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Freemasonry in the US and Abroad

Shawn April 26, 2020 at 18:06 5275 views 17 comments
Throughout my existence I've been fascinated and somewhat horrified with the existence of a group of people called Freemasons,

Some people call them the custodians of the constitution. Personally, I think they have enormous power and influence over the events of the world.

It scares me that they have lodges around the world and are taken more seriously than can be comprehended.

Does anyone know about their intentions or aspirations? They strike me as fanatic about morality and ethics for some reason.

Any thoughts appreciated.

Comments (17)

ssu April 26, 2020 at 19:17 #406078
In a time when there wasn't freedom of speech and people had to be very careful what they said in public, it is no wonder that secret societies were very much in need during the 18th Century. That the "Founding Fathers" were Freemasons is quite understandable during the time.

Also, that the political, cultural or economic elite is in any country a rather small group shouldn't be a surprise. Having networks is and has been totally reasonable for the elite in history as it's now. Networks actually create an elite.

And knowing Americans, who naturally (thanks to their history) don't have an aristocracy, have always yearned for one (just think about the fascination with the Kennedy family), joining a "secret" society which has had so many US Presidents starting from the first one as it's members creates envy and interest to join. And finally conspiracy theories too. Especially when the political elite isn't so appreciated today in the society.

The not so secret society:
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Pfhorrest April 27, 2020 at 02:10 #406186
I think it’s weird that particularly religious (Christian) people seem especially worried about the Freemasons, when they are an explicitly Christian organization that won’t even admit non-Christians.

Fun fact: the short-lived historical Illuminati were essentially a secular humanist copy of the Freemasons, and were quickly eradicated by the theocrats of their time, but nevertheless have been blamed by religious nutbars for the rise of secularism and all other “evils“ ever since.
h060tu April 27, 2020 at 03:34 #406207
Reply to Shawn Yes I do. Freemasons come out of the Enlightenment, and base themselves on Hermetic and Esoteric philosophy.

Manly P. Hall, a great intellectual and philosopher, was a Freemason of the 33rd degree. Recommend his work.
h060tu April 27, 2020 at 03:36 #406208
Reply to Pfhorrest

Blamed? It's in their Constitution. The Illuminati were actually the apotheosis of the whole revolutionary Enlightenment political ethic. The whole idea is to use reason to achieve enlightenment. Robespierre wanted to build a temple of reason where the Cathedral of Notre Dame was.

But yeah, the revolutionary and insidious nature of the Illuminati is evident not only in their Constitution, but actually by Thomas Jefferson, Franklin, the Founders, who themselves were Freemasons many of them, publicly warned against the threat of the Illuminati.
I like sushi April 27, 2020 at 03:52 #406216
Giordano Bruno is an interesting figure. Francis Yates’ scholarly work on him is pretty interesting if you’re interested in this area.
h060tu April 27, 2020 at 04:17 #406229
Quoting I like sushi
Francis Yates’ scholarly work on him is pretty interesting if you’re interested in this area.


Yes. Good book.
Changeling April 27, 2020 at 04:55 #406239
Reply to ssu they've got a good list of abstract nouns, I'll give 'em that.
Pfhorrest April 27, 2020 at 06:10 #406268
Reply to h060tu Not sure what you mean, but I said "blamed" because crazy conspiracy people think that everything that has happened to weaken the church and state since the 18th century is the fault of the Illuminati, despite them not having existed for anything but a tiny sliver of that time. But hey, their agenda continued anyway, Enlightenment spread across the world, so I guess in the eyes of paranoid religious freaks, the Illuminati must have secretly continued in the shadows pulling the strings on all the world leaders ever since their supposed "destruction", since there's no way crazy ideas like critical thinking and freedom could have caught on without some kind of nefarious agenda like that.
ssu April 27, 2020 at 08:39 #406283
Quoting Pfhorrest
since there's no way crazy ideas like critical thinking and freedom could have caught on without some kind of nefarious agenda like that.

This is the problem typically with conspiracy theories. Everything that happens has to have been planned by someone, who basically is against the "ordinary" people. It has to be the Jews, the Illuminati, the Freemasons, the Globalists, the Communists, the Cultural Marxists, the liberals, whoever acting as the instigators and following their hideous sinister plans.

The idea that large changes can happen without someone having planned them is far too difficult to understand.
h060tu April 28, 2020 at 00:18 #406671
Quoting Pfhorrest
?h060tu Not sure what you mean, but I said "blamed" because crazy conspiracy people think that everything that has happened to weaken the church and state since the 18th century is the fault of the Illuminati, despite them not having existed for anything but a tiny sliver of that time. But hey, their agenda continued anyway, Enlightenment spread across the world, so I guess in the eyes of paranoid religious freaks, the Illuminati must have secretly continued in the shadows pulling the strings on all the world leaders ever since their supposed "destruction", since there's no way crazy ideas like critical thinking and freedom could have caught on without some kind of nefarious agenda like that.


No, but the Illuminati had a role to play. Just as Rockefellers, Morgans, Rothschilds, Cecil Rhodes, the British Empire, radical revolutionaries etc. etc. did. There's not just one shady group behind everything. There's multiple interest groups involved. Always are. That's how statecraft works. How empire is forged. How the elites run the show.
h060tu April 28, 2020 at 00:21 #406672
Quoting ssu
This is the problem typically with conspiracy theories. Everything that happens has to have been planned by someone, who basically is against the "ordinary" people. It has to be the Jews, the Illuminati, the Freemasons, the Globalists, the Communists, the Cultural Marxists, the liberals, whoever acting as the instigators and following their hideous sinister plans.

The idea that large changes can happen without someone having planned them is far too difficult to understand.


Uh, except there are literally documents which show that there are things that are planned. Many of them. For example, the 1954 coup in Guatemala was planned to destroy the government, and kill the population to protect US crop interests. That's not a conspiracy theory, it's a fact. Another one, is MKULTRA. The government released the public documents of the secret mind control program. Again, not a conspiracy theory. And there are dozens of examples. Sir Rothschild said that he didn't care who ran government, as long as he ran the nation's supply of money. That's a conspiracy.
ssu April 28, 2020 at 09:56 #406849
Quoting h060tu
Uh, except there are literally documents which show that there are things that are planned.

And what you have to use is source criticism. There are indeed conspiracies, and then there are those that aren't. And one has to understand which are true and which are not. Yet everything isn't planned and few things are conspiracies. The leaders are quite clueless about the future.

Quoting h060tu
For example, the 1954 coup in Guatemala was planned to destroy the government, and kill the population to protect US crop interests.

Taken literally what you said above, doesn't make sense at all. Really, to kill the Guatemalan population? Like Hitler with his "final solution" with the Jews? Likely that wasn't your intent, but this is what source criticism is like. That the civil war in Guatemala was the longest in Latin America 1960-1996 and about two hundred thousand died wasn't the intent. This is the typical error that conspiracy theorists make: the agenda of someone is inherently evil, totally diabolical. It's not just a bad policy or immoral and unethical, it is genuinely evil. This passionate stance destroys objectivity. You really have to make a credible argument that someone really planned to have a civil war going on for 36 years and the objective was genocide. Because otherwise the normal history of Guatemala holds: that the United Fruit Company, the largest landowner in Guatemala, protested that the government of Guatemala began expropriating unused Company land to landless peasants, lobbied and then got the CIA to orchestrate a military coup that lead to a long civil war. That the United Fruit company wanted to change the demographics of Guatemala like Hitler wanted with Europe sounds very peculiar.

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In a way conspiracy theorists go a notch further than let's say Noam Chomsky, an archetypal long term critic of the US establishment who sees as his role to criticize the US in every aspect. In fact there's a surprising equivalence between Noam Chomsky and Alex Jones. A lot of the points are the same, which are facts. But then there's the difference. Chomsky doesn't see 9/11 as an "inside job", doesn't see that the Illuminati want to decrease the population by all the bad things happening in the World. Chomsky might see as the only good thing that the US funded and AIDS program under Bush (or similar events), but typically real conspiracy theorists don't see anything good. Except Trump when it comes to Alex Jones.
Shawn April 28, 2020 at 19:17 #407033
Reply to ssu

OK, so this is pretty scary shit. I'm out.
h060tu April 28, 2020 at 22:37 #407086
Quoting ssu
Taken literally what you said above, doesn't make sense at all. Really, to kill the Guatemalan population? Like Hitler with his "final solution" with the Jews? Likely that wasn't your intent, but this is what source criticism is like. That the civil war in Guatemala was the longest in Latin America 1960-1996 and about two hundred thousand died wasn't the intent.


Yes it was. That was the intent. Just like Madeline Albreight admitted, on tape, that a few hundred thousand if not a million Iraqis dying was a "sacrifice she was willing to make" or something to that effect. Yes, they knew what would happen if they installed a murderous dictator and directed him to kill the population. They knew, and they thought the sacrifice worth the action.

Quoting ssu
This is the typical error that conspiracy theorists make: the agenda of someone is inherently evil, totally diabolical.


Some people literally are. "We came, we saw, he died."

Quoting ssu
That the United Fruit company wanted to change the demographics of Guatemala like Hitler wanted with Europe sounds very peculiar.


Well, I never said that, so of course it would be. What I said was, the CIA made a calculation, on the behest of the Oligarchs, and decided that killing people would be worth saving however many millions of dollars and whatever supply chain they thought worth saving. It's just a Cost-Benefit Analysis, applied to human life.

Quoting ssu
In a way conspiracy theorists go a notch further than let's say Noam Chomsky, an archetypal long term critic of the US establishment who sees as his role to criticize the US in every aspect. In fact there's a surprising equivalence between Noam Chomsky and Alex Jones. A lot of the points are the same, which are facts. But then there's the difference. Chomsky doesn't see 9/11 as an "inside job", doesn't see that the Illuminati want to decrease the population by all the bad things happening in the World. Chomsky might see as the only good thing that the US funded and AIDS program under Bush (or similar events), but typically real conspiracy theorists don't see anything good. Except Trump when it comes to Alex Jones.



Because Chomsky isn't infallible. He doesn't know all of the evidence. Nobody can, by the nature of the human condition. Conspiracy theories are a hypothesis, everything is a hypothesis. Sometimes there are incommensurability of hypothesis.

Chomsky doesn't know that the Israeli app Odigo warned of the 9/11 attacks before they happened, as Haaretz reports and Al Franken admitted on live radio. Chomsky doesn't know of the existence of Thermite at the site of 9/11. He doesn't understand the physics of the fact that jetfuel cannot melt steel. He doesn't know of the dancing Israelis who gleefully celebrated the event. He didn't know of the Plan for a New American Century's aspiration for a "Pearl Harbor event" to justify invading other countries. He didn't know the existence of building seven and the Oligarch who just happened to buy insurance on the building, I think within hours of 9/11. And so on and so forth.

So, Chomsky doesn't know those things, so he doesn't make those arguments. On the other hand, Chomsky is potentially actually part of the conspiracy. Ironically enough. He himself admits that he worked at MIT at the very same time the military and Pentagon was working with MIT to develop new military technologies.

Anyway, suffice it to say, you just lambast "conspiracy theorists" just like the CIA intended in their memo literally inventing the term to discredit conspiracy theorists, and praise Chomsky, but you don't seem to know or care that perhaps Chomsky is simply unaware of, or never considered the evidence behind particular hypotheses (which is what "conspiracy theories" are, just a different hypothesis) and therefore the reason why he doesn't entertain them.

Christopher Hitchens just basically used ad hominems against people on the left who were against the war against Iraq (not "in Iraq") and people who pointed out the official story of 9/11 as a hypothesis doesn't take into account all of the relevant information and data.
ssu April 29, 2020 at 00:13 #407133
Quoting h060tu
Yes it was. That was the intent. Just like Madeline Albreight admitted, on tape, that a few hundred thousand if not a million Iraqis dying was a "sacrifice she was willing to make" or something to that effect. Yes, they knew what would happen if they installed a murderous dictator and directed him to kill the population. They knew, and they thought the sacrifice worth the action.

You make my case.

First, it's Madeleine Albright. Second, the quote you refer Albright saying was about UN Sanctions, which were put on after the Saddam Hussein's invasion of Kuwait. Later Albright was against the invasion of Iraq, so what has that do to with Guatemala, really? And thirdly, how about that the Carter administration barred all sales of military equipment to Guatemala and later extended the ban to commercial sales because of the atrocities? Even if Reagan came along later, you still simply cannot make these kind of simplified generalizations that don't go with the facts. Or, when you say that the intent was to kill the Guatemalan people, who would then pick the Banana's? Did the United Fruit Company, according to you, have an idea to replace the people with new ones or what?

What I earlier forgot to mention is also the omnipotence that conspiracy theorists give to the elites, the Illuminati and/or the US. How nothing happens by chance/accident and especially how nothing, ABSOLUTELY NOTHING happens in other countries because of domestic actors due to their own agendas, which can be totally unrelated from the conspiracy discourse. No, those people are mere stooges and lackeys of the CIA and the powerful elites. Every tragedy in the World happens because of evil elites. That's the basic conspiracy theorists punchline today.
h060tu April 29, 2020 at 00:28 #407141
Quoting ssu
First, it's Madeleine Albright. Second, the quote you refer Albright saying was about UN Sanctions, which were put on after the Saddam Hussein's invasion of Kuwait. Later Albright was against the invasion of Iraq,


That makes your case... not at all. It makes mine.

Quoting ssu
Later Albright was against the invasion of Iraq, so what has that do to with Guatemala, really?


Good for her. Give her the Nobel Peace Prize.

Quoting ssu
And thirdly, how about that the Carter administration barred all sales of military equipment to Guatemala and later extended the ban to commercial sales because of the atrocities?


I didn't say that there weren't different visions within the Oligarchic structure. There are. Wilsonianism is one of those.

Quoting ssu
Or, when you say that the intent was to kill the Guatemalan people, who would then pick the Banana's?


You're either not understanding what I'm saying, not reading, or not caring. They wanted to kill Guatemalans, but I didn't say they "planned a genocide of the population" those words never surfaced. They killed the Guatemalans that they needed to kill to secure the resource they wanted. They didn't kill them all. They killed as many as necessary to get what they wanted to get. It's the same reason Albright thought it was "worth it" to kill 500,000+ kids. Maybe 4,000,000 wouldn't be worth it. But to her 500k was. Again, it was a Cost-Benefit Analysis. It wasn't some mass extermination campaign, and I never even implied that.

Quoting ssu
What I earlier forgot to mention is also the omnipotence that conspiracy theorists give to the elites, the Illuminati and/or the US.


Which I never did. I always say that there are different factions, sects and interest groups within the superstructure of the Oligarchy which do different things and want different things. Case and point, MI6 has a different interest than the CIA, has a different interest than FSB, has a different interest than Mossad, has a different interest than the Vatican, has a different interest than the Mafia, has a different interest than the Rockefellers and so on and so on. Sometimes those interests converge, like during Operation Gladio, sometimes they do not. I never said anything different.
ssu April 29, 2020 at 12:35 #407261
Quoting h060tu
You're either not understanding what I'm saying, not reading, or not caring.

Actually, I did understand that likely you didn't intend to saying that United Fruit / the US wanted to kill ALL Guatemalans, but saying that the "intent was to kill the Guatemalan people" can interpreted literally. That the Guatemalan junta wanted to kill all leftist rebels, their sympathizers and anyone helping them is a better way to put it. When in an insurgency the government response is unrestrained violence, the outcome can indeed be something approaching a genocide. But the intent then isn't genuine genocide of "lets eradicate all the people of this ethnicity/religion/class and we have solved our problem". There are examples of those genocides: the Holocaust, the Holodomor, the genocide against Armenians, Cambodia, Rwanda etc.

Quoting h060tu
I didn't say that there weren't different visions within the Oligarchic structure. There are. Wilsonianism is one of those. - I always say that there are different factions, sects and interest groups within the superstructure of the Oligarchy which do different things and want different things

And that's a great start, which I agree with.

But note what impact the above has on a lot of conspiracy theories. Yes, there might be a cabal of people trying to promote and advance their agenda, but large events are effected by a myriad of groups having their own agenda. Things can have unintended consequences. And you have to show that one specific cabal is really calling all the shots and all other actors are playing along. Conspiracy lovers seldom want to hear details that go in other direction from their conspiracy narrative. Simply put it, source criticism and detail are important.

Hence one of the errors we make is to assume a consensus among a large group of people who don't share a common agenda. We easily generalize and simplify and talk for example about "the CIA" doing this or "Moscow", "London" or "Beijing" doing that.

A great classic, a small booklet by Major General Smedley Butler called War is a Racket gives nice perspective on these issues. However my point is not to look at events from just from one viewpoint and with one narrative in mind. For example, studying history which has been written from different perspectives gives a far more clear view about these issues. Many times the history of Latin America, especially Central America is quite "US centric". Yet a lot of the structural weaknesses and societal problems come from earlier times of Spanish rule. And if a native American state would have somehow survived to this day without colonization, just like Ethiopia in Africa (as the Italians didn't hold all of the area during their occupation), the problems would likely still be there (just look at the history of Ethiopia). And when the "conspiracy theories" come up from various different approaches, that tells that they indeed have happened. That our historical understanding from other countries is usually even more limited doesn't help.