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Trey Knowles' “Azazel: The United States 5-Star General” is an allegorical comedy that fuses dark humor with pointed social satire. The story imagines a powerful U.S. five-star general overtaken by the ancient entity Azazel, whose influence quietly spreads into the minds of prominent technology innovators, including Elon Musk and Palmer Luckey. Under this unseen spiritual manipulation, advanced artificial intelligence and autonomous weapon systems are accelerated toward a future that threatens humanity itself.
Through satire and symbolic storytelling, Knowles challenges audiences to reflect on the difference between humanity as divine image-bearers and a society increasingly shaped by corruption, ambition, and unchecked technological power. The narrative uses comedy to raise unsettling questions about influence, control, and the moral direction of modern innovation—inviting readers to consider whether progress is always guided by human conscience.
Drawing from Jewish apocryphal tradition, particularly the Book of Enoch, Azazel is depicted as a fallen being who introduced forbidden knowledge to humankind, including warfare and destructive arts. In Knowles' allegory, this ancient symbolism is reimagined for the modern age, transforming technological advancement into a stage for spiritual and ethical conflict wrapped in dark comedic insight.
By Trey KnowlesTrey Knowles' “Azazel: The United States 5-Star General” is an allegorical comedy that fuses dark humor with pointed social satire. The story imagines a powerful U.S. five-star general overtaken by the ancient entity Azazel, whose influence quietly spreads into the minds of prominent technology innovators, including Elon Musk and Palmer Luckey. Under this unseen spiritual manipulation, advanced artificial intelligence and autonomous weapon systems are accelerated toward a future that threatens humanity itself.
Through satire and symbolic storytelling, Knowles challenges audiences to reflect on the difference between humanity as divine image-bearers and a society increasingly shaped by corruption, ambition, and unchecked technological power. The narrative uses comedy to raise unsettling questions about influence, control, and the moral direction of modern innovation—inviting readers to consider whether progress is always guided by human conscience.
Drawing from Jewish apocryphal tradition, particularly the Book of Enoch, Azazel is depicted as a fallen being who introduced forbidden knowledge to humankind, including warfare and destructive arts. In Knowles' allegory, this ancient symbolism is reimagined for the modern age, transforming technological advancement into a stage for spiritual and ethical conflict wrapped in dark comedic insight.