Anonymous ID: 52841e April 16, 2018, 12:58 p.m. No.1067792   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>1066903

>'frankists' among the founding fathers (esp. Jefferson).

 

Bullsh!t! NICE TRY, BUT YOUR EXPOSED, CLOWN!

 

Jefferson, like all men, certainly made mistakes (e.g. supporting slavery in the South for material gain), but his contribution to humanity, by authoring the DECLARATION OF INDEPENDENCE far outweighs the material sins that he later regretted.

 

Just because he defended Wishaupt in a letter to Madison doesn't mean he knew of or condoned the highly coveted occult satanic mission of the SABBETEANS to infiltrate everything GOOD in the world and destroy it from the inside out.

 

excerpt of Jefferson's letter

 

"Wishaupt [sic] seems to be an enthusiastic Philanthropist. He is among those (as you know the excellent [Richard] Price and Priestley also are) who believe in the indefinite perfectibility of man. He thinks he may in time be rendered so perfect that he will be able to govern himself in every circumstance so as to injure none, to do all the good he can, to leave government no occasion to exercise their powers over him, & of course to render political government useless…"

 

"As Wishaupt lived under the tyranny of a despot & priests, he knew that caution was necessary even in spreading information, & the principles of pure morality.… He proposed to initiate new members into his body by gradations proportioned to his fears of the thunderbolts of tyranny…"

 

"This has given an air of mystery to his views, was the foundation of his banishment, the subversion of the masonic order, & is the colour for the ravings against him of Robinson, Barruel & Morse, whose real fears are that the craft would be endangered by the spreading of information, reason, & natural morality among men…"

 

Thomas Jefferson, letter to Reverend James Madison (31 January 1800).

 

BUT THE MOST CONCLUSIVE EVIDENCE THAT JEFFERSON WAS NOT A ROTHSCHILD SABBETEAN WAS THAT HE WAS AGAINST CENTRAL BANKS, CORPORATIONS, AND MONOPOLIES, ALL OF WHICH ARE CRITICAL SACRAMENTS IN THE ROTHSCHILD WORSHIP OF MAMMON.

Anonymous ID: 52841e April 16, 2018, 1:24 p.m. No.1068052   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8068 >>8113 >>8119

>>1067815

>GOOGLE "Benjamin Franklin bones basement house Britain"

 

LOL! THANKS FOR PROVIDING THE SILVER BULLET WHICH DESTROYS YOUR RIDICULOUS CLAIM. Q WAS RIGHT. YOU CLOWNS ARE STUPID!

 

BACK TO SHILL SCHOOL FOR YOU

 

"Enter one William Hewson, husband of Mary "Polly" Stevenson, the daughter of Franklin's landlady. "In the early 1770s, Dr. Hewson was in partnership with William Hunter who, with his brother John, was one of the founders of surgery in England. After a dispute with Hunter was resolved, with the help of Franklin, Hewson is believed to have established a rival school and lecture theatre in the Stevenson house." And there, in the basement, according to a Westminster coroner, Hewson apparently buried those "anatomical specimens" – a prudent move, since the corpses had undoubtedly been obtained by illegal grave-robbing.

"The discovery is seen as providing an important insight into a time when significant developments were beginning to take place" in surgery, the Web site notes. "As someone who helped Polly and Hewson, Franklin can be seen as part of that history. There is, of course, no suggestion that Franklin was a grave robber or a participant in the lectures." Whew.

Franklin did serve as representative for the Pennsylvania Assembly and chief agent for the American colonies (a function not unlike that of ambassador) during his 17 years at 36 Craven Street; he also invented bifocal glasses and watertight bulkheads for ships and entertained such figures as Edmund Burke, James Boswell, Adam Smith, and Thomas Paine. The house, between what is now Charing Cross Station and Trafalgar Square, is the only still- standing residence of Franklin in the world, having barely survived years of neglect and German bombs in World War II. Recently, the Friends of Benjamin Franklin House joined forces with the Royal Society for the encouragement of Arts, Manufactures, & Commerce (of which Franklin was a member) to raise money for the restoration.

Hewson, incidentally, died in 1774 (the year Franklin left London), having contracted septicaemia when he cut himself while dissecting a partially decomposed corpse. He was 34 years old.

"Franklin continued to support the widowed Polly, who ultimately followed him to America," the Web site states. According to the University Archives and Records Center, both of her sons went to Penn: William Hewson, C1788, G1791, and Thomas Tickell Hewson, C1789, G1792. Thomas, like his father, became a doctor."

 

Copyright 1998 The Pennsylvania Gazette Last modified 8/25/98