Saturday, October 13, 2018

Dreams Apocalyptic 

Another Apocalyptic dream comes to mind a lot.


It’s daylight, a sunny clear day. We are enjoying a nice day outdoors. 


I’m there, in one of those intercity one block community parks, surrounded by homes in raised foundations, with balconies outside the homes, where the Family seats and watches the playground. 


All of a sudden, I see a star like object, like the Sun, in plain daylight. It appears to have a halo around it which pulsates in increasing strength, on a rhythmic increasing pattern, like an increasing heartbeat. I feel an ominous sensation, as if something bad is about to happen.


I then realize that the sun like object was about to burst out in an radiant explosion which would reach us where we were at. I became very alert of everything taking place.


At this point, I effusively signaled my brother, with whom I was, to duck down and cover, to hit the grass underneath us rapidly, as if by instinct. We postrarted down on, with all our bodies and head on the ground covered by grass. 


As I was laying there, on the ground, on top of the grass, head down on the ground, I tilted my head to my left a bit, my cheek was on the grass, so I could see.


I saw at a distance, one of the homes, the trees, and children who were knocking on their door in urgency, trying to get inside the home for protection from that sun that seemed about to burst. 


In an instant, to my shock and awe, I saw the bodies become carbonized and free fall to the ground. It happened all so sudden, as if an invisible ray gun had disintegrated them. It seemed like taken out of a sci-fi movie. 


It was so odd. The home was intact, so were the trees. There wasn’t a breeze of wind, all so quiet. I was perplexed, and for an instant in a catatonic state. 


I had these dream many years ago. But this one keeps on coming to memory, as if it wanted to come out. Given that many dreams I have had become truth, I felt the obligation to share it. 


I do not want to cause panic. I just don’t want to be told that I should have shared if I knew it. It’s like Intel, too big to keep quiet. 


So, there, I’m sharing. Let no one said I kept it too long hidden. It’s published!

Tuesday, October 2, 2018

H2O sparkplug/injectors 

Water, salvation from God. All honor and glory to him! 


I have an idea to modify all the vehicles in America with a simple device: an H2O spark plug/injector of water, to convert all cars easily to water powered vehicles. 


Salvation through water. 

I would modify the spark plug to include a water injector. The beam can spark H2O and we have combustion. 

I would start at smallest scale possible given it burns at 4000 degrees (way to hot). 

I guess we need experimental research at small scales. 

We need H2O spark plugs with the water injector built in. 

That’s a patent we should not miss to exploit. 

Finally, deliverance from oil from OPEC, the Islamic Empire. Hurray! 


https://youtu.be/p8xYUDiSGDk


H2O spark plugs 

https://youtu.be/BkzEbaH0sNQ


We need to make it happen before it’s too late. Strategy. 



Water, salvation from Above. Glory to God!

I have an idea to modify all the vehicles in America with a simple device: an H2O spark plug/injector of water, to convert all cars easily to water powered vehicles. 


Salvation through water. 

I would modify the spark plug to include a water injector. The beam can spark H2O and we have combustion. 

I would start at smallest scale possible given it burns at 4000 degrees (way to hot). 

I guess we need experimental research at small scales. 

We need H2O spark plugs with the water injector built in. 

That’s a patent we should not miss to exploit. 

Finally, deliverance from oil from OPEC, the Islamic Empire. Hurray! 


https://youtu.be/p8xYUDiSGDk



Respect of ideologies, or respect of humans regardless of their ideology

Respect for ideas, or fellow human beings? 


I owe respect to all humans regardless of their ideologies. 

I do not owe respect to flawed an equivocal ideologies. Let us separate the respect we have to a person, from their ideologies, regardless of their ideologies.

There are certain ideas who are flawed and are destructive. I do not respect Islam. I respect Muslims, but not Islam. It’s a flawed destructive idea. Scientific proof is 1300 years of history of Islamics against Christian and Jews. And, it has not ended, OPEC just raised the price of oil. There goes the economy! Dollar devaluating!


Sorry, but in my opinion Islamism is an ideology of war by submission. 


It if offends you, sorry. It’s just the history of the past 1300 years, since Mohamed came to Earth, the False Prophet. 


I respect Muslims, not their ideology. They are like Freemasonry, who asks them to give glory to Lucifer. The False Prophet is inspired by the Beast of the Abyss, as according to the Book of Revelation. I am Alvear, Visigoth, my family crowned King Don Pelayo in 718 in Covadonga Spain. I know Islamic invasion history from the Iberian Peninsula, 700 years of Islamic Submission under threat of death and punishment. It’s part of the history of Spain. And, if we ignore history, we are doomed to repeat it.


We need to teach history! Otherwise, America will not be celebrating year 2019, 2020, and so on. They will take us to year 1460 of the Islamic Empire. So, we will no longer celebrate Christmas

if we refuse to teach people that Christ was born 2018 years ago, and we are about to celebrate his birthday, his year, 2019.


Can’t you see that education is the only way? Christianity is not compulsory, it lets you choose. On the other hand, an Islamic Ruled nation is compulsory by sword, and so is a state infiltrated by its poison.


Should we repent and start teaching full spectrum history, or we keep on teaching bias history?

Saturday, September 29, 2018

#MMIX

#MMIX


We have and an obligation to teach history.


When some one comes and ask you why is it we live in Year 2018, and are about to celebrate, as we do every year; we must be eloquent enough to give reason.


The Historical event is that Jesus was born and we will be celebrating his 2019 birthday.


Santa is a lie made by marketeers of monetary profit, which was latter associated to Christianity. 


Truth be said, New Year and Christmas is a part of the same celebration for all Christians throughout the world, for the past 2018 years.


Yes, we live in Christ’s Kingdom established on Earth since came almost 2019 years ago. 

(Sent to the local newspaper, Sunstar, testing for echoe.)

Thursday, September 13, 2018

What is Freemasonry?

Freemasonry is Institutionalized State Atheism, much like what Stalin brought to the USSR, for “the State, which [Masonry believes] ought to be absolutely atheistic, having the inalienable right and duty to form the heart and the spirit of its citizens.”

Freemasonry is also “The reimagining of marriage as a merely civil contract, the promotion of divorce, and support for the legalisation of abortion.”

The Scottish Rite of Freemasonry consists in giving glory and worship to self and also Lucifer, as a component of their different hierarchical degrees and ranks.

Freemasonry is obviously diabolical.

Read the article published by the Catholic Herald. Here is the text and the link.

http://catholicherald.co.uk/issues/august-11th-2017/the-real-reason-catholics-cant-be-freemasons/

The mutual antagonism of the Catholic Church and Freemasonry is well established and longstanding. For most of the past 300 years they have been acknowledged, even in the secular mindset, as implacably opposed. In recent decades the animosity between the two has faded somewhat from the public consciousness as the Church’s direct institutional involvement in civil affairs has become less pronounced and as Freemasonry has waned dramatically in numbers and prominence. But as Freemasonry turns 300 years old, it is worth revisiting what was at the core of the Church’s absolute opposition to the group. Freemasonry can appear to be little more than an esoteric men’s club, but it was and remains a highly influential philosophical movement – one which has made a dramatic, if little-noticed, impact on modern Western society and politics.


The history of Freemasonry itself is long and interesting. Its gradual transformation from the medieval workers’ guilds of stonemasons into a network of secret societies with their own Gnostic philosophy and rituals is a fascinating tale in itself. The era of the latter version of Freemasonry began with the formation of the Grand Lodge of England in 1717 in the Goose & Gridiron pub near St Paul’s Cathedral. In the early days, before the Church made any formal pronouncement on the subject, many Catholics were members and the English Catholic and Jacobite diaspora was crucial to spreading Freemasonry to continental Europe. At one point it was so popular among Catholics in some places that Francis I of Austria served as a formal patron.


And yet the Church became the greatest foe of the Masonic lodges. Between Clement XII in 1738 and the promulgation of the first Code of Canon Law in 1917, a total of eight popes wrote explicit condemnations of Freemasonry. All provided the strictest penalty for membership: automatic excommunication reserved to the Holy See. But what did and does the Church mean by Freemasonry? What are its qualities which are so worthy of condemnation?


It is sometimes said that the Church opposed Freemasonry because of the lodges’ supposedly revolutionary or seditious character. There is a widespread assumption that Masonic lodges were essentially political cells for republics and other reformers, and the Church opposed them as part of a defence of the old regime of absolute monarchy in which she was institutionally invested. But while political sedition would eventually come to the front of the Church’s opposition to Masonic membership, this was by no means the initial reason the Church opposed the Masons. What Clement XII described in his original denunciation was not a revolutionary republican society but a group spreading and enforcing religious indifferentism: the belief that all religions (and none) are of equal worth, and that in Masonry all are united in service to a higher, unifying understanding of virtue. Catholics, as members, would be asked to put their membership of the lodge above their membership of the Church. The strict prohibition, in other words, was not for political purposes but for the care of souls.


From the outset, the primary concern of the Church has been that Masonry suborns a Catholic’s faith to that of the lodge, obliging them to place a fundamental secularist fraternity above communion with the Church. The legal language, and penalties, used in the condemnations of Freemasonry were actually very similar to those used in the suppression of the Albigensians: the Church sees Freemasonry as a form of heresy. While the Masonic rites themselves contain considerable material which can be called heretical, and is in some instances explicitly anti-Catholic, the Church has always been far more concerned with the overarching philosophical content of Freemasonry rather than its ritual pageantry.


Throughout the 18th and 19th centuries, the Catholic Church and its privileged place in the government and society of many European countries became the subject of growing secularist opposition and even violence. Now, there is little if any historical evidence of the lodges playing an active role in beginning the French Revolution. However, the anti-clerical and anti-Catholic horrors of the Revolution can be traced back to the secularist mentality described in the various papal bulls outlawing the Masonic lodges. Masonic societies were condemned not because they set out to threaten civil or Church authorities but because such a threat was the inevitable consequence of their existence and growth. Revolution was the symptom, not the disease.


The alignment of Church and state interests, and their assault by seditious and revolutionary secret societies, were clearest where the Church and state were one: in the Papal States of the Italian peninsula. As the 19th century began, a new iteration of Freemasonry came to prominence which was explicit in its revolutionary character and avowed in its opposition to the Church; they called themselves the Carbonari, or charcoal merchants. They sanctioned and practised both assassination and armed insurrection against the various governments of the Italian peninsula in their campaign for a secular constitutional government, and were perceived as an immediate threat to the faith, the Papal States and the person of the pope.


The link between the passive threat of the philosophy and secrecy of Masonry and the active revolutionary plots and acts of the Carbonari was laid out in Pius VII’s apostolic constitution Ecclesiam a Jesu Christo, promulgated in 1821. While the Carbonari’s avowed and active opposition to the temporal governance of the Papal States was addressed and condemned, it was still made clear that the gravest threat posed even by these violently revolutionary cells was their philosophy of secularism.


Throughout all the various papal condemnations of Freemasonry, even when lodges were actively supporting military campaigns against the pope, as they did with Garibaldi’s conquest and unification of Italy, what was always the first objection of the Church to the Lodge was its threat to the faith of Catholics and the freedom of the Church to act in society. The undermining of the teachings of the Church in the lodges, and the suborning of her authority on matters of faith and morals, were described repeatedly as a plot against the faith, both in individuals and in society.


In the encyclical Humanum Genus, Pope Leo XIII described the Masonic agenda as the exclusion of the Church from participation in public affairs and the gradual erosion of her rights as an institutional member of society. During his time as Pope, Leo wrote a great many condemnations of Freemasonry, pastoral and legal. He outlined, in detail, what the Church considered to be the Masonic agenda and, reading it with contemporary eyes, it is still shockingly relevant.


He specifically referred to the aim of secularising the state and society. He referenced in particular the exclusion of religious education from state schools and the concept of “the State, which [Masonry believes] ought to be absolutely atheistic, having the inalienable right and duty to form the heart and the spirit of its citizens.” He also decried the Masonic desire to remove the Church from any control in, or influence over, schools, hospitals, public charities, universities and any other body serving the public good. Also specifically highlighted was the Masonic push for the reimagining of marriage as a merely civil contract, the promotion of divorce, and support for the legalisation of abortion.


It is almost impossible to read this agenda and not recognise it as the underpinning of almost all of our contemporary political discourse. The settled view on these matters of many, if not all, of our major political parties, indeed the very concept of the secular state and its consequences on Western society, including the pervasive divorce culture and near universal availability of abortion, is a victory of the Masonic agenda. And this raises very real canonical questions about Catholic participation in the modern secular political process.


Throughout the centuries of papal condemnations of Freemasonry, it was normal for each pope to include the names of new societies that shared the Masonic philosophy and agenda and which should be understood by Catholics to come under the heading of “Masonic” in terms of canon law. By the 20th century, this had come to include political parties and movements such as communism.


When the Code of Canon Law was reformed, following Vatican II, the canon specifically prohibiting Catholics from joining “Masonic societies” was revised. In the new code, promulgated in 1983 by St John Paul II, explicit mention of Freemasonry was dropped completely. The new Canon 1374 referred only to societies that “plot against the Church”. Many took this change to indicate that Freemasonry was no longer always bad in the eyes of the Church. In fact, the reforming committee made it clear that they meant not just Freemasons, but many other organisations; the “plot” of its secularist agenda had spread so far beyond the lodges that to keep using the umbrella term “Masonic” would be confusing. The then Cardinal Ratzinger issued an authoritative clarification of the new law in 1983, in which he made it clear that the new canon was phrased to encourage broader interpretation and application.


Given the crystal-clear understanding in Church teaching regarding what the Masonic plot or agenda against the Church includes (marriage as a merely civil contract open to divorce at will, abortion, exclusion of religious education from public schools, exclusion of Church from the provision of social welfare and or control of charities), it seems impossible not to ask: how many of the major political parties in the West can now be said to fall under the prohibition of Canon 1374? The answer may well be rather uncomfortable for those who want to see an end to the so-called culture wars in the Church.


More recently, Pope Francis has repeatedly spoken of his grave concern at Masonic infiltration of the Curia and other Catholic organisations. At the same time, he has warned against the Church becoming a mere “NGO” in its methods and goals – which is the direct danger of that secularist mentality which the Church has always called a Masonic philosophy.


Masonic infiltration of the hierarchy and Curia has long been treated as a kind of Catholic version of monsters under the bed, or McCarthyite paranoia about commie infiltrators. In fact, when you speak to people who work in the Vatican, you will quickly discover that for every two or three people who laugh at the very notion, you can find someone who has directly encountered it. I myself know at least two people who were approached about joining during their time working in Rome. The role of Masonic lodges as a confidential meeting point and network for those with heterodox ideas and agendas has changed little from pre-Revolutionary France to the modern Vatican; 300 years after the founding of the first Grand Lodge, the conflict between the Church and Freemasonry is still very much alive.


Ed Condon is a canon lawyer. He wrote his doctoral dissertation on the history of the Church’s legal sanctions against Freemasons


This article first appeared in the August 11 2017 issue of the Catholic Herald. To read the magazine in full, from anywhere in the world, go here