911:Literature
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- "This is about the religious, scientific and political tragedies throughout Human time, and ways to learn from our troubled history to overcome the neurosis and its behavioral and social symptoms.
- Fascism through systematized spirituality, suppressed knowledge and authoritarian rule, to try to control all Human consciousness in our World, because they are afraid of those expressions.
- The neurosis rippling out from a person into society, then reflecting back and be repeated and amplified by culture.
- Leading to the loss of health, honesty, beauty, love and sovereignty at the personal and social level."
- ~100 AD:
- Dead Sea scrolls (This comprises roughly 900 documents, including texts from the Hebrew Bible)
- ~1530-1564:
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The Institutes of the Christian Religion [1], Jean Calvin (1509-1564)
- See also: Jean Calvin
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Tracts relating to the Reformation (vol.1, published in 1844), Jean Calvin (1509-1564)
- See also: Jean Calvin, Council of Trent, "History of the Council of Trent" by Félix Bungener
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- 1563:
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Foxe's Book of Martyrs, John Foxe (1517-1587), (wikipedia article)
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- 1611:
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(translation from Greek and Hebrew texts): King James Bible, John Wycliffe (1320–1384) and William Tyndale (c.1494–1536), (note: both men were executed for having translated the bible into common English), (wikipedia article)
- See also: Blue Letter Bible, KJB with parallel text browser, Latin Vulgate - the Roman Catholic bible version.
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- This book was discovered somewhere between 1618-1648:
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Secret Instructions of the Jesuits ([2], [3], [4]), unknown Jesuit authors. (to research: are there multiple versions? W. C. Brownlee, ...)
- Note: This book was first discovered during the first 30 Years' War (1618-1648) when the Duke of Brunswick plundered the Jesuit's college at Paderborn in Westphalia and made a present of their library to the Capuchins of the same town. Soon after reprints and translations appeared all over Europe.
- See also: George Bourne
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- 1656:
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Provincial Letters: Moral Teachings of the Jesuit Fathers Opposed to the Church of Rome and Latin Vulgate [5], Blaise Pascal (1623–1662), ("Lettres provinciales", 18 letters written under pseudonym, translated by Thomas M'Crie, published in 1892), wikipedia article
- See also: Antoine Arnauld, Casuistry, Catholic article on Blaise Pascal
- "But, be it rare or not, and let it be granted that (red.: Jesuit Father) Layman follows in this the example of Navarre, a circumstance on which you lay so much stress, is it not shameful that he should consent to such an opinion as that, to preserve a false honour, it is lawful in conscience to accept of a challenge, in the face of the edicts of all Christian states, and of all the canons of the Church, while in support of these diabolical maxims you can produce neither laws, nor canons, nor authorities from Scripture, or from the fathers, nor the example of a single saint, nor, in short, anything but the following impious synogism: "Honour is more than life; it is allowable to kill in defence of life; therefore it is allowable to kill in defence of honour!" What, fathers!" ... " What a subversion of all principle is here, fathers! And who does not see to what atrocious excesses it may lead? It is obvious, indeed, that it will ultimately lead to the commission of murder for the most trifling things imaginable, when one's honour is considered to be staked for their preservation- murder, I venture to say, even for an apple! You might complain of me, fathers, for drawing sanguinary inferences from your doctrine with a malicious intent" ... "For, after due representations had been made to them of the penalties they would draw upon themselves by their refusal to sign the Constitution, and the scandal it might cause in the Church, their reply was ....." (Letter XIV)
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- 1659:
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Jesuit Juggling: Forty Popish Frauds Detected and Disclosed, Richard Baxter (1615-1691)
- "The more cause have all Christian princes and states to be vigilant against those incendiaries: because they trust to war and violence, and build their kingdom on it, and therefore study it day and night. Because they have Jesuits all abroad continually upon the design: whose contrivances and endeavors are day and night to bring nations to their will, and to kindle divisions and wars among them to attain their ends." (p.310)
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- 1689:
- Second Treatise of Government, John Locke (1632-1704), (wikipedia article)
- 1698:
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Discourses Concerning Government, Algernon Sidney (1623– 1683)
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- 1756:
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A Vindication of Natural Society, Edmund Burke (1729–1797), (wikipedia article)
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- 1759:
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Candide, ou l'Optimisme [6], Voltaire (François-Marie Arouet) (1694–1778), (wikipedia article)
- "A Jesuit! a Jesuit! we shall be revenged; we shall have excellent cheer; let us eat this Jesuit; let us eat him up.” (ch.16)
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- 1783:
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The Definitive Treaty of Peace 1783, (wikipedia article)
- "signed on September 3 1783, and ratified by the Congress of the Confederation on January 14, 1784, formally ended the American Revolutionary War between the Kingdom of Great Britain and the United States of America that had rebelled against their rule starting in 1775."
- See also: [7], [8], [9]
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- 1790:
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Reflections on the Revolution in France, Edmund Burke (1729–1797), (wikipedia article)
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- 1798:
- 1816:
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Cobbett's Complete Collection of State Trials and Proceedings for High Treason and Other Crimes, William Cobbett (1762-1835), David Jardine, Thomas Jones Howell (his father was Thomas Bayly Howell)
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- 1835:
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Foreign Conspiracy against the Liberties of the United States ([10], [11], [12], [13]), Samuel Finley Breese Morse (1791-1872)
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Imminent Dangers to the Free Institutions of the United States Through Foreign Immigration and the Present State of the Naturalization Laws, Samuel Finley Breese Morse (1791-1872)
- "Returning to New York at the end of his grand tour of Italy in 1830 and 1831, Samuel F.B. Morse hurried into print to warn his countrymen of the insidious Papal designs on the United States. His essays were later published in two volumes: Foreign Conspiracy Against the Liberties of the United States and Imminent Dangers to the Free Institutions of the United Stales through Foreign Immigration. European despots, he told his thousands of readers, were trembling lest the democratic institutions of America inspire revolts on the part of their own peoples. These institutions could not be overthrown by arms, for the United States was too powerful; hence monarchs had allied with the Catholic Church, which Morse considered a giant religious despotism, to dispatch its servile minions across the Atlantic, disguised as immigrants, until they were numerous enough to seize control. “You,” he thundered to his fellow Americans, “are marked for their prey, not by foreign bayonets, but by weapons surer of effecting the conquest of liberty than all the munitions of physical combat in the military or naval storehouses of Europe.” Only by closing the gates to those immigrants, Morse believed, could America be saved." [14]
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Samuel F. B. Morse, His Letters and Journals: volume 1, volume 2 (published in 1914?), Samuel Finley Breese Morse (1791-1872)
- "The course of some of our journals on the subject of Popery has led to the belief that they are covertly under the control of the Jesuits. And let me say, sir, that the modes of control in the resources of this insidious society, notorious for its political arts and intrigues, are more numerous, more powerful, and more various than an unsuspicious people are at all conscious of.... "Mr. Y. falls into the common error and deprecates what he calls _religious_ controversy, as if the subject of Popery was altogether religious. History, it appears to me, must have been read to very little purpose by any one who can entertain such an error in regard to the cunningest political despotism that ever cursed mankind." (volume 2, chapter XXII: 1833-1836)
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- 1839:
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A text-book of Popery: comprising a brief history of the Council of Trent, and a complete view of Roman Catholic theology (earlier version), John Mockett Cramp (1796-1881)
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The Principles of the Jesuits, Henry Handley Norris (1771–1850)
- Is it Mary or Lady of the Jesuits?, Justin Dewey Fulton (1828-1901)
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- 1843:
- (to find) Subterranean Rome (translated from French, and quotes the Jesuit Extreme Oath of Induction), Charles Didier
- 1845:
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The History of Romanism: from the Earliest Corruptions of Christianity to the Present Time [15], John Dowling (1807-1878)
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The Wandering Jew, Eugène Sue (1804-1857)
- See also: Wandering Jew
- "Martin: Astor, Guggenheim, and Straus were three Jewish men who went down with the Titanic. Why do you focus so much of your attention on Astor? Phelps: John Jacob Astor was the wealthiest Jew in the world, some say the wealthiest man in the world. But he was, most definitely, the wealthiest Jew. He did not have more money than the Pope. But he was the wealthiest man in the world and he was using his wealth NOT in accord with the Jesuit Order. Now, later, his son, John Jacob Astor IV, became part of the money trust, which can be found on the Internet; and so the Jesuits had access, now, to the Astor fortune. They control it now. But, at that time, they got rid of Astor because they wanted his fortune, and they wanted to end his resistance to the establishment of a national bank. And they do this pursuant to The Secret Instructions, that they will take the fortunes of widows and other people who resist them. And that is what they did in Eugene Sue's The Wandering Jew. That story revolves around a French Protestant family, the Renneponts, and the Jesuits killing-off every member of the Rennepont family, so that they can have the fortune when it would be opened up at a certain day, at a certain time in Paris. And the man who held the fortune in trust was a Jew. So, that's why they got rid of Astor." Eric Jon Phelps interview
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A Popular History of Priestcraft in All Ages and Nations, William Howitt (1792-1879)
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- 1847:
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Letters on the Masonic Institution, John Quincy Adams (1767-1828)
- See also: Anti-Masonic Party, History of Freemasonry, "Files about Freemasonry"
- "That so many men, at so many separate points, should have acted in perfect concert in such business as they were engaged in, would scarcely be believed, without compelling the inference of some distinct understanding existing between them. That they should have carried into effect the most difficult part of their undertaking, a scheme of the most daring and criminal nature, in the midst of a large, intelligent and active population, without thereby incurring the risk of a full conviction of their guilt and the consequent punishment, would be equally incredible, but for the light furnished by the phraseology of the Masonic oath. Upon the first hasty and superficial glance, a feeling might arise of surprise that the frivolity of its unmeaning ceremonial, and ridiculous substitution of its fictions for the sacred history, should not long ago discredited the thing in the minds of good and sensible men everywhere. Yet upon closer and more attentive examination, this first feeling vanishes, and makes way for astonishment at the ingenious contrivance displayed in the construction of the whole machine. A more perfect agent for the devising and execution of conspiracies against the church or state could scarcely have been conceived." (p.8)
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- 1848:
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History of the Jesuits, 3 Volumes, Andrew Steinmetz
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The Jesuit Conspiracy: The Secret Plan of the Order [16], Abbate M. Leone
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- 1849:
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The Genuine Works of Hippocrates, Hippocrates (~460 BC – ~370 BC) ("Father of Western Medicine"), (translated by Francis Adams)
- See also: Hippocratic Oath, Vitalism, Qi, Prana, "The Medical Conspiracy" by Bill Schnoebelen (105 MB mp3 file), "Major Figures in the History of Medicine"
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- 1850:
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The Dealings of God, Man, and the Devil ("As Exemplified in the Life, Experience, and Travels of Lorenzo Dow , in a Period of over Half a Century, Together with His Polemic and Miscellaneous Writings, Complete. To Which is Added The Vicissitudes of Life, By Peggy Dow - with an Introductory Essay by the Rev. John Dowling."), Lorenzo Dow (1777–1834)
- "The Jesuits govern the Roman church, and turning the office of the pope, and the power of Icings to further their ambitious views, to gain ascendency and govern the world!" (p.147)
- "For the Holy Alliance are bent to destroy Representative Government from the world ; and the order of Jesuits to have but one Religion, as exemplified in their late production in favor of the Inquisition recently published in Boston. And these two powers have entered into a conspiracy against the Liberties of mankind throughout the world, which has been brewing and ripening for execution for about seventeen years—and exhibits a reason why the Kings of England and France have disappointed the people and betrayed their trust, by leaning towards the principles of the Un-Holy-Alliance." (p.155)
- "The whole world is divided into districts, which are lots, each agent having his field for research, and then communicate his information to Rome, according to the science of System of JESUITICAL economy" (p.155)
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- 1851:
- 1853:
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The Jesuits, An Historical Sketch, Edward William Grinfield
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- 1854:
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The Works of Thomas Paine [18], (this includes: "The Origins of Freemasonry") Thomas Paine
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History of the Jesuits: Their Origin, Progress, Doctrines and Designs [19], Giovanni Battista Nicolini
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Wide-awake! Romanism: its aims and tendencies, L. W. Granger
- Popery in its social aspect, R. P. Blakeney, D.D., LL.D
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- 1855:
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The rise of the Dutch republic: A history, John Lothrop Motley (1814-1877)
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The Crisis; or the Enemies of America Unmasked, J. Wayne Laurens
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- 1858:
- 1859:
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On Liberty, John Stuart Mill (wikipedia article)
- See also: Harm principle
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The history of slavery and the slave trade, ancient and modern, William O. Blake
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- 1860:
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History of the Waldenses, James Aitken Wylie (1808-1890)
- See also: Waldensians
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- 1865:
- 1869:
- 1872:
- The Papal System: From its origin to the present time, William Cathcart (1826-1881)
- See also: 1850: The History of the Papal States: From Their Origin to the Present Day, John Miley (any relation to the book above?)
- The Papal System: From its origin to the present time, William Cathcart (1826-1881)
- 1875:
- Manual of Romish Controversy (correct date?), R. P. Blakeney, D.D., LL.D
- 1876:
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The Papacy and Civil Power, R.W. Thompson
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- 1877:
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(to find) The rise, progress, and insidious workings of Jesuitism, James Aitken Wylie (1808-1890)
- "To what country of Europe shall we turn where we are not able to track the Jesuit by his bloody footprints? … How many assassins they sent to England to murder Elizabeth history attests. … Nor is it only the palaces of monarchs into which they have crept with their doctrines of murder and assassination; the very sanctuary of their own Popes they have defiled with blood. […] In the Gunpowder Plot we see them deliberately planning to destroy, at one blow, the nobility and gentry of England. To them we owe those civil wars which for so many years drenched with blood the fair provinces of France. They laid the train of that crowning horror, the St. Bartholomew massacre. Philip II and the Jesuits share between them the guilt of the Invincible Armada …. What a harvest of plots, tumults, seditions, revolutions, torturings, poisonings, assassinations, regicides and massacres, has Christendom reaped from the seed sown by the Jesuits!" [21]
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The Jews of Spain and Portugal and the Inquisition, Frederic David Mocatta (1828-1905)
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- 1878:
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The History of Protestantism [22] (24 books in 3 volumes), James Aitken Wylie (1808-1890)
- See also: History of Protestantism
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- 1879:
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The Grand Inquisitor, Fyodor Dostoyevsky (1821-1881), (wikipedia article, and part of The Brothers Karamazov)
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- 1880:
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The Doctrine of the Jesuits, Paul Bert (1833-1886)
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- 1883:
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The Engineer Corps of Hell; or Romes Sappers and Miners (this includes "Tactics of the Militia of the Pope or the Secret Manual of the Jesuits"), Edwin A. Sherman
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- 1886:
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Fifty years in the Church of Rome [23], Charles Chiniquy (1809-1899)
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- 1887:
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A history of the Inquisition of the Middle Ages (3 volumes), Henry Charles Lea (1825-1909)
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A short history of the English people (3/4 volumes), John Richard Green (1837-1883), (note: the author's background and objectivity is highly dubious!)
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The Master's Carpet, or, Masonry and Baal-worship identical, Edmund Ronayne (1832-?)
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- 1888:
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Washington in the lap of Rome, Justin Dewey Fulton (1828-1901)
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The Great Controversy, Ellen Gould White (1827–1915), wikipedia article
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- 1894:
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The Footprints of the Jesuits, by Richard Wigginton Thompson (1809-1900)
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- 1896:
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Black Pope a History of the Jesuits, Mary Frances Cusack (1829-1899) ("The nun of Kenmare")
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- 1897:
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Rome's Responsibility for the Assassination of Abraham Lincoln, Colonel Thomas Maley Harris (1817-1906)
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- 1900:
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Forty years in the church of Christ, Charles Chiniquy (1809—1899)
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- 1901:
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The History of the Jesuits in England, 1580 to 1773, Ethelred Luke Taunton
- (to find / scan) Die karikatur der europäischen völker vom altertum bis zur neuzeit, Eduard Fuchs (1870-1940) (two parts, containing many illustrations)
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- 1902:
- (to find) Struggles for Catholic Supremary in the Last Years of Queen Elizabeth, Martin S. A. Hume
- 1903:
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The Programme of the Jesuits, William Blair Neatby (1864-1938)
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The Jesuits, A Complete History of Their Open and Secret Proceedings From the Foundation of the Order to the Presort Time, Theodor Griesinger (translated by Andrew James Scott)
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The Jesuits in Great Britain, An Historical Inquiry into Their Political Influence, Walter Walsh (1857-1931)
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- 1904:
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Thirty Years in Hell: From Darkness To Light, Bernard Fresenborg (ex-priest)
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A history of the gunpowder plot: the conspiracy and its agents, Philip Sidney (1872-1908)
- See also: video: "V for the Vatican", Gunpowder Plot, "The Trials of Robert Winter, Thomas Winter, Guy Fawkes, ... for High-Treason, being Conspirators in the Gunpowder-Plot", gunpowderplot.parliament.uk (disinfo), V for Vendetta (Comic and Hollywood film)
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- 1906:
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History of the Inquisition of Spain: Volume I, Volume II, Volume III, Volume IV, Henry Charles Lea (1825-1909)
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- 1911:
- (to find) The Answer of Ernst Haeckel to the Falsehoods of the Jesuits (date correct?)
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Fourteen Years a Jesuit German version, 2 Volumes, Count Paul Von Hoensbroech (1852-1923)
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Slaves of the Godsmith, H. George Buss ("The Gadfly")
- 1913:
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A Candid History of the Jesuits, Joseph McCabe (1867–1955)
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- 1916:
- The Jesuit Missions: A chronicle of the cross in the wilderness, Thomas Guthrie, 1864-1936
- (to find) Uncle Sam or the Pope, Which?, Rev. L.L. Pickett,
- 1922:
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Romanism as a World Power, Luther S. Kauffmann
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- 1924:
- The Suppressed Truth about the Assassination of Abraham Lincoln, Burke McCarty
- See also: Abraham Lincoln
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Secret Societies and Subversive Movements [24], Nesta H. Webster (note: disinfo agent?. The book clearly promotes the anti-Semitic Vatican-Jesuit agenda, and at times even puts the Jesuit Order in a more positive light. See quote below.)
- See also: book review
- "In all these questions it is necessary to seek a motive. I have no personal interest in defending the Jesuits, but I ask: what motive could the Jesuits have in forming or supporting a conspiracy directed against all thrones and altars? It has been answered me that the Jesuits at this period cared nothing for thrones and altars, but only for temporal power; yet--even accepting this unwarrantable hypothesis--how was this power to be exercised except through thrones and altars? Was it not through princes and the Church that the Jesuits had been able to bring their influence to bear on affairs of state? In an irreligious Republic, as events afterwards proved, the power of the whole clergy was bound to be destroyed. The truth is then, that, far from abetting the Illuminati, the Jesuits were their most formidable opponents, the only body of men sufficiently learned, astute, and well organized to outwit the schemes of Weishaupt. In suppressing the Jesuits it is possible that the Old Régime removed the only barrier capable of resisting the tide of revolution."
- A Vanished Arcadia: being some account of the Jesuits in Paraguay 1607-1767, Cunninghame Graham, Robert Bontine (1852-1936)
- The Suppressed Truth about the Assassination of Abraham Lincoln, Burke McCarty
- 1928:
- Jesuit Enigma, Edward John Boyd Barrett (1883-?, ex?-Jesuit)
- 1932:
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The Story Of Religious Controversy, Joseph McCabe (1867–1955)
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- 1933:
- Hitler's Secret Backers, (author unkown, see below)
- "By Sidney Warburg it is suspect that the author using an alias name might have actually been James Warburg, son of Paul Warburg, founder of the Federal Reserve System and Kuhn Loeb partner. Some believe it could have been Sydney Weinberg of Goldman Sachs, proper age at the time to fit the message boy scenario".
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The Mass Psychology of Fascism ("Massenpsychologie des Faschismus"), Wilhelm Reich (1897–1957) (original Marxist edition, banned by the Nazis and the Communists) (Note: Reich's main accomplishment here is describing parts of the social and psychological process of the spread of "emotional plague", the mass neurosis - the symptoms of chronic physical obstruction of our biological functioning)
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The Revolutionary Movement: A Diagnosis of World Disorders, John Findlater (a Scottish Presbyterian scholar)
- Hitler's Secret Backers, (author unkown, see below)
- 1934:
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The Rumbling of the Apocalypse, Avro Manhattan (note: he was a Jesuit Temporal Coadjutor - certainly in his early years)
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- 1935:
- Rome stoops to conquer, Edward John Boyd Barrett (1883-?, ex?-Jesuit)
- "In theory, Catholic Action is the work and service of lay Catholics in the cause of religion, under the guidance of the bishops. In practice it is the Catholic group fighting their way to control America.", p.15 [25]
- "The effort, the fight, may be drawn out. It may last for five or ten years. Even if it last for twenty - what is twenty years in the life of Rome? The fight must be fought to a finish - opposition must be worn down if it cannot be swept away. Rome's immortal destiny hangs on the outcome. That destiny overshadows the land. And in the fight, as she has ever fought when battles were most desperate in the past, Rome will use steel, and gold, and silvery lies. Rome will stoop to conquer." - Id., pp. 266, 267.
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War is a Racket, Smedley Darlington Butler (1881–1940)
- See also: "Banker Coup to Remove FDR in 1933 was a Ruse"
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A History of Rome Down to the Reign of Constantine, Max Cary, D.Litt. (note: there are multiple later editions)
- Rome stoops to conquer, Edward John Boyd Barrett (1883-?, ex?-Jesuit)
- 1941:
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No Friend of Democracy: A study of Roman Catholic politics, their influence on the course of the present War and the growth of Fascism [26], Edith Moore (Preface by Joseph McCabe)
- See also: Clerical fascism
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The Vatican's Last Crime: How the Black International Joined the World-Plot Against Freedom, Liberalism, and Democracy, Joseph McCabe (1867–1955)
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How The Pope Of Peace Traded In Blood: The Red Pope, Joseph McCabe
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The Pope Helps Hitler to World Power: How the Cross Courted the Swastika for Eight Years, Joseph McCabe
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The Vatican Buries International Law: How Mussolini And The Yellow Brother Got Their Share, Joseph McCabe
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Hitler Dupes The Vatican: How The Papacy Was Sold In Austria, And Sold Civilization In Czecho-Slovakia, Joseph McCabe
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The War And Papal Intrigue: How The New Pope Talked Peace And Worked For War, Joseph McCabe
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The Pious Traitors Of Belgium And France: How The Preaching Of Peace Fizzled Out, And Why, Joseph McCabe
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The Pope And The Italian Jackal: How Mussolini's Invincible Legions Were Blessed, Joseph McCabe
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Fascist Romanism Defies Civilization: How The Pope Keeps To The Plot While The World Curses It, Joseph McCabe
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The Totalitarian Church Of Rome: Its Fuehrer, Its Gauleiter, Its Gestapo, And Its Money-box, Joseph McCabe
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The Tyranny Of The Clerical Gestapo: Catholics The Most Priest-Ridden Of All People, Joseph McCabe
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Rome Puts A Blight On Culture: The Roman Church, The Poorest In Culture And Richest In Crime, Joseph McCabe
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The Church The Enemy Of The Workers: Rome Is The Natural Ally Of All Exploiters, Joseph McCabe
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The Holy Faith Of Romanists: How Catholics Are Hypnotized About Their Weird Creed, Joseph McCabe
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The Artistic Sterility Of The Church: How The Church Stupefies Folk By Crude Emotionalism, Joseph McCabe
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The Fruits Of Romanism: The Catholic Church Does Far More Harm Than Good, Joseph McCabe
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Rome's Syllabus Of Condemned Opinions: The Last Blast Of The Catholic Church's Medieval Trumpet, Joseph McCabe
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The Psychology of Religion, Joseph McCabe
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- 1942:
- Facts of Faith, Southern Pub. Association
- 1943:
- Undercover - My Four Years in the Nazi Underworld in America (part1, part2), John Roy Carlson
- See also: "The Armenian Displaced Persons: A First Hand Report on Conditions in Europe" by John Roy Carlson
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Towards the new Italy, Avro Manhattan, (note: he was a Jesuit Temporal Coadjutor - certainly in his early years), (Preface by H.G. Wells)
- Germany's Master Plan: The Story Of Industrial Offensive, Joseph Borkin and Charles A. Welsh
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Facts and Fascism [27], George Seldes (1890–1995)
- Undercover - My Four Years in the Nazi Underworld in America (part1, part2), John Roy Carlson
- 1944:
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Behind the Dictators: A Factual Analysis of the Relationship of Nazi-Fascism and Roman Catholicism, by Leo H. Lehmann
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The Empire of "The City", (revised in 1985), E.C. Knuth
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- 1945:
- A History of Western Philosophy, Bertrand Russell (1872–1970)
- "The Jesuits acquired prestige by their missionary zeal, especially in the Far East. They became popular as confessors, because (if Pascal is to be believed) they were more lenient, except towards heresy, than other ecclesiastics. They concentrated on education, and thus acquired a firm hold on the minds of the young." (p.524)
- "The Church in the lifetime of Copernicus was more liberal than it became after the Council of Trent, the Jesuits, and the revived Inquisition had done their work." (p.526)
- A History of Western Philosophy, Bertrand Russell (1872–1970)
- 1946:
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Latin America and the Vatican, Avro Manhattan, (note: he was a Jesuit Temporal Coadjutor - certainly in his early years)
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- 1947:
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The Lies and Fallacies of the Encyclopedia Britannica: How powerful and shameless clerical forces castrated a famous work of reference, Joseph McCabe (1867–1955)
- (to find) The Secret of Catholic Power, L. H. Lehmann
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The Catholic Church Against the Twentieth Century, Avro Manhattan (2nd edition 1950), (note: he was a Jesuit Temporal Coadjutor - certainly in his early years)
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Democracy and Empire in the Caribbean: A Contemporary Review, Paul Beecher Blanshard (1892-1980)
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- 1948:
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The Vatican in Asia, Avro Manhattan, (note: he was a Jesuit Temporal Coadjutor - certainly in his early years)
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- 1949: