Wednesday, August 15, 2018

Almost everything in this world, every organization or structure, ENDS OR BEGINS WITH SATAN.

Joseph Stalin was born into a prominent Catholic family in Gori, Georgia. His father was a priest and his mother was a devout Catholic. Stalin was educated by Capuchin priests as a boy, and would later be accepted into Tiflis Seminary, a Jesuit institution.

Despite the Jesuits expulsion in 1820, by Alexander I, many Jesuits still remained within Russian territory, and maintained control of several institutions, including Tiflis Seminary. Stalin himself substantiates this in his interview with Journalist Emil Ludwig (Cohen).

Some historians propagate the theory that Stalin departed from the seminary shortly before graduating, but this position is untenable. The more logical and credible conclusion is that Stalin graduated as a Jesuit priest, with the assignment to infiltrate and manage the Georgian Underground Movement against the Russian Tsarist Government. Either way, we know he was Jesuit trained, and on mission to enforce the Jesuit doctrine of Communism throughout Russia.

By 1922, the country was broke, and many were starving. Desperate for reinforcements, American Companies along with Wall Street Financiers stepped in and helped the Bolsheviks get Russia going again. In April of the same year, Stalin was made General Secretary of the Central Committee.

With everything now in place, Jesuit General Wlodimar Ledochowski ordered for the death of Lenin, and gave full power of the Soviet Union to Bloody Joseph.

Stalin kicked it into high gear in 1939 when he began the outlawing of the Russian Orthodox Church, seizing thousands of schools and churches to be put in the hands of the Catholic Church.

A greatly suppressed fact is that the head of Stalin’s death camps in Siberia was none other than Cardinal Gregory Agagianian, his classmate at Tiflis. Together these sinister Roman Catholic classmates would kill tens of million of people in their death camps, far exceeding the casualties of Hitler in Germany. Sadly, this information has barely seen the light of day.

Toward the end of his life, Stalin had a falling out with the Catholic Church resulting in a strong suppression against them.

Shortly after these events, Stalin was given the poison cup and died on March 5, 1953.

“Practically every right-wing dictator of the period had been born and brought up a Catholic – notably Hitler, Franco, Petain, Mussolini, Pavelic, and Tiso (who was a Catholic priest).” – John Cornwell - Hitler's Pope (1999; p. 280)

Seminary was controlled by Jesuits and Agagianian was influential to Stalin and the Cold War. We read from Murder in the Vatican (pp. 25, 26) by Avro Manhattan with emphasis by Eric Jon Phelps:

“Msgr. Gregory Agagianian, Patriarch of the Catholic Rite of the Armenian Church [was elevated by the ex-Jesuit Pope Pius XI] to the Patriarchate in 1937, a post which he held for 25 years thereafter . . . In 1946, anti-Communist Pope Pius XII made him a Cardinal . . . Cardinal Agagianian was expected to play a major role during the developing Cold War . . . The reason was that Agagianian was the top expert on the Soviet Union, Communism, and the Orthodox Church; . . . He was of Armenian origin, but a Georgian by birth. He had known Communism at first hand, having lived three difficult years as a young priest in Tiflis, Georgia, whilst the Bolshevist Revolution was raging. He spoke fluent Russian . . . Agagianian was also considered very special by Stalin himself [as both Josef Stalin had been educated by, and Grigory Rasputin had been advised by the rector of the Order’s “Orthodox” Tiflis Theological Seminary—Jesuit Spiritual Coadjutor and Orthodox Bishop Hermogen], the Cardinal having had the dubious distinction of attending the same Jesuit seminary [though “Russian Orthodox” in name] in Georgia as Stalin had done. This was a small, but significant, fact, . . .” {37} [Emphasis added]
Another source giving testament to Tiflis being under the Jesuits comes from Joseph Stalin; a Short Biography by G. F. Alexandrov published 1947:
The Jesuitical regime that reigned in the seminary aroused in Stalin a burning sense of protest and strengthened his revolutionary senti- ments. At the age of fifteen Stalin became a revolu- tionary.
And finally from Stalin himself:
Stalin himself openly admitted the Jesuit control of the institution in his famous interview with Jewish Journalist Emil Ludwig (Cohen):
Ludwig: What impelled you to become an oppositionist? Was it, perhaps, bad treatment by your parents?
Stalin: No. My parents were uneducated, but they did not treat me badly by any means. But it was a different matter at the Orthodox theological seminary which I was then attending. In protest against the outrageous regime and the Jesuitical methods prevalent at the seminary, I was ready to become, and actually did become, a revolutionary, a believer in Marxism as a really revolutionary teaching. Ludwig: But do you not admit that the Jesuits have good points?
Stalin: Yes, they are systematic and persevering in working to achieve sordid ends. Hut their principal method is spying, prying, worming their way into people’s souls and outraging their feelings. What good can there be in that? For instance, the spying in the hostel. At nine o’clock the bell rings for morning tea, we go to the dining-room, and when we return to our rooms we find that meantime a search has been made and all our chests have been ransacked…. What good point can there be in that?
The Jesuit Generals rule through provincial governement the article did not say the Jesuit General himself was in Russia, his subordinates however, were.
While digging through historical records to determine the feasibility of the legend that Hitler escaped to Argentina after the war, we came upon an interesting link between Joseph Stalin and the Roman Catholic Church.

It seems that Stalin was not only a Catholic, but he was an ordained Jesuit priest before he became a ruthless Communist dictator and mass killer of an untold thousands. Some believe Stalin was responsible for more death and destruction than Hitler yet the Catholic Church never chose to excommunicate him.

Stalin’s real name was Josef Vissarionovich Dzhugashvili. For obvious reasons, after becoming politically active, he changed his last name to Stalin, which, in Russian, means “made of steel."

He was born to relatively wealthy Catholic parents and attended a church-run school at Gori. He graduated at the top of his class in 1892. He then was accepted as a student at the “Orthodox” Seminary of Tbilisi, Georgia, where he trained as a Jesuit priest.

The history books report that Christianity was banned in Russia under the Communists, but this was not the case with the Jesuits. They not only remained in Russian territory but reportedly helped finance the first and second world wars. But that is another story.

Stalin talked about his conversion to Marxism during an interview with Journalist Emil Ludwig. He said the “Jesuitical methods prevalent” at the seminary were severe and he became “a revolutionary, a believer in Marxism” in protest to “the outrageous regime” he endured at the school.

He said the Jesuits were “systematic and persevering in working to achieve sordid ends. But their principal method is spying, prying, worming their way into people’s souls and outraging their feelings. What good can there be in that?”

In spite of his feeling about the Jesuits, Stalin remained a star pupil at the seminary and was ordained as a proper Jesuit priest after seven years of study. After his graduation, however, he became “influential and active in coordinating the Georgian Social-Democratic movement in the Georgian underground against the Russian Tsar. He was a secret leader of the Mayday uprising of 1901 and quickly moved up in rank among the revolutionaries.

In the years of turmoil that followed, Stalin was arrested and imprisoned in Siberia numerous times, but each time was mysteriously released and returned to action with the Bolsheviks. In 1917 Stalin and Lenin founded Pravda, the official Bolshevik newspaper in Saint Petersburg, which became a major tool of the revolution.

Lenin and Stalin did not get along even though they were both active in the revolution. Lenin regarded Stalin as a double agent of the Jesuits because of Stalin’s amazing “luck” at escaping execution and prison. Then in 1922, after the Bolsheviks won the Civil War, the Rothschilds and American Jesuit Bankers offered to finance the new Soviet Union if Stalin was given a key role. Thus Stalin was made General Secretary of the Central Committee, a springboard to his eventual position as head of the Soviets.

Stalin’s promotion set up a final show-down with Lenin. Lenin began planning to have Stalin “eliminated.” At the same time, Jesuit Superior General Wlodimir Ledochowski gave an order to Stalin to have Lenin killed. Lenin died of poisoning on January 21, 1924. The official word from Pravda was that Lenin died of syphilis.

Thus Stalin moved into the position of the undisputed ruler of the Soviet Union. Among his first acts was to outlaw the Russian Orthodox Church. Thousands of churches and schools were seized and handed over to the Catholic Church.

It is not very well known but Stalin, like Hitler, launched a deportation of Jews to Siberian death camps, where it is said tens of millions perished. The head of those camps was Catholic Jesuit Cardinal Gregory Agagianian, a former classmate with Stalin at Tiflis.

Another strange part of this story is that even though he was a fully ordained priest, Stalin was allowed to marry twice. And there is no record that he was ever defrocked as a priest.







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I want to give you all an experiment to try at home. If you have a car with a key fob locking system, walk away from your car far enough that pushing the button on the key fob wont work the lock. Most cars flash lights to acknowledge it worked. When you can hold the fob out front of you and it won't work, that's far enough. Sometimes this can be as far as 200 ft if the battery is good. Now, put the fob against your head and push the button. Did the lights flash? I bet they did. Putting the fob against your brain amplifies the signal up to another 50-100 feet. What these people are warning about is no matter how small the signal is, your brain pan is more sensitive to the signal than just open air. Having a cell phone that goes 5 miles to a tower is at least 1/4 watt, probably more like a half watt. A microwave is 1000 watts or more. Some older microwaves are 750-850 watts. A microwave would fry your brain in seconds. A smaller signal could confuse you, make you forgetful, make you depressed, make you hear things not there, ect. Is there some fighting in your house that makes no sense? Has a child changed, stopped studying, become a discipline problem?What these guys are saying is why would you put your brain exposed to more microwaves than needed. My Router will barely reach the other end of my house, but it's located in my bedroom. Sleeping under it is just Russian Roulette. Take the bullet out.