-Caveat Lector-

Cliff Hume wrote:
>
> The April-May issue of  NEXUS magazine published an article,  The
> WingMakers, which goes into great detail about aliens living amongst us.
> Much more is covered on the internet at <www.wingmakers.com>
>
> Popular Mechanics, another of the many Council on Foreign Relations
> publications with the CFR bias, has a female alien on the cover of their
> July, 1999 issue, and informs us that the universe may be teeming with
> exotic life-forms.
>
> This month of September, 1999, the The Readers Digest with the same CFR
> socialist, one world government bias is sporting an article on aliens. Time,
> Life and other CFR publications usually lead the pack, so it is possible
> that they have already covered this ground. All of the CFR publications have
> been prepped to frighten us into their New World Order, and the alien thing
> was set up by a think-tank traced back to a study released in 1966 called
> Report from Iron Mountain. The study was commissioned three years previously
> by the Department of Defense under Defense Secretary, Robert S. McNamara
> (CFR). The former Canadian, CFR member, John Kenneth Galbraith inadvertently
> let the cat out of the bag and the Insiders have been trying to cover that
> boo-boo ever since.
>
> G. Edward Griffin's 608 page, The Creature from Jekyll Island at
> www.realityzone.com will tell you all that you need to know about money,
> banking, collusion, and many other extremely important things you should
> know before the year 2000 is hustled in. It might have a lot to do with
> saving your freedom or even saving your life.
>
> Report From Iron Mountain is covered on pages 516, 518, 521, 523-5, 533,
> 556, 558 and 560. Y2K was designed as a helper situation to create the chaos
> and confusion necessary to separate the uninformed and misinformed American
> people from what little freedom they once enjoyed. The sports, soaps, movie
> and other spaced out fans, if still in slumber land over the next four
> months are going to be in for a very rude awakening. Their criminal
> government has some very big plans in store for them - if they can pull it
> off. They intend to because they have spent hundreds and hundreds of
> billions of dollars for their scheming, planning and conniving, and they
> don't want all of those bad people on the internet throwing their game.
>
> Yours truly,
>
> Cliff Hume
>
> At 01:42 PM 9/1/99 -0700, you wrote:
> >http://caus.org/ca090199.htm
> >
> >------------------------------------------------------------------><TD
> WIDTH="85%" VALIGN="TOP">
> ><P>
> ><B>FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
> ></B>
> >
> ><P>
> ><B>CITIZENS GROUP HAS UNDENIABLE EVIDENCE OF "ET" INVASION AND
> >SUES FEDERAL GOVERNMENT AND ARIZONA FOR PROTECTION
> ></B>
> ><P>
> >SEPTEMBER 1, 1999
> >
> ><P>
> >PHOENIX -- In a continuing effort to end government secrecy surrounding
> >UFOs and contact with a non-human intelligence, Arizona attorney Peter A.
> >Gersten filed papers today in U.S. District Court requiring the Federal
> >government to protect the residents of Arizona from a "clandestine
> >invasion."
> ><P>
> >Gersten, the Executive Director of the Phoenix-based Citizens
> >Against UFO Secrecy, Inc. (CAUS), had filed an earlier lawsuit under the
> >Freedom of Information Act on January 22, 1999 against the Department of
> >Defense (DOD).
> ><P>
> >Today's precedent-setting legal initiative comes under Article IV,
> >Section 4 of the U.S. Constitution, which requires the federal government
> >to protect each of the fifty states against invasion.
> ><P>
> >CAUS is an Arizona activist organization dedicated to ending the
> >secrecy surrounding Earth's contact with an "extraterrestrial intelligence."
> >The organization, Gersten said, sent letters to the country's 50
> >Governors as well as Secretary of Defense William Cohen and Attorney General
> >Janet Reno requesting they take immediate action to protect United States
> >citizens against these intruders.  Only three governors have replied.
> ><P>
> >"It's outrageous that this threat is continually ignored," Gersten
> >stated.  "I can prove in a court of law, and beyond a reasonable doubt, that
> >we are in contact with another form of intelligence.  More importantly,
> >one aspect of this contact poses a threat to our safety."
> ><P>
> >"Arizona will be a test case," Gersten said.  He cites the reported crash
> >of an "unusual" craft in Paradise Valley in 1947, the Travis Walton
> >disappearance in Snowflake in 1975, the infamous "Phoenix lights" seen
> >throughout the state in 1997 and countless other reports during the past 52
> >years. "Arizona is definitely a targeted area for the clandestine
> >intruders," Gersten believes.
> ><P>
> >The CAUS legal papers contend that the intruders are conducting
> >nonconsensual physical acts including abductions, sexual abuse, assaults and
> >unlawful imprisonment upon the citizens of the United States.
> ><P>
> >CAUS is asking the federal court in Phoenix to compel both the
> >Federal government and the State of Arizona to initiate an immediate study
> >and investigation, and "to proceed to protect the citizens from the
> >intruders" which, according to Gersten," would restore the full measure of
> >independence, safety and security guaranteed by the federal government."
> ><P>
> >For the full text of the complaint, as well as material related
> >to it, visit the group's website at <A
> href="http://www.caus.org">http://www.caus.org</A> or contact Mr.
> >Gersten at (480) 609-9120
> ***************************************
> "Bard" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Subject: [freedomfight] Roots of Subversion by William H. McIlhany
>
> http://thenewamerican.com/tna/1996/vo12no20/vo12no20_roots.htm
> Sunday, August 29, 1999
> 20th Century Heroes
> Augusto Pinochet is being persecuted by the global elite and Marxist Left,
> not because of alleged crimes against humanity,
> but because he led one of the few counter-revolutions that succeeded in
> ousting a Communist regime.
>
> Vol. 12, No. 20
> September 30, 1996
>
> Roots of Subversion
> by William H. McIlhany
>
> Memoirs Illustrating the History of Jacobinism, by Abbé Augustin Barruel
>
> The years 1796 to 1798 saw the publication of two important presentations of
> evidence concerning an international conspiracy, then only decades old,
> which had devastated France and was threatening the entire civilized world.
> That conspiracy had coalesced into a continuing organizational structure
> with the founding of the Order of the Illuminati by Adam Weishaupt on May 1,
> 1776 in Ingolstadt, Bavaria.
>
> The conspirators in the Order came from the top levels of society, and their
> ultimate goal was the destruction of all existing religious and political
> institutions, all forms of traditional religious faith, and all governments.
> They were committed to a campaign of worldwide revolution to destroy the
> existing order. They hoped that the continuing organizational structure they
> established would eventually succeed in imposing on the world a "solution"
> to the chaos they had caused: a totalitarian world government -- a "new
> world order."
>
> Evil Exposed
>
> In 1785 the Elector of Bavaria, Carl Theodore, discovered the secret papers
> of the Illuminati, which revealed the evil plan. He published and
> distributed the papers to all endangered heads of state. The two important
> studies published from 1796-98 were substantially based on this primary
> source documentation.
>
> One of those works, Proofs of a Conspiracy Against All the Religions and
> Governments of Europe, published in Dublin, Ireland in 1797, was written by
> John Robison, a prominent scientist and professor at the University of
> Edinburgh. His work, which was originally circulated in Great Britain and
> THE NEW AMERICAN Republic, was reprinted in 1967 by Western Islands, the
> publishing arm of the John Birch Society, under the shortened title Proofs
> of a Conspiracy. It is still available in paperback (contact American
> Opinion Book Services at the above address).
>
> The second work, much lengthier and more detailed, is Abbé Barruel's Memoirs
> Illustrating the History of Jacobinism, the subject of this review. Born in
> France in 1741, Abbé Barruel was educated by the Jesuits and entered the
> Society of Jesus. During suppression of the Jesuits in France, he resided
> for some years in Moravia and Bohemia and traveled in Italy as a tutor for a
> young nobleman. In addition to Memoirs, he wrote several other books prior
> to his death in 1820, including his History of the Clergy During the French
> Revolution.
>
> Originally in separate volumes, Memoirs consists of four parts. The first
> two volumes, originally published in French in 1796, concern the
> anti-Christian and anti-monarchical conspiracy of 1796 and expose certain
> French and European philosophers of the early to mid-18th century,
> particularly members of the French Academy in Paris.
>
> To illustrate the vicious philosophical campaign against Christianity,
> Barruel focuses on the works of Voltaire. As for the anti-monarchical
> campaign, he examines the works of Montesquieu and Rousseau. Modern-day
> advocates of a limited constitutional republic who may wonder what is wrong
> with opposition to monarchy should keep in mind that the conspiracy which
> Barruel traced -- from philosophers whom he called the "sophisters of
> impiety" to the Illuminati -- targeted all religious and political
> institutions and forms of government, including the infant American
> Republic, and sought as the ultimate goal an international totalitarianism.
>
> Rise of the Order
>
> One of the principal weapons used by the sophisters of impiety, particularly
> Diderot, was the publication of the Encyclopédie beginning in 1751, and its
> eventual Supplement. The conspirators hoped that this work would become the
> standard reference for all learned and literate persons on virtually all
> subject matter. Barruel demonstrates at length that it was used as a
> comprehensive, subtle carrier of propaganda and indoctrination favorable to
> subversive strategy.
>
> The third part of Memoirs concerns the Illuminati. Therein Barruel presents
> in greater detail than Robison's Proofs of a Conspiracy the primary source
> documents captured from the Order. The rapidly growing influence of the
> Order in, and outside of, Bavaria is carefully traced both before and after
> the French Revolution.
>
> Barruel recounts the European freemasonic conference at Wilhelmsbad in the
> summer of 1782, at which Weishaupt's representatives recruited the
> leadership of French, German, and other European Grand Orient freemasonry
> into the Illuminati, thus bringing those bodies under the Order's control.
> Much evidence in Barruel's and other contemporary sources testifies to this
> fact. The leaders of the Illuminist French Grand Orient ran the Jacobin
> clubs and were responsible for planning and orchestrating all the major
> events of the French Revolution.
>
> In the final part of Memoirs, Barruel reviews the tragic success of the
> Illuminati's first experiment in subversive destruction, the French
> Revolution of 1789, from which France has never fully recovered. Barruel's
> review of this episode, along with historian Nesta Webster's outstanding
> 1919 work The French Revolution: A Study in Democracy, provide a fairly
> complete history of the Conspiracy's first attempt at organized subversion.
>
> Sounding the Alarm
>
> It would be hard to overstate the influence Robison's and Barruel's works
> had on events in America for several decades after their publication. In
> 1799, George Washington read Robison's Proofs of a Conspiracy, which only
> reconfirmed his awareness of the danger to our Republic from Illuminists who
> tried to bring revolutionary Jacobinism to our shores. Five years earlier
> Illuminist agents Genet and Fauchet had used front organizations
> ("democratic societies") to trigger the so-called "Whiskey Rebellion" in
> Pennsylvania. Only Washington's public exposure and opposition with armed
> troops stopped this early campaign of sedition without bloodshed.
>
> Regrettably, during Washington's Presidency his Secretary of State Thomas
> Jefferson was closely allied to the French agents behind the Whiskey
> Rebellion. Perhaps simply deluded by his idealism at this time, Jefferson
> unsuccessfully opposed Washington's efforts to stop the conspirators.
> Jefferson defended Weishaupt and referred to Barruel's Memoirs as the
> "ravings of a Bedlamite."
>
> Other prominent Americans did their best to warn the public of the
> Conspiracy's attempts, and they relied on Robison's and Barruel's works.
> They included Jedidiah Morse, author of early history and geography
> textbooks and the father of Samuel Morse; Yale University president Timothy
> Dwight; and Seth Payson, author of Proofs of the Real Existence and
> Dangerous Tendency of Illuminism (1802), which summarized Robison's and
> Barruel's works and included evidence from Morse of Illuminist efforts in
> America.
>
> President Washington and Jedidiah Morse were the outstanding American
> "alarmists" of their time, and they were attacked by their enemies just as
> members of the John Birch Society and other "conspiratorialists" are
> attacked today. Washington's and Morse's weapon was the truth, and Barruel's
> Memoirs and Robison's Proofs provided them with indispensable ammunition.
>
> Interestingly, some historical personalities very close to, and devoted to,
> the Illuminist conspiracy valued and relied on the accuracy of Barruel's
> Memoirs. Among them was the British poet Percy Shelley, who not only
> "treasured" his copy but marveled at length over its descriptions of the
> destructiveness he hoped to see occur. French socialist leader Louis Blanc
> used Barruel's evidence as the basis for linking the early communist
> movement to its Illuminist origins. Barruel's Memoirs were translated and
> published in all major languages.
>
> Of course, both Robison and Barruel were attacked by a few contemporary
> friends of the French Revolution, and have been attacked by orthodox
> historians ever since. Most of these criticisms are exercises in clarity of
> hindsight and are based on mistakes in translation or factual errors or
> omissions that always result when history is written chronologically close
> to the events. Anyone who has studied the major 19th and 20th century
> historians of the Master Conspiracy, as well as the primary source documents
> now available in reprint, can attest to the substantial accuracy of
> Robison's and Barruel's works.
>
> Some have noted a distinction between Robison's thesis and Barruel's.
> Robison correctly argued that the Illuminati invaded and captured
> continental European (not British or American) Grand Orient free masonic
> lodges in order to use them as tools for infiltration and revolution. On the
> other hand, Barruel argued that the Illuminati was a natural outgrowth of
> freemasonry in its tracing of a pre-Illuminati philosophical plot against
> altar and throne involving numerous French freemasons. Once again, students
> of the Master Conspiracy today enjoy the benefit of much more data and a
> much larger perspective.
>
> Crucial Reading
>
> The new one-volume reprint of Memoirs includes Barruel's complete text, as
> well as a fine introduction by Fr. Stanley L. Jaki. It does not include,
> however, a postscript written by English translator Robert Clifford, which
> was published at the end of volume four of the 1798 London edition. The
> postscript, entitled "Application of Barruel's Memoirs of Jacobinism to the
> Secret Societies of Ireland and Great Britain," provides another 50 pages of
> evidence concerning the Illuminists' efforts to organize sedition and
> rebellion.
>
> This reviewer cannot recommend too highly that any American who wishes to be
> well informed in the fight for freedom carefully read Memoirs Illustrating
> the History of Jacobinism. Barruel's impressive presentation provides
> thoughtful and penetrating insight not only into the events he reviews, but
> also into the strategies and tactics that the same Master Conspiracy that
> began as the Order of the Illuminati has employed ever since. Reading
> Memoirs will also provide one with added confirmation that the Master
> Conspiracy thesis advanced by British historian Nesta Webster and John Birch
> Society founder Robert Welch is overwhelmingly established by both logic and
> a physical mountain of evidence.
>
> But don't just take this reviewer's word for it. Consider the words of
> British statesman Edmund Burke, author of Reflections on the Revolution in
> France, who said of Barruel's Memoirs: "Certain we are, that no book has
> appeared since the commencement of our labours, which was more necessary to
> be read, and weighed attentively, by every person of any property, whether
> hereditary or commercial; every person holding any rank in society; and
> every person who has within him a spark of zeal, either for the honour of
> God, or the welfare of mankind."
>
>  © Copyright 1999 American Opinion Publishing Incorporated
> http://thenewamerican.com/tna/1996/vo12no20/vo12no20_roots.htm
>
> Bard

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