Copyright (c) 1998 - Ingrid
A. Rimland
March 5, 1998
Good Morning from the Zundelsite:
Those of us who get a lot of literature pertaining to the various shenanigans
of the New World Order read articles about Freemasons frequently. I know
a doctor who is a devout Freemason, and when I broach that subject with
him and try to tell him of the dangers of Freemasonry, he always laughs
at me.
He says that he goes to their meetings, knows everything that might be going
on - and nothing could be farther from the mark than harmless people wanting
to do good now being tainted with the brush of evil.
I am sure that he is right - about the level of Freemasonry he is allowed
to see. Secret societies have always constructed around them the aura of
respectability, and what is hiding underneath is left for us to guess.
It seems that some Brits are now guessing.
Here is yet another segment from Ernst Zundel's March "Power"
letter, titled "British Freemasonry under surprise attack by Parliamentary
Committee":
In what can only be called astonishing developments - moves
tantamont to a bloodless revolution - are taking place in England against
the real and mostly unelected rulers of England. 340,000 British Freemasons
are currently under scrutiny - especially those in the police and the judiciary.
Remember: I was charged and tried in court for seven weeks in 1983-1985
because I had written a 4-page pamphlet alerting the leadership of the Arab
world to the role of politicized Freemasonry in the Western world in corruption,
revolutions, and politics generally. At the time, many of my supporters,
who were Masons - some in the police forces - were critical of me, and I
lost some support because of my stance over the years.
My view simply is: if all they want is to build Shriner hospitals or do
good deeds, why all the secret handshakes, passwords, weird rituals etc.?
In light of the developments cited below, these critics might possibly reconsider
their views, based on material in a recent article by Richard Ford, of the
London Times, Feb. 20, 1998, titled "Head to head at the commons":
"The leaders of Britain's Freemasons were locked in a struggle
with MPs last night after being ordered to lift the cloak of secrecy surrounding
their organization and name members allegedly involved in a series of police
scandals.
"The United Grand Lodge of England risks being charged with contempt
of Parliament if (it) refuses to produce the information, which the Commons
Home Affairs Select Committee demanded months ago.
"The move, at the end of an acrimonious session of the committee, is
the second challenge to the secrecy of the movement in two days. On Wednesday,
Jack Straw said that Masons working in the criminal justice system would
have to be registered.
"The Home Affairs Select Committee had asked the Grand Lodge last summer
to identify which of 161 people involved in a series of notorious police
inquiries - including the Birmingham pub bombing and the John Stalker investigation
- were Masons. The Lodge, which says it has found only ten possible Masons
on the list, refused and yesterday the committee lost patience and took
the rare step of issuing a formal order.
"That decision was said last night to demonstrate a "sea change"
in attitudes towards Freemasonry. Martin Short, author of Inside the Brotherhood,
said: "The idea that a parliamentary committee should be calling the
Masons to account in quite this preemptory manner is astonishing. If you
go back thirty, tweny or even ten years, it is inconceivable this would
have happened. This shows that a huge amount of public concern that has
existed for maybe 100 years has finally come out."
"There are 340,000 Freemasons in England and Wales, and their influence
reaches inside the Royal Family. (...)
"The committee's decision came after an hour of angry questioning during
which both Mr. Mullin (select committee chairman) and Commander Michael
Higham, the Grand Secretary of the United Grand Lodge, came close to losing
their tempers.
"Mr. Mullin said that 96 of the 161 names on the list presented to
the United Grand Lodge were former members of the West Midlands Serious
Crime Squad, which was disbanded in 1989 for corruption.
"About 60 - including some journalists - were involved with the investigation
that led to the wrongful conviction of the Birmingham Six. (...)
"Commander Higham accused MPs of conducting a "fishing expedition"
and complained that the events under consideration dated back to the Seventies
and Eighties. "I rather think the whole thing is pretty academic. If
it was a recent case of bad police work or a miscarriage of justice, we
would be dealing with the police authority, not this committee," he
said.
"Mr. Mullin retorted that 30 convictions had been overturned as a result
of the Serious Crime Squad's activities. The committee had been told by
police officers - including Masons - that Freemasons had operated within
the squad as "firms within firms'. (...)
"Commander Higham went on to say that there was a feeling among Freemasons
of "impending persecution" over government plans for registers
of members working in the criminal justice system, and there was a good
deal of anger about the slur of their integrity. 'We know we have a few
bad apples, the rest of ordinary Freemasons are decent chaps," he said."
Amazing stuff! It makes me wonder if I have not been the
victim of the same forces in Canada? After all, decent, competent, hard-working
police officers, through diligent detective work, identified, found and
virtually delivered the terrorist bombers on a silver platter to the higher-ups-and
nothing happened! These thugs are still free!
They have not been charged, not been tried; they roam the streets freely!
Is there a conspiracy? You be the judge!"
(Ernst Zundel)
Thought for the Day:
"He who gains the most advantage from a crime is the one most likely
to have committed it."
(Seneca)
Comments? E-Mail: irimland@cts.com
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