Showing posts with label Freemasonry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Freemasonry. Show all posts

Monday, December 1, 2014

This Audacity of Theirs Is Not New

                
"To plunder, to slaughter, to steal, these things they misname empire; and where they make a wasteland, they call it peace."

-Tacitus


Ames Monument, Laramie, Wyoming
           
Pictured above is the Ames Monument.  It is a pyramid, built on the highest point of the Union Pacific's Trans-Continental Railroad.  It is located about 20 miles east of Laramie, Wyoming at elevation 8,247 feet above sea level.  The pyramid was built by Henry Hobson Richardson while Augustus Saint-Gaudens designed the two 9 ft. relief portraits on the east and west sides respectively.  The faces are those of the Ames brothers, Oakes and Oliver.  One brother was a politician in Washington, the other a president of the Union Pacific Railroad. 
 
America has a lengthy history of being associated with enormous economic frauds and with Freemasonry and/or Satanic symbols. It should be no surprise to see another ominously evil-looking pyramid monument in honor of two ruthless men who were main contributors in building the Trans-continental railroad.  Oakes and Oliver stole money from the American people, endorsed the ethnic cleansing of the Plains Indians, and helped expedite the buffalo slaughter by splitting the herd of over 90 million buffalo, into two parts-  a northern half and a southern half with their Trans-Continental Railroad.

The pyramid has long been associated with Freemasonry and SatanismThe triangle also represents the trinity, which is another way of saying that humans are divine and do not need God.

 "Form follows function."

-Louis Sullivan

Very much like today when the U.S. Government goes off half-cocked with grandiose construction projects financed by money created out of thin air, the Government of the mid-19th Century was met with strong opposition.  As is usually the case today, these detractors were denounced as short-sighted cynics, or in today's terminology, "conspiracy theorists."  
    
Naysayers said the Trans-Continental Railroad would be impossible for a number of reasons.  The number one reason was the enormous cost.  However, the Ames brothers and the men of Credit Mobilier and Union Pacific put that worry to rest.  Pessimists said it would be impossible to build the track through the Great Plains, as it was Indian country and safety could not be guaranteed.  American war generals simply moved from butchering in the Civil War to the ethnic genocide of the Western Native Americans.  Others critical of the project claimed it was simply a scam created by rich men looking to make themselves and their buddies richer.      

Oakes Ames
Why would such a monument remain?  Why wouldn't it be torn down- a monument to men who designed an enormous scam?

After all, Oakes was convicted as part of the Credit Mobilier scandal.  The greed that satiated the robber barons of the Nineteenth Century still invades the hearts of men today.  The Ames Monument is a monument of depravity.  It is a symbol of the Evil Powers' willingness and ability to destroy; regardless of how it looks, if its justified, or in the best interests of the people.   

"Throughout the remainder of the nineteenth century (and beyond), corporate interests-  apparently insatiable-  returned again to demand direct and indirect federal subsidies.  To insure preferential treatment and noninterference, national legislative and executive offices were corrupted and representative government made a mockery...the corruption of the Grant era was sparked by... the activities of those two companies and individuals connected to Pacific railway scheme." 

-Leonard Curry 

The Ames Monument still stands today, a striking image on Wyoming's high plains, a symbol of an ancient, ruthless religion of power and greed.  Though the original rail tracks have been moved multiple times from the area of the monument, the pyramid monument still stands.  The rail town of Sherman, which grew up 100 yards from the pyramid, is now a ghost town with no buildings standing, but yet, the triangle remains.
  
 "This audacity of theirs is not new."
   
-Dante Alighieri

 
the Trans-Continental Railroad

 

Tuesday, January 15, 2013

The Zoo As Civilization



"You're captives of a civilization that more or less compels you to go on destroying the world in order to live...You are captives-  and you have made a captive of the world itself.  That's what at stake isn't it?-  Your captivity and the captivity of the world."

-Daniel Quinn

Ota Benga, African Pygmy caged
and displayed in a zoo, 1904
The idea of the "zoo," a collection of animals held in captivity for display, has existed since ancient Egypt.  In earlier ages, the royal elite collected menageries of exotic animals.  As is usually the case with royal controllers, they like to show off their power by controlling other sentient beings.  For a king or queen, it is not enough for the lion to be majestic on the African plain.  The tyrant must control the animal's essence- a character flaw still present in today's powerful rulers.  Living and allowing to live in accordance with nature has never been their aim.  Theirs has always been a firm drive to bastardize nature through absolute bloodthirst and heart-wrenching imprisonment. 

Many people would be able to come up with strong arguments in favor of zoos.  "My kids like to see the animals."  "The zoos treat the animals like celebrities."  "Having zoos is critical to scientific progress."  By dealing with the animals in captivity, according to zoologists, they can better "protect" similar animals in the wild.  All arguments are merely excuses for a trend of control started in the early 19th century by the secret society of devil-worshipping Freemasonry.  All these reasons are excuses for locking up living things that are supposed to be roaming the Earth free, as the Creator intended.  Today we see the results of captivity in animals and they are not encouraging as newborns in captivity struggle to live.
Panda Mei Xiang cradles her
 dead cub
Indeed, it was a Freemason who started the London Zoological Society in 1828.  Sir Thomas Stamford Raffles founded the Society in 1826.  Not only was Stamford Raffles "fond" of animals, he was also a notable British imperialist, creating Singapore and claiming the port for the British Empire.  The idea of "conservation," preached by those in favor of brutal captivity, is usually popularized after a wild economic boom which decimates an animal population.  For example, when ivory was exotic and much desired, elephants were routinely killed until they were almost extinct.  Comically, the same elite that makes all the profit from the extermination, afterwards uses their immense power to enforce conservation measures.  And conservation measures are a convenient weapon to enhance land control.

In America, during the same 19th Century, Charles Goodnight and fellow Freemason Oliver Loving, conquered the Texas panhandle by fighting the Comanches Indians.  As Texas Rangers, they drove the Comanche from their ancestral home.  After all the buffalo were needlessly decimated,  Goodnight and Loving became some of the first cattle ranchers of the West.  They drove their Texas longhorns north along the Pecos River and sold them for a tremendous profit.  Goodnight and Loving were immortalized in Larry McMurtry's Lonesome Dove series.  Numerous towns and landmarks are named after Goodnight and Loving. 

Palo Duro Canyon, Texas
What do the history books remember? Mostly, the history books are very kind to Goodnight and his Freemason friends, lauding Goodnight's many romantic stories like the time he took the corpse of his friend Loving all the way back to Texas.  History books tend to focus on the time he and other whites brought back a girl stolen by the Indians, a story later adapted by John Ford in his movie The Searchers.  Other exploits such as his raising buffalo and cross-breeding them with cattle are praised as philanthropic and visionary. 

Robert Duvall and Tommy Lee Jones
play Augustus McRae andWoodrow Call,
characters based on Goodnight and Loving 
The flowery accounts of Goodnight's success must be tempered with doses of reality.  After eradicating the Indians, his success was largely attributed to setting his ranch up in one of the most desirable pastures on the Earth, the Palo Duro Canyon, south of Amarillo, Texas.  The JA Ranch, named after his wealthy British-national business partner, John Adair, was yet another extension of control made possible by the shadowy Masonic group.  Goodnight founded the Panhandle Stockman's Association, an organization designed to keep cattle ranching an endeavor of mostly elitists.

The successful ranching efforts of Goodnight was only possible by stealing the land from the Indians and eradicating an enitre competing food source.  His "success" was largely by default, determining on a skewed playing field using racist logic.  It is a shame all those monuments salute him as "the Father of the Panhandle."  Would the same be said today in Singapore of Raffles?

Where are the next Stamford Raffles and Charles Goodnights?  Will it be possible for the next imperialists to substantiate their behavior even if it results in genocide?  How will the elite enforce Agenda 21 and further ghettoize human beings into zoo plantations?