Anonymous
11/5/2025, 3:46:32 PM
No.520662743
[Report]
“Because Gelli was supposed to transform the “P2” lodge into an auxiliary structure, at the national level in Italy, of the “Three Eyes.” And its members, belonging to the highest political and institutional spheres, the army, the service sector, the economic and financial sectors, the media, etc., etc., were supposed to be, according to the plans of the Worshipful Masters, those who would prop up the authoritarian-elitist regime that was already prepared to be implemented in 1969, 1970, and 1974, through the coups d'état organized by the brothers Junio Valerio Borghese and Edgardo Sogno.” If Schlesinger hadn't intervened. Gelli's downfall was no accident. Moreover, and this is a rule about the back office that must be learned quickly: nothing in the rearguard of Freemason power happens by chance. In that famous year of 1981, when in Italy the (incomplete!) lists of the 962 members of the "P2" were discovered, causing an unprecedented political and institutional earthquake, another bitter civil war was being waged behind the scenes; and it was a particularly harsh, dirty, and wicked war. This time, those massacring each other were no longer the progressives and the conservatives: for years, the democratic brethren had been in full retreat, and the world stage, for almost fifteen years, had been in the hands of hyper-oligarchs led by that sort of tank that was the "Three Eyes" of Rockefeller and Kissinger. (This last sentence appears to be incomplete and possibly a fragment from a different source.) Its members become so powerful, so arrogant and invasive, that they are everywhere: from the Iranian Revolution to the Yom Kippur War, from the energy crises of the seventies to the new direction of communist China, so much so that even members of the other conservative Ur-Lodges begin to feel unbearable.
Anonymous
10/18/2025, 4:38:31 PM
No.18084363
[Report]
>Kissinger opposed the idea of a United States Holocaust Memorial Museum
>In 1985, he publicly supported President Ronald Reagan’s wreath-laying ceremony at a military cemetery in Bitburg, West Germany where members of the Waffen-SS are buried.
>“The emigration of Jews from the Soviet Union is not an objective of American foreign policy, and if they put Jews into gas chambers in the Soviet Union, it is not an American concern. Maybe a humanitarian concern.”
>Kissinger was irked by the concern expressed by American Jews about the fate of Soviet Jewry, calling the former “self-serving…bastards.”
>at a contemporaneous meeting of the Washington Special Actions Group, a government crisis task force, Kissinger grumbled, “If it were not for the accident of my birth, I would be antisemitic.” He added: “Any people who has been persecuted for two thousand years must be doing something wrong.”
>During a Vietnam War-era chat from October 1973 with Brent Scowcroft, Deputy Assistant to the President for National Security Affairs, Kissinger found American Jews and Israelis “as obnoxious as the Vietnamese.”
>In another transcribed telephone conversation from November 1973, Kissinger declared: “I’m going to be the first Jew accused of antisemitism.”
>Kissinger also mocked those who defended Jews, especially Israelis. One such target was presidential adviser Daniel Patrick Moynihan, whose pro-Israel stance evoked this comment from Kissinger: “We are conducting foreign policy. … This is not a synagogue.”
>one of Kissinger’s first actions as Secretary of State was to revoke the standard procedure allowing Jewish State Department employees holidays on Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur
>historian Gil Troy depicted Kissinger as a “conflicted” Jew and “German intellectual”