Jordan exposes so much information hidden in plain site, in churchs, corporate logos, information on occult aspects of fremasonary Very interesting material
how clever
dangerous people. evil. we are living in perilous times
horseshit
INDEED IT IS THOSE OF YOU WHO ARE CONSUMED IN DARKNESS THAT WILL DOUBT THE THOUGHT OR WORD OF ANY LIGHT TO COME OR HAVING A TRUTH.
This guy mixes fact and fiction like confetti.
Here (http://www.etymonline.com/) is a reliable resource for the origin of words like:
pope -- O.E. papa, from M.L. papa "bishop, pope" (in classical L., "tutor"), from Gk. papas "patriarch, bishop," originally "father." Applied to bishops of Asia Minor and taken as a title by the Bishop of Alexandria c.250. In Western Church, applied especially to the Bishop of Rome since the time of Leo the Great (440-461) and claimed exclusively by them from 1073. Popemobile, his car, is from 1979. Papal, papacy, later acquisitions in Eng., preserve the original vowel. Popery (1534) was a hostile coinage of the Reformation.
Wall Street -- "U.S. financial world," 1836, from street in New York City that is home to many investment firms and stock traders, as well as NYSE. The street so called because it ran along the interior of the defensive wall of the old Dutch colonial town.
mayday -- "distress call," 1927, from Fr. m'aider, shortening of venez m'aider "come help me!"
British -- O.E. Bryttisc "of or relating to ancient Britons," from Bryttas "natives of ancient Britain" (see Briton). First record of British Isles is from 1621.
Briton -- Anglo-Fr. Bretun, from L. Brittonem (nom. Britto, misspelled Brito in MSS) "a member of the tribe of the Britons," from *Britt-os, the Celtic name of the Celtic inhabitants of Britain and southern Scotland before the 5c. Anglo-Saxon invasion drove them into Wales, Cornwall, and a few other corners. In 4c. B.C.E. Gk. they are recorded as Prittanoi, which is said to mean "tattooed people." Only in historical use after O.E. period; revived when James I was proclaimed King of Great Britain in 1604, and made official at the union of England and Scotland in 1707.
Florida Keys -- The Spanish word "cayo" translates as both "cay, reef, small island" and as "key". Clearly, though the first meaning was meant by Ponce de Leon, the second meaning was the translation taken by those translating this region's name into English. It has absolutely nothing to do with the Pope and his metaphorical keys to the kingdom of heaven. Look up "cayo" in a thorough Spanish dictionary, then look up "cay" here (www.onelook.com).
And PLEASE tell me dude did not just call any writing by George Washington "Old English." He better have meant only it was English that sounded "old". Because Old English is what Beowulf was written in (http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/basis/beowulf-oe.html).
Oh, and if you REALLY want to know the origin of words, the best resource in the world is the Oxford English Dictionary (www.oed.com). Though it takes a subscription to access it via the Internet (which I have, because I'm a student and my school subscribes to it), you can very likely find it at your local library for free.
Seriously, this guy takes stuff that's only marginally similar to each other and declares it absolute proof of a conspiracy. This is why skepticism is SO important. He's going to have to do MUCH more thorough homework before I could take him seriously. The Pope has one hat that's similar to a Jewish hat, therefore he is really Jewish? This guy's leaps in logic could overcome buildings in a single bound!
good stuff
fuck freemasons kill u when i see you pussys


muck
anonymous wrote 4 years ago | Reply