Charlie Hebdo: Pencil Power, Satire, IRS & Masonic Handshakes
- Duration: 9:28
- Updated: 14 Jan 2015
Interviews at the Charlie Rally opens with Christine Lagarde, the chief of the International Monetary Fund, and entourage, marching from the Newseum to the Police memorial.
Then interview with a woman holding a cartoon by French satirical cartoonist, Plantu, of his 2015 reinterpretation of the 1830 Eugène Delacroix painting of Liberty Leading the People (La Liberté Guidant le Peuple), Plantu takes as his weapon of Liberty are Pencils.
Next an interview with a former U.S, intelligence officer, Apuleius Hillier, who, while at the Defense Language Institute in Monterey, California, became a lifetime student of the German satirist Kurt Tucholsky, Tucholsky coined the quotation, falsely attributed to Josef Stalin - "The war? I can't find it too terrible! The death of one man: that is a catastrophe. One hundred thousand deaths: that is a statistic!" Französischer Witz ("French Wit"), 1932. Apuleius the interviewee, is thrown of of Germany for protesting the jailing of East German dissident Nico Hubner, at the Brandenburg Gate, make a lifetime career working for the the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) and collects race horses.
Enter the Freemasons, their connection with the slain cartoonists and advice they give to governments - ends with the Grand Master's handshake!
Various Internet sites carried the news of the Masonic connections to the Charlie Hebdo murders.
"Two of the journalists assassinated in the cowardly and barbarous attack on Charlie Hebdo were Freemasons. Bro Bernard Maris, economic columnist at CH, and Bro Michel Renaud, formerly of Europe 1 and Le Figaro, were both active Freemasons in the Grand Orient, Bernard in Roger Leray Lodge in Paris and Michel in Lux Perpetue Lodge in Clermont Ferrand.
They died representing the values we stand for :
- Freedom of expression,
- Freedom of conscience
- FREEDOM in general
There is no real equivalent in English language Freemasonry but in French we say "Gémissons, gémissons, gémissons, mais espérons". Which translated roughly means "Cry with anguish, cry with anguish, cry with anguish, but let us hope.""(http://freemasonsfordummies.blogspot.com/2015/01/i-received-this-note-today-from-grand.html)
http://wn.com/Charlie_Hebdo_Pencil_Power,_Satire,_IRS_&_Masonic_Handshakes
Interviews at the Charlie Rally opens with Christine Lagarde, the chief of the International Monetary Fund, and entourage, marching from the Newseum to the Police memorial.
Then interview with a woman holding a cartoon by French satirical cartoonist, Plantu, of his 2015 reinterpretation of the 1830 Eugène Delacroix painting of Liberty Leading the People (La Liberté Guidant le Peuple), Plantu takes as his weapon of Liberty are Pencils.
Next an interview with a former U.S, intelligence officer, Apuleius Hillier, who, while at the Defense Language Institute in Monterey, California, became a lifetime student of the German satirist Kurt Tucholsky, Tucholsky coined the quotation, falsely attributed to Josef Stalin - "The war? I can't find it too terrible! The death of one man: that is a catastrophe. One hundred thousand deaths: that is a statistic!" Französischer Witz ("French Wit"), 1932. Apuleius the interviewee, is thrown of of Germany for protesting the jailing of East German dissident Nico Hubner, at the Brandenburg Gate, make a lifetime career working for the the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) and collects race horses.
Enter the Freemasons, their connection with the slain cartoonists and advice they give to governments - ends with the Grand Master's handshake!
Various Internet sites carried the news of the Masonic connections to the Charlie Hebdo murders.
"Two of the journalists assassinated in the cowardly and barbarous attack on Charlie Hebdo were Freemasons. Bro Bernard Maris, economic columnist at CH, and Bro Michel Renaud, formerly of Europe 1 and Le Figaro, were both active Freemasons in the Grand Orient, Bernard in Roger Leray Lodge in Paris and Michel in Lux Perpetue Lodge in Clermont Ferrand.
They died representing the values we stand for :
- Freedom of expression,
- Freedom of conscience
- FREEDOM in general
There is no real equivalent in English language Freemasonry but in French we say "Gémissons, gémissons, gémissons, mais espérons". Which translated roughly means "Cry with anguish, cry with anguish, cry with anguish, but let us hope.""(http://freemasonsfordummies.blogspot.com/2015/01/i-received-this-note-today-from-grand.html)
- published: 14 Jan 2015
- views: 75