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Friday, January 3, 2014

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Freemasons are Violent: After establishing their own tea plantations in India, Freemasons ruled the tea trade. However, the British government heavily taxed tea. Hence, men dressed as Indians carried out the Boston Tea Party. Therefore, Freemason were the principals of the Boston Tea Party.

The Boston Tea Party ignited the 1776 Declaration of Independence, and then the American Revolutionary War that captured America from Britain. The war was orchestrated by planters such a George Washington who owned black people as slaves. Lauranett Lee, Ph.D., of the Virginia Historical Society corroborated that there slaves were in the original thirteen colonies, and Brent Tarter cited slaves present in 1774. Therefore, Freemasons were America's "'founding fathers.'" Thus, Henry Louis Gates, Ph.D., spoke of America's first President George Washington, a Freemason, as "The father of our country … ", and an " … icon of American independence … ".

Consequently, per Dr. Gates, "The founding fathers built [America] committed to slavery."

George Washington was the wealthiest man in the Americas who gained his riches, per Dr. Gates, from about 100 slaves at Mt. Vernon plantation who " … from sunup to sundown, … toiled as slaves."

By 1789, Freemasons had sent France into economic chaos and beheaded the king and queen to avenge the assaults on their predecessors, Templar Knights, four centuries earlier.

When describing these two events, Dr. Weber stated that never before had dissidents employed " … violence … " as in the American Revolution and " … violence … " as in the French Revolution.

Professor of history at the University of Maryland, Ira Berlin, called slavery in America's southern states " … obscene violence … (italics supplied)."

Jeffrey McClurkin, Ph.D., of Mary Washington University recalled the " … violence, that was inherent in slavery (italics supplied)."

Of lynching, Professor Shaun Leigh Alexander of the University of Kansas called it " … violence."

Therefore, because for the French Revolution Freemasons were violent;

and because for the American Revolution Freemasons were violent;

and because from capture of Africans inside of Africa, through the Middle Passage to beatings and rapes on sugar plantations to lynchings, Freemasons were violent to black people;

and because historian, author of "1861 - The Civil War Awakening", and Director of Washington College's department that deals with the American Experience Adam Goodheart also articulated the " … violence … " synonymous with slavery, before the Civil War, to black people, Freemasons were violent.

Thomas Fortune and W. E. DuBois in 1890 and 1905 respectively called for end to " … violence … " against African-Americans. In Illinois, in 1908 there were incidents of " … violence … " against African-Americans, and for the Freedom Riders of 1961, newspapers reported the " … violence … ", "Violence … ", and " … violence … " against African-Americans.

July 27, 2013 on Rainbow PUSH, Robin Robinson of FOX News restated the violence that dogs African-Americans, per the previous day's conference put on by leaders of the African-American community.

CNN's Don Lemon spoke of America's " … violent … " actions against African-Americans, and Ken Burns of PBS' The Civil War in 2011 reminded of the " … violence … " of black enslavement in America's southern states.

Hence, because to African-Americans for nearly three centuries of enslavement Freemasons were violent;

and because violence against African Americans was kept up to today, after slavery ended in 1865, Freemasons continued for 150 years on African-Americans to be violent.

Therefore, Freemasons are violent.

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