Is It Live or Is It Livery
9/11 Resolution Trilogy Volume I: Pattern of the Crimes
9/11 Resolution Trilogy Volume II: Pattern of the Signs part 1 of 4
9/11 Resolution Trilogy Volume II: Pattern of the Signs part 2 of 4
9/11 Resolution Trilogy Volume II: Pattern of the Signs part 3 of 4
9/11 Resolution Trilogy Volume II: Pattern of the Signs part 4 of 4
9/11 Resolution Trilogy Volume III: Pattern of the Times part 1 of 4
9/11 Resolution Trilogy Volume III: Pattern of the Times part 2 of 4
9/11 Resolution Trilogy Volume III: Pattern of the Times part 3 of 4
9/11 Resolution Trilogy Volume III: Pattern of the Times part 4 of 4
Field McConnell explains the events of September 11, 2001
Field McConnell on The Edge
Very great work being done by yourself, i salute you with the most respect. You are the real intelligence ! ; )
ReplyDeleteEngland to blame? Load of crap. England never massacred Scots and Irish. Scotland allied itself with France and invaded England numerous times. It then invaded Ireland thus emplanting the so-called Scotch-Irish.
ReplyDeleteAlso, the NWO is propelled by the fasle Freemasonry of the Scottish Rite.
The colours of freedom are red and white. The colours of oppression are white on blue the colours of the Scottish Rite. Why is the Ku Klux Klan called a clan (original spelling) and why did it burn crosses, a Scottish tradition.
The English empire was as benign an empire as could posibly be, and became violent and destructive only after the 1707 union between England and Scotland. This union was designed from the outset to erase England. The false Freemasonry of the Scottish Rite became obvious then and was transferred to the USA. The white on blue was introduced into the American flag.
Don't blame England.
Though you certainly make some valid points, it's not quite as straightforward as that, Mr. Gash. The truth seldom is. And no empires are benign. (Various English people never massacred various Scottish and Irish folks?! Talk about revisionism. Then there's the Triangular Trade....)
ReplyDeleteIt's always easier to fault 'autrui', rather than 'soi-même'. There's plenty of blame and responsibility to go around – and likewise, plenty of opportunity for redress and harmony. Self-honesty and unflinching objectivity provide a good place to start – a tall order, I know, but a noble standard to strive toward.