911:History of oppression

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To play those millions of minds, to watch them slowly respond to an unseen stimulus, to guide their aspirations without their knowledge - all this whether in high capacities or in humble - is a big and endless game of chess of ever extraordinary excitement. - Sidney Webb (former leader of the socialist-fascist Fabian Society)
America will never be destroyed from the outside. If we falter and lose our freedoms, it will be because we destroyed ourselves. - Abraham Lincoln

Contents

Introduction

Resources:


Pre-cataclysm civilizations

See also:

Cultural elements:

  • Astronomy (stars, sun, moon)
  • Spirituality (energy/plasma, entheogens)
  • Construction
  • Cataclysm stories (prediction methods)
  • Measurements (mathmatics)
  • Life cycle (death, reckoning, resurrection, sex, born again)
  • Priest culture and ruling
    •  ??: Aria (Arian, Aerian) caste

Common symbolism:

  • Dragon
  • Serpent (Feathered)
  • Dog
  • Lion
  • Eagle
  • Sun (cross)
  • 'Atlantis'
    • A huge amount of surface land lost to an environmental cataclysm, which caused sea levels to rise over 120 meters (or the Earths crust to sink 120 meters!)
    • Alternative names of Atlantis: Antilla, Amenti, Arallu, Attala, Atvantika, Elysian-Fields, Aztlan, Azatlan, Atlantia, Atli, Asgard, Avalon, Arcadia, Arktos, Agartha, Shangri-La, Hyperborea, Tula, Rutas, Thule, Hesperides, Hy-Brasil
    • toresearch: "Episkopos Mordecai, Keeper of the Notary Sojac, informs me that you are welcome to reveal that our oldest extant records show us to have been fully established in Atlantis, circa 18,000 B.C., under Kull, the galley slave who ascended to the Throne of Valusia. Revived by Pelias of Koth, circa 10,000 B.C. Possibly it was he who taught the inner-teachings to Conan of Cimmeria after Conan became King of Aquilonia. First brought to the western hemisphere by Conan and taught to Mayan priesthood (Conan is Quetzlcoatl). That was 4 Ahua, 8 Cumhu, Mayan date. Revived by Abdul Alhazred in his infamous Al Azif, circa 800 A.D. (Al Azif translated into Latin by Olaus Wormius, 1132 A.D., as The Necronomicon.) In 1090 A.D. was the founding of The Ismaelian Sect (Hashishim) by Hassan i Sabbah, with secret teachings based on Alhazred, Pelias and Kull." - (a snippet from the humorous-intended, masonically-styled book "Principia Discordia")

Communities:

Sacred books:

-10.500

(todo: Cataclysm period)

...

-700

-300

  • Ptolemaic dynasty (-305 BC - 30 BC), "The Ptolemaic dynasty was founded by Ptolemy son of Lagus, a general of Alexander the Great. On Alexander's death in 323 BC he was appointed satrap of Egypt, and eventually declared himself king in 304 BC. The dynasty lasted until the death of Cleopatra VII and the Roman conquest of Egypt in 30 BC, an episode which is still one of the best-known chapters of ancient history." - [7]

-200

-100

0

100

200

300

The Roman Catholic Church was not founded until after the Council of Nicea in 325 A.D. by Constantine I. Christianity-like cultures already existed, and Catholicism (meaning: "Universal") was created from various cultural elements from other tribes and their religions.

Anyone who did not obey the regime of Rome was called a heretic. Religious massacres, crusades, prosecutions, enslavement and conversions followed for centuries, up until this day.

After the decline of the Roman empire the political control of Rome needed to reformed to maintain as much power and property as possible.

The Vatican was the worlds first multi-national company, just with a jumbled and constructed religion called Catholicism, as its main export product. When people did not want this product they were either forced to swallow it or be threatened, prosecuted and/or killed.

  • todo: examples of this forced religion
    • Destruction of Greek effigies some years after the adaption of Romanism.
    • Creation of illiteracy, weak education and poverty

700

800

  • ~800-1200: Catholization of Scandinavia
    • "the process of conversion to Catholicism of the Scandinavian people, starting in the 8th century with the arrival of missionaries in Denmark and it was at least nominally complete by the 12th century, although the Samis remained unconverted until the 18th century." ... "Archaeological excavations of burial sites on the island of Lovön near modern-day Stockholm have shown that the actual Catholization of the people was very slow and took at least 150-200 years," (red: Christianization -> Catholization)

1000

  • ~1012:
    • Cathar christianity appears
      • "a name given to a (south-western France) Christian religious sect with dualistic and gnostic elements that appeared in the Languedoc region of France in the 11th century and flourished in the 12th and 13th centuries."
    • See also the ancient Iranian religion: Manichaeism

1100

Pre-reformation Vatican-dogma resistance groups and individuals:

1200

1300

  • 1307-1310: Suppression of the Knights Templar by Philip IV of France
    • "The Knights Templar were a 200-year-old military order, supposedly answerable only to the Pope. But Philip used his influence over Pope Clement V, who was largely his pawn, to disband the order and remove its ecclesiastical status and protection in order to plunder it." [10]
    • "The Knights of Malta are generally depicted, for example, as the rivals of another military order, the celebrated Knights Templars, but my own researches suggest that the Knights of Malta were in fact an offshoot or reorganization of the Templars, who were suppressed by King Philippe le Bel of France in 1310." ... "Their blood-red surplices, emblazoned with a white balanced arm cross - the exact reverse of the Templars' red cross on white (...)" (source)
  • 1347-1351: The Black Death ravages Europe.
    • "It began in South-western or Central Asia and spread to Europe by the late 1340s. The total number of deaths worldwide from the pandemic is estimated at 75 million people; there were an estimated 20 million deaths in Europe alone. The Black Death is estimated to have killed between a third and two-thirds of Europe's population."


1400

  • 1453:
    • Fall of Constantinople marked the capture of the Byzantine Empire's capital by the Ottoman Empire. "... it played a crucial role in Ottoman political stability and its subsequent expansion in the Eastern Mediterranean and the Balkans. The date of the event is one of the frequently proposed events marking the end of the Middle Ages as a historical period."
  • 1492:
    • Beginning expansion of the Spanish Empire (1492-1898), one of the largest empires in history and one of the first global empires. (See also: The Spanish Empire, Papacy, and Jesuits)
    • First mention of the Spanish mystic secret society Los Alumbrados ("the enlightened ones"), of which Ignatius Loyola (founder of the Jesuit Order) had been a member. [13]
    • "Eric Jon Phelps evidenced by the chart on his VA website knows of The Pilgrim Society. Here's what I think about the Jesuits and their Illuminati in terms of history. It is true the Illuminati and Freemasonry predate the Jesuit Order which was founded by Satan's tool Ignatius Loyola in 1534. Loyola was also member of the Spanish Alumbrados as we both know. The Jesuit Order took over the Illuminati when they wrote the last few degrees of Scottish Rite Freemasonry after high Masonic Frederick the Great protected them after they were expelled from Europe. The Black Pope had already controlled Freemasonry and the Illuminati by the time of Jesuit-trained Adam Weishaupt who founded the Bavarian Illuminati May 1 1776. The Bavarian Illuminati was only one branch of a vast international network. The Jesuits control them all through the high Masonic degrees they formulated. So it all makes sense true the Knight Templar/Freemasons and Illuminati were around before the founding of the Company of Gesu but since it is openly religious it wins out because of the Romanist dogma of the two swords found in Unam Sanctam the secular and religious. I think the secular sword is the Illuminati/Freemasonry and the religious is Roman Catholicism which is ruled by the Jesuit Order." (quoted from Nicholas N. Rivera)

1500

The main resistence against the Vatican company were:

  • Switserland
  • France
  • Germany
    • Martin Luther (was he a Rosicrucian pawn?)
      • Reformation Day and the 95 theses (wikipedia: The 95 Theses)
        • "Some Protestants celebrate Reformation Day. This is the anniversary of 1517-OCT-31 CE (Note: 400 years later WWI is started), the day that Martin Luther's published his 95 theses. These were criticisms of beliefs and practices of the Roman Catholic church, particularly related to the sale of indulgences. He is widely believed to have published them in a dramatic manner, by nailing them to the door of Castle Church in Wittenberg, Germany. Actually, that never happened. He did write a letter to his superiors attacking the sale of indulgences; the 95 theses were merely appended to the letter. This triggered for the Protestant Reformation, leading to a decades-long war in Europe, enmity between Catholics and Protestants, and the fracture of Christianity into thousands of individual faith groups."
        • Reformation Day versus Halloween disinformation?
        • Reformation - as described in the Catholic Encyclopedia
  • Netherlands
  • Scandinavia
  • England (see also: Thomas More)

One of the largest setbacks of the Vatican empire was the Reformation. (Todo: Enlightenment -> Reformation -> Counter-Reformation)


  • 1592-1600: Spanish and Portugese discoveries of the America's.

1600

  • ~1600-1790: Early North American migrations
    • See also: "The Migration to North America"
    • The main reason for these migrations were to get away from Roman Catholic oppression and prosecutions in Europe.
    • These people were mostly puritans/protestants who were aware of the State/Church corruption in own region. Most of the early settlers were from East Anglican parts of England (Norfolk, Suffolk, Essex, Kent, and East Sussex), but later Dutch and German puritans followed.
    • See also: Quakers (from 1680), Yankees
    • todo: Irish famine (most of the weak harvest production went to England!), after which the starving catholic wanted to be shipped to the US by the Jesuits.
  • 1609:
    • Second Charter of Virginia
    • "Start of the general Spanish colonial strategy of building reductions in order to "civilise" and catechise the native populations of South America." from Jesuit Reductions
      • The Vatican/Jesuits were already controlling large parts of South America, and derived wealth from indigenous commune labor and mining.
  • 1618-1648: Thirty Years' War
    Religious situation in Europe in 1618. [3]
    Religious situation in Europe in 1618. [3]
    • "The Thirty Years' War was fought principally on the territory of today's Germany, and involved most of the major European continental powers. Although it was from the outset a religious conflict between Protestants and Catholics, the rivalry between the Habsburg dynasty and other powers was also a central motive, as shown by the fact that Catholic France under the de facto rule of Cardinal Richelieu supported the Protestant side in order to weaken the Habsburgs, thereby furthering France's position as the pre-eminent continental power. This increased the France-Habsburg rivalry which led later to direct war between France and Habsburg Spain."
  • 1639: Expulsion of the Jesuits from Japan
    • "Japan at the time was in civil war and daimyo rose and fell frequently. However, decentralization could also have helped the Jesuits in that there was no united force to expel or to fight against them. They were favored in one area or rejected in another, but not until the Tokugawa unified Japan was it able to enforce a complete expulsion edict." ... "Had the Jesuits remained contented to preach religion perhaps expulsions and martyrdoms might have been avoided. The Jesuits as this time, however, were anything but humble missionaries. They meddled in politics, attempted to influence trade to their own advantage, and even attempted to rule." ... "When the Tokugawa finally unified the country, one of its first acts was to expel the Christians. Of course, I hope no one in this seminar will confuse this with a 'closed door' policy!" [16]
  • 1641-1649: "The massacre of the poor Irish protestants on October 23rd 1641 - the Feast of Ignatius Loyola. How fitting a day for a massacre by these bloodthirsty swine. It is estimated that 150,000 Irish Protestants were butchered in the streets and in their homes. This slaughter took place over an eight-year period." [17]
  • 1665-1667: Second Anglo-Dutch War
      • "England tried to end the Dutch domination of world trade. After initial English successes, the war ended in a Dutch victory. English and French resentment, however, would soon lead to renewed warfare."

1700

  • 1750:
    • Jesuit suppression by Portugal
      • "The conflicts began with trade disputes. In 1750 in Portugal, in 1755 in France, and in the late 1750's in the Two Sicilies. In 1758 the government of Joseph I of Portugal took advantage of the waning powers of Pope Benedict XIV and deported Jesuits from America after a relocating the Jesuits and their native workers, and then fighting a brief conflict, formally suppressing the order in 1759. In 1762 the Parliament of France, a court, not a legislature, affirmed a ruling against the society in a huge bankruptcy case, under pressure from a host of groups - from within the Church to secular intellectuals to the king's mistress. Austria and the two Sicilies suppressed the order by decree in 1767." - from Suppression of the Jesuits
  • 1754:
    • The Jesuits write the first 25 rites of Scottish Rite freemasonry. Freemasonry publisher "C. Lenning" stated that James II of England, after his flight to France in 1688, resided at the Jesuit College of Clermont, where his followers fabricated certain degrees for the purpose of carrying out their political ends.
  • 1768:
    • Jesuits expelled from Malta and their property transferred to the papal Military Order of Malta. [19]
      • The Military Order of Malta takes refuge within the royal court of Russia, until they are made subordinate to the Jesuit Order in Russia using Napoleon's invasion of Russia| in the 1812 (part of the Jesuits Napoleonic Wars). The Military Order of Malta will be openly expelled by Lenin in 1917.
  • 1789:
    • 1789-1799: French Revolution
      • "was a period of political and social upheaval in the political history of France and Europe as a whole, during which the French governmental structure, previously an absolute monarchy with feudal privileges for the aristocracy and Catholic clergy, underwent radical change to forms based on Enlightenment principles of democracy, citizenship, and inalienable rights."

1800

  • 1804-1815: Napoleonic Wars
    • "So, you have the alignment with the Jesuit Order and the most powerful Freemason they had in the craft, Fredrick the Great, during their suppression. That is an irrefutable conclusion. And then, when you see the Napoleonic Wars, the French Revolution and the Napoleonic Wars carried out by Freemasonry, everything Napoleon did, and the Jacobins, whatever they did, completely benefited the Jesuit Order. It's to this end that Alexander Dumas wrote his The Count Of Monte Cristo. The Count is the Jesuit General, Monte=Mount, Cristo=Christ. The Count of the Mount of Christ. Alexander Dumas was talking about the Jesuit General getting vengeance when the Jesuits were suppressed, and many of them were consigned to an island, three hours sailing, West, off the coast of Portugal. And so, when the Jesuits finally regained their power, they punished all of the monarchs of Europe who had suppressed the Jesuits, drove them from their thrones, including the Knights of Malta from Malta, using Napoleon." [21]
    • 1812: Napoleon's invasion of Russia
      • "Napoleon arrived back in France with his Grande Armée reduced by 570,000 of his best soldiers. Alliances were quickly formed against him and he was forced to abdicate. He eventually made a comeback and finally met his Waterloo on June 18, 1815... This put an end to the Jesuits dream of conquering Russia until the 20th century." [22]

1810

  • 1810:
    • "Titles of Nobility amendment": a (supposedly) unratified proposed amendment to the United States Constitution. It forbids US presidents from using royal titles (such as king, queen, prince, baron).
      • "The United States Senate approved the measure by a vote of 19 to 5 on April 27, 1810. It was then adopted by the House of Representatives with a vote of 87 to 3 on May 1, 1810. After its passage in the Congress, the TONA was presented to the state legislatures for ratification as prescribed by Article V of the Constitution. This still-pending proposed amendment is known to have been ratified by the legislatures of the following 12 states: Maryland in 1810, Delaware, Georgia, Kentucky, New Jersey, North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, and Vermont in 1811, as well as by Massachusetts on February 27, 1812, and by New Hampshire on December 9, 1812." .. "Today, with 50 states in the Union, it would take the approvals of legislators in a minimum of 38 states to achieve ratification." ... "Thus, the legislatures of at least 26 more states would have to ratify the TONA in order for it to become part of the American Constitution." (True? or were the other ratifications destroyed in the US-UK war of 1812?)
  • 1814:
    • Jesuits are revived by a Papal Bull, 41 years after their Papal suppression in 1773. Thanks to their military agent Napoleon, the Jesuit Order is now in complete control of the Vatican.

1820

  • 1822:
    • Congress of Verona - drafts the secret Treaty of Verona [25]
      • This was a large-scale conspiracy of the Vatican/Jesuits/Kings/Aristocrats to:
        • Overthrow independence of the new America and other independent regions.
        • Restrain freedom of the press (movable type publishing).
        • More cooperation between the state and the church bodies (to oppress the people).
  • 1823:
    • Monroe Doctrine - instated by President James Monroe
      • The Holy Alliance: to stop the economic and religious corruption in the South (Mexico)
      • The Irish famine was created for the purpose of pushing more catholic into the new America.
  • 1829:
    • Jesuits expelled from England

1830

1840

  • ....: President Abraham Lincoln meets Charles Chiniquy (a former priest who speaks about the Jesuit/aristocratic conspiracy)
    • Lincoln begins to realize that a Vatican religious take-over is the real threat to the free people.
    • Samuel Wells Morris visited Italy and realized the creation of an antagonism, consisting of a of war between the South (production economy, slave labor) and the North (trade/transport economy).
  • 1848:
    • Jesuits expelled from Switzerland

1850

  • 1858:
    • "The success of the British branch (N M Rothschild & Sons) was also spectacular. The son of Nathan, Lionel, in 1858 became the first Jewish member of the upper house of parliament, the House of Lords. His descendant, Sir Evelyn Robert de Rothschild, the former chief of the British branch who is now aged 75, had privileged relations with the former prime minister Margaret Thatcher." [26]

1860

  • 18611865: American civil war
    • The civil war was mainly driven by Vatican/Jesuit/Aristocratic elitist interests. See also: "Secrets of the Bank of England Revealed at Last"
    • 1863: "Syllabus of Errors"
      • "... a document issued by Holy See under Pope Pius IX' on December 8, 1864, Feast of the Immaculate Conception, on the same day as the Pope's encyclical Quanta Cura. It was very controversial in its time and remains so to this day, because it condemned concepts such as freedom of religion and the separation of church and state."
      • Papacy: "The US free states are against God"
  • 1864:
    • Suriname slave labour was only abolished in 1863, placing the Netherlands among the last European countries to do so. (Spanish-controlled Cuba and Puerto Rico had slaves until 1880 and 1873, respectively.) However, slaves were not released until 1873. After that, laborers were imported from the Dutch East Indies (modern Indonesia) and India.

1870

  • 1870:
    • 1870-1945: Between those years France and Germany fought three wars: Franco-Prussian War, WW I and WW II
      • 1870-1871: Franco-Prussian War
        • "The thorough Prussian and German victory brought about the final unification of the German Empire under King William I of Prussia. It also marked the downfall of Napoleon III and the end of the Second French Empire, which was replaced by the Third Republic. As part of Treaty of Frankfurt, the territory of Alsace-Lorraine was taken by Prussia to become a part of Germany, which it would retain until after World War I. The conflict was a culmination of years of tension between the two powers, which finally came to a head over the issue of a Hohenzollern candidate for the vacant Spanish throne, following the Glorious Revolution of Spain deposition of Queen Isabella II in 1868."
        • "... each war escalating in destructive magnitude, political scope and geographic extent. The primary reason for these wars was strategic and political: a dynamic and increasingly powerful Germany expanding into the sphere of influence of a declining French empire. However, for either country to achieve its political aims it required an industry capable of producing and powering the tools of geopolitical expansion: ships, guns and railroads. Essential to this industry were coal and steel. The control of natural resources essential for war-making, specifically the coal and iron ore of the upper and lower Rhineland, was one of the primary aims of both the wars and the peace settlements that followed each. Indeed, the it was the struggle for resources in the peace settlements that fueled further conflict." [27]
  • 1871:
    • 1871-1872: Jesuits expelled from Italy
    • 1871-1878: Kulturkampf: The culture struggle" refers to German policies in relation to secularity and the influence of the Roman Catholic Church, enacted from 1871 to 1878 by the Chancellor of the German Empire, Otto von Bismarck. The 1871 Kanzelparagraf marked the beginning of a series of sanctions against Catholicism that Bismarck imposed until 1875. See also: [28], [29], [30].
  • 1872:
    • Otto von Bismarck expels the Jesuits from Germany
      • As Minister-President of Prussia from 1862–1890, Otto von Bismarck engineered the unification of Germany.
      • "He planned for another war with the French thus working with General von Molte the Elder to devise the Schlieffen Plan." [31] (SMOM connection with the German Knight of Malta Alfred Graf von Schlieffen (1833–1913))?
      • "More severe anti-Roman Catholic laws of 1873 allowed the government to supervise the education of the Roman Catholic clergy, and curtailed the disciplinary powers of the Church." [32]

1880

  • 1880:
    • Jesuits expelled from France

1890