Sam Fisher (Data Drops) – Telegram
Sam Fisher (Data Drops)
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All the files that're in my file archive, it's like the library, but not! (you can keep these and there's no fines!)
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Forwarded from Jade Helm 15 Rehash (ned)
Bluesky Pro-Vaxxers
Go'n'o change the name to Blueski Sovietski
~add to your #bluesky #blocklist
Forwarded from ned
ned
The Origin of the Illuminati... Join ➣ @Fraud_Inc Join ➣ @Fraud_Inc_Chat Boost Chat ➣ https://news.1rj.ru/str/boost?c=1606126474
Cute but it neglected to mention that after the 1780s, George Washington warned the Illuminati were infiltrating masonic lodges in America.
That was 1799.
There's over a century more history between then and 1920!
As for rational thought, that's the cover, the front: their slogan was Ewige Blumenkraft!
"Eternal Flower Power!!" They were drug pushers! Next came the Opium Wars!
Decent enough intro video I guess for noobs.
Forwarded from ned
ned
The Origin of the Illuminati... Join ➣ @Fraud_Inc Join ➣ @Fraud_Inc_Chat Boost Chat ➣ https://news.1rj.ru/str/boost?c=1606126474
My bad

Pretty close

AI responses may confabulate and track hyperlink activity.

George Washington did not write a letter in 1799 warning that the Illuminati had infiltrated Masonic lodges; he died in December 1799
. However, in 1798, Washington exchanged letters with a Presbyterian minister, G. W. Snyder, on this very subject.
In his correspondence with Snyder, who had sent him a copy of John Robison's book Proofs of a Conspiracy, Washington acknowledged that he was aware of the "nefarious, and dangerous plan, and doctrines of the Illuminati" and was satisfied that they had spread in the United States.
Crucially, Washington differentiated between individuals who might hold these views and the Masonic institution as a whole. He stated:

"I did not believe that the Lodges of Free Masons in this Country had, as Societies, endeavoured to propagate the diabolical tenets of the first, or pernicious principles of the latter".
He believed "none of the Lodges in this Country are contaminated with the principles ascribed to the Society of the Illuminati".

He did, however, concede that "Individuals of them may have done it". Washington was a Freemason himself and a high-ranking officer in the Virginia Grand Lodge, taking his duties seriously. The letters confirm he was aware of the conspiracy theories circulating at the time but expressed confidence that American Masonic lodges were not involved in any plot to overthrow the government or religion, which were the primary goals attributed to the Illuminati. The original letters can be viewed on the Library of Congress and the National Archives websites.