Think about how far back presidential candidates were accusing each other of being Freemasons, etc. I know that’s politics, but it’s probably based in a whole lot of reality. …. This stuff ain’t new. We just aren’t used to taking a big picture perspective on these matters. Why? How hard is it to control a few major industries or even countries e.g. w/ banking & currency (the fed reserve)? Ask the Rothchilds…..


Conspiracy Theories Abounded in 19th-Century American Politics
Rumors of secret alliances, bank deals, and double-crossings were rampant in early American elections
https://www.smithsonianmag.com/hist...9th-century-american-politics-180971940/

Bunch of pawns ultimately take the heat and the fall but the fire behind it all still burns…. How
far are they willing to go? Who’s their daddy? A foundation built on lies. Personally, Im over it.

Quote
“ Jackson won—and conspiratorial rhetoric remained ever-present throughout his presidency. In the run-up to the 1832 election, the national organization of Freemasonry drew conspiracy theorists’ attention. Spurred on by the murder of a New York Mason named William Morgan, who had threatened to disclose the fraternal order’s secrets, an Anti-Masonic political party had emerged during the 1828 election. Frequently repeated accusations that Freemasonry was secretive and elitist reflected larger concerns about the ways in which the ruling elite undermined the nation’s democratic institutions through corruption. And for the Anti-Masons, Jackson was no better than Adams; in their view, the Tennessean’s promise of “rotation of office” was simply cronyism.

Four years later, the Anti-Masons had gained enough supporters to run William Wirt for president against the Democratic incumbent Jackson and the National Republican candidate Henry Clay. During the 1832 campaign, they accused Freemasons of a number of transgressions beyond Morgan’s murder, including subversion of free speech and democracy. Rhode Island Anti-Masons, for example, warned that Freemasons were “darkening the public mind” by attempting to quash public criticism of their organization in the state’s newspapers. Vermont’s William Strong charged the Democrats with following the Masonic dogma of “the end justifies the means” to elect Jackson in 1828 and secure government patronage for party members.”

https://www.smithsonianmag.com/hist...9th-century-american-politics-180971940/

Last edited by Anthony C.; Wed Dec 20, 2023 4:34 PM.