That creepy photo of Jack Smith appears to me like an evil Grand Inquisitor of the Roman Church Inquisition that persecuted millions of innocent Christians to death for being Protestant and calling the Bishop of Rome the Anti-Christ.
That's about right, when I saw that photo its almost like it brought back a long buried genetic memory of evil and malice. The side by side photos of evil Smith and Trump the good.
The current situation does remind me quite a bit of what Father Urbain Grandier went through in 17th century France, as faithfully depicted in both the film and Aldous Huxley's book. History repeating, with the likes of Queers For Palestine replacing the naked hysterical nuns.
On my Dad's side of the family going back to the 17th century, they were Huguenots that fled Britany in western France and found refuge in Brittain and New England. If it were not for the Brits, hundreds of thousands of Huguenots would have perished at the hands of the Inquisition. St. Bartholomew's Day 1572 is just an example of the insanity and fanaticism of that evil pseudo-Christian organization and its followers that got away with crimes against humanity.
That creepy photo of Jack Smith appears to me like an evil Grand Inquisitor of the Roman Church Inquisition that persecuted millions of innocent Christians to death for being Protestant and calling the Bishop of Rome the Anti-Christ.
Yes. Very much like Baron De Labaudermont in Ken Russell's The Devils. Exuding supercilious venality and malevolence.
https://www.filmkuratorium.de/filmk15-data/akten/screenshots/2018/03/the-devils-1971-dudley-sutton-med.jpg
That's about right, when I saw that photo its almost like it brought back a long buried genetic memory of evil and malice. The side by side photos of evil Smith and Trump the good.
The current situation does remind me quite a bit of what Father Urbain Grandier went through in 17th century France, as faithfully depicted in both the film and Aldous Huxley's book. History repeating, with the likes of Queers For Palestine replacing the naked hysterical nuns.
On my Dad's side of the family going back to the 17th century, they were Huguenots that fled Britany in western France and found refuge in Brittain and New England. If it were not for the Brits, hundreds of thousands of Huguenots would have perished at the hands of the Inquisition. St. Bartholomew's Day 1572 is just an example of the insanity and fanaticism of that evil pseudo-Christian organization and its followers that got away with crimes against humanity.