Black Iron Prison

I was brows­ing the National Sec­u­lar Soci­ety site, and from there Con­cordat Watch site and other art­icles — includ­ing the fact that the Pope Benedict’s plans to revive the Latin Mass. And I recalled a dread­ful truth: “The Empire Never Ended” from ‘Valis,’ the book of rev­el­a­tions by Philip K. Dick

Ah, and what about the post title? The Black Iron Prison is a concept of an all-​pervasive sys­tem of social con­trol pos­tu­lated in the Tract­ates Cryptica Scrip­tura, a sum­mary of an unpub­lished Gnostic exegesis included in VALIS.

Once, in a cheap sci­ence fic­tion novel, Fat had come across a per­fect descrip­tion of the Black Iron Prison, but set in the far future. So if you super­im­posed the past (ancient Rome) over the present (Cali­for­nia in the twen­ti­eth cen­tury) and super­im­posed the far future world of The Android Cried Me a River over that, you got the Empire, as the supra– or trans-​temporal constant. Everyone who had ever lived was lit­er­ally sur­roun­ded by the iron walls of the prison; they were all inside it and none of them knew it.”

Philip K. Dick, Valis, Lon­don; Gol­lancz, 2001, pp. 54 – 55