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September 8, 2025 60 mins

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This documentary continues its exploration into the hidden forces that shaped the 20th century. This segment investigates the proxy wars and ideological battles that served as a prelude and companion to World War II.

First, we delve into the brutal Spanish Civil War, a conflict that pitted Nationalists led by General Franco against a Republican government backed by international volunteers. It was a battleground where Fascism and Communism clashed, with the Catholic Church caught in the crossfire.

Next, the film uncovers the forgotten history of the Cristero War in Mexico, where thousands of Catholics rose up against the anti-clerical government of President Calles to defend their right to worship. Their battle cry was "¡Viva Cristo Rey!"—Long Live Christ the King.

The narrative then examines the alleged links between Freemasonry and occultism, citing Masonic texts that purportedly provide instructions for invoking spirits and making demonic pacts. Finally, it presents the theory that secret societies, like the "Brotherhood of Death," orchestrated the atomic bombing of Nagasaki—the heart of Japanese Christianity—as part of a larger esoteric agenda.


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(00:27):
None. The.

(01:39):
The. The Jewish bankers were

(02:05):
financing the Spanish Revolutionduring these revolutions, the
Catholic. Church.
Was always on the receiving. End and then we.
See the priests. The Catholic priests fighting.
Revolutionaries and the Spanish Revolution.

(02:35):
It began as any good dream should, with bursts of joy and
optimism. When King Alphonso the 13th
decided to allow elections, socialist and liberal
Republicans, anarchists and communists swept to overwhelming
victories, and the Second Spanish Republic was born.
But the flame of hope flickered out in just two years, amid the

(02:58):
poverty and unemployment of the Great Depression, conservatives
won the next election and rolledback many of the changes.
The left, incensed, countered with a general strike, but it
was shut down by the army in 1936.
Power swung back to the left when the Popular Front, a broad

(03:20):
coalition of liberal and socialist groups, eeked out a
parliamentary majority. The political divide quickly
became a chasm. The right, consisting of the
military, conservatives and the Catholic Church, feared for the
very survival of Spain. President Manuel Azhagna further

(03:42):
inflamed the situation as he began reinstituting changes from
1931 that hindered large farms and the church.
At the same time, anarchists began pushing Bolshevism and
some conservatives joined the fascist Falange Espanola.
Multiple militias formed on bothsides.

(04:03):
It was a battleground for idealists.
Violence escalated, culminating in a series of assassinations
that finally killed democracy. The civil war exploded with a
coup led by General Franco and the army.
Fighting in Spanish Morocco in the early part of the century,

(04:24):
Franco had made a name for himself as an.
Energetic and courageous officer.
And he was soon given command ofthe Spanish.
Foreign Legion. Going on to become that. 33
Spain's youngest general in 19. 31.
To avoid civil war, King Alfonsowent into exile.
Each side became determined not merely to defeat the other, but

(04:47):
to exterminate it. Churches were burned.
Priests murdered workers, liberals, leftists.
Were shot. Down.
The social upheavals of the Republic had led to a
progressive breakdown of law andorder.
In the countryside. Peasants hungry to own the land

(05:09):
they worked seized it. Some land owners had been killed
and others feared for their lives.
Peace was impossible, so we had to head for the hills.
If it's just not. Possible to live?
Then you have to. Find a different solution which.
Was the rising against the Republic?
In 1930. 6 Hitler had. Been in power for three years,

(05:33):
Mussolini had ruled Italy since 19. 22.
In Russia, Stalin had begun the show tries and purges of his.
Enemies immediately both sides sought and found gestures of
support from. Rival sponsors abroad.
In the Liberal Democratic world,individual sympathy for the
flight of the Spanish. Republic was widespread, but

(05:55):
practical help from governments was to prove a different matter.
The army rebels pleas, on the other hand, were soon answered.
2. Days after the Spanish uprising,
Franco. Had appealed to the fuel of her

(06:15):
help, Hitler decided to send. Not the few anti aircraft guns
and fighters that Franco had asked for.
But a full squadron of Juncker'stransport planes to airlift the
Spanish. Army of Africa from Morocco.
1500 of. These.
Troops were transported to Seville.
To begin their fighting passage to Madrid.

(06:36):
These cracked. Troops of the Spanish Army were
to play a decisive role in the war.
His help was later rewarded witha constant supply of Spanish
iron ore. The nationalists grew stronger,
Mussolini added 100,000 men and more firepower.
The undermanned Republic, without most of the army, had to

(06:59):
arm its citizens and turn to theCommunists of the Soviet Union
for help. Support also came from Mexico
and from an unexpected source. More than 40,000 volunteers from
53 nations joined the Republicans, including a group
from distant America known as the Lincoln Battalion.

(07:33):
70 years ago, 500 young Scots risked their lives by
volunteering to fight in anothercountry's war.
This group of men threw themselves head first into the
bloody struggle against fascism I thought never returned.
They were the Scots who fought Frankel.
The Spanish Civil War of 1936 to1939 was a conflict that gripped

(07:56):
Scotland. It was the defining moment for
the generation of Scots and for a time, the country's greatest
cause. Proportionately, Scots made a
greater contribution than any other nationality. 549 of those
volunteers came from Scotland. It was also illegal.
At the start of the war the British government signed up to

(08:17):
a non intervention agreement outlawing participation in
Spain's war and banning the saleof arms to the country.
The Scotland those men left behind was far removed from the
Scotland of today. It was a time of regular strike
action in century St. preachers and the belief in great causes.
Scotland stood out in Europe as both one of its poorest

(08:39):
countries and one of its most radical.
In February 1937 the newly formed British Battalion of the
International Brigades had arrived at Karma and been given
the task of stemming A fascist advance on the Spanish capital.
Over 100 Scots when involved in wading through the winter mud to
wage war. The Battle of Harama was an

(09:03):
almighty slog that set the faultlines for this most bloody of
conflicts. The ill prepared and under
equipped British battalion was left dangerously exposed in
Harama. In the first week of fighting
their entire machine gun companywas ambushed and captured by
General Franco's Army of Africa,the Moors.

(09:23):
Emboldened by the outcome of thebattle, the British battalions
leaders planned an offensive at Brunetti, to the West of Madrid
in the in baking July heat. Optimism soon turned to terror.
The British were slaughtered. Of 331 men present on the first
day of battle, 289 were killed, wounded or captured.
Scots suffered more than most. By the summer of 1937, the Scots

(09:51):
who fought Franco were demoralised and had witnessed
slaughter on an unimaginable scale.
The great 'cause they had pledged themselves to was ridden
with bleak reality. In Spain, their idealism had
been severely tested. They had found hell.
At the end of August 1938, the Scots who fought Franco were

(10:12):
holding firm in Catalonian mountains.
They remained deeply committed to the cause, despite monstrous
conditions and heavy losses. Yet their fate was set, not in
battle, but in the corridors of power.
In late September, the Republican government announced
the withdrawal of the International Brigades.
They believed that the move would force Hitler and Mussolini

(10:34):
to remove their troops from Spain.
It was a forlorn hope. Surviving Scots marched through
the streets of Barcelona as partof an emotional farewell parade.
The great Republican leader La Passionaria paid tribute to
their efforts, telling them you can go with pride.

(10:57):
It was an endless grinding war until Franco tried a new tactic.
Living under the constant threatof bombing took its toll, slowly
draining away the will of the people and the Republic.
In January 1939, Barcelona fell and Madrid soon followed in

(11:22):
March, bringing to a close the Spanish Civil War.

(12:27):
Via. De Los Cayidos in Spain, the
valley of the former, nearly half a century after the Civil
War. The men who created and.
Won that war have preserved its massive monument General Franco
called the uprising against the Republican government.
A crusade. A fight for Christian

(12:48):
civilization? It was for nearly three.
Years the world's moral arena. Inside this mausoleum today,
there is no hint of reconciliation.
This huge tomb for. Franco's men was hewn.
In a granite. Mountain by his defeated
enemies, Republican prisoners ofwar behind the altar, the

(13:11):
journalist Seymour himself. Franco.
As a soldier, Franco has served the Republic.
He was called a fascist. And died a dictator.

(14:09):
The. Music.

(16:02):
Mexican government during the persecution.
Any reduced act was condemned bythe law if they didn't fight in
that time. We wouldn't have the the.
Churches open. We forget what our grandparents

(16:22):
did for our faith. They were risking everything
just to go to Mass. They were risking their lives.
They were normal people and theywere called to participate in
the defense of their faith. And they?
Willingly say yes to that call. Part of the greater tragedy of
the Cristero movement is that this period of Mexican history

(16:44):
has been basically wiped away from the history books.
Mexico in 1926 is reeling from more than a decade of war and

(17:04):
violence. The Mexican Revolution of 1910
has failed to create lasting peace.
President Plutarco Elias Calles seeks to centralized all power
in the hands of the federal government.
He views the Catholic Church as an obstacle to his plan.
Mexico's 1917 Constitution imposes many restrictions on the

(17:28):
Catholic Church. However, these controversial
articles are not enforced until President Calles comes to power
overnight. Public worship is forbidden.
The government seizes churches and monasteries and exiles
foreign priests. Mexican clergy are banned from

(17:52):
wearing clerical garb in public and threatened with jail if they
criticize the Calle's government.

(18:45):
The Mexican government was violently.
Anti clerical. Not just closing.
Churches but shooting, hanging, murdering priests.
They were losing their way of life and at the end they were
forbidden to worship, so they came to our conclusion that they

(19:09):
had to. Resist.
For dignity, people fought in self-defense, but it was the
army against people with stones and bricks and nothing.
Many people in the clashes decided that there was no
solution but. The war.

(19:31):
For the next three years, Mexican Catholics wage a
guerrilla war against insurmountable odds.
They become known as cristeros, named after their battle cry,
Viva Cristo Rey, or Long live Christ the King.
When the Cristero revolt begins,few take the rebellion
seriously, least of all President Callez.

(19:55):
He writes to the French ambassador saying that without
Mass and the sacraments, MexicanCatholics will soon forget their
faith and the conflict would be over within a year.
He really believed that no more Catholic Church, no more
fanaticism of the masses, of theIndian masses and with his

(20:17):
hostility he he couldn't understand the strong religious
feeling of the Mexican people. Music.

(21:12):
So that young man lost all hope,all possibility for a brilliant
military career. He was working for cosmetics and
I I found a letter of university, a general of the
Mexican army, making perfume forthe lady.

(21:32):
What a shame, what a shame. Leaders of the National League
for the Defense of Religious Freedom asked General Gorostetta
to transform the disorganized Cristero fighters into a modern
army. OK, let's make an army.
Let's make a formidable army outof a group of ragtag peasants.

(21:55):
And what ranches out of a few game ranchers out of some tender
footed clergy who are. Trembling with the.
Thought of holding the weapon for the first time.
You want me to make a National Guard out of that?
Look at me. Do you have proper weapons?
No. You have an ammunition supply?

(22:15):
No. You have a central command.
No. How many is that?
Reno's. All you have is belief.
The. Belief will not.
Save them in that. Despite their limited means, the
Cristeros rally around Gorosteta's leadership and grow
in numbers and in strength. Their wives and daughters

(22:35):
smuggle weapons and ammunition to the front lines.
The only ammunition they got outside from the take in the
battlefield, it was a walk of woman.
Without a woman, you don't understand the Christiana.
Without a woman, you have no Christiana.
The Christiana at its best moment counted more than 40,000

(23:01):
rifles, 50,000 in small bands all over the country and 25,000
in the centre West of the country.
Under the supreme leadership of Gorocieta, the Cristero are
climbing. Today we're going to send a
message. We are going to send a message

(23:22):
to Caius and to the rest of the world that freedom, it's not
just for writers and for politicians and and for fancy
documents. Freedom.
Freedom is our home, our wives, our children, our faith.
Freedom is our lives and we willdefend it or die try it.

(23:50):
It is not only our duty to defend it, but it is our right.
You must remember that men will fire bullets, but God decides
where they land. They say that he.

(24:19):
Was there for the money or? He was there for power because
he wanted to. Become a president.
When my grandmother died, she. Left the letters.
That my grandfather wrote to her, my mother showed.
Them to me in the. Letters.
You can see that that. He really believed in, in, in

(24:42):
freedom for, for the faith. He discovered the real
Christianity in the face of the Mexican people and in the face
of his soldiers. The Knights of Columbus began

(25:06):
activities in Mexico in 19 O 5. By the 1920's the Knights were
very active throughout the country and as the Caius
government began to crack down on the Catholic Church, we were
also victims and martyrs. Many of our members lost their
lives. 2/3 of our councils were shut down by the government. 6

(25:27):
members who were priests have been canonized as martyrs.
In the United States, the Knights of Columbus reacted to
the situation immediately, passing a resolution at the
Supreme Convention condemning what Callas is doing in Mexico.
The Knights had also. Begun raising $1 million for the

(25:52):
purposes of educating. The American public about the.
Situation with the persecution. But the Knights efforts also
raise the specter of anti Catholicism in the United
States. Supporters of President CAIS
include the powerful KKK. This caused a lot of.
Criticism of the Knights. This is the 1920's.

(26:13):
The 1920s is when the Ku Klux Klan was at its peak.
In America. I found in the archives of
President Cais Telegram is the clan and they say to President
Cais, the Knights of Columbus are rising a fund of $1 million
for the Mexican Catholic Church.If you need it, we'll rise a

(26:36):
fund of $10 million for helping you in your valiant fight.
All these after three years helped to bring the government
to settle things so so they agreed to sign what is known the
Los Aregos in 1929. The 1929 peace agreement opens

(27:00):
the churches and restores religious freedom for Mexican
Catholics, but the constitution remains unchanged, allowing
future governments to once againturn the law against the faith.
For the Cristeros, the treaty was a death sentence.
Fearful of a resurgence, 500 Cristero leaders are rounded up
and executed. 5000 Others are purged in what becomes the

(27:24):
Cristeros final sacrifice for religious freedom.
History. Has approached the Cristero
revolt with silence. I think the example of the men
and women that participated in that movement, it's a great
example for us. It's a great lesson for us to

(27:47):
learn of how important religiousfreedom is in our time.
For me, it's more than only something that.
Happened 80 years ago I. Think this is something?
That really is the foundation. Not only of of Mexico, but I
think also of of the whole continent.
I don't know if that would have happened.
If these brave people. Wouldn't have stood up for their

(28:08):
beliefs. None.

(29:39):
None. Music.

(30:34):
Do you regard? Black magic as being purely
fictitious? Or is there some truth in it?
Some truth. 100% truth. There is nothing consists.
About that. Magic in any way whatever.
It is a fact. It is a fact.
Which has existed for several 1000 years.
I mean when? We talk about black magic, we
are talking about Satanism, necromancy, alchemy.

(30:55):
Witchcraft, the worship of Satan.
The worship of dark forces, whether it's voodoo, whether
it's something practiced in the Western world or the Eastern.
World, whether it's easily defined or not, easy to.
Find the order of the. Left hand path it.
Is basically the. Worship of the forms of.
Evil, evil, evil. When the Mason learns that the

(31:28):
key to the warrior on the block is the proper application of the
Dynamo of living power, he has learned the mystery of his
craft. The seething energies of Lucifer
are in his hands. Is there any direct evidence
from Masonic literature that they would provide information
or instruction to conjure Satan or his demons?

(31:53):
This book is The Builders. It was written by Joseph Fort
Newton in 1914. It's the classic which today is
often presented to newly raised master Masons.
The bibliography contains references to most of the major
books and authors which reveal the hidden meanings behind
Masonry. This is page 57.

(32:14):
It's a page in the chapter on the Secret Doctrine that says
perhaps the greatest student in this field of esoteric teaching
and method, certainly the greatest now living, is Arthur
Edward Waite, to whom it is a pleasure to pay tribute.
Waite, who until his death in 1945 was considered to be a
great student of the Secret Doctrine, wrote this Masonic

(32:37):
Encyclopedia, a new encyclopediaof Freemasonry.
Waite also wrote the Book of Black Magic.
On page 244 through 248 of the Book of Black Magic, we find
detailed instructions on how to conjure Lucifer.

(33:04):
This book was published by the authority of the Supreme Council
of the 33rd Degree. It has a bibliography listing
selected references in the back.It's known as a Bridge to Light.
Here's the title page, and we can see down at the bottom that
it was in fact written with the authorization of the Supreme

(33:26):
Council. Here's the selected references,
which are found on page 329 of ABridge to Light, and we notice
down at the bottom that they recommend Manly Palmer Hall's
1928 Secret Teachings of All Ages, an encyclopedic outline, a
Masonic, Hermetic, Kabbalistic, and Rosicrucian symbolical
philosophy. Is the other title.

(33:48):
This is the full page of the chapter heading on Ceremonial
Magic and Sorcery in Hall's book.
I'm going to do a close up of the the left hand top of the
page, Hall writes. Ceremonial magic is the ancient
art of invoking and controlling spirits by a scientific
application of certain formula. Down below he writes while the

(34:13):
elaborate ceremonial magic of antiquity was not necessarily
evil, Well, believe me, what Hall is talking about here is
conjuring demons, and it is extremely evil modus operandi
for the invocation of spirits. This is a rather nice way to say
the methods to be used to conjure demons.

(34:38):
Here is a drawing from the book showing a magician invoking a
demon. Notice that he's standing in a
magic circle, and on the upper left hand corner we've got the
foam at the Goat of Mendez. How would you go about
controlling a demon once it was invoked?
Well, the Secret Teachings of All Ages provides an example

(34:58):
pact, which is found on this page.
Civ. It reads.
At last a pact is agreed upon. It may read as follows.
I hereby promise the Great Spirit Lucifuge, Prince of
Demons, that each year I will bring unto him a human soul to
do with as it may please him, and in return Lucifuge promises

(35:21):
to bestow upon me the treasures of the earth and fulfill my
every desire for the length of my natural life.
If I fail to bring to him each year the offering specified
above, then my own soul shall beforfeit to him.
And it's signed. The infigate signs, the pact
with his own blood. This is the lost keys of

(35:46):
Freemasonry. On page 57, Hall writes.
The Master Mason, if he be trulya master, is in communication
with the unseen powers that movethe destinies of life.
If he be truly a master is in communication with the unseen
powers that move the destinies of life.

(37:03):
The. France once is the Uni Margus.
Sets the moon is across the comfort of Enthusiitai.
Side teams in atmosphere triangle.
Monetary for Gangnon when? It's up here.

(37:23):
Tunics kind. Of as this eyeless side theme
land mesic fellow. You know, I've said a

(38:08):
Freemasonry, it's harmless in myview.
And the founding of the United States of America was a Masonic
experiment, and that was the that was the pinnacle of its
achievement. And there's no secret gender and
there are no secrets. And all these people that accuse
Freemasonry of being of having asecret agenda.
Rather deluded. I've now had to change my mind
and confess I was wrong. And there is an agenda which

(38:31):
appears to be immensely powerful.
And I think they see it as the fulfilment of the 3000 year
mission from the time of Solomon.
But the really scary bit was when we realized that the
Pentagon is Stonehenge rebuilt. And the man, the man that

(38:53):
designed it was president of theUnited States of America at the
time and just about to take his country in into the Second World
War. And they had to build the
Pentagon quickly. And they were building it
somewhere else. And he said, want it here and I
want the middle of it here and Iwant it looking like this.
And he actually gave the design to the architects and he's built
it following the instructions that are in the 32nd, 3030° of

(39:17):
Freemason, which is about defence around the whole
building was structured 25 timesthe size of Stonehenge.
But every corner, every wall follows the patterning.
They understood it. What exactly what they're doing
every junction, every every monument at the intersections,
everything about the structure was originally designed to

(39:41):
follow to the millimetre these using these ancient
measurements, megalithic units, megalithic yards and seconds of
Arc. Franklin Delano Roosevelt was a
bit of an amateur architect himself, but for him on such an
important thing when the army said there isn't time, we can't
move it and he insisted to be put in a place it was called
Hell's Bottom. It was just an absolute horrible

(40:04):
place where they had to drain riverbank and move marshes and.
And it had to be built at some speed because they knew they
were going to war. But it had to be in that exact
position to have this juxtaposition with this chamber
and the the centre of the capital.
And it had to be at that angle. And it had to have the five

(40:26):
walls because that's what's rotated in the in the Scottish
Rite. And the walls within the walls
and the size of them had to be exactly as they are because they
are the megalithic dimensions that we find in the 6000 year
old henges across here in Europe.
And the chances of all these things being done in 1941 by

(40:46):
accident by accident are non existent.
And the words spoken in the 32ndand 33rd degrees describe
exactly what happened. They, they, they were building
this structure to win the war that was going to turn the world

(41:07):
into their oyster because they were building the New Jerusalem,
because these people were originally Jewish priesthood
according to the rituals of Freemasonry.
They describe how they they won the direct destruction of the
temple to place in 70 AD when Titus and the Roman troops
destroyed it and they lost the war. 1.3 million Jews lay dead,

(41:28):
priests escaped to Europe. And this is all explained in
Sonic Ritual, which at one time I would have thought was a
fanciful story. It was actually totally fit.
And there as they moved northernFrance, they met the the
Normans, the north people who'd come down from Scandinavia,
who'd got knowledge of the original structures that were

(41:48):
that were built because they were the builders.
And they realized that they needed to work together.
And for the last 1000 years theyhave been working together.
I mean. The reason we're given?
Why America entered World War? 2 is because on.
December 7th. Later the.
Japanese attacked Pearl Harbour.They.

(42:09):
Knew what they were doing then. Yep, there are some funny funny
bits in there. Another awkward one which almost
don't. I don't can't work out, don't
like think about too much. From the centre of Washington
DC, Exactly 3 megalithic degrees, that's three 366 of the

(42:33):
Earth's surface takes you to thewestern tower of the twin
towers, to the millimetre. And you try and link out
anything else by any means and nothing else works at all.

(42:55):
And of course it could be coercions, but it's a very
strange one, especially given the the timing.
I certainly cannot buy personally conspiracy theory
that the US military or political people were involved
in the in the thing, but it's very odd.

(43:18):
I guess what I'm alluding to there as well, obviously.
Is that? They were.
They were beginning. The building on the Pentagon.
Because they knew they were entering the war.
You. Know but.
But the reason for them to entering the war didn't come
until later. Sure.
My understanding is that the Americans had put the Japanese
into a a terrible economic painted them into a corner where

(43:41):
that's right. So certainly the powers that be
at the highest level probably knew all this.
If these people were driving forthe war, it's possible that they
just foresaw the war coming and that they hadn't set out to
'cause it, per say, not at leastnot deliberately to 'cause it.

(44:04):
That's what I like to think anyway.
That's what I like to think, anyway.

(45:36):
None. To understand where it came
from, we have to go back to the 11th century.
At that time, the Church was sending thousands of men as
crusaders to recapture the Holy Land and in particular
Jerusalem, which had fallen intoMuslim hands.
Now who were these men? These crusaders?
They came from all walks of life.

(45:57):
The one thing they had in commonwas their belief in the Catholic
teachings. However, when these men
travelled to the Middle East, they were suddenly exposed to
many different beliefs and spiritual teachings that they
had never heard before. These teachings came from Judaic
and Islam, mysticism, they came from Egypt, from Greece, and
even from far away places like India.

(46:18):
They also began to hear different interpretations of a
familiar biblical text, things they had never heard in their
church. One particular passage stood
out. It was a story of the snake
tempting Eve with the apple. The Catholic Church had taught
them that the snake was Lucifer or Satan, who deceived Eve by

(46:39):
promising that if she would eat from the forbidden tree, she
would become like God. Suddenly these men were
introduced to a very different interpretation.
They heard that Lucifer was not evil or Satan, but the God who
wanted to save and educate mankind.
In truth they called him the light bringer, the real God, and

(47:00):
that Yahweh or I, don't I in theBible was in actuality the
Devil, the suppressor of mankindbecause he didn't want Eve and
Adam to know their true identity.
This teaching became the famous Luciferian doctrine.
Now when these men returned homefrom the Holy Land, they
continued talking about these new ideas and interpretations,

(47:20):
but they knew they could only doso under stricter secrecy, as
the Church would torture and kill anybody who would question
or challenge the teachings and authority.
This eventually led to the birthof many secret societies, most
famously the Templars, the Rosencrucian and the various

(47:43):
Masonic orders. These very mixed teachings from
many different occult traditionswere secretly studied eventually
and wrapped in rituals and protected by gruesome and blood
curdling oaths that the members had to swear to ensure secrecy.
But everything changed in the year 1888 when the founder of
the Philosophical Society, Madame Blavatsky, made most of

(48:06):
these teachings public in her famous book The Secret Doctrine.
Central to Madame Blavatsky's Stitchi was the Luciferian
doctrine. The 1st edition of a book stated
that Lucifer is the only God forour planet.
Another famous person was Alice Bailey who founded the Lucifer
Publication Company in 1922. And then there was the well

(48:29):
known science fiction writer HG Wells who also published a book
called The New World Order in 1940.
With this book, he promoted a world government and a secular
world religion. But it does come with a hefty
price. Anybody who aligns himself with
this God of the world to obtain riches, power, fame, and so on,

(48:55):
enters the Faustian bargain. Chances are they will become his
servant after their physical death.
Such energies are never given for free.

(49:25):
To put it carefully, most of these people followed a not very
mainstream religion. So you have Catholics,
Protestants, all sorts of religions.
These people, most of them were Luciferians.
And then you can say religion isa fairy tale, God doesn't exist.

(49:46):
None of that is real. Well for these people it is
truth and reality and they servesomething immaterial, what they
call Lucifer. And I also was in contact with
those circles, only I laughed atit because to me they were just
clients. So I went to places called

(50:06):
Churches of Satan. So now we are talking about
Satanism. Yes.
So I visited these churches justas a visitor drop by and then
they were doing their holy mass with naked women and liquor and
stuff and it just amused me. I didn't believe in any of this

(50:28):
stuff and was far from convincedif any of this was real, it was
just a spectacle. Yes, in my opinion the darkness
and evil is within the people themselves.
I didn't make the connection yet.
So I was a guest in those circles and it amused me greatly

(50:49):
to see all those naked women andthe other things.
It was the good life. But then at some point I was
invited, which is why I'm telling you all this, to
participate in sacrifices abroad.

(51:22):
That was a break. That was the breaking point.
Kinder. Children, you were asked to do
that. Yeah.
Yes. And I couldn't do that.
Would you like to stop for a moment, by the way?

(51:43):
No. And then I started to slowly
break down. I lived through quite a lot as a
child myself and this really touched me deeply.
Everything changed, but that is the world I found myself in.

(52:11):
And then I started to refuse assignments within my job.
I could no longer do it, which made me a threat for them.
Of course. I was no longer capable of
functioning optimally. My performance started to shake
and I had to refuse tasks I had not participated.
The purpose of the whole thing eventually in that world is that

(52:36):
they have everybody in their pocket.
You need to be susceptible to blackmail, and blackmailing me
proved to be very hard. If I look back on it, they
wanted to do that through those children and that broke me.
Is that you are not telling me something new.
What they also do in politics. If you Google this, you'll find

(53:01):
enough worldwide witness accounts to know this isn't a
Walt Disney fairy tale. Walt Disney for how?
Cheers. Unfortunately, the truth is that
worldwide they have been doing this for thousands of years.
I once studied theology and evenin the Bible you find references
to these practices with Israelites, including the

(53:25):
sacrificing of children. So this is pertinent.
All this made me believe becauseI realized there was more to
life than meets the eye. There is a whole invisible
world. It is real.
You really do talk about a dark force and a manifestation of
light. Now I am become death.

(54:08):
The Destroyer of Worlds. On July 16th, 1945, in the
Granado del Muerto Desert in NewMexico, the first atomic bomb
was detonated. Witnessing this event were
members of the Manhattan Project, the Los Alamos Director

(54:31):
Robin Auberheimer, Test DirectorKenneth Bainbridge, and many
other top level scientists and military personnel.
One of the world's oldest and largest secret societies seeks
to destroy the Catholic Church. This true story of what happened
on August 6th and August 9th, 1945 begins with a top secret

(54:55):
meeting on September 13th, 1942,which took place roughly 75
miles north of San Francisco. The meeting place, known as the
Bohemian Grove, is a woodland hideaway owned by the
Brotherhood of Death Front called the Bohemian Club.
The Bohemian Club serves to provide an exclusive location

(55:17):
where multiple Brotherhood of Death secret societies can meet
and participate in bizarre occult ceremonies.
A key ritual sacrifice, known toparticipants as the Cremation of
Care, occurs annually in July. The Bohemian Grove has been the
epicenter for many meetings heldby high-ranking Brotherhood of

(55:37):
Deaf agents. Foremost among the attendees of
the September 1942 meeting were the members of the S1 Executive
Committee, led by an agent of the Brotherhood named Vannevar
Bush. Although it would seem that the
S1 Committee were the ones responsible for the bombs, there
was a much more powerful but unseen group that controlled

(55:58):
them. One of the top men in this group
was Bernard Baruch. Since the early 1930s, members
of the Brotherhood of Death havebeen meeting at the Bohemian
Grove to make their plans to start a Second World War.
In control of these men was Baruch.
By the early 1940s, with the Second World War now underway,

(56:19):
Baruch and other secret society members loyal to the Brotherhood
of performing their daily roles as important political figures
had started to fine tune their plan for the use of the atomic
bomb. Bernard Baruch played a behind
the scenes role in ensuring agents serving the Brotherhood
were in key atomic bomb targeting related positions.

(56:40):
Unknown to most people in the United States and the Western
world in general is the fact that in 1945 Nagasaki was the
center of Christianity in Japan,with Oppenheimer expressed in
shock about Nagasaki. Edwin Reischauer, AUS Army
intelligence expert on Japan serving on Oppenheimer's team,

(57:01):
was also falsely credited with having a deciding role in
selecting Nagasaki. However, as the handcuffs of
secrecy were eventually removed after the war, Reischauer
revealed in his autobiography, as did General Leslie AM Groves
in his book, that it was Secretary of War Henry Louis
Simpson who made the decision todestroy Nagasaki.

(57:25):
Stimson was initiated into the Skull and Bones Secret Society
and graduated from Yale in 1888.In 1945, he was a key leader in
the Brotherhood of Death. The Brotherhood of Death leaders
understood the marketing principle called the Law of
Leadership. This marketing principle states

(57:47):
that people remember the first event in a new category and pay
less attention to the second event in a new category.
Understanding this principle is critical for understanding why
Hiroshima, by being first, was actually a diversionary target.
William Lawrence would write after Nagasaki was destroyed
quote Destiny chose Nagasaki as the ultimate target.

(58:10):
End Quote. His choice of the word destiny
is highly significant because inthe Brotherhood of Death
religion, destiny is used in literature to communicate among

(58:30):
insiders their active role and involvement.

(59:00):
None. The.

(59:47):
Many. Pharisees belong to the Jewish
occult group called the Cabal orthe Satanic.
Through and through, we. Showed how these Pharisees hate
Christ so eminently once we understand that the Pharisees of
Christ Day was involved in a satanic secret society.
We can understand how they the Jews.
Could hate them so much. And a lot of them have their

(01:00:11):
little subcultures under them called the Freemasons.
Of the world. The Freemasons of the world.
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