Posted Jun 28, 2019 by Michael L. Brown

It was not enough for Teen Vogue to celebrate anal sex and promote prostitution and teach kids how to have an abortion without parental permission. Now this popular young people’s magazine is offering guidelines on “sex spells,” guaranteed to “make your orgasms magical.” (What wholesome reading for teens!)

The new article, by astrologer Lisa Stardust, is titled, “How to Use Sex Magic to Manifest Your Best Self,” and contains quotes like this one, by Taylor Cordova: “Through sacred sex, we find a particularly ripe portal for making our wildest dreams come true and drawing our hearts desire into our energetic field.”

Also quoted is Pam Grossman, author of Waking the Witch: Reflections on Women, Magic, and Power. And Stardust cites, “Professional witch and owner of Olde Ways, Michael Cardenas.” He “suggests using sex magic to align the spirit with the body in order to manifest self-love in a simple bath ritual.”

But this article is just one in a series devoted to “practical magic.” And it follows on the heels of articles like this one, from 2017, by “practicing witch” Sarah Lyons, titled, “Witchcraft: 10 Common Myths Debunked.” (And to think: Teen Vogue was once best known for its beauty tips.)

Some of my readers may have thought I was exaggerating when I wrote about “The Resurgence of the Feminist Witch” earlier this month. Others may have raised their eyebrows at the title of my forthcoming book, Jezebel’s War with America: The Plot to Destroy Our Country and What We Can to Turn the Tide.

But I am deeply convinced that there is a spiritual connection between the rise of pornography in America, the rise of the militant abortion spirit, the rise of radical feminism, the rise of witchcraft, and the rise of LGBT activism (among other, related phenomena).

I believe the dots can be connected. And I believe they point back to “Jezebel,” meaning, that the same demonic powers that operated through Jezebel 3,000 years ago are operating again today.  (See here for verses about Jezebel in the Bible.)

Really now, is there is a logical connection between anal sex and witchcraft? Or between prostitution and magic? Why, then, is Teen Vogue such a proponent for all of the above (and much more)? It’s because there is a spiritual logic that connects them, not a natural logic. The dots really do connect.

Teen Vogue has embraced an anti-God, anti-Bible mentality (whether consciously or unconsciously). And so, sex out of wedlock and sex work and sexually perverse acts are to be celebrated. Teen pregnancies, terminated without parental knowledge, are almost encouraged. And witchcraft and magic should be embraced.

Writing for The Guardian in 2017, Ruby Warrington observed, “Launched in 2004 as a little sister to US Vogue, Teen Vogue used to focus on the standard cocktail of fashion must-haves and celebrity worship. (A classic coverline from a 2005 edition was How To Get Perfect Party Hair.) But beginning with the August 2015 issue, the team, including then beauty editor Welteroth, engineered a shift.”

And, Warrington notes, “It is the website that runs Teen Vogue’s most overt political coverage, and has come to play a key role in repositioning the title as a passionate and informed, if unexpected, voice for the resistance.”

Specifically, this is “the resistance” to Trump. But it is more than that. It is “the resistance” to traditional values as well. In the words of digital director Phillip Picardi, “I thought it was really important to talk about reproductive rights, gender. To dig into politics and the news cycle.” And from a decidedly left-leaning, anti-conservative point of view.

In one video, a gay and transgender participant “talk about the role the internet plays in coming out of the closet, and finding your community as a queer kid in 2017. It’s really heart-touching, and honest,” says editor Elaine Welteroth.

Welteroth also wants her readers to understand things like “intersectional feminism,” something she did not know about when she was 14. Her young readers will certainly know about this today.

Little wonder, then, that with an agenda like this, Teen Vogue is now promoting witchcraft and magic, including sex spells to enhance one’s personal pleasure. Jezebel would be proud. (I should also mention that Lisa Stardust, author of the sex spells article, writes for Sabat Magazine, which “fuses witchcraft and feminism . . . .” No surprise.)

In my forthcoming book, I trace some of the origins of the radical feminist movement, including a prominent group from the late 1960’s named “Women’s International Terrorist Conspiracy from Hell.” The group’s acronym was W.I.T.C.H.

Enough said.

Special note from the publisher: If you pre-order the hardcover version of Jezebel’s War with America, be sure to go here to receive two free e-books, along with other free, downloadable resources.

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Comments

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Skeptic posted a comment · Jul 09, 2019
Well, I appreciate the elevation of my brief comment to "methodological skepticism". And I apologize for not adding links and footnotes. And yes: I belong to the "most retarded group of skeptics" who think that the Bible isn't really the most trustworthy book on earth ;-). I'd say use reality just once in a while as a benchmark for your believes in the supernatural. And by the way, I like your comment on Jezebel and that "it's most likely not made up". This makes you (almost) as skeptic...
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SG74 posted a comment · Jul 01, 2019
It's not clear what you mean by made up articles, skeptic. Since Dr Brown provides links to those very articles they're clearly not made up. Or maybe you mean that the supernatural powers of witches have no more reality than those of Elijah in the OT? But then you would be doing the very thing that you attack Dr Brown for namely asserting something based simply on a worldview! I don't know anyone but the most retarded skeptics who think that the Bible is all made up. The relevant accounts in the context of this article are the ones about Jezebel and these accounts are most likely not made up. Why? Well for one they put the hero[s] of the plot in a very 'negative' light. Many of the prophets of God are slaughtered by Jezebel and God 'fails' to stop it and Elijah is so scared of Jezebel despite his miracle on Carmel that he runs away from her!! At least Dr Brown provides links and citations for his views whereas you rely only on methodological skepticism.
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Skeptic posted a comment · Jun 28, 2019
I’m not sure whether it is really a good strategy to debunk witchcraft and “practical magic” with other myths based on the bible: Demonic powers behind Teen Vogue to destroy America? This is as absurd as it is funny. To seriously write an article about the “spiritual logic which connects anal sex and witchcraft (vs a natural logic)”…? I can’t even wrap my head around it and understand what this means ;-) One has to have a lot of time to, first get upset about made up witchcraft articles in Teen Vogue and then write a whole rebuttal with such outrageous claims. And what’s wrong with writing about reproductive rights, gender and politics? Even when it’s left (or right) leaning? It’s not in-sync with your world view, that’s the problem. You’d be fine with an article about taking away the rights of woman to choose. This artificial hysteria about nothing is just silly in my opinion. As silly as articles about witchcraft and stories about Jezebel ;-)