Comments by "craxd1" (@craxd1) on "" video.

  1. I often wonder if many know the real roots of communism. The "commune," used in this way, was the brainchild of François-Noël "Gracchus" Babeuf, a Frenchman and Jacobin, who rebelled alongside other anarchists such as Robespierre, Saint-Simon, and many others. However, Babeuf's ideas came from the Diggers in Britain, the writing of Rousseau, and the politics of the Jacobins. One could say that the French Revolution was the first communist revolution. Much of the thought came from the radical Unitarians, which leads all the way back to Bohemia and the radical Hussites. Babeuf's "communiste" was changed to the English word, communism, by Goodwyn Barmby, over those he described as the "disciples of Babeuf." He even started a Church of Communism. Many call communists Babeufians, which eventually leads to the Jacobin ideas within the university, and Karl Marx. Marx, after all, wished that the Paris Commune had succeeded. The funny thing, and many people grasp at straws to deny this, is, the same revolutionary ideas lead to the Italian Revolution (Risorgimento) under Giuseppe Mazzini, Giuseppe Garibaldi, and the early mafioso. It also leads to the proto-fascists, the Decadent Movement, and people such as Guido Keller , Gabriele D'Annunzio , and the Free State of Fiume in 1919. Worse, it leads to the creation of both Nazism and Fascism, as well as their occult beliefs. I also notice the comments about Freemasonry. Many of the Jacobins were French Freemasons. However, they changed it, and took God out of it, creating the Grand Orient of France, and an occult religion known as Martinism. The Mother Lodge, in London, (The United Grand Lodge of England), finally had their fill of the French radicals, and revoked their charter, making it clandestine and "irregular," meaning that it was rogue, and off-limits. In reality, there were more protestants and atheists in the movement than J##s. The J##s involved, were mainly within the universities across Europe.
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  2. ​ @BusbyTreeSurgery  Actually, it wasn't the Templars, but the "revived" Teutonic Order that claimed to have absorbed the Templars, which was a myth invented in what later became the German Confederation in 1815, by the Rite of Strict Observance, even though the real Templars still existed in Portugal. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Order_of_Christ_(Portugal) France is where everything changes, with the Jacobins. What became the Scottish Rite, in the US and UK, makes claim to the Templars, whereas the French, and much of Europe's irregulars, claims to be from the Teutonic Order myth, and this European branch is the root of Martinism. It is also one of the reasons why the European version, and why AMORC, is deemed "irregular." Original Freemasonry, which was founded in 1717 London, became an aristocratic movement about promoting its members to become educated at university. When it spread to France, later, and after the revolution, they bastardized it, making it fit their secular culture, and their line of "French haut grades Masonry" spread throughout Europe. They changed it, completely, from the 1st to the 3rd degrees, and added others, making 99; calling it the "Egyptian Rite." Worse, they had made it secular, and removed the belief in God. When this occurred, as well as becoming fed up with the French anarchists within it, the UGLoE stripped them of their warrant (charter). https://scottishrite.org/about/history/ The real roots of the Scottish Rite started as a side degree in London, known as the Scotch Masons’ degree. It was the French and Germans that added more to it. Anyhow, the version seen as regular to the UK and US does not contain the so-called Christian mysticism (Martinism). Though the regular branch alludes to ancient mysticism in passing, during the history lectures, it really teaches that the world is made up of several religions and cultures, which is taught at university. At the end, it also tells the true tale of the Templars, and their demise, as a warning, not the myth created around the Teutonic Order. Martinism, and the Teutonic Order myth, leads to the neo-Hinduism occult aspects seen in proto-fascism, and later, fascism and nazism. Himmler had latched onto this proto-fascist mysticism, and had learned of the Martinist's Vichy synarchy movement (1941). He had also been made aware of the ancient roots of religion and the Aryans. He wished to create a new Germanic religion, and though the basis was Martinism, just like the mystical beliefs of the proto-fascists, he also added a large dose of Germanic paganism, leading to Theosophy, Thule, and the Black Sun Society. There is as much difference between regular and irregular Freemasonry, as there is between white and black. Regular Freemasonry, from its founding in 1717, was mainly made up of Anglicans, and it is still Judaeo-Christian oriented today.
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