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Reason: None provided.

This quote first appeared in a book in 1959 that the author said he got it from a letter that has never been proven to exist.

Not true.

The author you're referring to is William Guy Carr, who wrote Pawns in the Game in 1959. He states the letter was mentioned in another book written by Cardinal Jose María Caro Rodriguez.

Cardinal Rodriguez published Freemasonry Unveiled in 1925, so after World War I but before World War II and III.

Here's a link to the page where the Cardinal mentions the 1871 letter was attributed to Albert Pike by Le Diable Au XIX Siecle and states the possibility it might not be authentic, but is prophetic in spite of its questionable authenticity -

https://archive.org/details/freemasonry-unveiled-by-the-cardinal-of-chile-1925-1957/page/61/mode/2up

Le Diable Au XIX Siecle is also known as Leo Taxil. The Masons claim Taxil was trolling the Catholics.

https://freemasonry.bcy.ca/texts/taxil_confessed.html

Here's another link where the Freemasons claim the 1871 letter is a forgery but neglect to mention the reference to it in Freemasonry Unveiled (1925), of course.

https://freemasonry.bcy.ca/anti-masonry/pike_mazzini.html

P.S. The Freemasons also argue the words Nazism and Zionism were not known in 1871 and hope you don't use your critical thinking skills.

If these were indeed manufactured movements, is it any surprise the conspirators came up with these terms?

1 year ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

This quote first appeared in a book in 1959 that the author said he got it from a letter that has never been proven to exist.

Not true.

The author you're referring to is William Guy Carr, who wrote Pawns in the Game in 1959. He states the letter was mentioned in another book written by Cardinal Jose María Caro Rodriguez.

Cardinal Rodriguez published Freemasonry Unveiled in 1925, so after World War I but before World War II and III.

Here's a link to the page where the Cardinal mentions the 1871 letter was attributed to Albert Pike by Le Diable Au XIX Siecle and states the possibility it might not be authentic, but is prophetic in spite of its questionable authenticity -

https://archive.org/details/freemasonry-unveiled-by-the-cardinal-of-chile-1925-1957/page/61/mode/2up

Le Diable Au XIX Siecle is also known as Leo Taxil. The Masons claim Taxil was trolling the Catholics.

https://freemasonry.bcy.ca/texts/taxil_confessed.html

Here's another link where the Freemasons claim the 1871 letter is a forgery but neglect to mention the reference to it in Freemasonry Unveiled (1925), of course.

https://freemasonry.bcy.ca/anti-masonry/pike_mazzini.html

P.S. The Freemasons also argue the words Nazism and Zionism were not known in 1871 and hope you don't use your critical thinking skills.

If these were indeed manufactured movements, is it any surprise the conspirators came up with these terms?

1 year ago
1 score
Reason: Original

This quote first appeared in a book in 1959 that the author said he got it from a letter that has never been proven to exist.

Not true.

The author you're referring to is William Guy Carr, who wrote Pawns in the Game. He states the letter was mentioned in another book written by Cardinal Jose María Caro Rodriguez.

Cardinal Rodriguez published Freemasonry Unveiled in 1925, so after World War I but before World War II and III.

Here's a link to the page where the Cardinal mentions the 1871 letter was attributed to Albert Pike by Le Diable Au XIX Siecle and states the possibility it might not be authentic, but is prophetic in spite of its questionable authenticity -

https://archive.org/details/freemasonry-unveiled-by-the-cardinal-of-chile-1925-1957/page/61/mode/2up

Le Diable Au XIX Siecle is also known as Leo Taxil. The Masons claim Taxil was trolling the Catholics.

https://freemasonry.bcy.ca/texts/taxil_confessed.html

Here's another link where the Freemasons claim the 1871 letter is a forgery but neglect to mention the reference to it in Freemasonry Unveiled (1925), of course.

https://freemasonry.bcy.ca/anti-masonry/pike_mazzini.html

P.S. The Freemasons also argue the words Nazism and Zionism were not known in 1871 and hope you don't use your critical thinking skills.

If these were indeed manufactured movements, is it any surprise the conspirators came up with these terms?

1 year ago
1 score