FINAL WARNING: A History of the New World Order

(Dana P.) #1

FINAL WARNING: The Birth of Tyranny


In 1786, a lodge was started in Portsmouth, Virginia, where allegedly,
Thomas Jefferson was a member; followed by fourteen others in
different cities of the thirteen colonies.

On July 19, 1789, David Pappin, President of Harvard University,
issued a warning to the graduating class, concerning the Illuminati’s
influence on American politics and religion. In April, 1793, France sent
new ambassador Edmond Genet to America, so he could collect
payment for the American debt incurred during the American
Revolution. The money was to be used to finance France’s war with
England. However, his real reason for being here, was to gain political
favor for France, and spread Illuminism, which he did, through the
establishment of ‘Democratic Clubs.’

Washington said “they would shake the government to its
foundations,” while John Quincy Adams, oldest son of the 2nd
President John Adams, who became our 6th President in 1825, said
that these clubs were “so perfectly affiliated with the Parisian Jacobins
that their origin from a common parent cannot possibly be mistaken.”
Because of the Illuminati threat, Washington and Adams lobbied
Congress to pass the Alien and Sedition Act, which was “designed to
protect the United States from the extensive French Jacobin
conspiracy, paid agents of which were even in high places in the
government.”

In a letter from Adams to Jefferson, dated June 30, 1813, he wrote:
“You certainly never felt the terrorism excited by Genet, in 1793 ...
when ten thousand people in the streets of Philadelphia, day after day
threatened to drag Washington out of his house, and effect a
revolution ... nothing but (a miracle) ... could have saved the United
States from a fatal revolution of government.”

Thomas Paine, author and political theorist, helped the Illuminati
infiltrate several Masonic lodges. He revealed his loyalty to them when
his book The Age of Reason was published in 1794, which dealt with
the role of religion in society. Although he believed in God, he could
not accept the entire Bible as being fact.

A second volume was published in 1796. An unofficial third volume
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