A highly insightful and revolutionary book, which explores a diverse collection of ancient pagan texts to reveal the mythological origins behind modern gender confusion. My mind was blown!
Until I read this book, I thought the transgender pronoun issue was a recent historical anomaly. While I already knew that abortion hearkened back to the times of child sacrifice to Molech, I had no idea that Ishatar/Astarte had cross dressing preists who castrated or surgically altered themselves and worshiped their goddess as both male and female. Nor did I realize that the rainbow was such a prominent symbol associated with this goddess.
These are but a taste of the many ancient to modern parallels between the ancient pagan cults and the modern woke cult that has imposed its dogmas into every facet of our culture.
However, there are a few assumptions he makes about feminism that are not sufficiently supported or developed. As a consequence, this book will incur the frustrations of any woman who sees the slightest bit of herself within Ishtar. After all, the goddess is at least a strong, independent woman-- the first ever to wage war on the patriarchy.