24 Comments
User's avatar
JP Spatzier's avatar

I would also suggest reading Black Nobility 101 on Frances Leaders substack. Her research is amazing & made everything โ€œclickโ€ for me ๐Ÿ™

ExcessDeathsAU's avatar

Epstein's client list

jacquelyn sauriol's avatar

Imagine finding this list in your 7th grade social studies book!

Unbekoming's avatar

What we haven't been taught, is the importance of psychopathy to history. What all these secret societies have in common is that they are clubs for psychopaths, that's pretty much it I think.

Javier Lopez's avatar

Should be part of the curriculum!

Tuesday with Philberg's avatar

Perhaps you can add the US CIA & FBI to the list of secret societies, funded by peoples taxes. The FBI are national terrorists, the CIA are international terrorists. These two terror groups engineered and covered up a coup with the assassination of JFK, same with 9/11. Covid scam too? Hmm.

Javier Lopez's avatar

Not really secret though are they. They are probably the most referenced groups when it comes to the kind of behavior you mentioned. I would add all the other intelligence agencies that work in concert to carry out globalist initiatives around the world. Maybe it's that aspect that is less well understood by the general public, that operatives within these intelligence agencies steer collaborative agendas this way and that for the string pullers.

I would say papal knights and their entire spectrum of orders have more influence over world affairs than any other group.

Carlos Santiago's avatar

The bad thing is that there are so many secret societies.

The good thing is that there are so many secret societies.

Which is to say, there are many different factions competing, rather than one singular group that controls everything. Or maybe that's just what they want us to think...

Unbekoming's avatar

Thatโ€™s a great point. I think the competition is real, but like all things there is a hierarchy of competence.

skintnick's avatar

"Unlawful Societies Act of 1799 which was the first statue "for the more effectual suppression of societies established for seditious and treasonable purposes." This law was in effect until 1967." rather begs the question: Why was it repealed?

zdb's avatar

thank you

jacquelyn sauriol's avatar

Is thugee where the word thug comes from? Seems quite possible.

Turfseer's avatar

Excellent analysis!

My Mystery Cult. The Covidian cult explained in song. Watch the music video: https://turfseer.substack.com/p/my-mystery-cult

Y. Andropov's avatar

I am a member of a secret society (Skull & Serpent) but I don't donate or attend meetings. I was once a member of the power elite: chairman of Moody's credit policy committee and the executive for corporate, bank and country ratings. I attended meetings of the Council on Foreign Relations. I can tell you that there is no cabal or if there is, I was never inducted.

Unbekoming's avatar

Thanks Christopher.

Iโ€™m reading Quigley atm, or more accurately Plummer on Quigley and Tragedy and Hope. Thereโ€™s definitely something there.

Javier Lopez's avatar

You were never inducted.

JP Spatzier's avatar

Iโ€™m currently reading that book also ๐Ÿคฏ๐Ÿคฏ๐Ÿคฏ.

BuelahMan's Revolt's avatar

I can't help but notice one glaringly obvious missing (hidden in plain sight) cult who has control in an open secret that so many are afraid to name.

Marilyn Johnson's avatar

Respectfully, this could use a proofreader.

Teresa's avatar

Respectfully, you could use some manners.

Javier Lopez's avatar

Respectfully, they did preface with respectfully.

User's avatar
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Sep 3, 2023
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Unbekoming's avatar

I need to read more Sutton before I write about him, but as far as Iโ€™m concerned, he was definitely one of the good guys.