Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Sacha Stone" in English language version.
since recording these interviews, Trading Standards have announced that they consider it to be a scam. They're working with the police to get a court order to take down the website.... Sacha Stone told me that the alternative science he promotes is under constant attack.
Meanwhile, the faux-spiritual guru Sacha Stone uses the 'New Earth Project', which has 280,000 Facebook followers, to push the idea that 'pollutants' such as electromagnetic radiation are the source of all illnesses. Stone also tells his followers that the COVID vaccine will insert a 'nanochip' into recipients that will allow 'the Beast to take control of their soul'. ... The likes of Shemirani, Stone and Icke tap into the 'cultic milieu', a term coined in the 1970s by British sociologist Colin Campbell, and used to refer to a diverse subculture encompassing forms of 'New Age' spiritualism and occultism, paranormal beliefs and pseudosciences, including fringe alternative medicine/healing communities. This milieu is fluid and overlaps significantly with conspiracy theorist communities, with which it shares an outsider identity, an ethos of 'seekership' and a scepticism towards established authority. The danger is that those attracted to Icke, Shemirani and Stone for their spiritual teachings or health advice will soon be exposed to the darker side of their ideologies... Piers Corbyn, Icke, Shemirani, Steele, Stone and other leading figures all promoted (and promote) variants of the NWO theory... Sacha Stone blames the 'Sabbatian Zionist Lurian Kabbalists behind the veil', using code words for Jews.
I spoke to a member of the group, who told me he had not heard anything more from the campaign after donating on CrowdJustice. Another member, Jasper, told me he'd previously seen Steele talk on 5G at an event in London last year, where musician-turned-activist Sacha Stone was promoting an anti-radiation tool. These anti-5G tools pop up everywhere on the Internet and can be anything from £200 paint, to £70 umbrellas, to £900 router-looking devices – many which lack the science behind them. Stone was trying to flog his product for around £500, which is where Jasper's suspicions with figures within the anti-5G movement began.