Repost, corrected
Re Lion Payseur
Louis XIV was not a bad King. He had his trouble with satanists too. Which the modern cult is still trying to cover up.
Payseur has no reason to love satanist, or the masons, for they organized the French Revolution.
The scandal that rocked the French Government of Louis XIV was enormous.
>The most famous case was that of midwife Catherine Deshayes Monvoisin or La Voisin, who was arrested in 1679 after she was
incriminated by the poisoner Marie Bosse. La Voisin implicated a number of important individuals in the French court. 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,[1] La Voisin claimed that Montespan had bought aphrodisiacs and performed black masses with
her in order to gain and keep the king's favor 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.[2] 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.[3]
>The Poison Affair implicated 442 suspects: 367 orders of arrests were issued, of which 218 were carried out. Of the
condemned, 36 were executed; five were sentenced to the galleys; and 23 to exile. This excludes those who died in custody by
torture or suicide. Additionally, many accused were never brought to trial, but placed outside of the justice system and
imprisoned for life by a lettre de cachet.
>Of the people who were condemned to perpetual imprisonment by lettre de cachet, six women were imprisoned at Château de
Villefranche; 18 men at Château de Salces; 12 women at Belle-Île-en-Mer; ten men at Château de Besançon; 14 women at St
Andre de Salins; and five women at Fort de Bains.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Affair_of_the_Poisons
If Leone Payseur is of the Capet bloodline he may well be sincere in his respect and affection for those of the Q movement who seek truth. If Payseur's are living in straightened circumstances, assume it is possibly the result of recent attacks by satanic cultists on his family.
If you want to examine the character of the French government and those who composed it, the two volume memoirs of the Duc
de Saint Simon are astute and amusing and a good place to start.
There have always been members of the bloodlines who have fought for and defended mankind. Sometimes they were rulers at
other times scholars, never Tammany Hall pols.
We oughtn't make assumptions about anyone based on a label assigned them by something as fallible as common knowledge.