Vanguard News Network
VNN Media
VNN Digital Library
VNN Reader Mail
VNN Broadcasts

Prev Previous Post   Next Post Next
Old June 29th, 2005 #1
blueskies
Banned
 
Join Date: Feb 2004
Posts: 5,392
Default Freemasonry and the American Revolution

Because it had been a Revolution! In 20/20 hindsight, the American “Revolution of 1776” had been a civil war between the Anglo-kike Atlantic;Britzog &USzog that ended in gentlemanly accord. [Read The Paris Peace Treaty of 1783!] Very little had changed. By way of comparison, the “Civil War” inaugurated the most radical changes in American history!

----------
http://web.archive.org/web/200107190...n/bk2a-2wl.htm

In 1754, two years before the outbreak of the Seven Years' War, (in America generally known as the “French and Indian War”), Benjamin Franklin had drawn up the “Albany Plan” to create a federal union of the Colonies under “one general government”:


“The [British] Crown was to appoint a President General to act as executive officer; 'the people' or their representatives were to appoint members of a Grand Council of Delegates. This central government was to control Indian affairs, declare war and make peace, raise and equip soldiers and levy taxes.”
John C. Miller
Origins of the American Revolution
Stanford University Press

How's that for a Constitution? This was the work of our great and illustrious Benjamin Franklin, whom the Pennsylvania Quakers hailed as “an American Patriot”, so eager to hand us over for a farthing. At the time, the British Crown was the titular head of St John's Lodge of Freemasonry. They were the “Tories”. The “Whigs” were the Lodge of St Andrew. In England, the situation is exactly reversed. The English Tories were the Lodge of St. Andrew, loyal to the Stuarts (Jacobins, from James I), while the English Whigs were the upstart Lodge of St. John (the Pretenders), who supported William, Duke of Orange, and the later Hanoverans. The discrepance will be described elsewhere.

The story that is unfolding is how the American Revolution had been co-opted by Freemasonic forces, originating from the Grand Lodge of St Andrew's, of what was later to become the Scottish Rite. I should point out that Freemasons have never been populists; to the contrary, the history of Freemasonry is a litany of the exploits of countless earls, dukes, viscounts, barons, marquises and kings. These are the same individuals who were behind the Highland Clearances and numerous other acts of enslavement and expropriation against their own people. They have never cared a jot for us commoners who, to them, are so much cannon-fodder. The Revolutionary War had been orchestrated by Freemasons acting on both the British and the American sides, and their ultimate objective had been to steer the rebellious colonists back into the “British System”.

Without getting lost in English history, it is necessary here to describe what we mean by the “British System”. At the dawn of the seventeenth century, when we see the first English colonies being established in America, there were serious threats at home rising to challenge the British aristocracy. The Anglican Church, which had long served to control the thoughts and behavior of the commoners, was losing ground to the new protestant sects of Presbyterians, Puritans and Quakers. The Roman Catholics, particularly in the north, remained a separate and threatening political force, always open to alliance with France and the Papacy. The English civil wars of the seventeenth century were essentially religious wars under the general authorship of Oliver Cromwell, who sought to establish the supremacy of Parliament over the English Crown. On the secular front, the populist movement of the Levelers was asserting the doctrine of natural rights and natural law as superseding the Divine Right of Kings.

.........
 
 

Share


Thread
Display Modes


All times are GMT -5. The time now is 04:22 PM.
Page generated in 0.05821 seconds.