A little Globalist trivia for you today on October 20, 2024.
October 20, 1309. This one is quite long. (The “Knights Templar” rebranded themselves as “Freemason” later). From THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR, TEMPLE CHURCH, AND THE TEMPLE, BY CHARLES G. ADDISON, ESQ., 1842.
On Monday, the 20th of October, after the Templars had been languishing in the English prisons for more than a year and eight months, the tribunal constituted by the Pope to take the inquisition in the province of Canterbury assembled in the episcopal hall of London. It was composed of the bishop of London, Dieudonne, abbot of the monastery of Lagny, in the diocese of Paris, and Sicard de Vaur, canon of Narbonne, the Pope's chaplain, and hearer of causes in the pontifical palace. They were assisted by several foreign notaries. After the reading of the papal bulls, and some preliminary proceedings, the monstrous and ridiculous articles of accusation, a monument of human folly, superstition, and credulity, were solemnly exhibited as follows : "
Item. At the place, day, and hour aforesaid, in the presence of the aforesaid lords, and before us the above-mentioned notaries, the articles inclosed in the apostolic bull were exhibited and opened before us, the contents whereof are as underwritten. "
These are the articles upon which inquisition shall be made against the brethren of the military order of the Temple, &:c. "
1. That at their first reception into the order, or at some time afterwards, or as soon as an opportunity occurred, they were induced or admonished by those who had received them within the bosom of the fraternity, to deny Christ or Jesus, or the crucifixion, or at oiie time God, and at another time the blessed virgin, A. D. 1309. sometimes all the saints. "
2. That the brothers jointly did this. "
3. That the greater part of them did it. "
4. That they did it sometimes after their reception. "
5. That the receivers told and instructed those that were received, that Christ was not the true God, or sometimes Jesus, or sometimes the person crucified. "
6. That they told those they received that he was a false prophet. "
7. That they said he had not suffered for the redemption of mankind, nor been crucified but for his own sins. "
8. That neither the receiver nor the person received had any hope of obtaining salvation through him, and this they said to those they received, or something equivalent, or like it. "
9. That they made those they received into the order spit upon the cross, or upon the sign or figure of the cross, or the image of Christ, though they that were received did sometimes spit aside. "
10. That they caused the cross itself to be trampled under foot."
11. That the brethren themselves did sometimes trample on the same cross. "
12. Item quod mingebant interdum, et alios mingere facie- bant, super ipsam crucem, et hoc fecerunt aliquotiens in die veneris sancta ! ! "
13. Item quod nonnulli eorum ipsa die, vel alia septimanae sanctae pro conculcatione et minctione praedictis consueverunt convenire ! "
14. That they worshipped a cat which was placed in the midst of the congregation. "
15. That they did these things in contempt of Christ and the orthodox faith. "
16. That they did not believe the sacrament of the altar. "
17. That some of them did not. "
18. That the greater part did not. "
19. That they believed not the other sacraments of tle church. "
20. That the priests of the order did not utter the words by which the body of Christ is consecrated in the canon of the mass. "
21. That some of them did not. "
22. That the greater part did not. "
23. That those who received them enjoined the same. "
24. That they believed, and so it was told them, that the Grand Master of the order could absolve them from their sins. "
25. That the visitor could do so. "
26. That the preceptors, of whom many were laymen, could do it. "
27. That they in fact did do so. "
28. That some of them did. "
29. That the Grand Master confessed these things of himself, even before he was taken, in the presence of great persons. "
30. That in receiving brothers into the order, or when about to receive them, or some time after having received them, the receivers and the persons received kissed one another on the mouth, the navel ! ! "
(31 through 35 are missing in the .pdf).
36. That the receptions of the brethren were made clandestinely. "
37. That none were present but the brothers of the said order. "
38. That for this reason there has for a long time been a A. D. 1309, vehement suspicion against them. The succeeding articles proceed to charge the Templars with crimes and abominations too horrible and disgusting to be named. "
(39 through 45 are missing in the .pdf).
46. That the brothers themselves had idols in every province, viz. heads; some of which had three faces, and some one, and some a man's skull. "
47. That they adored that idol, or those idols, especially in their great chapters and assemblies. "
48. That they worshipped it. "
49. As their God. "
50. As their Saviour. "
51. That some of them did so. "
52. That the greater part did. "
53. Tliat they said that that head could save them. "
54. That it could produce riches. "
55. That it had given to the order all its wealth. "
56. That it caused the earth to bring forth seed. " 57. That it made the trees to flourish, "
58. That they bound or touched the head of the said idols with cords, wherewith they bound themselves about their shirts, or next their skins. "
59. That at their reception the aforesaid little cords, or others of the same length, were delivered to each of the brotliers. "
60. That they did this in worship of their idol. "
61. That it was enjoined them to gird themselves with the said little cords, as before mentioned, and continually to wear them. "
62. That the brethren of the order were generally received in that manner. "
63. That they did these things out of devotion. James de "
64. That they did them everywhere. a.d. 1309. "
65. That the greater part did. "
66. That those who refused the tilings above mentioned at tlieir reception, or to observe them afterwards, were killed or east into prison.”
October 20, 1942.
Guardian: How Bush's grandfather helped Hitler's rise to power, 2004.
The alien property custodian seized the assets of the UBC, of which Prescott Bush was a director.
October 20, 1967.
“Bigfoot” makes his debut. A lot of people bought into Bigfoot initially. Then it turned into a joke over time, making “conspiracy theorists” look like idiots in perhaps the most successful PSYOP in CIA history.
October 20, 1986.
Bollyn..
During Shamir's second term (October 20, 1986 – July 13, 1992) two of Isser Harel's senior Mossad agents obtained the anti-terrorism security contract for the World Trade Center in New York. In 1987, Zvi Malkin and Avraham Shalom Bendor obtained the contract for a company called Atwell Security of Tel Aviv. The company was created by Shaul Eisenberg, the mega Mossad agent of Asia, specifically for the World Trade Center. When it was discovered that Shalom Bendor was using a false name and had a criminal past the Port Authority cancelled the contract. The details of this can be found in the chapter entitled "The Architecture of Terror" in Solving 9-11: The Deception that Changed the World.
October 20, 1994. Assassination of Roy Cohn’s Secretary.
New Yorker, Eavesdropping on Roy Cohn and Donald Trump, 2017.
And, in the nineteen-seventies and eighties, many of Trump’s private conversations with his late mentor, the lawyer Roy Cohn, were eavesdropped on by Cohn’s longtime switchboard operator and courier, whose activities were later exposed.
Cohn, who had been an aide to Senator Joe McCarthy, in the nineteen-fifties, was a political fixer and lawyer who represented New York power brokers, from the Yankees owner George Steinbrenner to the mob boss Carlo Gambino. Trump was one of his favorite clients; before Cohn’s death, of aids-related complications, in 1986, the two men talked up to five times a day and partied together at Studio 54 and other night clubs. “Roy was brutal, but he was a very loyal guy,” Trump told the writer Tim O’Brien, in 2005. “He brutalized for you.” Christine Seymour had recently graduated from Sarah Lawrence College when she started working at the back of Cohn’s office as a switchboard operator, connecting calls with clients including Nancy Reagan, Gloria Vanderbilt, and the mobsters Gambino and Anthony (Fat Tony) Salerno. “She listened in to all of them,” Susan Bell, Cohn’s longtime secretary, recalled recently. “Not at his direction, but he knew.” A pretty brunette, Seymour was, according to her brothers, brash and funny, with a gossipy sense of humor. Cohn had his reasons for tolerating her behavior. “She was very efficient, and he liked that about her,” Bell said. “She would work anytime, day or night. She was always at his beck and call.”
After Cohn died and his law firm dissolved, Seymour left the city and moved to Florida. She settled in Key Colony Beach, a sleepy town at the bottom of the Keys, where, in the early nineties, she started writing a book, “Surviving Roy Cohn,” based on her notes on the eavesdropped calls. It must have seemed an ideal moment for a project that promised to take the reader inside the town house of one of the most scandalous figures in recent New York history. In 1993, James Woods was nominated for an Emmy for his portrayal of Cohn in an HBO biopic, “Citizen Cohn,” and “Angels in America,” Tony Kushner’s play dramatizing Cohn’s struggle with aids, had débuted to acclaim on Broadway.
On the morning of May 5, 1994, the New York Post ran a column by Cindy Adams with the headline “Savvy Chris Spills the Beans on Roy Cohn.” In her characteristically breezy manner, Adams wrote about Seymour’s book project, listing the secrets she would expose. (“How a porno flick was filmed in the office and business was conducted while someone was being whipped”; “How Sen. Joe McCarthy hid the fact that he was gay. . . .”) “Chris taped conversations,” she wrote. “She kept a log—three spiral notebooks a day—of transactions.” Adams wrote that Seymour “monitored every call in or out, knew everything, everyone, knew where all the bodies were buried.” The story ricocheted through the city, and Cohn’s former law partners and staffers received phone calls from several other anxious clients, worried that their secrets would be revealed.
Five months later, on October 20, 1994, Seymour was driving her blue two-door Yugo on a highway in Florida at dusk when she collided head-on with a tractor-trailer and was instantly killed. She was forty-six, and the book was still unfinished. Seymour’s collaborator on the book, an author and literary agent named Jeffrey Schmidt, was at home on Long Island when he got the call from Seymour’s mother, Adele, who lived in nearby Shoreham. As he recalled recently, on hearing the news of Seymour’s death, he panicked, took a box of the notebooks, and burned them.
October 20, 2005. Epstein clears out computers before Palm Beach PD raid.
Miami Herald, COPS WORKED TO PUT SERIAL SEX ABUSER IN PRISON. PROSECUTORS WORKED TO CUT HIM A BREAK, 2018.
The day of the search on Oct. 20, 2005, they found that most of Epstein’s computer hard drives, surveillance cameras and videos had been removed from the house, leaving loose, dangling wires, according to the police report. There was a picture of Epstein, Ghislaine Maxwell, and Pope John Paul II.
Got any more October 20 trivia? Leave it in the comments section.
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