Pazuzu
The king demon of the wind in Assyrian and Mespotamian culture, Pazuzu is depicted as having the body of a man, the head of a lion or dog, talons of an eagle, two pairs of wings, a scorpion's tail and a serpentine penis. Pazuzu is most often shown with his right hand up and left hand down and was characterized in the Grimoire of Solomon as possessing both positive and negative traits. Failure to appease Pazuzu results in famine and locust swarms. The demon's snake-like coiled phallus is seen by many biblical scholars as relating to the Exile from Paradise. In simplest terms, Pazuzu is necessary evil - the spirit of evil charged with driving other more destructive forces [1] away.
- ↑ Ex:. sex memories/nostaglia, communism, narcotics, the appearance of reality as a concrete, dimensional, and discrete system of physical objects as resulting from a literal interpretation of our fitness-tuned perceptual system. Thus, the following can be considered manifestations of Pazuzu: the CIA/FBI/Cointelpro, cannabis, and non-apocryphal Church Father'd Christian Theology.