Anonymous ID: a5a141 Dec. 4, 2021, 3:07 a.m. No.15133056   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3065

>>15127256

 

(Please read from the start)

 

It’s very obvious that Pike had the McLeod syndrome. I am also suspecting many British kings had it, mostly the Plantagenet dynasty; as well as Louis XIV, Louis XV and of course Louis XVI to have had the illness as well = the Bourbon dynasty. In fact, when we look at how the royalty in Europe married from one another, you will see how the ladies transferred the illness from one royal family to another.

 

I’m not putting these candidates out of nothing. Let’s check out Louis XIV; he used to think he was the sun god – I bet he is referring to the Evil One and how (((they))) thought he was the sun, but the truth is he is the lesser sun. This is how you know since when the Bloodlines know there is an association between the Evil One and the sun (lesser sun). The French monarch’s name was Louis meaning Light = as the Evil One was the carrier of the Lamp; I bet (((they))) thought he was the carrier of the Light- which is not true. Louis XIV is also known for his mood swings.

 

Let me show you a couple of things quickly about Louis XIV: https://www.biography.com/news/louis-xiv-biography-facts

 

“[…]

The princess Louis XIV married was his first cousin

 

The king’s first true love was Mazarin’s niece, Marie Mancini, but both the queen and the cardinal frowned upon their relationship. Louis XIV was ultimately directed into a marriage that was a political, rather than a romantic, union by wedding the daughter of Spain’s King Philip IV, Marie-Thérèse, in 1660. The marriage between the two first cousins ensured ratification of the peace treaty that Mazarin had sought to establish with Hapsburg Spain.

 

One of Louis XIV’s mistresses bore more of his children than his wife

 

Marie-Thérèse gave birth to six of the king’s children, but only one, Louis, survived past the age of five. Louis XIV, however, had a healthy libido and fathered more than a dozen illegitimate children with a number of mistresses. Mistress Louise de La Vallière bore five of the king’s children, only two of which survived infancy, while her rival Madame de Montespan, who eventually became the king’s chief mistress, gave birth to seven of the monarch’s children. Louis XIV eventually legitimized most of his children born to mistresses in the years following their births.

[…]”

 

>> Just from 3 women = his legal wife and 2 mistresses, Louis XIV had 18 children. From the queen Marie-Thérèse he had 6 children whom 5 died and one made it pass his fifth birthday. While from his mistress de La Vallière he had 5 children which only 2 survived and 3 died. It’s not clear in this text how many of the 7 children he had from Madame de Montespan survived their childhood.

 

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Anonymous ID: a5a141 Dec. 4, 2021, 3:09 a.m. No.15133065   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3068

>>15133056

 

(Please read from the start)

 

So let’s take a look at that: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Françoise-Athénaïs_de_Rochechouart,_Marquise_de_Montespan

 

“[…]

Children by Louis XIV

 

Name Birth Death Notes

Louise Françoise de Bourbon at the end of March, 1669 23 February 1672 (aged 2)

Louis Auguste, Duke of Maine

31 March 1670 14 May 1736 (aged 66) Legitimised on 20 December 1673. Held numerous offices, of which: Colonel General of the Suisses et Grisons, Governor of Languedoc, General of the Galleys, and Grand Master of Artillery. Also Duke of Aumale, Count of Eu and Prince of Dombes. Had issue. Founder of the Maine Line.

 

Louis César, Count of Vexin

20 June 1672 10 January 1683 (aged 10) Legitimised on 20 December 1673.

Louise Françoise de Bourbon

1 June 1673 16 June 1743 (aged 70) Legitimised on 20 December 1673. Married Louis III, Prince of Condé. Had issue.

 

Louise Marie Anne de Bourbon

12 November 1674 15 September 1681 (aged 6) Legitimised in January 1676.

Françoise Marie de Bourbon

9 February 1677 1 February 1749 (aged 72) Legitimised in November 1681. Married Philippe II, Duke of Orléans, the Regent of France under Louis XV. Had issue.

Louis Alexandre, Count of Toulouse

6 June 1678 1 December 1737 (aged 59) Legitimised on 22 November 1681. Held numerous offices, of which: Admiral of France, Governor of Guyenne, Governor of Brittany, and Grand Huntsman of France. Also Duke of Damville, of Rambouillet and of Penthièvre. Had issue.

 

>> We can see, that 3 out of 7 of her children died while being children and the remaining 4 made it into adulthood.

 

So let’s redo the numbers from Louis XIV:

1 – The queen had 6 children – 5 died.

2 – De La Vallière had 5 children – 3 died.

3 – De Montespan had 7 children – 3 died.

 

So in total Louis XIV had from 3 women 18 children which 11 died in infancy. This is indicating Louis XIV and his women had the McLeod Syndrome. They all had it. Look at the third child of Louis XIV with Montespan: Louis César Count of Vexin: He is a male with the McLeod Syndrome which can only be transmitted to him via his mother. This means that Montespan was a carrier of the McLeod Syndrome.

 

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Anonymous ID: a5a141 Dec. 4, 2021, 3:11 a.m. No.15133068   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3079

>>15133065

 

(Please read from the start)

 

Let me add to all of this the scandal of “l’Affair des Poisons”: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Affair_of_the_Poisons

 

“The Affair of the Poisons (l'affaire des poisons) was a major murder scandal in France during the reign of King Louis XIV. Between 1677 and 1682, a number of prominent members of the aristocracy were implicated and sentenced on charges of poisoning and witchcraft. The scandal reached into the inner circle of the king. It led to the execution of 36 people.

[…]

 

Implications and investigation

 

The affair proper opened in February 1677 after the arrest of Magdelaine de La Grange on charges of forgery and murder. La Grange appealed to François Michel Le Tellier, Marquis of Louvois, claiming that she had information about other crimes of high importance. Louvois reported to the king, who told Gabriel Nicolas de la Reynie, who, among other things, was the chief of the Paris police, to root out the poisoners. La Reynie sought to calm the king. The subsequent investigation of potential poisoners led to accusations of witchcraft, murder and more.

 

Authorities rounded up a number of fortune tellers and alchemists who were suspected of selling not only divinations, séances and aphrodisiacs, but also "inheritance powders" (a euphemism for poison). Some of them confessed under torture and gave authorities lists of their clients, who had allegedly bought poison to get rid of their spouses or rivals in the royal court.

 

The most famous case was that of the midwife Catherine Deshayes Monvoisin or La Voisin, who was arrested in 1679 after she was incriminated by the poisoner Marie Bosse. La Voisin implicated several important courtiers. These included Olympia Mancini, the Countess of Soissons, her sister, the Duchess of Bouillon, François Henri de Montmorency, Duke of Luxembourg and, most importantly, the king's mistress, Madame de Montespan.

 

Questioned while intoxicated, La Voisin claimed that Montespan had bought aphrodisiacs and performed black masses with her in order to gain and keep the king's favour over rival lovers. She had worked with a priest named Étienne Guibourg. There was no evidence beyond her confessions, but bad reputations followed these people afterwards. Eleanor Herman, in her book Sex with Kings, claims that the police, given reports of "babies' bones", uncovered the remains of 2,500 infants in La Voisin's garden. However, Anne Somerset disputes this in her book The Affair of the Poisons and states there is no mention of the garden being searched for human remains.

 

Also involved in the scandal was Eustache Dauger de Cavoye, the eldest living scion of a prominent noble family. Cavoye was disinherited by his family when, in an act of debauchery, he chose to celebrate Good Friday with a black mass. Upon his disinheritance, he opened a lucrative trade in "inheritance powders" and aphrodisiacs. He mysteriously disappeared after the abrupt ending of Louis's official investigation in 1678. Because of this and his name, he was once suspected of being the Man in the Iron Mask. However, this theory has fallen out of favour because it is now known that he was imprisoned by his family in 1679 in the Prison Saint-Lazare.”

 

>> Notice the house with a garden where 2 500 infant remains were found?

 

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Anonymous ID: a5a141 Dec. 4, 2021, 3:16 a.m. No.15133079   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9703

>>15133068

 

(Please read from the start)

 

“The end of the trial

 

La Voisin was sentenced to death for witchcraft and poisoning, and burned at the stake on 22 February 1680. Marshal Montmorency-Bouteville was briefly jailed in 1680, but was later released and became a captain of the guard. Minister Jean-Baptiste Colbert helped to hush things up.

 

De La Reynie re-established the special court, the Chambre Ardente ("burning court"), to judge cases of poisoning and witchcraft. It investigated a number of cases, including many connected to nobles and courtiers in the king's court. Over the years, the court sentenced 34 people to death for poisoning or witchcraft. Two died under torture and several courtiers were exiled. The court was abolished in 1682, because the king could not risk the publicity of such scandal. To this, Police Chief Reynie said "the enormity of their crimes proved their safeguard.

[…]"

 

>> It’s clear as day here the nobility in France, including the royals are Satanists. As well as they had the McLeod Syndrome.

 

La Voisin was 40 years old when she died. The 2 500 remains of infants in the garden of her house are the results of satanic child sacrifice rituals being practiced in the vicinity or inside her house. Of course she didn’t practice the sacrifice of children all by herself. And of course La Voisin didn’t start to sacrifice children when she was a kid herself, so let’s just say she started to take part of it since she was 15 or 18 = she needs to be initiated according to their rituals. So that leaves us with something like 25 years where she had time to practice the ritual of child sacrifice.

 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/La_Voisin

 

Saying she was a midwife and provided abortions is just a cover to hide what she was really doing. It’s a good excuse to try to justify the high number of infant remains in her garden. The truth is anons, even if she was a midwife performing illegal abortions, this doesn’t explain, nor justifies the fact that she buried these infants in her own garden, where her children used to play and where she lived. She could have taken these infants to bury them in another place or a small secretive cemeterie, but she didn’t. And the number is just too big. And look since when (((they))) promote abortions!

 

If she practiced abortions for 25 years and they found 2 500 infant remains in her gardens. That makes it AROUND a 100 abortion per year for her as in performing an abortion each 3 or 4 days. That’s just an insane number anons. It doesn’t add up. Was France back then a children popping machine? It’s like every female in France was pregnant back then. And La Voisin wasn’t the only one performing abortions. This doesn’t add up. I think this abortion provider excuse is just to cover the fact that she used to practice satanic child sacrifice to the nobility in France. And the network she was the head of, it’s a child kidnapping network.For me, this means she sacrificed with the nobles and/or for them, around a 100 child per year approximately.

 

Let’s compare the burial in La Voisin garden (clearly Satanic ritual victims) with the burial in Carthage:

 

1 - There is a notable to bring attention to here = the infants buried in her garden were not cremated which is in opposition with what we have in Carthage burial. But it fits perfectly with what we know is part of the satanic child sacrifice ritual = cannibalism. I just said when I talked in the previous pages about the ritual and how it’s all focused on the blood of the victim and cannibalism is connected. It’s the same ritual that was taking place under the temple of Epstein Island. The victim’s body is eaten and not cremated in Satanic rituals, at least part of it.

 

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