Dogs at the Threshold
why dogs are better than muslims
I love dogs.
I don’t trust people who dogs don’t like.
I know that the subtitle of this article seems political rather than esoteric but I promise you that it isn’t. Call it clickbait if you will. But it is something that has been going around the psychosphere of the west recently, and only due to a specific non native demographic suddenly voicing their dislike of dogs. In this article I want to give my two cents on why I think that is.
Dogs have been with us short after we started herding bovines. Which is a terribly long time ago. Ever since we have had this understanding with one another: you warn us against danger, you help us hunt and we share the bounty of the hunt and the warmth of our fires with you. Along with the bovine, the canid was one of the first domesticated animals and unlike the bovine, the canid wants to be around us. It actually likes us for us.
This is not a dog appreciation article, even though they would most certainly deserve such an article being written about them.
But it does goes to show that our relationship goes back since long before even the concept of organized religion ever came about.
People have since started noticing that the canid sees more than we do. Its visual spectrum is different than ours, it can see things we do not. And it will warn us against these unseen dangers just as much. They act as personal guardians not just against the physical but also the unseen. This goes for illnesses just as much as things of a spiritual nature. Dogs can be trained to sniff out certain diseases and afflictions, with great success. Dogs often know a woman is pregnant before the woman knows. Perhaps it is not even too far fetched to say that the dog knows us better than we know ourselves.
It is all these things combined that western man has come to see the canid as a guardian at the threshold of the unseen in our folklore, which are not just fairy tales and campfire stories: it is the lore of our folk.
In Greek Mythology a dog stands at the gates of Hades, preventing the living from entering and the dead from leaving.
The Vigrid plains are inhabited by ferocious dog-like creatures which guard the more conventional ways to Asgard. Who will rip to shreds anything that threatens to enter the golden gate without invitation.
Hellhounds are often seen as warnings, omens of danger and the psychic onslaught that accompanies it.
And how often has modern man heard and seen their dog barking ferociously at something that modern man can not see or hear? We know our dogs, we know the difference between our dog barking at another animal, a person or something else entirely. Ever since the internet there are loads of anecdotal stories about people and their dogs warning them against spirits and demons. Even protecting us from them.
A rather famous story is the story of Skinwalker Ranch’s sheep dogs, running after orbs and lights that made the inhabitants feel extremely uneasy.
Who has not experienced their dog suddenly aggressively barking at a person for no apparent reason? And the dislike seems to be entirely mutual even though that person may attempt to pretend to like the dog. While that dog is otherwise well behaved and people friendly, the dog sensed something about that person that we did not, something that is a danger to its human companion. Only to find out later that this person has been arrested for something heinous.
Then there are plenty of stories of people who had UFO encounters (of a very unpleasant nature) which only stopped after people got themselves a dog. The dog seems to become a shield against whatever is happening, both a shield and an alarm. Yet another instance where the dog becomes a protector against spiritual forces the human often does not know how to handle or how to deal with it. And while it may be a contested opinion, it just highlights how UFO encounters are spiritual rather than physical. Because if the UFO inhabitants are afraid of a dog’s teeth, there is no reason they would not have the same fear of a bullet. Yet that fear of fire arms does not seem to be a factor at all.
So now we have the guardian aspect of dogs outlined, both physical and spiritual.
I want to go ahead and say something about the religion of not-so-much peace.
In their own beliefs it is thought that an angel can not enter a house in which a dog is present. Much like the person mentioned before, muslims will often jump out of the way of a dog and some will even react very hostile and aggressive (from a distance) towards our beloved canids. For reasons that seem to have little to do with religion or culture but much more so with a personal aversion of sorts.
Here is a great example of that, with the man in white:
And I think that anyone with a keen eye here can sense what the dog can sense as well, entity attachment. This is a very similar way of behaving as when entity infested people encounter a street preacher or when the woke come into contact with an outspoken non-woke person. The human soul has been replaced by something else, something less than human.
Without going into a long diatribe.
I think I can safely say that the reason muslims don’t like dogs is because that religion, just as much as modern woketardery, primes a human to become a vessel for walk-ins. And that the “angels” that will not enter a house with a dog, are not angels at all but something far more sinister.
For that reason, I think dogs are better people than muslims.
And nothing can change my mind.
Thank you very much for your support and your readership!



I have a wooden cabin for my 4 dogs with a stove, which I keep burning for them through the winter months. I have a seat in there and hang out and read or listen to podcasts.
6 Cats share the space also.
Dogs are kings and cats are Queens in my world!
The response from the British to the push from our government to ‘decolonise’ and ‘diversify’ the countryside, and the complaints from a certain demographic about dogs, has been to get more dogs. A beautiful display of obstinacy and quiet protest.