Because Sandy Hook hoaxsters run the world.
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When do the boots show up Jim?
Because Sandy Hook hoaxsters run the world.
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When do the boots show up Jim?
The Judaeo-Masonic Roots of Ulster British Loyalism
The Orange Order was founded by three Freemasons in 1795, with the purpose of unifying Irish Protestants in defence of British Masonic rule in Ireland. The “Orange” in the title of course refers to the homosexual paedophile William of Orange, and his successful invasion of England in 1688, and his subsequent victory in the Battle of the Boyne in 1690— a victory that cemented his rule. Many of the subsequent travails that beset not just Britain and Ireland, but also the rest of the world in the succeeding centuries, can be traced back to this decisive triumph of cabalist Whiggism.
Yet conservative and traditionalist Catholics, many of whom, consciously or unconsciously, have internalised the narratives of the “conservative” wing of Anglo-Masonry, tend to place all the blame for modern ills on the French Revolution of 1789—when in truth, that bloodfest was simply a delayed aftershock from the events of a hundred years earlier in Britain and Ireland. British “conservative” Masonry only turned on the French Revolutionaries after the latter began attacking the British Masonic agents in France who had played a crucial role in instigating the revolution in the first place[6]. Likewise, the Orange Order was formed in order to ensure that Irish Protestants did not stray into the Irish separatist revolutionary camp. In other words, the whole dispute over the French Revolution was simply two strands of Masonry slugging it out for control.
Orangeism is, therefore, only ‘”conservative” in the sense that all revolutionary movements need to exploit conservative sentiment in order to provide stabilising ballast. As Engels once said: “Nothing is more authoritarian than a revolution.” For instance, without the backing of “conservative” evangelical Protestants, and to a lesser extent “conservative” Catholics (aka “Neo-Catholics”), would the Trotskyist Neocon agenda in the Middle East and elsewhere have succeeded? It should be noted in this context that Northern Irish Orangeists, like their Protestant counterparts in the U.S., eagerly supported this revolutionary programme for remaking the Middle East in order to advance the goal of Greater Israel.
continued…. https://fitzinfo.net/2016/08/03/the-masonic-roots-of-ulster-british-loyalism/
Purple Gang
The Purple Gang was Detroit’s most notorious organized crime gang in the 1920s and 1930s. Led chiefly by the Burnstein (often misspelled Bernstein) brothers Raymond, Joseph, Isadore and Abraham - the Purple Gang was made up of immigrants from Detroit’s lower east side. The area, known as “Little Jerusalem,” was bordered by Gratiot Avenue, Brush Street, Willis Avenue and Russell Street. Beginning as disruptive delinquents at Bishop School, and progressing to “students” of Detroit mobsters Charles Leiter and Henry Shorr, who ran the Oakland Sugar House, the group was first known as the Sugar House Boys or Sugar House Gang.
The origin of the name, Purple Gang (also known as “the Purples”), has many variations, among them: street vendors who were victims of the delinquents, referred to them as “tainted, off-color,” therefore purple, a “purple gang”; named for someone’s purple sweater at a meeting to change the name from Sugar House Boys; taken from the Purple Line Company, a taxi cab company who used gang members to win a trade war; others attribute it to the purple dye that was used to ruin clothes during the Cleaners & Dyers War.
The Gang, originally a loose confederation of independent criminals, began by hijacking alcohol smuggled by others across the Canadian border, chiefly the Detroit River, during prohibition. Al Capone, the notorious Chicago gangster, chose to use the Purple Gang to supply Old Log Cabin whiskey rather than battle them for Detroit territory. Allegedly, several Gang members were used as spotters in Chicago’s infamous St. Valentine’s Day Massacre.
In the 1920s, the Purple Gang was known for their instigation of the “Cleaners and Dyers War,” a dispute between the cleaning industry and its union. The Wholesale Cleaners and Dyers Association was formed by Abe Burnstein and the Detroit Federation of Labor. Membership was coerced by Purple Gang members, who often used violent means of persuasion. In 1928, 13 members of the Purple Gang were tried for extortion for their role in the war, but all were acquitted.
Around the time of the trial, the Purple Gang was in its heyday. It controlled all of Detroit’s underworld, including the gambling, liquor, and drug trade. The Purple Gang of the late 1920s was nearly invincible against law enforcement, since witnesses were too terrified to testify in murder and criminal trials.
Nonetheless, the Purple Gang began to dissolve in the early 1930s through inter-gang strife and warfare. In September 1931, the Purple Gang murdered three of its own members who were double crossing the Gang. The three men, Herman (Hymie) Paul, Isadore (Joe) Sutker, and Joe Lebowitz, were invited to a peace negotiation at the Collingwood Manor Apartment building in Detroit. When they arrived, they were shot. Sol Levine, the man who unwittingly transported the three men to their deaths, was later caught by Detroit Police and pressured into testifying against the Gang. As a result, three of the four men involved with the murders, including Ray Burnstein, were convicted of third-degree murder and sent to jail for life.
The “Collingwood Manor Massacre,” as the event came to be known, marked the downfall of the Purple Gang. By 1935, the alliance had splintered and the Purple Gang no longer reigned over Detroit’s underworld, with at least 18 members dead and others in prison.
> Purple Gang
link.. https://detroithistorical.org/learn/encyclopedia-of-detroit/purple-gang
Led by Abe Bernstein, the Purple Gang was a mob of bootleggers and hijackers who operated out of Detroit, Michigan in the 1920s. This group of mostly young Jewish immigrants got its start in the Hasting Street neighborhood known as Paradise Valley in Detroit’s Lower East Side. Many of the core members went to school together and as boys, became thieves and pickpockets in an area called the Eastern Market close to their school. As they got older, their crimes got bigger and they soon began to commit armed robbery, loan sharking, and extortion under the mentorship of older neighborhood gangsters.
By the 1920’s Detroit had become a major port for running and distributing alcohol products from Canada during Prohibition.
They operated between Detroit and Chicago, and would meet behind the Bohm Theatre or in secret places in houses of Albion, a small town halfway between the two points. The gang supposedly received their name during a conversation between two Detroit market owners, each of them gang victims. One owner made the comment: “They’re rotten, purple like the color of bad meat.”
Perhaps the most ruthless bootleggers of their time, they may have killed over 500 members of rival bootlegging gangs during Detroit’s bootleg wars.
Bootlegging netted the Purple Gang millions of dollars, but the mob was also involved in extortion, hijacking, and jewelry thefts. After the repeal of Prohibition in the 1930s, the Purple Gang members joined the growing national crime syndicate that was replacing the old school mafia leadership, fondly known as the Mustache Petes.
The Purple Gang also attempted to run gambling rings in Detroit, especially among the African American population. Run by Julius Horowitz, the son of the sugar supplier to the breweries, and a one-legged black gangster wanted in the South for murder, the operation was successful until the gamblers learned that the Purple Gang had been using loaded dice and other tricks to keep it profitable. A small riot followed from which Horowitz escaped but the black gangster was believed killed.
The Purple Gang was exceptionally violent, constantly at war with other gangs and with each other. Newspapers would often carry stories of gang murders on both sides of their conflicts, which were constant during the gang’s existence. Too many openly violent crimes caused a string of convictions of Purple Gang members, while the intra-gang violence between different gang members damaged the gang’s organization and its abilities to control its turf.
continued…. https://www.legendsofamerica.com/20th-purplegang/
Updated 2 min ago
Theranos Investors Were Savvy, Knew the Risks, Holmes's Lawyer Says
By Sara Randazzo
Theranos Inc.'s list of well-known investors knew the risks of sinking money into an untested Silicon Valley startup, Elizabeth Holmes's lawyer said during opening statements.
"These were sophisticated people, and they knew what they were buying," Lance Wade, a partner at Williams & Connolly LLP, told jurors Wednesday. He named Theranos investors like the DeVos family, the heirs to the Walmart fortune, hedge fund Partner Fund Management and Rupert Murdoch, the executive chairman of News Corp., owner of The Wall Street Journal.
The investor agreement included clauses that they knew it was a speculative investment that came with risks, Mr. Wade said. He said they knew Theranos had no clearance from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration for its technology.
Theranos received hundreds of millions of dollars from investors, and settled with some who sued the company as it came under scrutiny.
Prosecutors allege Ms. Holmes defrauded investors by overstating revenue projections and claims of what the company’s technology could do.
https://www.wsj.com/livecoverage/elizabeth-holmes-trial-theranos
== William of Orange
And the "Glorious" Revolution ==
William of Orange was a Dutch prince invaded England in 1688 in what became known as the ‘Glorious Revolution’. William and his wife Mary (the daughter of James VII became King and Queen of England, Scotland and Ireland.
In Scotland, the 28 years of persecution in Scotland were now over. Just as Renwick] and the Covenanters had already done, the whole Scottish nation now rejected James’ right to be king over them. William and Mary were proclaimed King and Queen of Scotland in April 1689.
In 1690, the Church of Scotland was reorganised as a Presbyterian church once again. However the Revolution Church was a very different church than it had been before the persecution. The new church ignored the covenants. Men who had agreed to the indulgences and even persecuted the Covenanters were accepted as ministers and elders without repenting. The church was also Erastian because it accepted some control by the government, and the King had the power to call, postpone and stop General Assemblies.
The Covenanters, still meeting as the United Societies, therefore refused to join what they saw as a new church. Their three ministers (the most well-known of whom was Alexander Shields) handed in a protest to the General Assembly of the Revolution church, but it refused to discuss it. Despite this, the three of them joined the church. The Covenanters were left without a minister until John Macmillan joined them in 1706.
The Covenanters also protested against the Revolution state as well as the Revolution church, as it too ignored the covenants which the nation and parliament (not just the church) had signed. The new government also left in place the Recissory Act which had taken away all the laws since 1633 that had been passed in favour of Reformation. The acts condemning the covenants as illegal were also left in place. William not only established Episcopalianism in England and Ireland (which was against the Solemn League and Covenant) but declared that he was the head of those churches.
https://reformationhistory.org/williamoforange.html
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