Freemasonic origins and infighting
John Robison | 09.01.2003 15:24
Freemasonic origins and infighting
"[in] the Mason Lodges there the most ignorant of all the ignorant, gaping for instruction from our deputies" [Weishaupt]
We cannot improve the world without improving women, who have such a mighty infiuence on the men. But how shall we get hold of them? ...We must begin with grown girls ... It may immediately be a very pretty Society, under the management of Ptolemy's wife, but really under his management. ['Minos']
"this man did not scruple to sell to the Empress of Russia an immense library, which he did not possess, for an enormous price, having got her promise that it should remain in his possession in Paris during his life. When her ambassador wanted to see it, after a year or two's payments, and the visitation could be no longer staved off, Diderot was obliged to set off in a hurry," [Robison]
"Oppressions of all kinds were at a height. The luxuries of life were enjoyed exclusively by the upper classes, and this in the highest degree of refinement; so that the desires of the rest were whetted to the utmost. Religion appeared in its worst form, and seemed calculated solely for procuring establishments for the younger sons of the insolent and useless noblesse. The morals of the higher orders of the clergy and of the laity were equally corrupted."
http://www.bilderberg.org/lucis.htm
John Robison
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http://www.bilderberg.org/lucis.htm
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