Call me a bloody fruit loop, but I find more honest truth in The Simpsons, for example, than in most scholarly texts. If you’ve attended college, tally up all of the mentions of Freemasons you have encountered in your studies. Are you done? I’m pretty sure it was a quick count, and the answer was probably “zero”.
Now think about The Simpsons. If you’re an avid fan, as I am, you can
probably recall two great Freemason references. In one episode, Mr. Burns is
portrayed as a Howard Hughes figure. When the camera zooms in to the microbes
on his face, the microbes say, in unison, “Freemasons run the country!”
Another more heavy-handed episode, deals with a Springfield organization known
as “The Stonecutters”. The elite in the town are members, and plot
schemes in secret. This culminates in the delightful song “We Do”:
“Who keeps the Martians under wraps?
Who keeps Atlantis off the map?
We do. We do.”
Say what you will about Masonry, but its very existence is unknown to most people.
When you consider how much influence Masons have had in the formation of the
United States, you realize you have been dealt a very shady hand by the educational
establishments. The Simpsons, however, spelled it out in no uncertain terms,
years ago. Mainly in mirth, perhaps, but as I have said, the truth is in there.
Having read what I have regarding reptilians and blood sacrifices, there was
another line, delivered by Mr. Burns, which made me pause. In that episode,
Mr. Burns is dying and needs a transfusion. When he receives it and is revived
he remarks “…and all I needed was the blood of a young boy”.
360 Degrees of Knowledge
“The Autobiography of Malcolm X” is a book I am ashamed to say I
have only recently read. Imagine my surprise when, on page 158, Malcolm talks
about first hearing about Masonry. His brother Reginald tells Malcolm “The
devil uses his Masonry to rule other people”.
Of course, at this point, Malcolm is introduced to an idea he later discarded:
the white man is the devil. Reginald, again, tells Malcolm all white people
know they are devils “especially Masons”.
How revelatory! I wish the millions who have read this book didn’t gloss
over this tiny part of his life story. He makes an interesting point: if 360
degrees is the maximum in life, why are the Masons limited to 33 degrees?
I realize that is sort of comparing apples to oranges, in a sense, but had this
line of thinking been pursued, America might have been saved, instead of descending
into the maelstrom of misery it currently inhabits.
On one hand, the libertarian in me says people should be allowed to associate
with whomever they choose, or to exclude whomever they do not want to associate
with. But, when you consider the influence Masons have in law enforcement and
the courts, you see that Masonry crosses a line into immorality and becomes
the very opposite of libertarianism: rule by secrecy.
Harry Harrison is God
Author Harry Harrison dealt with this reptilian (actually, reptoid) possibility
more than twenty years ago. His novel, “West of Eden”, the first
of a trilogy, is a stunning exploration of “What If?’ and frankly
I’m amazed that I never hear it mentioned in the context of reptilian
research.
I suspect it’s not brought up because it is clearly a work of fiction,
not an attempt at explaining some great unknown. In it, Harrison details two
cultures on two separate continents. On one continent reside the humanoids,
our mammalian forefathers. On another, reptoids: thinking, upright-walking descendants
of reptiles. These reptoids possess a culture that is in fact highly advanced
in relation to the humanoids.
In addition to being highly organized as a group, they also possess technology
far superior to the humanoids. It is based in biology and genetics. For instance,
to develop a microscope, they genetically engineer a large eye that serves as
a magnification lens.
It is a stunning piece of work. Truly inspired literature, and it predates modern
reptilian research by decades. On one hand, it is a brilliant examination of
reptilian culture as a race that is as entitled to the Earth as we humanoids
are. On the other hand, it is fiction, as I have said, and is the work of Mr.
Harrison’s fiery imagination.
It illustrates, I think, the danger in getting too deeply involved with reptilian
research as a defining worldview. If people are accepting as fact something
that was written to entertain, without a solid basis for those beliefs, without
being aware of their origins, we are being set up for a minor disaster.
Search the web for references to people who have killed recently, due to voices
in their head. Or in order to destroy a demon they believed inhabited someone
they knew. There are quite a lot more things like this going on than you may
imagine. I feel it is only a matter of time before some troubled soul kills
a “reptilian”. It will be tragic, and people like you and I may
be contributors to the occurrence.
I’m not saying there is no such thing. That would take all the fun out
of it, for me. But please exercise good judgment when pursuing these matters.
If you see things others don’t, hear voices, or are deeply involved with
reptilian research to the point of excluding all other viewpoints, take a deep
breath and a brisk walk down to the library or bookstore and pick up “West
of Eden”. Understand that the origin of these beliefs lie, in part, in
fiction.
Besides, I’m pretty sure this reptilian stuff is just a cover for the
real rulers of the universe - the insectoids.