Author Konrad Heiden, an anti-Nazi contemporary of Hitler, while
denying the authenticity of the Protocols, also saw a certain
reality there. 'Today the forgery is incontrovertibly proved,
yet something infinitely significant has remained: a textbook of
world domination... the great principle of inequality fights to
preserve its rule; {Is the principle of inequality behind
Nietzsche's 'radical aristocracy'?} the ruling class philosophy
of a natural hierarchy, of innate differences between men. Once
this principle is expressed in the form of historical events, it
also soon assumes the aspect of conspiracy... {Thus the actual
historical record is admitted to demonstrate the league of
Hegelian/Machiavellian/ Fukayama/Hobbesian/Wagnerians is at
least the neo-Platonic similarity and real lock-step 'old boy
network' that refutes any concept of Love and Brotherhood
egalitarianism. Yet some call people like me conspiratorialists
for pointing these real facts out?}The spirit of the Protocols,
therefore, contains historical truth, though all the facts put
forward in them are forgeries.'
It is the possibility of ?historical truth" which has kept the
Protocols in circulation since its inception. Today, modern
conspiracy writers see it as a real program predating Nazism or
Communism. Some claim the Frenchman Joly simply incorporated in
his book concepts he picked up as a secret society member.
Author David Icke saw a ?remarkable resemblance' between the
Protocols and confiscated secret documents of the mysterious
Bavarian Illuminati of the late eighteenth century. 'I call them
the Illuminati Protocols,' wrote Icke, with some justification
considering the numerous Masonic references in them.
The authors of The Holy Blood and the Holy Grail had an even
more intriguing take on the Protocols. They noted the original
Nilus edition contained references to a king as well as a
"Masonic kingdom," concepts clearly not of Jewish origin. {I
think a lot of Masonry is indeed connected to Noahdist Hebrew
rituals.} Furthermore, it concluded with the statement, ?Signed
by the representatives of Sion of the 33rd degree.??
The Protocols may indeed reflect a deeper conspiracy beyond its
intended use to encourage anti-Semitism, one hidden within the
secret upper ranks of the Illuminati and Freemasonry.
In the summer of 1917 a young Estonian Jew {Was he a Jew or a
Benjaminite/ Merovingian?} named Alfred Rosenberg was a student
in Moscow where he was given a copy of the Protocols by a
stranger. Following the Russian Revolution the following year,
the anti-Bolshevik Rosenberg fled to Germany where he used the
book to gain entry to a secret society in Munich, a move which
was to have far-reaching effects for the world.
In late 1918 Rosenberg presented the Protocols to an aging
Munich newspaper publisher named Dietrich Eckart. A boozing bon
vivant and one of Germany's better known poets at the time,
Eckart was enthralled by this plan for world domination. He
introduced Rosenberg to fellow members of the 'Thule
Gesellschaft' or Thule Society, a "literary discussion" group
founded by a Baron Rudolf Freiherr von Sebottendorff. {Thule was
another Atlantis location and probably located north of Ireland
where the people of Eire colonized and maintained its ties to
the spiritual center of Tara. It would be possible that it was
either a larger Iceland although Plutarch thinks this was known
as Ogygia. Ogygia means ancient ones and was probably a later
designation. Thule might have been the Faroes or Orkneys or
other islands at a time when the ocean was lower and there was
no North Sea. These places would thus, like Iceland have been
larger. The important thing here is the Thule group was not
anti-Rosenberg and therefore not anti-Semitic in toto but
possibly anti-Israelites-who threw Benjaminites out of
Palestine.} The society proved to be merely a front for a more
secret society, the Germanenorden or German Order. Both were
anti-Semitic nationalist organizations laced with beliefs in the
supernatural. Eckart claimed to be a "Christian mystic" who,
according to an article written by Rosenberg after Eckart's
death, was knowledgeable of the ancient Indian lore of Cosmic
Consciousness (Atman) and the idea that reality is actually an
illusion (Maya).
Sebottendorff, Eckart, and others within the Thule Society were
greatly influenced by the beliefs of the most prominent
twentieth century occult group--the Theosophical Society.? (2)
But the Theosophists are just a public outreach from other more
sinister elements.
Notes:
Rule by Secrecy, by Jim Marrs, 2001 Perennial Books edition,
Harper Collins, NY, pgs. 140-153.
About the author:
Author of Diverse Druids, Columnist for The ES Press Magazine,
Guest 'expert' at World-Mysteries.com
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