7/9/2020, 11:30 pm

Witch Fragility: Why It's So Hard for Witches to Confess Their Wickedness
(1692 Edition)
In this “vital, necessary, and beautiful book” (Magistrate Thomas Danforth), anti-witchery advocate, Dr.Robin DiAngelo, deftly illuminates the phenomenon of “witch fragility” and “allows us to understand witchcraft as a practice not restricted to ‘bad people' (Betty Paris).
Referring to the defensive moves that witches make when challenged in court, “witch fragility” is characterized by emotions such as anger, fear, and guilt, and by behaviors including argumentation, spell casting, and flying through second story windows on a broom. These behaviors, in turn, function to assure witch power and prevent any meaningful cross-spiritual dialogue.
In this in-depth exploration, Dr. Robin DiAngelo examines how witch fragility develops, how it protects satanic dominance, and what we can do to engage more constructively to call these witches out and get them to confess their wickedness.
Witches who will not confess their witchcraft and demonic possessions face the ultimate punishment of death. But if they be “woke” to their hate and admit their wickedness in a public show-trial they can peacefully live out their remaining days ostracized by their fellow citizens, forced from gainful employment opportunities and inevitably die the secluded lonely life they so deserve.
In this most important book, Dr. Di Angelo teaches witches how to identify their wicked ways, how to confess their witchery, and how to properly accuse others of witchcraft.
Soon to be followed up with Volume 2: Red Fragility - Why It's So Hard for Communists to Confess Their Marxism.
Reviews
—The New Yorker
“[T]thoughtful, instructive, and comprehensive . . . This slim book is impressive in its scope and complexity; DiAngelo provides a powerful lens for examining, and practical tools for grappling with, witchcraft today.”
—Publishers Weekly, Starred Review
“Witch Fragility is a book everyone should be exposed to. With any luck, most who are will be inspired to search themselves and interrupt their contributions too wickedness.”
—Shelf Awareness, Starred Review
“A valuable guide . . . While especially helpful for those new to the critical analysis of witchcraft, this work also offers a useful refresher to anyone committed to the ongoing process of self-assessment and anti-Christian work.”
—Library Journal
“A penetrating new book of wokeness.”
—Pacific Standard
“A vital, necessary, and beautiful book, a bracing call to witches everywhere to see their wickedness for what it is and to seize the opportunity to make things better now.”
—Michael Eric Dyson
