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Reason: None provided.

They were infiltrated by Freemasonry - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OIdANhgrm7k&list=PLOtKxMklQeXbXpwe4_Xk9vru9WGQJvXHK&index=9

The Jesuits began as an anti-communist order.

Entire playlist: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLOtKxMklQeXbXpwe4_Xk9vru9WGQJvXHK

There are 13 videos on that playlist alone about the Jesuits told from a different perspective other than "Jesuits bad!"

Here is more: https://brill.com/view/journals/jjs/5/1/article-p1_1.xml?language=en

In Beth Griech-Polelle’s article, we find a similar theme to that of Elmgren’s research: Jesuits and Jews are portrayed as being one and the same entity posing an existential threat, only this time, it is not in Finnish post-Civil War society, but rather in Nazi Germany. Examining the views of various Nazi leaders, Griech-Polelle seeks to show how Adolf Hitler, Alfred Rosenberg, Dietrich Eckart, and others conflated long-standing stereotypes and imagery of Jesuits with stereotypes of Jewish-ness and Bolshevism. In these leaders’ minds, Bolshevism was the product of Jewish materialistic thinking and Jesuitism had been inundated with “Jewish qualities.” Both Jesuitism and Jewish-ness were seen as working together to pose an existential threat to the continued success of the German people.

Also, https://fatima.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/BT057-Alta-Vendita-2019-WEB2.pdf

3 years ago
1 score
Reason: Original

They were infiltrated by Freemasonry.

The Jesuits began as an anti-communist order.

https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLOtKxMklQeXbXpwe4_Xk9vru9WGQJvXHK

There are 13 videos on that playlist alone about the Jesuits told from a different perspective other than "Jesuits bad!"

Here is more: https://brill.com/view/journals/jjs/5/1/article-p1_1.xml?language=en

In Beth Griech-Polelle’s article, we find a similar theme to that of Elmgren’s research: Jesuits and Jews are portrayed as being one and the same entity posing an existential threat, only this time, it is not in Finnish post-Civil War society, but rather in Nazi Germany. Examining the views of various Nazi leaders, Griech-Polelle seeks to show how Adolf Hitler, Alfred Rosenberg, Dietrich Eckart, and others conflated long-standing stereotypes and imagery of Jesuits with stereotypes of Jewish-ness and Bolshevism. In these leaders’ minds, Bolshevism was the product of Jewish materialistic thinking and Jesuitism had been inundated with “Jewish qualities.” Both Jesuitism and Jewish-ness were seen as working together to pose an existential threat to the continued success of the German people.

Also, https://fatima.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/BT057-Alta-Vendita-2019-WEB2.pdf

3 years ago
1 score