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Cobain murdered by CIA - Page 259 - David Icke's Official Forums

http://www.davidicke.com/forum/showthread.php?t=3097&page=259

hunkahunka
Senior Member Join Date: Jan 2008 Posts: 1,549

I have long suspected that the Salem witch trials either never actually took place (an elaborate lie) or were a type of false flag operation, similar to other false flag ops that we know about throughout history. Maybe the idiocy which was credited to the christian Puritans of Salem (the people purportedly involved therein) achieved its real intended purpose of 'chilling' or discrediting any actual christian opposition to the occult operations that were planned for the region. The more I research this, the more I agree with the idea that the Salem witch trials were likely a false flag event, if any semblance of such idiocy even took place, in reality, at all. Here is how an occultist false flag incident at Salem would be done: pose as an idiot christian denomination claim to have killed 25 obviously innocent people reveal that it is motivated by the 'christian intolerance' of the day. blame it all, by association, on the the 'idiot Puritans' of the Salem region

In other words, a typical false flag operation, where you either: - commit crimes and blame them on your enemies in order to discredit them. (and since the Puritans were purportedly a separate christian denomination, other christian denominations would unquestioningly accept this version of events as the unvarnished truth, so long as their own particular denomination was not tainted by the Puritan idiocy) or : - claim that crimes were committed which never even occurred, drawing upon the credibility and stature of prominent people to lend veracity to these lies, and then blame those fictional crimes on your enemies in order to discredit them. Though the Puritan christian denomination/establishment of Salem was supposedly responsible for these 'lawful' crimes ,these tales of barbarity would have portrayed all christian opposition to the occult as "stupid & potentially dangerous". (Especially when you include the fact that some of the alleged victims of the salem witch trials were themselves christians.) It is notable that Danvers State Hospital (and Oz programming farm, complete with railroad access) was located in Salem, Massachusetts, on the very hill where the Salem witch trials allegedly took place, and built on the former house site of John Hathorn, one of the Salem trial judges.

The glacial drumlin that the Danvers State asylum sat on once was the site of the home of John Hathorne ,one of the judges in the Salem witch trials. Innocence by Association It is notable that the occult complex known at the time as Danvers State Lunatic Hospital was built at the exact place/location of the historical incident that served most to discredit any Christian opposition to the occult in America. Consider this: While all of the christians of Salem were made 'guilty by association' with the Puritans, maybe then also Salem's practitioners of darkest sorcery were made 'innocent by association' with the falsely accused victims of the Salem witch trials. Thi k f it thi If t d thi d t t t t t ' it h h t' f lti t h ld th b

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24-06-2010 12:50

Cobain murdered by CIA - Page 259 - David Icke's Official Forums

http://www.davidicke.com/forum/showthread.php?t=3097&page=259

Think of it this way. If today, this very day, one were to try to start a 'witch hunt' of occultists, where would there be the least likely prospect of finding a warm welcome? Maybe a place like...... Salem ,Massachusetts? If one were a Christian back in 1870, and one didn't like what was going on at places like Danvers State Hospital (forced druggings, electroshock, lobotomy,ice baths, isolation chambers, the splitting of personalities, SRA etc.?) one best not be even thinking of organizing a demonstration, rallying a crowd, and traveling to Salem, Massachusetts, of all places, and accusing the 19th century programmers at Danvers State Hospital of witchcraft (Oz programming, satanic ritual abuse, near death trauma programming, etc.) Going witch hunting in Salem Massachusetts in 1870 , or any time thereafter, would have been the equivalent of trying to hold a nazi rally/jew hunt in modern day Auschwitz. Because by 1870, there had been over two hundred years for word to get out about "those horrible christian Puritans of Salem who'd been such idiots and so cruel", etc, back in the 1600's. The Salem area would surely have been completely purged of the evil 'witch hunters' by the time Danvers State Hospital was built. Not only purged, but the region would be prepared, fortified and inoculated, with potential to repel 'any invasion of barbaric witch hunters.' "Never again!" would be the sentiment drilled into the local sensibilities, & their devotions dispensed with a relish bordering on zealotry. "And, ah gots a message fo all you goddam witch hunners: y'all best not come round Salem no more, ya heah me?" Another odd coincidence is that John Hawthorn, the Salem witch trial judge, upon whose land Danvers State Hospital was eventually built, was the great great grandfather of 19th century author Nathaniel Hawthorne, who wrote similar fictions to the Salem witch trial fictions, (works similarly fictional, imo) , and similarly casting Christians in an unfavorable light. Nathaniel Hawthorne authored 'The Scarlett Letter', a historical fiction novel in which, purportedly, Christian belief required that adulterers in Puritan society be publicly whipped, forced to wear an A on their clothes forever onward, or even killed. Coincidentally, guess from where Nathaniel Hawthorne drew this historical reference for this 'fact' of 17th century Puritan life? He drew on records of his own Puritan great great grandfather John Hawthorn, who seems to be the common christian villain in all of this. The same witch trial judge John Hawthorn, who was allegedly stupid enough to drown innocent women out of superstition. Allegedly, John Hawthorn was also a villain who ordered whippings of adulteresses, red A's on clothing, etc. So, this John Hawthorn was quite the character. Killing innocent people because they might be witches (fail the witch water test) and whipping pregnant women, were all, ostensibly, on the average evil christian Puritan's list of purely stupid daily delights. So, it surely must have all happened, in reality, just exactly the way Nathaniel Hawthorne claimed that it did in his historical fiction novels, right? Hawthorne's 'Scarlett Letter' novel was also nice enough to include the character of Puritan Reverend Arthur Dimmesdale as the adulterous villain who fathered the baby of an already married woman. (those puritan christians again! hypocrites, and sexist too. only the woman was ever punished! blah blah blah) Or could it be that both Nathaniel Hawthorne and his ancestral forefather John Hawthorn both had an interest in depicting Christians as superstitious, ignorant, and barbaric? And another misleading factor is that though 17th century Boston/Massachusetts law provided for the legal execution of adulterers, and this has been cited as veracity of the claims made by Hawthorne and other writers of historical fiction, there is only one alleged case (Latham/Britton 1644) where anyone was ever purportedly executed for it) Danvers State Hospital & Farm (and near-death trauma programming facility etc) were built on land thoroughly purged of 'Puritans', in Salem. (The occultist propaganda has been so effective, that the phrase, 'christian puritans', has become a derisive, catch-all phrase for anyone who believes in basic christian principles, and anyone interested in opposing anything corrupt is accused of fomenting a 'witch hunt'.)

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24-06-2010 12:50

Cobain murdered by CIA - Page 259 - David Icke's Official Forums

http://www.davidicke.com/forum/showthread.php?t=3097&page=259

Hellfire Club member Benjamin Franklin (who discovered electricity and thereby enabled the invention of electroshock,which was one of the first uses found for electricity) Benjamin Franklin authored a confirmed hoax news report of christian persecution of witches in 1730. His hoax was basically a 'New Jersey version' of the Salem witch trial hoax, alleging that evil christians were persecuting innocent people again, only this time in New Jersey (the story was later admitted to be a hoax by the newspaper, of which Ben Franklin was the actual publisher): quote: "On October 22, 1730, The Pennsylvania Gazette printed an article entitled A Witch Trial at Mount Holly. The story, whose author is thought to be Benjamin Franklin (who published the Gazette), contains a description of a witch trial in southern New Jersey. The Salem witch trials had occurred just thirty-eight years before, leading to the death of twenty-five people. The beliefs that led to the trials were still prevalent in Franklin's day, and Franklin, a man of science, wanted to expose such things as ludicrous "

the text of his article linked below:


Quote:

A Witch Trial at Mount Holly by Benjamin Franklin The Pennsylvania Gazette, October 22, 1730 Burlington, Oct. 12. Saturday last at Mount-Holly, about 8 Miles from this Place, near 300 People were gathered together to see an Experiment or two tried on some Persons accused of Witchcraft. link: http://www.museumofhoaxes.com/hoax/t...unt_holly_text Amusing location he picked for his hoax too. 'Mount Holly'.

Benjamin Franklin was born a Puritan in Massachusetts, btw, as was John Hawthorn born a Puritan in Massachusetts, as was his descendant Nathaniel Hawthorne (who added an e to the end of his name to conceal his lineage) born in Massachusetts. Interesting that both Franklin and Hawthorne were so eager to discredit Puritans in their writings, when both were of prominent Puritan lineage. Nathaniel Hawthorne also authored the unfinished manuscript 'Septimius Felton', An H. P. Lovecraft Encyclopedia says that "The Dreams in the Witch House" was "heavily influenced by Nathaniel Hawthorne's unfinished novel Septimius Felton".[2]
Quote:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Dre...he_Witch_House The Dreams in the Witch House Plot summary Walter Gilman, a student of mathematics and folklore at Miskatonic University, takes a room in the Witch House, a house in Arkham thought to be accursed. The first part of the story is an account of the history of the house, which has once harboured Keziah Mason, an accused witch who disappeared mysteriously from a Salem gaol in 1692. Gilman discovers that for the better part of two centuries many if not most of its occupants have died prematurely. The dimensions of Gilman's room in the house are unusual, and seem to conform to a kind of unearthly geometry that Gilman theorizes can enable travel from one plane or dimension to another. In his dreams Gilman is taken to a city of Lovecraft's "Elder Things", and even brings back tangible evidence that he's actually been there. Several times his dreaming self encounters a bizarre "congeries (agglomeration) of iridescent, prolately spheroidal bubbles", as well as a trapezoidal figure, both of which seem sapient. Of much more direct concern, however, are Gilman's nightly dream sojourns with the old hag Keziah Mason and her rat-bodied, human-faced familiar Brown Jenkin, sojourns which he increasingly believes are actually happening in the real world. One night, along with this duo and the infamous "Black Man", Gilman is an unwilling dream participant in the kidnapping of a baby. He awakes to find mud on his shoe and news of the kidnapping in the newspaper. On May Eve (Walpurgis Night), Gilman dreams that he thwarts Keziah from sacrificing the baby, only to have it killed by Brown Jenkin. Coming back to wakefulness in this plane, Gilman hears an unearthly cosmic sound that leaves him deaf. The next morning, Gilman is found dead in his room in the Witch House, a hole burrowed through his chest and his heart eaten out. The landlord then abandons the house completely, and when it is finally demolished years later, a space between the walls is found filled with children bones, a sacrificial knife, and a bowl made of some metal that scientists are unable to identify. A strange stone statuette of a star-headed "Elder Thing" is also found, and these items go on display in the Miskatonic University museum, where they continue to mystify scholars.

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24-06-2010 12:50

Cobain murdered by CIA - Page 259 - David Icke's Official Forums

http://www.davidicke.com/forum/showthread.php?t=3097&page=259

video: interesting trailer for a film which was indirectly based on an an unfinished novel by Nathaniel Hawthorne, an HP Lovecraft story involving dissociative MPD crime, Salem witches, & baby sacrifice:

A final note. Our superior breeders, social engineers, master farmers of souls, may have had a master plan in mind when they were setting up occult centers such as Salem, Massachussetts (aka Danvers, Massachusetts) Were they planning to manufacture fruits and vegetables in their 'farms'? Like any good farmer, you first prepare the soil by tilling it or turning it upside down. The Salem witch trial, & other hoaxes of the time, depicted 'puritans' as thoroughly tainted. Puritans as evil. (pure = evil, occult = good, etc. ) Turn everything upside down, plow everything deep into the mud, wait for the fertile rot to set in. The soil of the region was carefully prepared, in advance, because ,in time, it would be needed to nourish the fruits and vegetables produced by such places as Danvers State Hospital. It is my suspicion that the same group of occultists may have created the Salem witch trial hoax, thereby built Salem, Massachusetts into an occult haven, and then built Danvers State Hospital (on their own land) in which to house a large inmate slave population & 'mass produce' shattered individuals for various purposes, including the breeding of babies for ritual sacrifice and ritual cannibalism.
Last edited by hunkahunka; 03-11-2009 at 01:02 PM.

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24-06-2010 12:50

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