's introduction of different dimensions allowed him to skip awkward questions about how the reptilians got here.[104] Icke believes the only way this "Archontic" influence can be defeated is if people wake up to "the truth" and fill their hearts with love.[14]

Icke briefly introduced his ideas about ancient astronauts in The Robot's Rebellion (1994), citing Milton William Cooper's Behold a Pale Horse (1991), and expanded it in And the Truth Shall Set You Free (1995), citing Barbara Marciniak's Bringers of the Dawn (1992).[90][91]

Religious studies lecturer David G. Robertson writes that Icke's reptilian idea is adapted from Zecharia Sitchin's The 12th Planet (1976), combined with material from Credo Mutwa, a Zulu healer.[127] Sitchin suggested that the Anunnaki came to Earth for its precious metals. Icke has said that they came for what he refers to as "mono-atomic gold", which he claims can increase the capacity of the nervous system ten-thousandfold, and that after ingesting it the Anunnaki can process vast amounts of information, speed up trans-dimensional travel, and shapeshift from reptilian to human.[128][129] Lewis and Kahn argue that Icke is using allegory to depict the alien, and alienating, nature of global capitalism.[17] Icke has said he is not using allegory.[130]

As of 2003, Icke claims the reptilian bloodline includes all (then 43) American presidents, three British and two Canadian prime ministers, several Sumerian kings and Egyptian pharaohs, and a smattering of celebrities. Key bloodlines are said to include the Rockefellers, Rothschilds, various European aristocratic families, the establishment families of the Eastern United States, and the British House of Windsor.[88] Icke claimed he saw British prime minister Edward Heath's eyes turn entirely "jet black" while the two men waited for a Sky News interview in 1989.[131][15] He confirmed to Andrew Neil in May 2016 that he believes the British royal family are shape-shifting lizards.[20] In 2001, Icke said the Queen Mother was "seriously reptilian".[88] The Rothschilds, in Icke's opinion, are also blood-drinking Satan-worshipers, which Daniel Allington and David Toube argued in 2018 was part of a revival of medieval anti-Semitic attitudes towards Jews.[132]

Icke sometimes calls the reptilian plot the "unseen". After a 2018 talk by Icke in Southport, Merseyside, Michael Marshall reported:

The appearance of the 'unseen' in the Middle East 6,000 years ago seems to be no coincidence, and it's little wonder that Icke's work is so often accused of anti-Semitism. However, if we were to accept that Icke himself does not hold such views, and that his work is merely co-opted by groups who undeniably are anti-Semitic, we also have to acknowledge that Icke often does his case no favours.[133]

Critics view Icke's "reptilians" and other theories as anti-Semitic,[24][134][135] and accuse him of Holocaust denial.[24] Critics say that Icke's reptilians are symbolic representations of Jews, which Icke called "total friggin' nonsense", adding, "this is not a plot on the world by Jewish people".[136] Icke has rejected the assertion he is a Holocaust denier.[25]

Brotherhood aims and institutions

Icke states that at the apex of the Babylonian Brotherhood stand the Global Elite, and at the top of the Global Elite are what Icke has referred to as the "Prison Wardens". Icke claims the brotherhood's goal, or their "Great Work of Ages", is a microchipped population, a world government, and a global Orwellian fascist state or New World Order, which he claims will be a post-truth era where freedom of speech is ended.[137][14][20][21][91]

Icke believes that the brotherhood uses human anxiety as energy and that the Archons keep humanity trapped in a "five sense reality" so they can feed off the negative energy created by fear and hate.[14][17] In 1999 he wrote, "Thus we have the encouragement of wars, human genocide, the mass slaughter of animals, sexual perversions which create highly charged negative energy, and black magic ritual and sacrifice which takes place on a scale that will stagger those who have not studied the subject."[138] Icke proposes that human sacrifice "to the gods" in the ancient world was for the reptilians' benefit, especially sacrifice of children, because "at the moment of death by sacrifice a form of adrenaline surges through the body, accumulating at the base of the brain, and is apparently more potent in children", claiming "this is what the reptilians and their crossbreeds want". He suggests that these sacrifices continue to this day.[138] He also claims the reptilians and their hybrid bloodlines engage in paedophilia and cannibalism.[139]

It is claimed that the brotherhood either created or controls the United Nations, International Monetary Fund, Round Table, Council on Foreign Relations, Chatham House, Club of Rome, Royal Institute of International Affairs, Trilateral Commission and Bilderberg Group, as well as the media, military, CIA, MI6, Mossad, science, religion, and the Internet, with witting or unwitting support from the London School of Economics.[63][91][140][141][142][143] In an interview in February 2019, Icke was asked about his beliefs and replied, "They're very clever in their systems of manipulation, which is overwhelmingly psychological manipulation, because if you can manipulate perceptions to believe that Osama bin Laden was behind 9/11, then you'll get support to invade Afghanistan".[144]

Problem–reaction–solution

Icke uses the phrase "problem–reaction–solution" to explain how he believes the Illuminati agenda advances. According to Icke, the Illuminati guide us in the direction they desire by creating false problems, which allows them to give their desired solution to the problem they created.[145] He also refers to this process as "order out of chaos".[146] In 2018 researchers looking at the psychological effects of Icke's belief system argued that "problem–reaction–solution" resembles the misinterpretation of the Hegelian thesis, antithesis, synthesis triad popularized by Chalybäus.[147]

Incidents and issues Icke attributes to the Illuminati, or "Global Elite", include the Oklahoma City bombing, Dunblane, Columbine, 9/11 (which Icke believes was an "inside job" to provide an excuse to advance an agenda of regime change across the world), 7/7, global warming, chemtrails, water fluoridation, the death of Princess Diana, the assassination of John F. Kennedy and Agenda 21.[125][148][149][150][151] These incidents allow them to respond in whatever way they intended to act in the first place.[146]

One of the methods Icke claims they use is creating fake opposites, or what he calls "opposames", such as the Axis and Allied powers of World War II, which he believes were used to provoke the creation of the European Union and the state of Israel.[145] Icke argues that to ensure the outcome they want they have to control both sides.[21] He believes that US presidents George W. Bush, Barack Obama and Donald Trump are part of a false political divide. Despite the presidency belonging to the Republican Party then the Democratic Party, then going back to the Republicans, Icke claims they are all pushing the same agenda of regime change in the Middle East, a goal set out in the early 2000s in a document called The Project for the New American Century.[21] Icke claims that this dialectic allows the Illuminati to gradually move societies toward totalitarianism without challenge, a process he calls the "totalitarian tiptoe".[145]

In Tales From The Time Loop (2003), Icke argues that the Illuminati create religious, racial, ethnic and sexual division to divide and rule humanity but believes that the many can only be controlled by the few if they allow themselves to be and that the power the Illuminati have is the power the people give them.[152][153] "Divide and rule is the bottom line of all dictatorships… Arab is turned against Jew, black against white, Right against Left. Unplugging from the Matrix means refusing to recognise these illusory fault lines. We are all One. I refuse to see a Jew as different from an Arab and vice versa. They are both expressions of the One and need to be observed and treated the same, none more or less important than the other. I refuse to see black people in terms that I would not see white, nor to see the 'Left' as I would not see the 'Right'. How could it be any different, except when we believe the illusion of division is real? If we do that, the Matrix has us."[153]

Icke's solution is peaceful non-compliance, which he believes will disempower "the elite".[152]

Saturn–Moon Matrix

The Moon Matrix is introduced in Human Race Get Off Your Knees: The Lion Sleeps No More (2010), in which Icke suggests that the Earth and the collective human mind are manipulated from the Moon, a spacecraft and inter-dimensional portal the reptilians control. The Moon Matrix is a broadcast from that spacecraft to the human body–computer, specifically to the left hemisphere of the brain, which gives us our sense of reality: "We are living in a dreamworld within a dreamworld – a Matrix within the virtual-reality universe – and it is being broadcast from the Moon. Unless people force themselves to become fully conscious, their minds are the Moon's mind."[154][155] Will Storr, writing for The Sunday Times in 2013, ponders if Icke's ideas suddenly "pop" into his head. On page 299 of Human Race Get Off Your Knees, Icke writes about working at his computer on the book and having "the overwhelming feeling out of 'nowhere' that the moon was not 'real'. By 'real' I mean not a 'heavenly body', but an artificial construct (or hollowed-out planetoid) that has been put there to control life on Earth — which it does. I have pondered this possibility a few times over the years, but this time I just 'knew'. It was like an enormous penny had suddenly dropped".[120]

This idea is further explored in Icke's Remember Who You Are: Remember 'Where' You Are and Where You 'Come' From (2012), where he introduces the concept of the "Saturn–Moon Matrix". In this more recent conceptualization, the rings of Saturn (which Icke believes were artificially created by reptilian spacecraft) are the ultimate source of the signal, while the Moon functions as an amplifier.[119][page needed][152] He claims that frequencies broadcast from the hexagonal storm on Saturn are amplified through the hollow structure of our artificial moon keeping humanity trapped in a holographic projection.[14]

5G and COVID-19

David Icke has been identified by the Center for Countering Digital Hate as a leading producer of misinformation about COVID-19 as well as anti-Semitic content.[156] In April 2020, Icke claimed in a YouTube video on Brian Rose's London Real channel that there was a link between the COVID-19 pandemic and 5G mobile phone networks. The video was removed from the platform, and YouTube tightened its rules to prevent its website being used to spread conspiracy theories about the COVID-19 pandemic.[157] It was later also deleted from Facebook.[158] Multiple mobile phone masts were subject to arson attacks at this time, as well as telecom engineers being abused.[159] Nick Cohen in The Observer thought Icke was ambiguous as to whether the phone masts should be left alone. Icke said in the London Real interview: "If 5G continues and reaches where they want to take it, human life as we know it is over… so people have to make a decision."[157][160][161]

London Live screened a similar interview with Icke about coronavirus on 8 April 2020.[162] He made an unsupported claim that Israel was using the crisis "to test its technology" and suggested any attempt to require people to be vaccinated against COVID-19 amounted to "fascism".[163]

After Ofcom's formal investigation, the UK media regulator decided the 80-minute interview broke the terms of the broadcasting code as it "expressed views which had the potential to cause significant harm to viewers in London during the pandemic" which "were made without the support of any scientific or other evidence."[164]

Icke's main page on Facebook was deleted on 1 May 2020, while other pages on the site promoting Icke with a smaller readership remained on the platform.[165] Facebook said it had removed Icke's page for its "health misinformation that could cause physical harm".[166] His YouTube channel was deleted a day later. A spokeswoman for YouTube told BBC News: "YouTube has clear policies prohibiting any content that disputes the existence and transmission of COVID-19 as described by the WHO and the NHS. Due to continued violation of these policies, we have terminated David Icke's YouTube channel." Icke's appearances in videos uploaded by other users were only to be removed if their content breached the same rules.[167]

On 29 August 2020, Icke was a speaker at an anti-lockdown protest in Trafalgar Square, London, organised under the Unite for Freedom banner. During his speech he stated, "Anyone with a half a brain cell on active duty can see coronavirus is nonsense"[168] and, "We have a virus so intelligent that it only infects those taking part in protests the government wants to stop".[169] He also stated, "This world is controlled by a tiny few people" who "impose their agenda on billions of people". He told the police who were present at the rally that they were "enforcing fascism that your own children will have to live with" and urged them to "join us and stop serving the psychopaths".[169]

In early November 2020, Twitter permanently suspended Icke's account on the platform for having violated its rules regarding COVID-19 misinformation.[170][171]

Reception

Interest in Icke's conspiracy theories is widespread and has cut across political, economic, and religious divides. His audiences hold a wide range of beliefs, uniting individuals, and left and right wing groups; from New Agers, and Ufologists,[6][104] as well as far-right Christian Patriots, and the UK neo-Nazi group Combat 18, which supports his writings.[6] Icke's work is representative of a major global countercultural trend.[6] American novelist Alice Walker is an admirer of Icke's writings,[102][23][172][173] along with comedian Russell Brand,[174][175] and musician Mick Fleetwood.[176] Icke has emerged as a professional conspiracy theorist[1] within a global counter-cultural movement that combines New World Order conspiracism, the truther movement and anti-globalisation, with an extraterrestrial conspiracist subculture.[6]

Accusations of antisemitism

There is a strong strain of anti-Semitic conspiracy theorizing that makes ufological connections, including especially the work of Milton William Cooper (1991) and David Icke (e.g., 1997). Both are controversial but still well known in both right-wing conspiracist and ufological subcultures.

— Christopher F. Roth, Ufology as Anthropology: Race, Extraterrestrials, and the Occult[177]

Jonathan A. Greenblatt, chief executive of the Anti-Defamation League told The New York Times in December 2018: "There is no fair reading of Icke's work that could be seen as not anti-Semitic".[178] However, Icke has repeatedly denied the accusation that he is an antisemite. In 2001, when he was questioned by Jon Ronson, Icke declared that The Protocols of the Elders of Zion is evidence not of a Jewish plot but of a reptilian plot. He also said, "the families in positions of great financial power obsessively interbreed with each other. But I'm not talking about one earth race, Jewish or non-Jewish. I'm talking about a genetic network that operates through all races, this bloodline being a fusion of human and reptilian genes… let me make myself clear: this does not in any way relate to an earth race."[179] In an article in The Algemeiner, the writer commented: "Yet when he goes through a list of people in power who he considers to be 'Rothschild Zionists,' they all happen to be Jews (with many of them never claiming to be Zionists at all.)"[180] According to Mark Gardner of the Community Security Trust, Icke believes a "'Rothschild Zionist' conspiracy controls the world, driving global conflict through NATO and seeking World War Three, which will begin between Zionists and Muslims." Such claims about the Rothschilds have a long history as an antisemitic theme.[135]

Icke states in And the Truth Shall Set you Free (1996):

Why do we play a part in suppressing alternative information to the official line of the Second World War? How is it right that while this fierce suppression goes on, free copies of the Spielberg film, Schindler's List, are given to schools to indoctrinate children with the unchallenged version of events. And why do we, who say we oppose tyranny and demand freedom of speech, allow people to go to prison and be vilified, and magazines to be closed down on the spot, for suggesting another version of history.[8]

Icke claims that the antisemitic forgery The Protocols of the Elders of Zion is genuine, explaining in And the Truth Shall Set you Free:

I strongly believe that a small Jewish clique which has contempt for the mass of Jewish people worked with non-Jews to create the First World War, the Russian Revolution, and the Second World War… They then dominated the Versailles Peace Conference and created the circumstances which made the Second World War inevitable. They financed Hitler to power in 1933 and made the funds available for his rearmament.[8][181]

In the book, Yair Rosenberg reports, Icke uses the words "Jewish" on 241 occasions, and "Rothschild" on 374 occasions.[23] Icke claims that Jews themselves are to blame for antisemitism (a classic Nazi claim that can be traced to Adolf Hitler):

Thought patterns in the collective Jewish mind have repeatedly created that physical reality of oppression, prejudice and racism which matches the pattern – the expectation – programmed into their collective psyche. They expect it; they create it.[182]

In The Trigger: The Lie That Changed the World – Who Really Did It and Why (2019), Icke writes that the official explanation for the September 11 attacks is false and is intended to cover up the "massive and central involvement in 9/11 by the Israeli government, [Israeli] military and [Israeli] intelligence operatives."[183] He states in the book: “Zionist and ultra-Zionist organisations form a network across America and the world to manipulate and impose the will of ultra-Zionism and the Sabbatian-Frankist Death Cult….Add the Kosher Nostra networks of organized crime which interlock with Mossad….add control of so much of government and media—and you have a hidden stream of interconnections perfectly capable of perpetrating and then covering up 9/11.”[184]

In his book UFOs, Conspiracy Theories and the New Age, David G. Robertson disputes that Icke is antisemitic, saying that it is just easier for some people to accept that when Icke says reptilians he really means Jews than that he literally means extraterrestrial reptilians control world politics. Robertson also says that to believe the accusations of antisemitism you must ignore numerous things, such as the many high-profile people Icke names as reptilian who are not Jewish (a point also made by Jon Ronson in his 2001 documentary The Secret Rulers of the World, Part 2: "David Icke, The Lizards and The Jews"), Icke's frequent statements that he is speaking literally and not metaphorically, and that Icke identifies the supposedly reptilian ruling elite as "Aryan" in several places. Robertson also writes that Icke denounces racism, having called it "the ultimate idiocy".[130] In 2018, in response to allegations of antisemitism, Icke stated to Vox that: "My philosophy and view of life is that we are all points of attention within the same state of Infinite Awareness and the labels we are given and give ourselves are merely temporary experiences and not who we are… Thus to me all racism is ridiculous and completely missing the point of who we are and where we are."[102]

Following complaints from the Canadian Jewish Congress in 2000, Icke was briefly detained by immigration officials in Canada, where he was booked for a speaking tour,[63] and his books were removed from Indigo Books, a Canadian chain. Several stops on the tour were cancelled by their venues, as was a lecture in London.[185][186] Two venues in Berlin cancelled live events scheduled to be hosted by Icke in 2017 following accusations of antisemitism. The Maritim hotel did not give a reason for the cancellation, but the Carl Benz Arena wrote on its Facebook page that it was due to the "contentious nature and the contradictory statements, which for us as a politically neutral event venue do not give a clear picture."[24] An event to be held at Manchester United's Old Trafford was also cancelled in 2017, with the venue saying it was due to Icke's "objectionable views."[187] After Icke's talk in Vancouver on 2 September 2017, the Canadian Jewish News called him "a controversial conspiracy theorist, antisemite and Holocaust denier". Micheal Vonn, the British Columbia Civil Liberties Association's policy director, told the newspaper: "You are free to be a racist in Canada, you are free to say so and tell others that they should be, too."[188]

In February 2019, the Australian Government cancelled Icke's visa ahead of a planned speaking tour[189] on the grounds of his character.[190] Immigration Minister David Coleman upheld the complaint made by Dvir Abramovich, the chairman of the Anti-Defamation Commission.[191] This decision was applauded by both major political parties. Labor's immigration spokesman, Shayne Neumann, said, "Labor welcomes the fact that the Government did what we called on them to do and refused David Icke's visa application."[190] Icke issued a statement in which he described himself as "the victim of a smear campaign from politicians who have been listening to special interest groups".[192]

On 4 November 2022, it was reported that Icke had been banned from entering the Netherlands for two years, after being sent a letter from the Dutch government saying that his presence in the country would pose a risk to public order. The ban also prevents Icke from entering the EU's visa-free Schengen Area.[193]

Other responses

Political Research Associates has described Icke's politics as "a mishmash of most of the dominant themes of contemporary neofascism, mixed in with a smattering of topics culled from the U.S. militia movement." He opposes gun control, and claims that many mass shootings were orchestrated to increase public opposition to guns. He believes the U.S. government carried out the Oklahoma City bombing.[8] He endorses or recommends antisemitic and far-right publications such as Spotlight and On Target, the magazine of the white supremacist group the "British League of Rights", and has been closely associated with antisemitic "New Age" periodicals such as Nexus and Rainbow Ark, a "New Age" magazine which is financed by far-right activists and affiliated with the neo-Nazi National Front.[182][194] The neo-Nazi terrorist group Combat 18 promoted Icke's public speaking events in its internal journal Putsch; of one such event, the journal wrote approvingly:

[Icke] spoke of "the sheep" and how the Zionist-operated government, sorry, "Illuminati", uses them for its own ends. He began to talk about the big conspiracy by a group of bankers, media moguls, etc. – always being clever enough not to mention what all these had in common.[8]

Michael Barkun has described Icke's position as New Age conspiracism, writing that Icke is the most fluent of the genre,[195] describing his work as "improvisational millennialism", with an end-of-history scenario involving a final battle between good and evil. Barkun defines improvisational millennialism as an "act of bricolage": because everything is connected in the conspiracist world view, every source can be mined for links.[196] Barkun argues that Icke has actively tried to cultivate the radical right: "There is no fuller explication of [their] beliefs about ruling elites than Icke's." He also notes that Icke regards Christian patriots as the only Americans who understand the "New World Order".[197] In 1996 Icke spoke to a conference in Reno, Nevada, alongside opponents of the Brady Handgun Violence Prevention Act, including Kirk Lyons, a lawyer who has represented the Ku Klux Klan.[104] Icke has never been a member of any right-wing group, and he has criticised them.[130]

Relying on Douglas Kellner's distinction between clinical paranoia and a "critical paranoia" that confronts power, Richard Kahn and Tyson Lewis argue that Icke displays elements of both and that his reptilian hypothesis and his "postmodern metanarrative" may be allegorical, a Swiftian satire which is used to give ordinary people a narrative with which to question what they see around them and alert them to the alleged emergence of a global fascist state.[198][199][200]

People influenced by Icke have asked public figures if they are lizards. An Official Information Act request was filed in New Zealand in 2008 to ask John Key, then prime minister, whether he was a lizard. Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg was asked the same during a Q&A in 2016. Both men said they were not lizards.[201] In a 2013 survey in the United States by Public Policy Polling, 4% believed that "'lizard people' control our societies".[202][203][204]

Selected works

Books

  • (1983) It's a Tough Game, Son!, London: Piccolo Books. ISBN 0-330-28047-3
  • (1989) It Doesn't Have To Be Like This: Green Politics Explained, London: Green Print. ISBN 1-85425-033-7
  • (1991) The Truth Vibrations, London: Gateway. ISBN 1-85860-006-5
  • (1992) Love Changes Everything, London: Harper Collins Publishers. ISBN 1-85538-247-4
  • (1993) In the Light of Experience: The Autobiography of David Icke, London: Warner Books. ISBN 0-7515-0603-6
  • (1993) Days of Decision, London: Jon Carpenter Publishing. ISBN 1-897766-01-7
  • (1993) Heal the World: A Do-It-Yourself Guide to Personal and Planetary Transformation, London: Gateway. ISBN 1-85860-005-7
  • (1994) The Robot's Rebellion, London: Gateway. ISBN 1-85860-022-7
  • (1995) … And the Truth Shall Set You Free, Ryde: Bridge of Love Publications. ISBN 0-9538810-5-9
  • (1996) I Am Me, I Am Free: The Robot's Guide to Freedom, New York: Truth Seeker. ISBN 0-9526147-5-8
  • (1998) Lifting the Veil: David Icke interviewed by Jon Rappoport. New York: Truth Seeker. ISBN 0-939040-05-0
  • (1999) The Biggest Secret: The Book That Will Change the World, Ryde: Bridge of Love Publications. ISBN 0-9526147-6-6
  • (2001) Children of the Matrix, Ryde: Bridge of Love Publications. ISBN 0-9538810-1-6
  • (2002) Alice in Wonderland and the World Trade Center Disaster, Ryde: Bridge of Love Publications. ISBN 0-9538810-2-4
  • (2003) Tales from the Time Loop, Ryde: Bridge of Love Publications. ISBN 0-9538810-4-0
  • (2005) Infinite Love Is the Only Truth: Everything Else Is Illusion, Ryde: Bridge of Love Publications. ISBN 0-9538810-6-7
  • (2007) The David Icke Guide to the Global Conspiracy (and how to end it), Ryde: David Icke Books Ltd. ISBN 978-0-9538810-8-6
  • (2010) Human Race Get Off Your Knees: The Lion Sleeps No More, Ryde: David Icke Books Ltd. ISBN 978-0-9559973-1-0
  • (2012) Remember Who You Are: Remember 'Where' You Are and Where You 'Come' From, Ryde: David Icke Books Ltd. ISBN 0-9559973-3-X
  • (2013) The Perception Deception: Or … It's All Bollocks — Yes, All of It, Ryde: David Icke Books Ltd. ISBN 978-0-955997389
  • (2016) Phantom Self (And how to find the real one), Ryde: David Icke Books Ltd. ISBN 978-0-9576308-8-8
  • (2017) Everything You Need To Know But Have Never Been Told, Ryde: David Icke Books Ltd. ISBN 978-1527207264
  • (2019) The Trigger: The Lie That Changed The World, Ryde: David Icke Books Ltd. ISBN 978-1-916025806
  • (2020) The Answer, Ryde: David Icke Books Ltd. ISBN 978-1916025820
  • (2021) Perceptions of a Renegade Mind, Ryde: David Icke Books Ltd. ISBN 978-1838415310
  • (2022) The Trap : What it is, how is works, and how we escape its illusions, Ryde: David Icke Books Ltd. ISBN 978-1838415327

Videos

  • (1994) The Robots' Rebellion
  • (1996) Turning of the Tide
  • (1998) The Freedom Road
  • (1999) David Icke: The Reptilian Agenda, with Zulu Sanusi (Shaman) Credo Mutwa
  • (1999) David Icke: Revelations of a Mother Goddess, with Arizona Wilder
  • (2000) David Icke Live in Vancouver: From Prison to Paradise
  • (2003) Secrets of the Matrix
  • (2006) Freedom or Fascism: The Time to Choose
  • (2008) David Icke Live at the Oxford Union Debating Society on YouTube
  • (2008) Beyond the Cutting Edge: Live from Brixton Academy
  • (2008) David Icke: Big Brother, the BIG Picture
  • (2010) The Lion Sleeps No More
  • (2012) Return to Peru
  • (2012) Remember Who You Are: Live at Wembley Arena
  • (2014) Awaken: Live from Wembley Arena
  • (2017) Worldwide Wakeup Tour Live
  • (2019) Renegade

See also

References

Citations

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  7. ^ Robertson 2016, p. 121.
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  20. ^ a b c Andrew Neil, "David Icke on 9/11 and lizards in Buckingham Palace theories", This Week, BBC (video), 20 May 2016, 00:04:02.
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  28. ^ Newitt, Ned (21 March 2013). The Slums of Leicester. JMD Media Ltd. pp. 153, 159–160.
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  30. ^ Icke 1993, pp. 36, 38.
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  32. ^ Icke 1993, pp. 44, 46.
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  38. ^ Robertson 2016, pp. 139–140, 147.
  39. ^ Icke 1993, pp. 72, 75.
  40. ^ Icke 1993, p. 78.
  41. ^ Icke 1993, pp. 79, 81, 83.
  42. ^ Icke 1993, pp. 85–86.
  43. ^ Icke 1993, pp. 88–91.
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  46. ^ Icke 1993, p. 98.
  47. ^ Icke 1993, p. 109.
  48. ^ Icke 1993, p. 104.
  49. ^ Icke, Tales from the Time Loop, p. 7.
  50. ^ Anonymous (14 November 1990). "Protester David Icke finally pays community charge". The Guardian.
  51. ^ a b Kennedy, Maev (20 March 1991). "Icke resigns Green Speaker and parliamentary roles". The Guardian.
  52. ^ a b Icke, David (1991). The Truth Vibrations. London: Aquarian Press. p. 13.
  53. ^ Icke, David. Days of Decision. p. 19.
  54. ^ a b Icke, David (2016). Phantom Self. Ryde: David Icke Books. pp. 1–3.
  55. ^ a b . davidickebooks.co.uk. David Icke. Archived from the original on 19 June 2011. Retrieved 8 June 2011.
  56. ^ "The 10 worst decisions in the history of sport". The Observer. Guardian News & Media. 12 January 2003.
  57. ^ Kay 2011, p. 179.
  58. ^ Robertson, David G. (7 September 2013). "David Icke's Reptilian Thesis and the Development of New Age Theodicy". International Journal for the Study of New Religions. 4 (1): 27–47. doi:10.1558/ijsnr.v4i1.27.
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  61. ^ Icke 1993, pp. 190, 208.
  62. ^ Icke 1993, p. 192.
  63. ^ a b c d Extracts from Ronson, Jon. Them: Adventures with Extremists.. Ronson, Jon. "Beset by lizards (part one)". The Guardian. Retrieved 27 November 2022. Ronson, Jon (17 March 2001). "Beset by lizards (part two)". The Guardian. Retrieved 27 November 2022.
  64. ^ Taylor, Sam (20 April 1997). "So I was in this bar with the son of God...". The Observer.
  65. ^ Robertson 2016, p. 130.
  66. ^ Icke 1993, pp. 223, 254.
  67. ^ Robertson 2016, pp. 134–135.
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  69. ^ Robertson 2016, pp. 130–131.
  70. ^ Ezard, John (28 March 1991). "'Son and daughter of God' predict apocalypse is nigh". The Guardian.
  71. ^ a b Robertson 2016, p. 131.
  72. ^ Ronson 2001, p. 154.
  73. ^ "The day David Icke told Terry Wogan "I'm the son of God"". The Daily Telegraph. 29 April 2016. Archived from the original on 11 January 2022.
  74. ^ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HAbI_1ySbCY at 6.19 minutes in this video
  75. ^ Des Christy, "Crucifixion, courtesy of the BBC," The Guardian, 6 May 1991.
  76. ^ Oppenheim, Maya (31 January 2016). "The most controversial moments from Sir Terry Wogan's chat show". The Independent. Retrieved 3 May 2020.
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  78. ^ Ronson 2001, p. 173.
  79. ^ a b Robertson 2016, p. 147.
  80. ^ Wogan, Terry (2007) [2006]. Mustn't Grumble. London: Orion. p. 158. ISBN 978-1409105893.
  81. ^ Icke, Tales from the Time Loop, pp. 14, 17, 26.
  82. ^ Robertson 2016, pp. 133–135.
  83. ^ Ronson (Channel 4) 2001, 06:12 mins.
  84. ^ Goodrick-Clarke 2003, p. 291.
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  87. ^ Juliane Wetzel, "The Protocols of the Elders of Zion on the internet: How radical political groups are networked via anti-Semitic conspiracy theories," in Esther Webman (ed.), The Global Impact of the Protocols of the Elders of Zion: A Century-Old Myth, New York: Routledge, 2012 (147–160), p. 148.
  88. ^ a b c Barkun 2003, p. 104.
  89. ^ Also see Norman Simms, "Anti-Semitism: A Psychopathological Disease," in Jerry S. Piven, Chris Boyd, Henry W. Lawton (eds.), Judaism and Genocide: Psychological Undercurrents of History, Volume IV, Lincoln, NE: Writers Club Press, 2002, 30ff.
  90. ^ a b c Robertson 2016, p. 138.
  91. ^ a b c d Goodrick-Clarke 2003.
  92. ^ For Cooper: Ed Vulliamy, Bruce Dirks, "New trial may solve riddle of Oklahoma bombing", The Guardian, 3 November 1997.
  93. ^ Icke, The Robots' Rebellion, London: Gateway, 1992, p. 114.
  94. ^ a b Honigsbaum, Mark (26 May 1995). . Evening Standard. London. Archived from the original on 28 April 1999.
  95. ^ "Greens bar Icke", The Independent, 12 September 1994.
  96. ^ Vivek Chaudhary, "Greens see red at 'Son of God's anti-Semitism'," The Guardian, 12 September 1994.
  97. ^ Goodwin, Stephen (29 September 1994). . The Independent. Archived from the original on 2 June 2013.
  98. ^ Faucher-King, Florence (11 October 2005). Changing Parties: An Anthropology of British Political Conferences. Palgrave Macmillan UK. p. 264, note 10. ISBN 978-0-230-50988-7.
  99. ^ David Icke, "Down but speaking out among the Greens," letters to the editor, The Guardian, 14 September 1994.
  100. ^ Barkun 2003, p. 144.
  101. ^ David Icke, "Chapter Seven: Master races", And the Truth Shall Set You Free, Ryde: Bridge of Love Publications, 1995, pp. 127–146.
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  105. ^ Paul Evans, "Interview: David Icke", New Statesman, 3 March 2008.
  106. ^ Marre, Oliver (20 January 2008). "Pendennis". The Observer.
  107. ^ David Icke, "David Icke Live at the Oxford Union Debating Society", produced by Linda Atherton, Commonage, February 2008.
  108. ^ Mesure, Susie (27 October 2012). "David Icke is not the Messiah. Or even that naughty. But boy, can he drone on". The Independent on Sunday. Retrieved 21 April 2020.
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  110. ^ "Haltemprice and Howden: Result in full". BBC News. 11 July 2008.
  111. ^ Wainwright, Martin; Stratton, Allegra (11 July 2008). "Haltemprice and Howden byelection: Davis sees off Loonies and claims victory in 42-day detention battle". The Guardian.
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  115. ^ "The People's Voice 2.0". thepeoplesvoice.tv/. Archived from the original on 18 May 2016.
  116. ^ Icke 1999, pp. 30–40.
  117. ^ For law of attraction, Icke, Children of the Matrix, 291 ff.
  118. ^ Icke 1999, pp. 5–9.
  119. ^ a b David Icke, Remember Who You Are: Remember 'Where' You Are and Where You 'Come' From, Ryde: David Icke Books, 2012.
  120. ^ a b Storr, Will (16 June 2013). "It's a jungle out there". The Sunday Times. London. Retrieved 21 April 2020. (subscription required)
  121. ^ Readfearn, Graham (6 December 2016). "More terrifying than Trump? The booming conspiracy culture of climate science denial". The Guardian. Retrieved 21 April 2020.
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  123. ^ Icke 1999, p. 52.
  124. ^ Robertson 2016, p. 140.
  125. ^ a b "The Royal Family are bloodsucking alien lizards – David Icke", The Scotsman, 30 January 2006.
  126. ^ Icke 1999, pp. 40, 43, 52, 61.
  127. ^ Robertson 2013, p. 35.
  128. ^ Icke 1999, p. 30.
  129. ^ Lewis & Kahn 2010, p. 81.
  130. ^ a b c Robertson 2016, pp. 150–151.
  131. ^ Icke, David; Mitchell, Ben (22 January 2006). "This much I know". The Observer. Guardian News & Media. Retrieved 21 April 2020.
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  137. ^ Barkun 2003, pp. 103–104.
  138. ^ a b Icke 1999, p. 40.
  139. ^ Robertson 2016, p. 152.
  140. ^ Icke, David. Children of the Matrix. p. 339.
  141. ^ Icke, David. Human Race Get off Your Knees. pp. 134, 646.
  142. ^ Kay, Jonathan (2011). Among the Truthers: A Journey Through America's Growing Conspiracist Underground. HarperCollins. p. 180.
  143. ^ Lewis & Kahn 2010, p. 83.
  144. ^ Seidel, Jamie (18 February 2019). "David Icke: How the world's greatest conspiracy theorist discovered his personal truth". News.com.au — Australia's Leading News Site. News Corp. Retrieved 18 February 2019.
  145. ^ a b c Robertson 2016, p. 139.
  146. ^ a b David Icke, , News for the Soul, accessed 12 December 2010.
  147. ^ Quote on page two from Drinkwater, Kenneth; Dagnall, Neil; Denovan, Andrew; Parker, Andrew; Clough, Peter (January–March 2018). "Predictors and Associates of Problem-Reaction-Solution: Statistical Bias, Emotion-Based Reasoning, and Belief in the Paranormal". SAGE Open. 8 (1): 11. doi:10.1177/2158244018762999.: "Although, the precise lineage of PRS [problem–reaction–solution] is unknown, researchers often ascribe the origin of PRS to various ancient figures or events (i.e., Roman Emperor Diocletian) and philosophical doctrines (Hegel, 1812; see Fichte, 1794, in Neuhouser, 1990). In this historical context, PRS comprises three stages equivalent to those subsumed within PRS: thesis (intellectual proposition, problem), antithesis (negation of the proposition, response to thesis), and synthesis (resolution of tension between proposition and reaction, resolution). These steps derive from Heinrich Moritz Chalybäus misinterpretation (Carlson, 2007) of Hegel's dialectic (Mills, 2005; Stewart, 1996). The exact source and academic status of PRS is unclear and beyond the remit of this article, which generally views PRS as a form of faulty inferential thinking. More precisely, as the tendency to validate proffered suboptimal solutions based on limited evaluation of objective evidence."
  148. ^ Icke, Human Race Get Off Your Knees: The Lion Sleeps No More.
  149. ^ For 9/11, Icke, Alice in Wonderland and the World Trade Center Disaster.
  150. ^ For global warming and Agenda 21, Icke, Phantom Self, 303.
  151. ^ Widdas, Henry (7 June 2018). "David Icke: My unanswered 9/11 questions". Lancashire Evening Post. Retrieved 19 June 2018.
  152. ^ a b c Robertson 2016, p. 157.
  153. ^ a b Icke, David (2003). Tales from the Time Loop: The Most Comprehensive Expose of the Global Conspiracy Ever Written and All You Need to Know to be Truly Free (First ed.). Bridge of Love. p. 447. ISBN 978-0953881048.
  154. ^ David Icke, Human Race Get Off Your Knees: The Lion Sleeps No More, Ryde: David Icke Books, 2010, pp. 618, 627, 632.
  155. ^ O'Brien, Liam (19 May 2013). "Prize-winning author Alice Walker gives support to David Icke on Desert Island Discs". The Independent. Retrieved 19 June 2018.
  156. ^ The Anti-Vaxx Industry, Center for Countering Digital Hate, 2020
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  158. ^ "Facebook removes David Icke coronavirus-5G conspiracy video". ITV News. 9 April 2020. Retrieved 4 May 2020.
  159. ^ Field, Mark (13 April 2020). "How Britain's telecoms firms are reacting to the surge in coronavirus conspiracies". The Daily Telegraph. Archived from the original on 11 January 2022. Retrieved 25 April 2020.
  160. ^ Cohen, Nick (25 April 2020). "Social media no longer tolerates toxic lies? Don't believe a word of it". The Observer. Retrieved 25 April 2020.
  161. ^ "The Coronavirus Conspiracy: How COVID-19 Will Seize Your Rights & Destroy Our Economy". London Real. 6 April 2020. Event occurs at 1:18:05. Retrieved 26 April 2020.
  162. ^ "Ofcom 'urgently' probes Icke TV interview on virus". BBC News. 9 April 2020. Retrieved 10 April 2020.
  163. ^ Harpin, Lee (12 April 2020). "London Live condemned for allowing David Icke to air 'lunatic conspiracy theories'". The Jewish Chronicle. Retrieved 21 April 2020.
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Bibliography

  • Barkun, Michael (2003). A Culture of Conspiracy: Apocalyptic Visions in Contemporary America (1st ed.). Berkeley: University of California Press.
  • Goodrick-Clarke, Nicholas (2003). Black Sun: Aryan Cults, Esoteric Nazism, and the Politics of Identity. New York University Press.
  • Icke, David (1993). In the Light of Experience. London: Warner Books.
  • Icke, David (1999). The Biggest Secret. Bridge of Love Publications USA.
  • Lewis, Tyson E.; Kahn, Richard (2010). Education Out of Bounds: Reimagining Cultural Studies for a Posthuman Age. New York: Palgrave Macmillan.
  • Robertson, David G. (2016). UFOs, Conspiracy Theories and the New Age (1st ed.). London: Bloomsbury Academic. ISBN 978-1474253208.

Further reading

  • Banyan, Will. (pdf), Paranoia Magazine, October 2003.
  • Kay, Jonathan. "When paranoia goes intergalactic", National Post, 12 May 2011.

External links

  • Official website  
  • David Icke at IMDb

Video

  • Neil, Andrew. "David Icke on 9/11 and lizards in Buckingham Palace theories", This Week, BBC, 20 May 2016.

david, icke, david, vaughan, icke, ɔː, born, april, 1952, english, conspiracy, theorist, former, footballer, sports, broadcaster, written, over, books, self, published, since, 1990s, spoken, more, than, countries, icke, 2013borndavid, vaughan, icke, 1952, apri. David Vaughan Icke v ɔː n aɪ k born 29 April 1952 is an English conspiracy theorist and a former footballer and sports broadcaster 1 2 3 4 5 He has written over 20 books self published since the mid 1990s and spoken in more than 25 countries 6 7 8 David IckeIcke in 2013BornDavid Vaughan Icke 1952 04 29 29 April 1952 age 71 Leicester EnglandOccupation s Conspiracy theorist 1 former sports broadcaster and football playerMovementNew Age conspiracismWebsitedavidicke wbr comIn 1990 Icke visited a psychic who told him he was on Earth for a purpose and would receive messages from the spirit world 9 This led him to claim in 1991 to be a Son of the Godhead 5 and that the world would soon be devastated by tidal waves and earthquakes He repeated this on the BBC show Wogan 10 11 His appearance led to public ridicule 12 Books Icke wrote over the next 11 years developed his world view of a New Age conspiracy 13 Reactions to his endorsement of an antisemitic fabrication The Protocols of the Elders of Zion in The Robots Rebellion 1994 and in And the Truth Shall Set You Free 1995 led his then publisher to decline further books and he has self published since then 8 Icke contends that the universe consists of vibrational energy and infinite dimensions sharing the same space 14 15 16 He claims that there is an inter dimensional race of reptilian beings the Archons or Anunnaki which have hijacked the Earth Further a genetically modified human Archon hybrid race of reptilian shape shifters the Babylonian Brotherhood Illuminati or elite manipulate events to keep humans in fear so that the Archons can feed off the resulting negative energy 14 17 18 19 He claims that many public figures belong to the Babylonian Brotherhood and propel humanity towards a global fascist state or New World Order a post truth era ending freedom of speech 13 14 20 21 He sees the only way to defeat such Archontic influence is for people to wake up to the truth and fill their hearts with love 14 Critics have accused Icke of being antisemitic and a Holocaust denier with his theories of reptilians serving as a deliberate code 22 23 24 Icke strongly denies this 25 Contents 1 Early life family and education 1 1 Football 2 First marriage 3 Journalism sports broadcasting 4 Green Party Betty Shine 5 Turquoise period 5 1 Green Party resignation and press conference 5 2 Wogan interview 6 Writing and lecturing 6 1 Early books 6 1 1 The Robots Rebellion 6 2 Self publishing 6 3 Lecturing 6 4 Second marriage politics television 7 Conspiracy theories 7 1 Infinite dimensions 7 2 Reptoid humanoids 7 3 Brotherhood aims and institutions 7 4 Problem reaction solution 7 5 Saturn Moon Matrix 7 6 5G and COVID 19 8 Reception 8 1 Accusations of antisemitism 8 2 Other responses 9 Selected works 10 See also 11 References 12 External linksEarly life family and educationThe middle son of three boys born seven years apart Icke was born in Leicester General Hospital to Beric Vaughan Icke and Barbara J Cooke who were married in Leicester in 1951 Beric Icke served in the Royal Air Force as a medical orderly during World War II 26 and after the war became a clerk in the Gents clock factory The family lived in a terraced house on Lead Street in the centre of Leicester 27 an area that was demolished in the mid 1950s as part of the city s slum clearance 28 When David Icke was three around 1955 they moved to the Goodwood estate one of the council estates the post war Labour government built To say we were skint he wrote in 1993 is like saying it is a little chilly at the North Pole 27 He recalls having to hide under a window or chair when the councilman came for the rent after knocking the rent man would walk around the house peering through windows His mother never explained that it was about the rent she just told Icke to hide He wrote in 2003 that he still gets a fright when someone knocks on the door 29 He attended Whitehall Infant School and then Whitehall Junior School 30 29 Football Icke has said he made no effort at school but when he was nine he was chosen for the junior school s third year football team He writes that this was the first time he had succeeded at anything and he came to see football as his way out of poverty He played in goal which he wrote suited the loner in him and gave him a sense of living on the edge between hero and villain 31 After failing his 11 plus exam in 1963 he was sent to the city s Crown Hills Secondary Modern rather than the local grammar school where he was given a trial for the Leicester Boys Under 14 team 32 He left school at 15 after being talent spotted by Coventry City who signed him up in 1967 as their youth team s goalkeeper In 1968 he played in the Coventry City youth team that were runners up to Burnley in the F A Youth Cup He also played for Oxford United s reserve team and Northampton Town on loan from Coventry 33 Rheumatoid arthritis in his left knee which spread to the right knee ankles elbows wrists and hands stopped him from making a career out of football Despite stating that he was often in agony during training Icke managed to play part time for Hereford United including in the first team when they were in the fourth and later in the third division of the English Football League But in 1973 at the age of 21 the pain in his joints became so severe that he was forced to retire 34 First marriageIcke met his first wife Linda Atherton in May 1971 at a dance at the Chesford Grange Hotel near Leamington Spa Warwickshire Shortly after they met Icke left home following one of a number of frequent arguments he had started having with his father His father was upset that Icke s arthritis was interfering with his football career Icke moved into a bedsit and worked in a travel agency travelling to Hereford twice a week in the evenings to play football 35 Icke and Atherton married on 30 September 1971 four months after they met 36 Their daughter was born in March 1975 followed by one son in December 1981 and another in November 1992 37 The couple divorced in 2001 but remained friends and Atherton continued to work as Icke s business manager 38 Journalism sports broadcastingThe loss of Icke s position with Hereford meant that he and his wife had to sell their home and for several weeks they lived apart each moving in with their parents In 1973 Icke found a job as a reporter with the weekly Leicester Advertiser through a contact who was a sports editor at the Daily Mail 39 He moved on to the Leicester News Agency did some work for BBC Radio Leicester as its football reporter 40 then worked his way up through the Loughborough Monitor the Leicester Mercury and BRMB Radio in Birmingham 41 In 1976 Icke worked for two months in Saudi Arabia helping with the national football team His position on the team was planned to be a long term position but Icke decided to stay in the UK after his first holiday back 42 After his return to the UK BRMB decided to give him his job back after which he successfully applied to Midlands Today at the BBC s Pebble Mill Studios in Birmingham a job that included on air appearances 43 One of the earliest stories he covered there was the murder of Carl Bridgewater the paperboy shot during a robbery in 1978 44 In 1981 Icke became a sports presenter for the BBC s national programme Newsnight which had begun the previous year Two years later on 17 January 1983 he appeared on the first edition of the BBC s Breakfast Time British television s first national breakfast show and presented the sports news there until 1985 In 1983 he co hosted Grandstand at the time the BBC s flagship national sports programme 45 He also published his first book that year It s a Tough Game Son about how to break into football 46 Icke and his family moved in 1982 to Ryde on the Isle of Wight 47 His relationship with Grandstand was short lived He wrote that a new editor arrived in 1983 who appeared not to like him but he continued working for BBC Sport until 1990 often on bowls and snooker programmes and at the 1988 Summer Olympics 48 Icke was by then a household name but has said that a career in television began to lose its appeal to him he found television workers insecure shallow and sometimes vicious 49 In August 1990 his contract with the BBC was terminated when he initially refused to pay the Community Charge also known as the poll tax a local tax Margaret Thatcher s government introduced that year He ultimately paid it but his announcement that he was willing to go to prison rather than pay prompted the BBC by charter an impartial public service broadcaster to distance itself from him 50 51 Green Party Betty Shine Icke moved to Ryde on the Isle of Wight in 1982 Icke began to engage with alternative medicine and New Age philosophies in the 1980s in an effort to relieve his arthritis and this encouraged his interest in Green politics He joined the Green Party and became a national spokesperson within six months 52 His second book It Doesn t Have To Be Like This an outline of his views on the environment was published in 1989 Icke wrote that 1989 was a time of considerable personal despair and it was during this period that he said he began to feel a presence around him 53 He often describes how he felt it while alone in a hotel room in March 1990 and finally asked If there is anybody here will you please contact me because you are driving me up the wall Days later in a newsagent s shop in Ryde he felt a force pull his feet to the ground and heard a voice guide him toward some books One of them was Mind to Mind 1989 by Betty Shine a psychic healer in Brighton He read the book then wrote to her requesting a consultation about his arthritis 54 55 52 56 Icke visited Shine four times During the third meeting on 29 March 1990 Icke claims to have felt something like a spider s web on his face and Shine told him she had a message from Wang Ye Lee of the spirit world 57 58 Icke had been sent to heal the earth she said and would become famous but would face opposition The spirit world was going to pass ideas to him which he would speak about to others He would write five books in three years in 20 years a new flying machine would allow us to go wherever we wanted and time would have no meaning and there would be earthquakes in unusual places because the inner earth was being destabilised by having oil taken from under the seabed 55 59 54 In February 1991 Icke visited a pre Inca Sillustani burial ground near Puno Peru where he felt drawn to a particular circle of waist high stones As he stood in the circle he had two thoughts that people would be talking about this in 100 years and that it would be over when it rained His body shook as though plugged into an electrical socket he wrote and new ideas poured into him Then it started raining and the experience ended He described it as the kundalini a term from Hindu yoga activating his chakras or energy centres triggering a higher level of consciousness 60 13 Turquoise period Icke s turquoise period followed an experience by a burial site in Sillustani Peru in 1991 There followed what Icke called his turquoise period He had been channelling for some time he wrote and had received a message through automatic writing that he was a Son of the Godhead interpreting Godhead as the Infinite Mind 61 He began to wear only the colour turquoise often a turquoise shell suit a colour he saw as a conduit for positive energy 62 63 He also started working on his third book and the first of his New Age period The Truth Vibrations citation needed In August 1990 before his visit to Peru Icke met Deborah Shaw an English psychic based in Calgary Alberta Canada When he returned from Peru they began a relationship with the apparent blessing of Icke s wife In March 1991 Shaw began living with the couple a short lived arrangement that the press called the turquoise triangle Shaw changed her name to Mari Shawsun while Icke s wife became Michaela which she said was an aspect of the Archangel Michael 64 65 The relationship with Shaw led to the birth of a daughter in December 1991 although she and Icke had by then ceased their relationship Icke wrote in 1993 that he decided not to visit his daughter and had seen her only once at Shaw s request Icke s wife gave birth to the couple s second son in November 1992 66 67 Green Party resignation and press conference In March 1991 Icke resigned from the Green Party during a party conference telling them he was about to be at the centre of tremendous and increasing controversy and winning a standing ovation from delegates after the announcement 51 A week later shortly after his father died Icke and his wife Linda Atherton along with their daughter and Deborah Shaw held a press conference to announce that Icke was a son of the Godhead 68 69 He told reporters the world was going to end in 1997 It would be preceded by a hurricane around the Gulf of Mexico and New Orleans eruptions in Cuba disruption in China a hurricane in Derry and an earthquake on the Isle of Arran The information was being given to them by voices and automatic writing he said Los Angeles would become an island New Zealand would disappear and the cliffs of Kent would be underwater by Christmas 70 Wogan interview News headlines following Icke s press conference attracted requests for interviews from Nicky Campbell s BBC Radio One programme for Terry Wogan s prime time Wogan show and Fern Britton s ITV chat show 71 Wogan introduced the 1991 segment with The world as we know it is about to end Amid laughter from the audience Icke demurred when asked if he was the son of God replying that Jesus would have been laughed at too and repeated that Britain would soon be devastated by tidal waves and earthquakes Without these the Earth will cease to exist When Icke said laughter was the best way to remove negativity Wogan replied of the audience But they re laughing at you They re not laughing with you 71 72 73 74 The BBC was criticised for allowing it to go ahead Des Christy of The Guardian called it a media crucifixion 75 76 The interview led to a difficult period for Icke In May 1991 police were called to the couple s home after a crowd of over 100 youths gathered outside chanting We want the Messiah and Give us a sign David 77 Icke told Jon Ronson in 2001 One of my very greatest fears as a child was being ridiculed in public And there it was coming true As a television presenter I d been respected People come up to you in the street and shake your hand and talk to you in a respectful way And suddenly overnight this was transformed into Icke s a nutter I couldn t walk down any street in Britain without being laughed at It was a nightmare My children were devastated because their dad was a figure of ridicule 63 78 In 2006 Wogan interviewed Icke again for a special Wogan Now amp Then series Wogan was apologetic for his conduct in the 1991 interview 79 However in his autobiography Mustn t Grumble Wogan described Icke as being a ranting demagogue convinced we were all manipulated sheep 80 Writing and lecturingEarly books The Wogan interview separated Icke from his previous life he wrote in 2003 although he considered it the making of him in the end giving him the courage to develop his ideas without caring what anyone thought 81 His book The Truth Vibrations inspired by his experience in Peru was published in 1991 Between 1992 and 1994 he wrote five books all published by mainstream publishers four in 1993 Love Changes Everything 1992 influenced by the channelling work of Deborah Shaw is a theosophical work about the origin of the planet in which Icke writes with admiration about Jesus Days of Decision 1993 is an 86 page summary of his interviews after the 1991 press conference it questions the historicity of Jesus but accepts the existence of the Christ spirit Icke s autobiography In the Light of Experience was published the same year 82 followed by Heal the World A Do It Yourself Guide to Personal and Planetary Transformation 1993 The Robots Rebellion In his 2001 documentary about Icke Jon Ronson cited this cartoon Rothschild 1898 by Charles Leandre arguing that Jews have long been depicted as lizard like creatures who are out to control the world 83 Icke s The Robots Rebellion 1994 a book published by Gateway attracted allegations that his work was antisemitic According to historian Nicholas Goodrick Clarke the book contains all the familiar beliefs and paranoid cliches of the US conspiracists and militia 84 It claims that a plan for world domination by a shadowy cabal perhaps extraterrestrial was laid out in The Protocols of the Elders of Zion c 1897 The Protocols of the Elders of Zion is an anti Semitic literary forgery 85 probably written under the direction of the Russian secret police in Paris purporting to reveal a conspiracy by the Jewish people to achieve global domination It was exposed as a forgery in 1920 by Lucien Wolf and the following year by Philip Graves in The Times Once exposed it disappeared from mainstream discourse until interest in it was renewed by the American far right in the 1950s 86 Interest in it was further spread by conspiracy groups on the Internet 87 According to Michael Barkun Icke s reliance on the Protocols in The Robots Rebellion is the first of a number of instances in which Icke moves into the dangerous terrain of antisemitism 88 89 Icke took both the extraterrestrial angle and the focus on the Protocols from Behold a Pale Horse 1991 by Milton William Cooper who was associated with the American militia movement chapter 15 of Cooper s book reproduces the Protocols in full 90 91 92 The Robots Rebellion refers repeatedly to the Protocols calling them the Illuminati protocols and defining Illuminati as the Brotherhood elite at the top of the pyramid of secret societies world wide Icke adds that the Protocols were not the work of the Jewish people but of Zionists 93 94 The Robots Rebellion was greeted with dismay by the Green Party s executive Despite the controversy over the press conference and the Wogan interview they had allowed Icke to address the party s annual conference in 1992 a decision that led one of its principal speakers Sara Parkin to resign but after the publication of The Robot s Rebellion they moved to ban him 90 95 96 97 98 Icke wrote to The Guardian in September 1994 denying that The Robots Rebellion was anti Semitic and rejecting racism sexism and prejudice of any kind while insisting that whoever had written the Protocols knew the game plan for the twentieth century 99 100 Self publishing Why do we play a part in suppressing alternative information to the official line of the Second World War How is it right that while this fierce suppression goes on free copies of the Spielberg film Schindler s List are given to schools to indoctrinate children with the unchallenged version of events And why do we who say we oppose tyranny and demand freedom of speech allow people to go to prison and be vilified and magazines to be closed down on the spot for suggesting another version of history And the Truth Shall Set You Free 1995 8 Icke s next manuscript And the Truth Shall Set You Free 1995 contained a chapter questioning aspects of the Holocaust which caused a rift with his publisher Gateway 94 101 22 In the book Icke suggested that Jews funded the Holocaust by quoting and seconding Gary Allen s claim that The Warburgs part of the Rothschild empire helped finance Adolf Hitler In his view schools indoctrinate children with the unchallenged version of events with the mainstream account of the Holocaust thanks to their use of free copies of the film Schindler s List 1993 102 23 After borrowing 15 000 from a friend Icke established Bridge of Love Publications later called David Icke Books He self published And the Truth Shall Set You Free and all his subsequent books According to Lewis and Kahn Icke aimed to consolidate all conspiracy theories into one project with unlimited explanatory power His books sold 140 000 copies between 1998 and 2011 at a value of over 2 million 103 Thirty thousand copies of The Biggest Secret 1999 were in print months after publication according to Icke 104 and it was reprinted six times between 1999 and 2006 His 2002 book Alice in Wonderland and the World Trade Center Disaster became a long standing top five bestseller in South Africa 6 By 2006 his website was gaining 600 000 hits a week and by 2011 his books had been translated into 11 languages 103 Lecturing Icke speaking in June 2013Icke has held public lectures around the world and by 2006 had spoken in at least 25 countries 6 He spoke for seven hours to 2 500 people at the Brixton Academy London in 2008 15 and the same year addressed the University of Oxford s debating society the Oxford Union 105 106 107 His book tour for Human Race Get Off Your Knees The Lion Sleeps No More 2010 included a sold out talk to 2 100 in New York City and 83 000 worth of ticket sales in Melbourne In October 2012 he spoke for eleven hours to 6 000 people at London s Wembley Arena 108 Second marriage politics television In 1997 Icke met his second wife Pamela Leigh Richards in Jamaica He and Linda Atherton divorced in 2001 109 and he and Richards were married the same year citation needed They separated in 2008 and divorced in 2011 79 Icke stood for parliament in the 2008 by election for Haltemprice and Howden a constituency in the East Riding of Yorkshire on the issue of Big Brother The Big Picture He came 12th out of 26 candidates with 110 votes 0 46 resulting in a lost deposit 110 111 He explained that he was standing because if we don t face this now we are going to have some serious explaining to do when we are asked by our children and grandchildren what we were doing when the global fascist state was installed I was watching EastEnders dear will not be good enough 112 113 In November 2013 Icke launched an Internet television station The People s Voice broadcast from London He founded the station after crowdsourcing over 300 000 and worked for it as a volunteer until March 2014 Later that year the station stopped broadcasting 114 115 Conspiracy theoriesIcke combines New Age philosophical discussion about the universe and consciousness with conspiracy theories about public figures being reptilian humanoids and paedophiles He argues in favour of reincarnation a collective consciousness that has intentionality modal realism 16 that other possible worlds exist alongside ours and the so called law of attraction 116 that good and bad thoughts can attract experiences 117 14 In The Biggest Secret 1999 he introduced the idea that many prominent figures derive from the Anunnaki a reptilian race from the Draco constellation 118 In Human Race Get Off Your Knees The Lion Sleeps No More 2012 he identified the Moon and later Saturn as the source of holographic experiences broadcast by the reptiles that humanity interprets as reality 119 14 Icke is an opponent of the scientific method describing it as bollocks in 2013 When asked by The Sunday Times to explain the existence of television he said It s not that all science is bollocks but rather t he basis of the way science judges reality is bollocks 120 He also thinks climate change is a hoax 121 Infinite dimensions Icke believes that the universe is made up of vibrational energy and consists of an infinite number of dimensions that share the same space just like television and radio frequencies and that some people can tune their consciousness to other wavelengths 16 14 He stated in an interview with The Guardian that Our five senses can access only a tiny frequency range like a radio tuned to one station In the space you are occupying now are all the radio and television stations broadcasting to your area You can t see them and they can t see each other because they are on different wavelengths But move your radio dial and suddenly there they are one after the other It is the same with the reality we experience here as life What we call the world and the universe is only one frequency range in an infinite number sharing the same space 15 Icke believes that time is an illusion there is no past or future and only the infinite now is real and that humans are an aspect of consciousness or infinite awareness which he describes as all that there is has been and ever can be 14 Reptoid humanoids Further information New World Order conspiracy theory The Draco constellation from Firmamentum Sobiescianum sive Uranographia 1690 by Johannes Hevelius Icke s reptoid hypothesis posits that humanity is ruled by descendants of reptilians from Draco 122 Icke believes that an inter dimensional race of reptilian beings called the Archons have hijacked the earth and are stopping humanity from realising its true potential 14 19 He claims they are the same beings as the Anunnaki deities from the Babylonian creation myth the Enuma Elis and the fallen angels or Watchers who mated with human women in the Biblical apocrypha 18 He believes that a genetically modified human Archon hybrid race of shape shifting reptilians known as the Babylonian Brotherhood or the Illuminati manipulate global events to keep humans in constant fear so the Archons can feed off the negative energy this creates 14 123 In The Biggest Secret Icke identified the Brotherhood as descendants of reptilians from the constellation Draco and said they live in caverns inside the earth 124 Icke said in an interview When you get back into the ancient world you find this recurring theme of a union between a non human race and humans creating a hybrid race From 1998 I started coming across people who told me they had seen people change into a non human form It s an age old phenomenon known as shape shifting The basic form is like a scaly humanoid with reptilian rather than humanoid eyes 125 Icke claims the first reptilian human breeding programmes took place 200 000 300 000 years ago perhaps creating Adam and the third and latest 7 000 years ago He claims the hybrids of the third programme which are more Anunnaki than human currently control the world He writes in The Biggest Secret The Brotherhood which controls the world today is the modern expression of the Babylonian Brotherhood of reptile Aryan priests and royalty Icke states that they came together in Sumer after the flood but originated in the Caucasus He explains that when he uses the term Aryan he means the white race 126 Icke has stated that the reptilians come from not only another planet but another dimension the lower level of the fourth dimension the lower astral dimension the one nearest the physical world From this dimension they control the planet although just as fourth dimensional reptilians control us they in turn are controlled by a fifth dimension 16 Michael Barkun argues that Icke s introduction of different dimensions allowed him to skip awkward questions about how the reptilians got here 104 Icke believes the only way this Archontic influence can be defeated is if people wake up to the truth and fill their hearts with love 14 Icke briefly introduced his ideas about ancient astronauts in The Robot s Rebellion 1994 citing Milton William Cooper s Behold a Pale Horse 1991 and expanded it in And the Truth Shall Set You Free 1995 citing Barbara Marciniak s Bringers of the Dawn 1992 90 91 Religious studies lecturer David G Robertson writes that Icke s reptilian idea is adapted from Zecharia Sitchin s The 12th Planet 1976 combined with material from Credo Mutwa a Zulu healer 127 Sitchin suggested that the Anunnaki came to Earth for its precious metals Icke has said that they came for what he refers to as mono atomic gold which he claims can increase the capacity of the nervous system ten thousandfold and that after ingesting it the Anunnaki can process vast amounts of information speed up trans dimensional travel and shapeshift from reptilian to human 128 129 Lewis and Kahn argue that Icke is using allegory to depict the alien and alienating nature of global capitalism 17 Icke has said he is not using allegory 130 As of 2003 Icke claims the reptilian bloodline includes all then 43 American presidents three British and two Canadian prime ministers several Sumerian kings and Egyptian pharaohs and a smattering of celebrities Key bloodlines are said to include the Rockefellers Rothschilds various European aristocratic families the establishment families of the Eastern United States and the British House of Windsor 88 Icke claimed he saw British prime minister Edward Heath s eyes turn entirely jet black while the two men waited for a Sky News interview in 1989 131 15 He confirmed to Andrew Neil in May 2016 that he believes the British royal family are shape shifting lizards 20 In 2001 Icke said the Queen Mother was seriously reptilian 88 The Rothschilds in Icke s opinion are also blood drinking Satan worshipers which Daniel Allington and David Toube argued in 2018 was part of a revival of medieval anti Semitic attitudes towards Jews 132 Icke sometimes calls the reptilian plot the unseen After a 2018 talk by Icke in Southport Merseyside Michael Marshall reported The appearance of the unseen in the Middle East 6 000 years ago seems to be no coincidence and it s little wonder that Icke s work is so often accused of anti Semitism However if we were to accept that Icke himself does not hold such views and that his work is merely co opted by groups who undeniably are anti Semitic we also have to acknowledge that Icke often does his case no favours 133 Critics view Icke s reptilians and other theories as anti Semitic 24 134 135 and accuse him of Holocaust denial 24 Critics say that Icke s reptilians are symbolic representations of Jews which Icke called total friggin nonsense adding this is not a plot on the world by Jewish people 136 Icke has rejected the assertion he is a Holocaust denier 25 Brotherhood aims and institutions Icke states that at the apex of the Babylonian Brotherhood stand the Global Elite and at the top of the Global Elite are what Icke has referred to as the Prison Wardens Icke claims the brotherhood s goal or their Great Work of Ages is a microchipped population a world government and a global Orwellian fascist state or New World Order which he claims will be a post truth era where freedom of speech is ended 137 14 20 21 91 Icke believes that the brotherhood uses human anxiety as energy and that the Archons keep humanity trapped in a five sense reality so they can feed off the negative energy created by fear and hate 14 17 In 1999 he wrote Thus we have the encouragement of wars human genocide the mass slaughter of animals sexual perversions which create highly charged negative energy and black magic ritual and sacrifice which takes place on a scale that will stagger those who have not studied the subject 138 Icke proposes that human sacrifice to the gods in the ancient world was for the reptilians benefit especially sacrifice of children because at the moment of death by sacrifice a form of adrenaline surges through the body accumulating at the base of the brain and is apparently more potent in children claiming this is what the reptilians and their crossbreeds want He suggests that these sacrifices continue to this day 138 He also claims the reptilians and their hybrid bloodlines engage in paedophilia and cannibalism 139 It is claimed that the brotherhood either created or controls the United Nations International Monetary Fund Round Table Council on Foreign Relations Chatham House Club of Rome Royal Institute of International Affairs Trilateral Commission and Bilderberg Group as well as the media military CIA MI6 Mossad science religion and the Internet with witting or unwitting support from the London School of Economics 63 91 140 141 142 143 In an interview in February 2019 Icke was asked about his beliefs and replied They re very clever in their systems of manipulation which is overwhelmingly psychological manipulation because if you can manipulate perceptions to believe that Osama bin Laden was behind 9 11 then you ll get support to invade Afghanistan 144 Problem reaction solution Icke uses the phrase problem reaction solution to explain how he believes the Illuminati agenda advances According to Icke the Illuminati guide us in the direction they desire by creating false problems which allows them to give their desired solution to the problem they created 145 He also refers to this process as order out of chaos 146 In 2018 researchers looking at the psychological effects of Icke s belief system argued that problem reaction solution resembles the misinterpretation of the Hegelian thesis antithesis synthesis triad popularized by Chalybaus 147 Incidents and issues Icke attributes to the Illuminati or Global Elite include the Oklahoma City bombing Dunblane Columbine 9 11 which Icke believes was an inside job to provide an excuse to advance an agenda of regime change across the world 7 7 global warming chemtrails water fluoridation the death of Princess Diana the assassination of John F Kennedy and Agenda 21 125 148 149 150 151 These incidents allow them to respond in whatever way they intended to act in the first place 146 One of the methods Icke claims they use is creating fake opposites or what he calls opposames such as the Axis and Allied powers of World War II which he believes were used to provoke the creation of the European Union and the state of Israel 145 Icke argues that to ensure the outcome they want they have to control both sides 21 He believes that US presidents George W Bush Barack Obama and Donald Trump are part of a false political divide Despite the presidency belonging to the Republican Party then the Democratic Party then going back to the Republicans Icke claims they are all pushing the same agenda of regime change in the Middle East a goal set out in the early 2000s in a document called The Project for the New American Century 21 Icke claims that this dialectic allows the Illuminati to gradually move societies toward totalitarianism without challenge a process he calls the totalitarian tiptoe 145 In Tales From The Time Loop 2003 Icke argues that the Illuminati create religious racial ethnic and sexual division to divide and rule humanity but believes that the many can only be controlled by the few if they allow themselves to be and that the power the Illuminati have is the power the people give them 152 153 Divide and rule is the bottom line of all dictatorships Arab is turned against Jew black against white Right against Left Unplugging from the Matrix means refusing to recognise these illusory fault lines We are all One I refuse to see a Jew as different from an Arab and vice versa They are both expressions of the One and need to be observed and treated the same none more or less important than the other I refuse to see black people in terms that I would not see white nor to see the Left as I would not see the Right How could it be any different except when we believe the illusion of division is real If we do that the Matrix has us 153 Icke s solution is peaceful non compliance which he believes will disempower the elite 152 Saturn Moon Matrix The Moon Matrix is introduced in Human Race Get Off Your Knees The Lion Sleeps No More 2010 in which Icke suggests that the Earth and the collective human mind are manipulated from the Moon a spacecraft and inter dimensional portal the reptilians control The Moon Matrix is a broadcast from that spacecraft to the human body computer specifically to the left hemisphere of the brain which gives us our sense of reality We are living in a dreamworld within a dreamworld a Matrix within the virtual reality universe and it is being broadcast from the Moon Unless people force themselves to become fully conscious their minds are the Moon s mind 154 155 Will Storr writing for The Sunday Times in 2013 ponders if Icke s ideas suddenly pop into his head On page 299 of Human Race Get Off Your Knees Icke writes about working at his computer on the book and having the overwhelming feeling out of nowhere that the moon was not real By real I mean not a heavenly body but an artificial construct or hollowed out planetoid that has been put there to control life on Earth which it does I have pondered this possibility a few times over the years but this time I just knew It was like an enormous penny had suddenly dropped 120 This idea is further explored in Icke s Remember Who You Are Remember Where You Are and Where You Come From 2012 where he introduces the concept of the Saturn Moon Matrix In this more recent conceptualization the rings of Saturn which Icke believes were artificially created by reptilian spacecraft are the ultimate source of the signal while the Moon functions as an amplifier 119 page needed 152 He claims that frequencies broadcast from the hexagonal storm on Saturn are amplified through the hollow structure of our artificial moon keeping humanity trapped in a holographic projection 14 5G and COVID 19 See also Misinformation related to the COVID 19 pandemic David Icke has been identified by the Center for Countering Digital Hate as a leading producer of misinformation about COVID 19 as well as anti Semitic content 156 In April 2020 Icke claimed in a YouTube video on Brian Rose s London Real channel that there was a link between the COVID 19 pandemic and 5G mobile phone networks The video was removed from the platform and YouTube tightened its rules to prevent its website being used to spread conspiracy theories about the COVID 19 pandemic 157 It was later also deleted from Facebook 158 Multiple mobile phone masts were subject to arson attacks at this time as well as telecom engineers being abused 159 Nick Cohen in The Observer thought Icke was ambiguous as to whether the phone masts should be left alone Icke said in the London Real interview If 5G continues and reaches where they want to take it human life as we know it is over so people have to make a decision 157 160 161 London Live screened a similar interview with Icke about coronavirus on 8 April 2020 162 He made an unsupported claim that Israel was using the crisis to test its technology and suggested any attempt to require people to be vaccinated against COVID 19 amounted to fascism 163 After Ofcom s formal investigation the UK media regulator decided the 80 minute interview broke the terms of the broadcasting code as it expressed views which had the potential to cause significant harm to viewers in London during the pandemic which were made without the support of any scientific or other evidence 164 Icke s main page on Facebook was deleted on 1 May 2020 while other pages on the site promoting Icke with a smaller readership remained on the platform 165 Facebook said it had removed Icke s page for its health misinformation that could cause physical harm 166 His YouTube channel was deleted a day later A spokeswoman for YouTube told BBC News YouTube has clear policies prohibiting any content that disputes the existence and transmission of COVID 19 as described by the WHO and the NHS Due to continued violation of these policies we have terminated David Icke s YouTube channel Icke s appearances in videos uploaded by other users were only to be removed if their content breached the same rules 167 On 29 August 2020 Icke was a speaker at an anti lockdown protest in Trafalgar Square London organised under the Unite for Freedom banner During his speech he stated Anyone with a half a brain cell on active duty can see coronavirus is nonsense 168 and We have a virus so intelligent that it only infects those taking part in protests the government wants to stop 169 He also stated This world is controlled by a tiny few people who impose their agenda on billions of people He told the police who were present at the rally that they were enforcing fascism that your own children will have to live with and urged them to join us and stop serving the psychopaths 169 In early November 2020 Twitter permanently suspended Icke s account on the platform for having violated its rules regarding COVID 19 misinformation 170 171 ReceptionInterest in Icke s conspiracy theories is widespread and has cut across political economic and religious divides His audiences hold a wide range of beliefs uniting individuals and left and right wing groups from New Agers and Ufologists 6 104 as well as far right Christian Patriots and the UK neo Nazi group Combat 18 which supports his writings 6 Icke s work is representative of a major global countercultural trend 6 American novelist Alice Walker is an admirer of Icke s writings 102 23 172 173 along with comedian Russell Brand 174 175 and musician Mick Fleetwood 176 Icke has emerged as a professional conspiracy theorist 1 within a global counter cultural movement that combines New World Order conspiracism the truther movement and anti globalisation with an extraterrestrial conspiracist subculture 6 Accusations of antisemitism There is a strong strain of anti Semitic conspiracy theorizing that makes ufological connections including especially the work of Milton William Cooper 1991 and David Icke e g 1997 Both are controversial but still well known in both right wing conspiracist and ufological subcultures Christopher F Roth Ufology as Anthropology Race Extraterrestrials and the Occult 177 Jonathan A Greenblatt chief executive of the Anti Defamation League told The New York Times in December 2018 There is no fair reading of Icke s work that could be seen as not anti Semitic 178 However Icke has repeatedly denied the accusation that he is an antisemite In 2001 when he was questioned by Jon Ronson Icke declared that The Protocols of the Elders of Zion is evidence not of a Jewish plot but of a reptilian plot He also said the families in positions of great financial power obsessively interbreed with each other But I m not talking about one earth race Jewish or non Jewish I m talking about a genetic network that operates through all races this bloodline being a fusion of human and reptilian genes let me make myself clear this does not in any way relate to an earth race 179 In an article in The Algemeiner the writer commented Yet when he goes through a list of people in power who he considers to be Rothschild Zionists they all happen to be Jews with many of them never claiming to be Zionists at all 180 According to Mark Gardner of the Community Security Trust Icke believes a Rothschild Zionist conspiracy controls the world driving global conflict through NATO and seeking World War Three which will begin between Zionists and Muslims Such claims about the Rothschilds have a long history as an antisemitic theme 135 Icke states in And the Truth Shall Set you Free 1996 Why do we play a part in suppressing alternative information to the official line of the Second World War How is it right that while this fierce suppression goes on free copies of the Spielberg film Schindler s List are given to schools to indoctrinate children with the unchallenged version of events And why do we who say we oppose tyranny and demand freedom of speech allow people to go to prison and be vilified and magazines to be closed down on the spot for suggesting another version of history 8 Icke claims that the antisemitic forgery The Protocols of the Elders of Zion is genuine explaining in And the Truth Shall Set you Free I strongly believe that a small Jewish clique which has contempt for the mass of Jewish people worked with non Jews to create the First World War the Russian Revolution and the Second World War They then dominated the Versailles Peace Conference and created the circumstances which made the Second World War inevitable They financed Hitler to power in 1933 and made the funds available for his rearmament 8 181 In the book Yair Rosenberg reports Icke uses the words Jewish on 241 occasions and Rothschild on 374 occasions 23 Icke claims that Jews themselves are to blame for antisemitism a classic Nazi claim that can be traced to Adolf Hitler Thought patterns in the collective Jewish mind have repeatedly created that physical reality of oppression prejudice and racism which matches the pattern the expectation programmed into their collective psyche They expect it they create it 182 In The Trigger The Lie That Changed the World Who Really Did It and Why 2019 Icke writes that the official explanation for the September 11 attacks is false and is intended to cover up the massive and central involvement in 9 11 by the Israeli government Israeli military and Israeli intelligence operatives 183 He states in the book Zionist and ultra Zionist organisations form a network across America and the world to manipulate and impose the will of ultra Zionism and the Sabbatian Frankist Death Cult Add the Kosher Nostra networks of organized crime which interlock with Mossad add control of so much of government and media and you have a hidden stream of interconnections perfectly capable of perpetrating and then covering up 9 11 184 In his book UFOs Conspiracy Theories and the New Age David G Robertson disputes that Icke is antisemitic saying that it is just easier for some people to accept that when Icke says reptilians he really means Jews than that he literally means extraterrestrial reptilians control world politics Robertson also says that to believe the accusations of antisemitism you must ignore numerous things such as the many high profile people Icke names as reptilian who are not Jewish a point also made by Jon Ronson in his 2001 documentary The Secret Rulers of the World Part 2 David Icke The Lizards and The Jews Icke s frequent statements that he is speaking literally and not metaphorically and that Icke identifies the supposedly reptilian ruling elite as Aryan in several places Robertson also writes that Icke denounces racism having called it the ultimate idiocy 130 In 2018 in response to allegations of antisemitism Icke stated to Vox that My philosophy and view of life is that we are all points of attention within the same state of Infinite Awareness and the labels we are given and give ourselves are merely temporary experiences and not who we are Thus to me all racism is ridiculous and completely missing the point of who we are and where we are 102 Following complaints from the Canadian Jewish Congress in 2000 Icke was briefly detained by immigration officials in Canada where he was booked for a speaking tour 63 and his books were removed from Indigo Books a Canadian chain Several stops on the tour were cancelled by their venues as was a lecture in London 185 186 Two venues in Berlin cancelled live events scheduled to be hosted by Icke in 2017 following accusations of antisemitism The Maritim hotel did not give a reason for the cancellation but the Carl Benz Arena wrote on its Facebook page that it was due to the contentious nature and the contradictory statements which for us as a politically neutral event venue do not give a clear picture 24 An event to be held at Manchester United s Old Trafford was also cancelled in 2017 with the venue saying it was due to Icke s objectionable views 187 After Icke s talk in Vancouver on 2 September 2017 the Canadian Jewish News called him a controversial conspiracy theorist antisemite and Holocaust denier Micheal Vonn the British Columbia Civil Liberties Association s policy director told the newspaper You are free to be a racist in Canada you are free to say so and tell others that they should be too 188 In February 2019 the Australian Government cancelled Icke s visa ahead of a planned speaking tour 189 on the grounds of his character 190 Immigration Minister David Coleman upheld the complaint made by Dvir Abramovich the chairman of the Anti Defamation Commission 191 This decision was applauded by both major political parties Labor s immigration spokesman Shayne Neumann said Labor welcomes the fact that the Government did what we called on them to do and refused David Icke s visa application 190 Icke issued a statement in which he described himself as the victim of a smear campaign from politicians who have been listening to special interest groups 192 On 4 November 2022 it was reported that Icke had been banned from entering the Netherlands for two years after being sent a letter from the Dutch government saying that his presence in the country would pose a risk to public order The ban also prevents Icke from entering the EU s visa free Schengen Area 193 Other responses Political Research Associates has described Icke s politics as a mishmash of most of the dominant themes of contemporary neofascism mixed in with a smattering of topics culled from the U S militia movement He opposes gun control and claims that many mass shootings were orchestrated to increase public opposition to guns He believes the U S government carried out the Oklahoma City bombing 8 He endorses or recommends antisemitic and far right publications such as Spotlight and On Target the magazine of the white supremacist group the British League of Rights and has been closely associated with antisemitic New Age periodicals such as Nexus and Rainbow Ark a New Age magazine which is financed by far right activists and affiliated with the neo Nazi National Front 182 194 The neo Nazi terrorist group Combat 18 promoted Icke s public speaking events in its internal journal Putsch of one such event the journal wrote approvingly Icke spoke of the sheep and how the Zionist operated government sorry Illuminati uses them for its own ends He began to talk about the big conspiracy by a group of bankers media moguls etc always being clever enough not to mention what all these had in common 8 Michael Barkun has described Icke s position as New Age conspiracism writing that Icke is the most fluent of the genre 195 describing his work as improvisational millennialism with an end of history scenario involving a final battle between good and evil Barkun defines improvisational millennialism as an act of bricolage because everything is connected in the conspiracist world view every source can be mined for links 196 Barkun argues that Icke has actively tried to cultivate the radical right There is no fuller explication of their beliefs about ruling elites than Icke s He also notes that Icke regards Christian patriots as the only Americans who understand the New World Order 197 In 1996 Icke spoke to a conference in Reno Nevada alongside opponents of the Brady Handgun Violence Prevention Act including Kirk Lyons a lawyer who has represented the Ku Klux Klan 104 Icke has never been a member of any right wing group and he has criticised them 130 Relying on Douglas Kellner s distinction between clinical paranoia and a critical paranoia that confronts power Richard Kahn and Tyson Lewis argue that Icke displays elements of both and that his reptilian hypothesis and his postmodern metanarrative may be allegorical a Swiftian satire which is used to give ordinary people a narrative with which to question what they see around them and alert them to the alleged emergence of a global fascist state 198 199 200 People influenced by Icke have asked public figures if they are lizards An Official Information Act request was filed in New Zealand in 2008 to ask John Key then prime minister whether he was a lizard Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg was asked the same during a Q amp A in 2016 Both men said they were not lizards 201 In a 2013 survey in the United States by Public Policy Polling 4 believed that lizard people control our societies 202 203 204 Selected worksBooks 1983 It s a Tough Game Son London Piccolo Books ISBN 0 330 28047 3 1989 It Doesn t Have To Be Like This Green Politics Explained London Green Print ISBN 1 85425 033 7 1991 The Truth Vibrations London Gateway ISBN 1 85860 006 5 1992 Love Changes Everything London Harper Collins Publishers ISBN 1 85538 247 4 1993 In the Light of Experience The Autobiography of David Icke London Warner Books ISBN 0 7515 0603 6 1993 Days of Decision London Jon Carpenter Publishing ISBN 1 897766 01 7 1993 Heal the World A Do It Yourself Guide to Personal and Planetary Transformation London Gateway ISBN 1 85860 005 7 1994 The Robot s Rebellion London Gateway ISBN 1 85860 022 7 1995 And the Truth Shall Set You Free Ryde Bridge of Love Publications ISBN 0 9538810 5 9 1996 I Am Me I Am Free The Robot s Guide to Freedom New York Truth Seeker ISBN 0 9526147 5 8 1998 Lifting the Veil David Icke interviewed by Jon Rappoport New York Truth Seeker ISBN 0 939040 05 0 1999 The Biggest Secret The Book That Will Change the World Ryde Bridge of Love Publications ISBN 0 9526147 6 6 2001 Children of the Matrix Ryde Bridge of Love Publications ISBN 0 9538810 1 6 2002 Alice in Wonderland and the World Trade Center Disaster Ryde Bridge of Love Publications ISBN 0 9538810 2 4 2003 Tales from the Time Loop Ryde Bridge of Love Publications ISBN 0 9538810 4 0 2005 Infinite Love Is the Only Truth Everything Else Is Illusion Ryde Bridge of Love Publications ISBN 0 9538810 6 7 2007 The David Icke Guide to the Global Conspiracy and how to end it Ryde David Icke Books Ltd ISBN 978 0 9538810 8 6 2010 Human Race Get Off Your Knees The Lion Sleeps No More Ryde David Icke Books Ltd ISBN 978 0 9559973 1 0 2012 Remember Who You Are Remember Where You Are and Where You Come From Ryde David Icke Books Ltd ISBN 0 9559973 3 X 2013 The Perception Deception Or It s All Bollocks Yes All of It Ryde David Icke Books Ltd ISBN 978 0 955997389 2016 Phantom Self And how to find the real one Ryde David Icke Books Ltd ISBN 978 0 9576308 8 8 2017 Everything You Need To Know But Have Never Been Told Ryde David Icke Books Ltd ISBN 978 1527207264 2019 The Trigger The Lie That Changed The World Ryde David Icke Books Ltd ISBN 978 1 916025806 2020 The Answer Ryde David Icke Books Ltd ISBN 978 1916025820 2021 Perceptions of a Renegade Mind Ryde David Icke Books Ltd ISBN 978 1838415310 2022 The Trap What it is how is works and how we escape its illusions Ryde David Icke Books Ltd ISBN 978 1838415327 Videos 1994 The Robots Rebellion 1996 Turning of the Tide 1998 The Freedom Road 1999 David Icke The Reptilian Agenda with Zulu Sanusi Shaman Credo Mutwa 1999 David Icke Revelations of a Mother Goddess with Arizona Wilder 2000 David Icke Live in Vancouver From Prison to Paradise 2003 Secrets of the Matrix 2006 Freedom or Fascism The Time to Choose 2008 David Icke Live at the Oxford Union Debating Society on YouTube 2008 Beyond the Cutting Edge Live from Brixton Academy 2008 David Icke Big Brother the BIG Picture 2010 The Lion Sleeps No More 2012 Return to Peru 2012 Remember Who You Are Live at Wembley Arena 2014 Awaken Live from Wembley Arena 2017 Worldwide Wakeup Tour Live 2019 RenegadeSee alsoChitauri based on Icke s ideas 205 Gnosticism The Shadow KingdomReferencesCitations a b c Barkun Michael 2011 Chasing Phantoms Reality Imagination and Homeland Security Since 9 11 University of North Carolina Press p 72 ISBN 978 0807877692 Conspiracy Theories The Reptilian Elite Time 20 November 2008 ISSN 0040 781X Retrieved 17 December 2018 Doherty Rosa 17 December 2018 Acclaimed author Alice Walker recommends book by notorious conspiracy theorist David Icke The Jewish Chronicle Retrieved 17 December 2018 via thejc com Shabi Rachel 27 November 2018 How David Icke helped unite Labour s factions against antisemitism The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 17 December 2018 a b Bowlin Ben Fredrick Matt Brown Noel 10 February 2017 David Icke and the Rise of the Lizard People stufftheydontwantyoutoknow com Podcast Retrieved 3 March 2017 a b c d e f g Lewis amp Kahn 2010 p 75 Robertson 2016 p 121 a b c d e f g Offley Will 29 February 2000 David Icke And The Politics Of Madness Where The New Age Meets The Third Reich Political Research Associates Retrieved 2 August 2016 Icke David 1991 The Truth Vibrations pp 15 18 Icke 1993 pp 192 194 Ronson Jon 2001 Them Adventures with Extremists London Picador pp 152 154 Evans Paul 3 March 2008 Interview David Icke New Statesman NS Media Group Retrieved 5 May 2020 a b c Barkun 2003 p 103 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Ward James 10 December 2014 Mocked prophet what is David Icke s appeal New Humanist Retrieved 15 June 2018 a b c d Doyle Paul 17 February 2006 David Icke The Guardian Retrieved 21 April 2020 a b c d Icke 1999 pp 26 27 a b c Lewis amp Kahn 2010 p 82 a b Icke 1999 pp 19 25 40 a b Lynskey Dorian 6 November 2014 Psycho lizards from Saturn The godlike genius of David Icke New Statesman Retrieved 13 April 2020 a b c Andrew Neil David Icke on 9 11 and lizards in Buckingham Palace theories This Week BBC video 20 May 2016 00 04 02 a b c d Widdas Henry 17 April 2018 Being red pilled by David Icke has never been so entertaining and terrifying Lancashire Evening Post Retrieved 15 June 2018 a b Offley Will 23 February 2000 Selected Quotes Of David Icke Political Research Associates Retrieved 7 July 2020 a b c d Rosenberg Yair 17 December 2018 The New York Times Just Published an Unqualified Recommendation for an Insanely Anti Semitic Book Tablet Retrieved 7 July 2020 a b c d Lizard conspiracist David Icke not wanted in Berlin Deutsche Welle 23 February 2017 Retrieved 26 May 2018 a b Widdas Henry 16 July 2018 Icke Reports of my madness have been greatly exaggerated Lancashire Post Retrieved 9 August 2018 Icke 1993 pp 28 30 a b Icke 1993 pp 29 33 Newitt Ned 21 March 2013 The Slums of Leicester JMD Media Ltd pp 153 159 160 a b David Icke Tales from the Time Loop Ryde Bridge of Love Publications 2003 pp 2 3 Icke 1993 pp 36 38 Icke 1993 pp 39 40 Icke 1993 pp 44 46 Icke 1993 pp 54 58 Icke 1993 pp 66 73 Icke 1993 pp 61 63 Icke 1993 p 61 Icke 1993 pp 82 96 253 254 Robertson 2016 pp 139 140 147 Icke 1993 pp 72 75 Icke 1993 p 78 Icke 1993 pp 79 81 83 Icke 1993 pp 85 86 Icke 1993 pp 88 91 Icke 1993 pp 91 92 Icke 1993 pp 93 95 99 100 Icke 1993 p 98 Icke 1993 p 109 Icke 1993 p 104 Icke Tales from the Time Loop p 7 Anonymous 14 November 1990 Protester David Icke finally pays community charge The Guardian a b Kennedy Maev 20 March 1991 Icke resigns Green Speaker and parliamentary roles The Guardian a b Icke David 1991 The Truth Vibrations London Aquarian Press p 13 Icke David Days of Decision p 19 a b Icke David 2016 Phantom Self Ryde David Icke Books pp 1 3 a b Biography 1 davidickebooks co uk David Icke Archived from the original on 19 June 2011 Retrieved 8 June 2011 The 10 worst decisions in the history of sport The Observer Guardian News amp Media 12 January 2003 Kay 2011 p 179 Robertson David G 7 September 2013 David Icke s Reptilian Thesis and the Development of New Age Theodicy International Journal for the Study of New Religions 4 1 27 47 doi 10 1558 ijsnr v4i1 27 Biography 2 davidickebooks co uk David Icke Archived from the original on 14 July 201 Retrieved 4 February 2021 Icke David Tales from the Time Loop pp 12 13 16 Icke 1993 pp 190 208 Icke 1993 p 192 a b c d Extracts from Ronson Jon Them Adventures with Extremists Ronson Jon Beset by lizards part one The Guardian Retrieved 27 November 2022 Ronson Jon 17 March 2001 Beset by lizards part two The Guardian Retrieved 27 November 2022 Taylor Sam 20 April 1997 So I was in this bar with the son of God The Observer Robertson 2016 p 130 Icke 1993 pp 223 254 Robertson 2016 pp 134 135 Icke 1993 pp 188 192 193 Robertson 2016 pp 130 131 Ezard John 28 March 1991 Son and daughter of God predict apocalypse is nigh The Guardian a b Robertson 2016 p 131 Ronson 2001 p 154 The day David Icke told Terry Wogan I m the son of God The Daily Telegraph 29 April 2016 Archived from the original on 11 January 2022 https www youtube com watch v HAbI 1ySbCY at 6 19 minutes in this video Des Christy Crucifixion courtesy of the BBC The Guardian 6 May 1991 Oppenheim Maya 31 January 2016 The most controversial moments from Sir Terry Wogan s chat show The Independent Retrieved 3 May 2020 Icke taunted The Times 27 May 1991 Ronson 2001 p 173 a b Robertson 2016 p 147 Wogan Terry 2007 2006 Mustn t Grumble London Orion p 158 ISBN 978 1409105893 Icke Tales from the Time Loop pp 14 17 26 Robertson 2016 pp 133 135 Ronson Channel 4 2001 06 12 mins Goodrick Clarke 2003 p 291 Protocols of the Elders of Zion United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Retrieved 8 August 2020 Barkun 2003 pp 50 145 146 Juliane Wetzel The Protocols of the Elders of Zion on the internet How radical political groups are networked via anti Semitic conspiracy theories in Esther Webman ed The Global Impact of the Protocols of the Elders of Zion A Century Old Myth New York Routledge 2012 147 160 p 148 a b c Barkun 2003 p 104 Also see Norman Simms Anti Semitism A Psychopathological Disease in Jerry S Piven Chris Boyd Henry W Lawton eds Judaism and Genocide Psychological Undercurrents of History Volume IV Lincoln NE Writers Club Press 2002 30ff a b c Robertson 2016 p 138 a b c d Goodrick Clarke 2003 For Cooper Ed Vulliamy Bruce Dirks New trial may solve riddle of Oklahoma bombing The Guardian 3 November 1997 Icke The Robots Rebellion London Gateway 1992 p 114 a b Honigsbaum Mark 26 May 1995 The Dark Side of David Icke Evening Standard London Archived from the original on 28 April 1999 Greens bar Icke The Independent 12 September 1994 Vivek Chaudhary Greens see red at Son of God s anti Semitism The Guardian 12 September 1994 Goodwin Stephen 29 September 1994 Icke factor could thwart Greens serious message The Independent Archived from the original on 2 June 2013 Faucher King Florence 11 October 2005 Changing Parties An Anthropology of British Political Conferences Palgrave Macmillan UK p 264 note 10 ISBN 978 0 230 50988 7 David Icke Down but speaking out among the Greens letters to the editor The Guardian 14 September 1994 Barkun 2003 p 144 David Icke Chapter Seven Master races And the Truth Shall Set You Free Ryde Bridge of Love Publications 1995 pp 127 146 a b c Grady Constance 20 December 2018 The Alice Walker anti Semitism controversy explained Vox Retrieved 13 April 2020 a b Alexander Harriet 4 December 2011 David Icke would you believe it The Sunday Telegraph London Archived from the original on 11 January 2022 Retrieved 21 April 2020 a b c d Barkun 2003 p 106 Paul Evans Interview David Icke New Statesman 3 March 2008 Marre Oliver 20 January 2008 Pendennis The Observer David Icke David Icke Live at the Oxford Union Debating Society produced by Linda Atherton Commonage February 2008 Mesure Susie 27 October 2012 David Icke is not the Messiah Or even that naughty But boy can he drone on The Independent on Sunday Retrieved 21 April 2020 Robertson 2016 pp 139 140 Haltemprice and Howden Result in full BBC News 11 July 2008 Wainwright Martin Stratton Allegra 11 July 2008 Haltemprice and Howden byelection Davis sees off Loonies and claims victory in 42 day detention battle The Guardian David ICKE stood for the None No Party VoteWise Archived from the original on 13 February 2012 Retrieved 12 December 2010 Naughton Philippe 27 June 2008 Reptilians beware David Icke is back The Times subscription required Jivanda Tomas 25 November 2013 David Icke launches internet TV station The People s Voice The Independent The People s Voice 2 0 thepeoplesvoice tv Archived from the original on 18 May 2016 Icke 1999 pp 30 40 For law of attraction Icke Children of the Matrix 291 ff Icke 1999 pp 5 9 a b David Icke Remember Who You Are Remember Where You Are and Where You Come From Ryde David Icke Books 2012 a b Storr Will 16 June 2013 It s a jungle out there The Sunday Times London Retrieved 21 April 2020 subscription required Readfearn Graham 6 December 2016 More terrifying than Trump The booming conspiracy culture of climate science denial The Guardian Retrieved 21 April 2020 Barkun 2003 p 105 Icke 1999 p 52 Robertson 2016 p 140 a b The Royal Family are bloodsucking alien lizards David Icke The Scotsman 30 January 2006 Icke 1999 pp 40 43 52 61 Robertson 2013 p 35 Icke 1999 p 30 Lewis amp Kahn 2010 p 81 a b c Robertson 2016 pp 150 151 Icke David Mitchell Ben 22 January 2006 This much I know The Observer Guardian News amp Media Retrieved 21 April 2020 Allington Daniel Toube David 14 November 2018 Why conspiracy theories are not just a harmless joke New Statesman Retrieved 21 April 2020 Marshall Michael David Icke Live What I Learned From Spending Four Hours With The World s Most Famous Conspiracy Theorist Gizmodo UK Retrieved 6 November 2018 Stephen Roth Institute 2002 Antisemitism Worldwide 2000 1 U of Nebraska Press pp 146 ISBN 978 0 8032 5945 4 a b Gardner Mark 5 January 2017 David Icke s ages old New Age antisemitism Community Security Trust Retrieved 13 April 2020 Ronson Jon 6 May 2001 David Icke the Lizards and the Jews Channel 4 Event occurs at 00 16 30 Archived from the original on 14 December 2021 via YouTube Barkun 2003 pp 103 104 a b Icke 1999 p 40 Robertson 2016 p 152 Icke David Children of the Matrix p 339 Icke David Human Race Get off Your Knees pp 134 646 Kay Jonathan 2011 Among the Truthers A Journey Through America s Growing Conspiracist Underground HarperCollins p 180 Lewis amp Kahn 2010 p 83 Seidel Jamie 18 February 2019 David Icke How the world s greatest conspiracy theorist discovered his personal truth News com au Australia s Leading News Site News Corp Retrieved 18 February 2019 a b c Robertson 2016 p 139 a b David Icke Problem reaction solution News for the Soul accessed 12 December 2010 Quote on page two from Drinkwater Kenneth Dagnall Neil Denovan Andrew Parker Andrew Clough Peter January March 2018 Predictors and Associates of Problem Reaction Solution Statistical Bias Emotion Based Reasoning and Belief in the Paranormal SAGE Open 8 1 11 doi 10 1177 2158244018762999 Although the precise lineage of PRS problem reaction solution is unknown researchers often ascribe the origin of PRS to various ancient figures or events i e Roman Emperor Diocletian and philosophical doctrines Hegel 1812 see Fichte 1794 in Neuhouser 1990 In this historical context PRS comprises three stages equivalent to those subsumed within PRS thesis intellectual proposition problem antithesis negation of the proposition response to thesis and synthesis resolution of tension between proposition and reaction resolution These steps derive from Heinrich Moritz Chalybaus misinterpretation Carlson 2007 of Hegel s dialectic Mills 2005 Stewart 1996 The exact source and academic status of PRS is unclear and beyond the remit of this article which generally views PRS as a form of faulty inferential thinking More precisely as the tendency to validate proffered suboptimal solutions based on limited evaluation of objective evidence Icke Human Race Get Off Your Knees The Lion Sleeps No More For 9 11 Icke Alice in Wonderland and the World Trade Center Disaster For global warming and Agenda 21 Icke Phantom Self 303 Widdas Henry 7 June 2018 David Icke My unanswered 9 11 questions Lancashire Evening Post Retrieved 19 June 2018 a b c Robertson 2016 p 157 a b Icke David 2003 Tales from the Time Loop The Most Comprehensive Expose of the Global Conspiracy Ever Written and All You Need to Know to be Truly Free First ed Bridge of Love p 447 ISBN 978 0953881048 David Icke Human Race Get Off Your Knees The Lion Sleeps No More Ryde David Icke Books 2010 pp 618 627 632 O Brien Liam 19 May 2013 Prize winning author Alice Walker gives support to David Icke on Desert Island Discs The Independent Retrieved 19 June 2018 The Anti Vaxx Industry Center for Countering Digital Hate 2020 a b Kelion Leo 7 April 2020 Coronavirus YouTube tightens rules after David Icke 5G interview BBC News Retrieved 7 April 2020 Facebook removes David Icke coronavirus 5G conspiracy video ITV News 9 April 2020 Retrieved 4 May 2020 Field Mark 13 April 2020 How Britain s telecoms firms are reacting to the surge in coronavirus conspiracies The Daily Telegraph Archived from the original on 11 January 2022 Retrieved 25 April 2020 Cohen Nick 25 April 2020 Social media no longer tolerates toxic lies Don t believe a word of it The Observer Retrieved 25 April 2020 The Coronavirus Conspiracy How COVID 19 Will Seize Your Rights amp Destroy Our Economy London Real 6 April 2020 Event occurs at 1 18 05 Retrieved 26 April 2020 Ofcom urgently probes Icke TV interview on virus BBC News 9 April 2020 Retrieved 10 April 2020 Harpin Lee 12 April 2020 London Live condemned for allowing David Icke to air lunatic conspiracy theories The Jewish Chronicle Retrieved 21 April 2020 Harpin Lee 20 April 2020 Ofcom sanctions London Live for broadcasting David Icke interview about coronavirus The Jewish Chronicle Retrieved 20 April 2020 Dearden Lizzie 1 May 2020 Coronavirus Conspiracy theorist David Icke s Facebook page deleted as pressure mounts on social media companies The Independent Retrieved 1 May 2020 Coronavirus David Icke kicked off Facebook BBC News 1 May 2020 Retrieved 9 January 2021 Coronavirus David Icke s channel deleted by YouTube BBC News 2 May 2020 Retrieved 2 May 2020 Drury Colin 30 August 2020 Anti lockdown anti vaccine and anti mask protesters crowd London s Trafalgar Square The Independent Retrieved 3 September 2020 a b Conspiracy theorist David Icke cheered by thousands at anti lockdown demo The Jewish Chronicle 30 August 2020 Twitter bans David Icke over Covid misinformation BBC News 4 November 2020 Retrieved 4 November 2020 Twitter permanently suspends conspiracy theorist David Icke s account The Guardian PA Media 4 November 2020 Retrieved 4 November 2020 Desert Island Discs Alice Walker BBC Radio 4 19 May 2013 Hoyles Ben Moore Matthew 22 December 2018 Yikes David Icke on march again after Pulitzer writer Alice Walker s praise The Times Retrieved 24 December 2018 Lynskey Dorian Psycho lizards from Saturn The godlike genius of David Icke New Statesman NS Media Group Retrieved 19 April 2020 Sawyer Miranda Brand on the run The Observer Guardian News amp Media Retrieved 19 April 2020 7 musicians who are fascinated by conspiracy theories BBC 16 April 2018 Retrieved 19 April 2020 Battaglia Debbora 2005 E T culture anthropology in outerspaces Duke University Press ISBN 978 0 8223 3632 7 Alter Alexandra 21 December 2018 Alice Walker Answering Backlash Praises Anti Semitic Author as Brave The New York Times Retrieved 14 April 2020 Ronson Jon 17 March 2001 Beset by Lizards The Guardian Retrieved 6 November 2018 Antisemite David Icke Being Allowed to Speak at City Owned Theater in Vancouver for Ten Hours The Algemeiner 5 September 2017 Retrieved 23 April 2020 Golan Ori 13 July 2016 Don t waste your money to see conspiracy theorist David Icke The Sydney Morning Herald Retrieved 4 May 2020 a b From Green Messiah to New Age Nazi Institute for Social Ecology January 1996 Retrieved 18 August 2018 Charles Ron 24 September 2019 A hateful conspiracy filled book just got harder to buy That s no cause for celebration The Washington Post Retrieved 13 April 2020 Antisemitic Conspiracies About 9 11 Endure 20 Years Later Anti Defamation League 9 September 2021 Retrieved 22 June 2022 Kraft Frances 7 October 1999 New Age speaker set to talk in Toronto The Canadian Jewish News Archived from the original on 1 March 2007 Cowley Jason 1 October 2000 The Icke Files The Independent on Sunday Archived from the original on 6 November 2012 Jackson Jamie 17 November 2017 Manchester United cancel David Icke show at Old Trafford after backlash The Guardian Retrieved 11 June 2018 Gindin Matthew 8 September 2017 Anti Semitic Conspiracy Theorist David Icke Gives Talk in Vancouver The Canadian Jewish News Retrieved 6 November 2018 Jaffe Hoffman Maayan 21 February 2019 Aussi Government Bans Man Who Said Jews Bankrolled Hitler The Jerusalem Post Retrieved 28 February 2019 a b Doran Matthew 20 February 2019 Holocaust denier who believes alien lizards rule the world banned from entering Australia ABC News Australia Retrieved 20 February 2019 Koziol Michael 20 February 2019 Government bans conspiracy theorist David Icke ahead of planned Australian tour The Sydney Morning Herald Retrieved 7 July 2020 Karp Paul 20 February 2019 Conspiracy theorist David Icke hits back after Australia revokes visa The Guardian Retrieved 13 April 2020 David Icke Conspiracy theorist banned from Netherlands BBC News 4 November 2022 Retrieved 4 November 2022 Rainbow Ark magazine Center for Media and Democracy Retrieved 18 August 2018 Barkun 2003 pp 98 103ff 163 Barkun 2003 pp 10 11 107 108 184 Barkun 2003 pp 106 108 Lewis amp Kahn 2010 pp 73 75 83 Tyson Lewis Richard Kahn The Reptoid Hypothesis Utopian and Dystopian Representational Motifs in David Icke s Alien Conspiracy Theory Utopian Studies 16 1 Spring 2005 45 74 52 55 56 JSTOR 20718709 Lewis amp Kahn 2010 p 88 Guarino Ben I am not a lizard Mark Zuckerberg is latest celebrity asked about reptilian conspiracy The Washington Post 15 June 2016 Conspiracy Theory Poll Results Public Policy Polling 2 April 2013 Harris Paul 2 April 2013 One in four Americans think Obama may be the antichrist survey says The Guardian Oksman Olga 7 April 2016 Conspiracy craze why 12 million Americans believe alien lizards rule us The Guardian Alex Godfrey Kick Ass 2 Mark Millar s superhero powers The Guardian 8 August 2013 Bibliography Barkun Michael 2003 A Culture of Conspiracy Apocalyptic Visions in Contemporary America 1st ed Berkeley University of California Press Goodrick Clarke Nicholas 2003 Black Sun Aryan Cults Esoteric Nazism and the Politics of Identity New York University Press Icke David 1993 In the Light of Experience London Warner Books Icke David 1999 The Biggest Secret Bridge of Love Publications USA Lewis Tyson E Kahn Richard 2010 Education Out of Bounds Reimagining Cultural Studies for a Posthuman Age New York Palgrave Macmillan Robertson David G 2016 UFOs Conspiracy Theories and the New Age 1st ed London Bloomsbury Academic ISBN 978 1474253208 Further reading Banyan Will The Big Picture David Icke Alice in Wonderland and the World Trade Center Disaster pdf Paranoia Magazine October 2003 Kay Jonathan When paranoia goes intergalactic National Post 12 May 2011 External links Wikiquote has quotations related to David Icke Wikimedia Commons has media related to David Icke Official website David Icke at IMDbVideo Neil Andrew David Icke on 9 11 and lizards in Buckingham Palace theories This Week BBC 20 May 2016 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title David Icke amp oldid 1164040180, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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