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Thursday, July 28, 2011

"Their ashes were then ground up and dumped into the Seine, so as to leave no relics behind."


This all started Gid after asked me to review his last post for suggestions and I gladly obliged.  In his post Gid mentions the Knights Templar in connection with a priest who also serves as an army chaplain.  It stuck in my head, because, well, Knights Templar!  I've read the books, stumbled across their symbols hanging from crosses on a stone altar, the cross later shattered, suggestive Merovingian bees lurking close by....I'm as entranced by the legends as much as the next nerd.

After reviewing the post I closed blogger and popped over to the NYT and there I read that Anders Behring Breivik, the terrorist/mass murderer of Oslo, referred to himself as a Templar.  A meaningful coincidence indeed.  It was the first time that the scope of what had actually happened registered and I knew immediately the conspiracy theorists would have a field day.  When I got around to looking over Breivik's massive (1500 page) manifesto (2083 – A European Declaration of Independence), I saw a photo of him in full Masonic regalia.  Like raw meat before a pack of dogs.

Conspiracy theorist Michael Hoffman has written extensively about what he terms the Revelation of the Method (great explanation there, btw) and one detail illustrating this alleged tactic came back to me immediately.  He has written that part of the pattern found with mind-controlled sleeper agents is that they have three names.  I recalled he'd reiterated that point after the January shooting in Arizona.

(Targeted Killings in Arizona 1/10/11, boldface added) 

The alleged perpetrator, Jared Lee Loughner, has been made to fit the familiar "lone nut" profile, complete with the requisite three names (as in John Wilkes Booth, Lee Harvey Oswald, James Earl Ray, Mark David Chapman). One of his other victims was a nine-year-old girl born on Sept. 11, 2001. Rep. Giffords attended a liberal "Reform" synagogue. Both Giffords and Roll were alleged targets of citizen displeasure over their actions relating to illegal immigration. The alleged perp supposedly wrote about government mind control.

So, here we have Anders Behring Breivik and questions relating to immigration and demographic change.  I can't help but think of my own recent Haboob post, a lightly satirical poke at nativist/nationalist sentiment which was dramatically highlighted by the Arizona shooting.  Some would say Breivik's actions were political, others the work of a madman.  But what is the line between political extemist violence and th e actions of a lunatic?  I read another article where I guy points out that when Arabs were suspected of the initial bombing, it was described as an act of radical Islamic terrorism.  When it was revealed the guy was Norwegian, the work of a madman.  When does it become Christian or Right-wing terrorism?  Is it?

There are other facts that some will use to support claims that this was a conspiracy.  Why, for example, did it take the police so long to respond?  Breivik was the son of a diplomat, and according to the NYT "He attended the elite high school where the country’s current king, Harald V, and his son once studied."  A step-brother to the Crown Princess was among the victims.  One might resonably ask how one man could kill so many?  Why could a news crew in a helicopter film him whereas a police helicopter wasn't even present?

Then there's the Freemason thing: 

Four years ago, he joined the Norwegian Order of Freemasons [St. Olaus T.D. Tre Søiler No. 8, Oslo]. To gain admission, a man must be “known to have stability in his daily life,” said Ivar A. Skar, the group’s leader. “He has now been excluded — the exclusion immediately effective,” Mr. Skar added.

The exclusion order and condemnation of his acts can be read here. 

(There is another Tamplar group called the The Sovereign Military Order of the Temple of Jerusalem (SMOTJ), unaffiliated with Freemasonry but part of the Ordo Supremus Militaris Templi Hierosolymitani (OSMTH).  They are a Christian charitable group founded by founded in 1804 by French physician Fabré-Palaprat.  Both sites have also issued statements like that of the Swedish Freemasons.  The Ordo Templi Orientis (OTO), aka the Order of Oriental Templars) exists in Sweden, but as of yet haven't offered up any statement.)


In a search for patterns one must look everywhere. If one looks on a map of Kaczynski's adopted hometown, Lincoln, Montana at the time he resided there, one sees that the location where he chose to erect his cabin was amid the Scapegoat Mountains and the Scapegoat Eatery.

If one looks at images of Anders Breivik, one sees him attired in a masonic apron.

Sometimes in our modern desire for complexity we overlook the significance of the simplest signals.

The mere fact that he was a Mason and pictured thus is apparently "proof" enough of a conspiracy.

But then again, any plan to perpetrate a criminal act by more than one person is by definition a "conspiracy": 

The police said later they were not ruling out the possibility that Mr. Breivik’s claim of accomplices, which he described as “two more cells” in an organization he called Knights Templar, was accurate. But they also noted that he had previously told them he had acted alone.  (NYT)

Reality or fantasy?

We'll have to wait and see.  I'm led to think of another story about a conservative Christians assuming the Templar/Crusader mantle.

Recall back in 2009 that Eric Prince, founder of Blackwater (now Xe) was accused by a former employee of being a man who "....views himself as a Christian crusader tasked with eliminating Muslims and the Islamic faith from the globe...." 

To that end, Mr. Prince intentionally deployed to Iraq certain men who shared his vision of Christian supremacy, knowing and wanting these men to take every available opportunity to murder Iraqis. Many of these men used call signs based on the Knights of the Templar, the warriors who fought the Crusades.

Blackwater/Xe has also been linked to the very real and still-existent Knights of Malta (who have also released a statment of condemantion).

The two riders on the same horse represent poverty.  Could it also mean the Templar never acts alone?
The Templars were a monastic/military order of founded circa 1119 by two French veterans of the First Crusade for the purpose of protecting pilgrims to the freshly-seized Jerusalem.  In pursuit of this goal they came up with an idea that has been described as the forerunner of modern banking.  Let's say you wanted to travel from France to Jerusalem; it didn't make much sense to lug a bag of gold along--too risky.  So what you did was left your gold in Toulouse or Beziers or whereever and the Knights wrote you a receipt, with which you could withdraw part of your deposit along the route.  For a fee of course.

They also spent a great deal of time fighting in the Crusades, which is more important to our narrative.

The templars soon amassed a vast fortune of cash and properties: vineyards, lands, ships, castles.  Far from their ideals of poverty, humility and chastity, they acquired a reputation as both haughty and debauched.  Resented by many, their wealth was coveted.  On Friday, October 13, 1307, French King Philip IV, who'd been hatching a plot with Clement V, ordered the Templars arrested and tortured.  They were accused of heresy, blasphemy, idolatry, homosexuality....but it was pretty much all a pretext for seizing their wealth.

In any event, Clement formally disbanded the order in 1312 and the Templars disappeared.  Or did they?  Some of them may have fled to Scotland, which at the time was excommunicated from the Church.  Although far from proven, there is some tantalizing evidence.  Many point to the sudden appearance of Templar symbols on Scottish gravestones in the years following the dissolution.  Some authors of a fanciful bent (Born in Blood, Holy Blood Holy Grail) posit that these fugitive Templars evolved into Freemasonry.  Bear in mind that these books are considered pseudohistorical by most serious historians, but that aside, this particular claim is not wholly without merit.

Many Freemasons and anti-Masons believe this to be true, however, and many Freemasons who don't believe in a historical link nevertheless honor them.  In the US, for example, the appendant York Rite contains degrees or orders, divided into Commanderies and Grand Commanderies, known as the Knights Templar; both Northern and Southern jurisdictions of the Scottish Rite contain degrees inspired by the Templars.  The Masonic youth group Order of DeMolay is named after the last Grand Commander of the Templars, Jacques DeMolay.  There is a curious legend that upon the death of Louis XVI during the French Revolution, a man jumped on the scaffold an cried "Jacques DeMolay, thou art avenged!"

The Templar history and mythos is such a morass of bullshit that it would be folly for me to try and refute or deny the Templar thesis of Freemasonic origin.  Serious scholarship has produced, however, a strong case for a Scottish origin to Freemasony (David Stevenson. The Origins of Freemasonry: Scotland's Century, 1590-1710.)  It's not an airtight case, but it does at least demonstrate a strong and quite early Masonic presence before the solidly documented existence Freemasonry after 1717.  But that's a whole other story and doesn't involve Templars.

Anders Behring Breivik is not the first Islamophobe to identify with crusaders...his video also cites El Cid as a hero...and if I recall correctly during my researches on Pelayo (Pelagius) I came across a website celebrating him within a militant Catholic/anti-Muslim context.  As I argued in that post and a series of posts about contemporary folklore, the long period of the Crusades and the Reconquista gave rise to a lot of legends celebrating Christian resistance and fortitude set during Late Antiquity.   Contemporary propagandists are similarly reaching back into the Middle Ages for inspiration.

Unlike Anglo-saxon "Blue" Masonry, yet like the Templar Degrees of the York and Scottish Rites, the Norwegian Order of Freemasons is restricted to Christians.  Breivik's affiliation will be an endless source of speculation and "proof" of a conspiracy.  Perhaps it's not so bad that this post has taken me so long to cobble together, today in my inbox I received another essay on the tragedy by Hoffman entitled Anders Behring Breivik: a Judeo-Masonic Terrorist‏. 

Which leads me in many directions.  First I ask myself why I continue to read this kind of shit.  Second it supports my idea that anti-Masonry is often not so cryptic anti-Semitism.  Third is that there is an interesting anti-Zionist narrative being constructed around the tragedy, which I'll leave you to dig into for yourselves.  Fourth, that what counts as "coincidence" and "meaningful" is an extremely subjective and dynamic phenomenon and that when their existence outside of the mind and the eye that sees them are taken too seriously, lead us into the realm of conspiracy.

To what end such a conspiracy?  Again, I'll let you dig into that.  But you can bet their will be more calls for restrictions on hate speech, increased police powers, fearmongering, suspicion....

from Wikipedia.
I for one also can't help but think of a film which has just been released here in France. The English title is Ironclad and it was initially released on March 4 in the UK and July 26 in the US.  I think of it because of the French title:  Le Sang des Templiers (Blood of the Templars). 

The tagline:  "BLOOD. WILL. RUN."

Indeed.

12 comments:

  1. I was wondering when you'd touch on this issue -- I haven't read the entire article yet, but it seems you have the handle handled. Anyway, I was keeping an eye peeled for your thoughts on the matter from when I first heard Ander's Facebook interests were apparently "weightlifting and Freemasonry."

    Which, frankly -- and I suppose somewhat sociopathically -- I thought hilarious. Also: IRONCLAD a tight little film that aside from it's internal pleasures, enjoys a swami-pod of company of late: I want to say this company lives in the "sword and sorcery" neighborhood -- but it's more like a romanticization of European Heroic Mythology as exemplified in the last few years with:

    300 (began it all, perhaps)
    Rome, The HBO series
    The Crusaders (TV shite)
    Agora
    The Five Beowulf Adaptions (the last one starring Christopher Lambert of Highlander fame)
    Valhalla Rising
    Centurion
    The Eagle
    Black Death
    Severed Ways
    Arn, The Knight Templar
    Season of The Witch
    R. Scott's Robin Hood

    and of course, IronClad.

    A fairly mixed lot, but confined to a fairly tight thematic subset. I'm probably falling feint with synchronicities, but I do think it's a significant development. After all, only ten years ago we were inundated with techno-dystopias. A kind of soul searching with blood and unwashed peasant titties?

    Which also reminds me, Frank Key's new book is called "Impugned by a Peasant" -- which nearly made me eject milk from nose if I hadn't already eaten the cow.

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  2. I should also add that one of the more popular comic book series -- non-superhero -- is Northlanders, a great book you should check out cbr-style if you get the chance.

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  3. RE the title of the piece, a seine is a fishing net, a trap for things to be caught and pulled out out of the river, so this quote sounds preposterously ironic in English.

    & .sWineDriveR. -- good take on that list of films. like you pointed to something in the corner that i knew was there but hadn't quite registered. wonder how "The Borgias" fits the pattern?

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  4. .sWineDriveR., Game of Thrones and Camelot might fit in with this list as well. Maybe even Lord of the Rings. This latter has lots of Alamo-like sequences, the brave few holding the fort against numerically superior foreign hordes. You'll recall the battle scenes where the enemy ride elephants and there is definitely an Asiatic/Eastern look to their accoutrements. Also, at one point doesn't one of the heroes begin his rallying cry by yelling out "Men of the West!" ?

    300 is surely the pure distillation of the theme, liberty versus the exotic tyranny of the Persians. It shares a lot with LOTR in this regard I think.

    Arn the Templar looks interesting, especially as it's Swedish! I've just started snagging it now....not sure what I'll find there.

    I'm not sure what it all means, if only a recent cluster in a long history of "Medieval Alamo" scenarios. One thing for sure, it was weird watching Ironclad last night....at the end the noblewoman is saying to the hero: "The Templars put that sword in your hand....the Templars made you kill."

    I'm going to check out a few of these films

    "Impugned by a Peasant"....I'm reminded of a certain "stubborn Bejoran"....

    This idea needs further development.

    @Gid: "seine" is also "breast" or "bosom" in French! I didn't know it was a form of fishnet so yeah, it does seem ironic. I didn't understand your comment at first. A seine as in fishing net isn't the most common of words!

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  6. SD, I've amassed a lot of notes and ideas on this list of recent films. I intend to look at a few in my next post. There are some striking similarities. I'm going with the "Medieval Alamo" idea as a unifying theme. The "line in the sand" joke I made in the last post, wasn't only used by Bush but also at the Alamo and at Thermopylae (300), the original Alamo. The idea of a small band of westerners (or western types), with superior tactics, skills, moral virtue etc in defense of liberty and freedom, against a vast horde of mindless kamikazes recurs throughout these films. My take is that from the get go, Islam was defined as an enemy and in the current context, none of these films can be viewed without considering that. A heady brew, to be sure, but it's humming along. Thanks to you!

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  7. Don't notorious killers get three names to distinguyish them from others with the same first and last name?

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  8. [W]orries about conspiracy thinking should not inhibit inquiries in a way that blocks sober examination, which often more properly identifies some kind of elite behavior familiar to sociologist and political scientists alike.
    Kevin Phillips, American dynasty: aristocracy, fortune, and the politics of deceit in the house of Bush.
    http://tinyurl.com/kphillips1

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  9. Anonymous, or AXD, I know who you are! ;)

    I wholeheartedly agree. If anything, my posts are sober looks at elite groupings and the conspiracies which exist even if not so neatly framed as they are by the conspiracy theorists. Knee-jerk reactions are just that, reflexes, not reflection. They are as harmful to the cause of finding things out as anything the government disinfo/psyops wizards could cook up. In fact, the disinfo squads may as well break up, the internet is doing their work for them. When I dis a guy who says that being a Freemason is enough to prove a conspiracy, I am doing the right thing, imho. Freemasonry's reputation precedes it. Its very nature will attract oddballs and those wanting to be "in on something", among others. If one of these guys goes off and does something weird, it's no proof of anything. If a devout Catholic or Mormon kills a bunch of people, do we have proof of a Vatican or LDS plot?

    I think this post is a good one, balancing a reasonable openness to the possibility of a conspiracy against the reality that lone nuts do exist and sometimes they act alone. If this guy fits a profile, it may well be that certain types are primed to go off through a weird alchemy of DNA and life experiences, NOT that they share their traits due to their time in sleeper agent training hospitals.

    I know conspiracies exist, but when I look at the shit pushed around by goofballs buying into the tripe of your Alex Jones or David Icke, I am disgusted. These people feel so free, so in the know. I think I can righty wonder if Jones, Icke, Hoffman et al are on the payroll of the NSA or some such organization.

    A few thoughts....

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  10. jon, yeah, I suppose it's the media's way of making sure innocents with the same name aren't tarred by the association. It does seem to crop up with assassins rather than serial killers or notorious killers or "regular people" however..."Casey Anthony" not "Casey Marie Anthony", for example. But I tend to think like you, that it's become a media habit in order to clarify things and people have picked up on this as being some kind of signal by the "Cryptocracy".

    Then again, as De La Soul tells us, "3 is the magic number" and its mystical and occult significance is widespread....

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  11. yes, triads are mystically important, and assassins are mythical figures, they light up archetypes. I suppose there is an attraction between the assassin and the assassinated, and that assassination always involves conspiracy. A 'lone wolf' assassin usually sees himself as part of a larger story, creates a conspiracy around him, or behaves as if he were part of one. The assassinated becomes a martyr or, more rarely, the assassin becomes a folk hero. Dante, in the pit of hell, has Satan consuming Judas, Brutus and Cassius. In Shakespeare Brutus isn't evil, just pififully honorable, naive. By the 19th century regicide was popular with radicals like Hazlitt. He xplicitly says Brutus should have killed Caesar's supporters too, like Marc Antony.
    I love the lore of assassins, and all of this, the problem is that it bleeds into history. We may all be acting out archetypal patterns, including when we assign triadic names to notorious figures, but that isn't history.

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  12. On a related note, another high-profile killing has a three-named perpetrator:

    Ross Truett Ashley

    While this Va. Tech murder suicide isn't in itself such a large-scale event, it is tied to the 2007 massacre, "the deadliest shooting incident by a single gunman in US history."

    Also perpetrated by a three-named killer: Seung-Hui Cho.

    Itself not so remarkable for Korean names though. He killed 32, one of our significant numbers.

    Which means only that I'm primed to see these things. I still think the three-name deal is to protect people who might share the first and last name.

    Speaking of which, Ashley fits this post's title perfectly....

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