Bog'liq The World\'s Most Dangerous Secret Societies The Illuminati, Freemasons
Dangers of Freemasonry As stated in the introduction, there’s little reason to assume that all
Freemasons are behind a single unified plan for global domination. In fact, few
Masons even make it to the higher echelon—most are content on enjoying a
night out without their wives, dressed in outlandish costumes, referring to one
another by exalted names and secret handshakes. A grown up version of a tree-
house club.
Would these grown-up boys be so quick to knowingly address one another
with a wink and a nod if they knew the true history and shadowy elements
behind Freemasonry?
I chose to omit some of the more outlandish accusations leveled against
Freemasonry in this chapter and instead chose to rely on verifiable facts. Not
because there may not be justifiable basis in those accusations, but because the
dedicated researcher would have an easier time trying to discern what goes on
behind those closed doors if presented with concrete reality instead of
opinionated fancy. The real danger in Freemasonry is not necessarily that of
unmitigated evil lurking behind the
sanctum sanctorum of your local Masonic
lodge. No, the true danger is how quickly seemingly noble virtues can be
denigrated to the spheres of greed, crime, bigotry, murder and the corruption
provided by unassailable power. And how quickly those virtues can be
integrated into a schematic of control and domination on a global political and
social scale. Unless, of course, those noble virtues were simply part of that
schematic all along…
Members In addition to the previously mentioned parties in this chapter, known current
and historical Freemasons have included: Emperor of Mexico Agustin I;
astronaut Edward “Buzz” Aldrin; French emperor Napoleon Bonaparte I; author
Mark Twain; automotive pioneer Walter Chrysler; aviator Charles Lindbergh;
poet Alexander Pope; actor Richard Pryor; Supreme Court Chief Justice Earl
Warren; silent film director Louis B. Mayer; FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover;
Turkish leader Mustafa Kemal Ataturk; escape artist Harry Houdini; Bolivian
leader Simon Bolivar; silent film director Cecil B. DeMille; former Russian Czar
Alexander I; former Presidents James Garfield, William McKinley and James
Monroe; boxer Sugar Ray Robinson; King of Sweden and Norway Charles XIII;
artist Marc Chagall; composer Felix Mendelssohn; British King William IV;
author Arthur Conan Doyle; Bell Aircraft founder Lawrence Dale Bell;
automobile pioneer Henry Ford; Former Presidents James K. Polk, Andrew
Jackson and Calvin Coolidge; boxing promoter Don King; Apple co-founder
Steve Wozniak; Chief Justice Earl Warren; Mt. Rushmore sculptors and
designers Gutzon and Lincoln Borglum; explorer Richard Francis Burton;
former presidents Harry S. Truman and Theodore Roosevelt; American
frontiersman Davy Crockett; Belgian King Leopold I; politician Bob Dole;
philosopher Friedrich Schiller; Church of Mormon co-founder Joseph Smith;
Revolutionary War general Benedict Arnold; Supreme Court Justice Thurgood
Marshall; British King Edward VIII; philosopher Johann Gottlieb Fichte;
explorer Hiram Bingham; and former presidents Warren G. Harding and Lyndon
B. Johnson.