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Vatican Assassins

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Chapter 3 115<br />

“Scarred, hacked, and even maimed, in the unceasing conflicts in which<br />

their lives had passed; wearing crescents in their caps, with the inscription,<br />

‘Rather Turkish than Popish’, renowned far and wide, as much for their<br />

ferocity as for their nautical skill; the appearance of these wildest of the<br />

‘Sea-beggars’ was both eccentric and terrific. They were known never to<br />

give nor to take quarter, for they went to mortal combat only, and had<br />

sworn to spare neither noble nor simple, neither king, kaiser, nor pope,<br />

should they fall into their power.” {7} [Emphasis added]<br />

The Sea Beggars always engaged their Spanish enemy and if they perceived the battle<br />

to be lost they would gather together, eat the Lord’s Supper and fire the magazine,<br />

blowing themselves and the enemy into eternity.<br />

This William I of Orange became the Father of religious liberty and greatly<br />

beloved of his people. He did not force the Anabaptists to go to war, as they were<br />

non-resistant. He further gave the European Jews religious liberty, so much so that<br />

they migrated to Amsterdam, calling it “the New Jerusalem.” (Rembrandt painted<br />

some of his greatest portraits using the Jews of Amsterdam to illustrate Biblical<br />

characters.) William ultimately produced in his son, Prince Maurice, the greatest<br />

soldier of the age. Maurice contributed to the final victory in 1648 after eighty years<br />

of war with the Spanish Empire under the command of the Jesuits and their tools,<br />

Philip II and his son, Philip III.<br />

Obviously, the Jesuits hated William of Orange. They kidnapped his eldest<br />

son who was then raised a Roman Catholic, the heart-broken father never to see him<br />

again. After several attempts to assassinate William, they finally succeeded one sad<br />

day in 1584. Their tool was Balthazar Gerard fulfilling the Jesuit Oath once again.<br />

Shooting the Father of the Dutch Republic three times with a pistol, Gerard attempted<br />

to escape but was caught and later brutally executed. As the poison from the rounds<br />

was coursing through his veins, William’s last words were:<br />

“O my God, have mercy on this poor people.” {8}<br />

Like Coligny, William I of Orange, the father of religious liberty and political<br />

freedom, died at the hand of a Jesuit assassin fulfilling the Company’s bloody oath<br />

once again:<br />

“I will . . . make and wage relentless war . . . against all heretics . . . to<br />

exterminate them from the face of the whole earth . . . That when the same<br />

cannot be done openly, I will secretly use . . . the leaden bullet . . . ” {9}<br />

[Emphasis added]<br />

Could it be that American presidents have been murdered by Jesuit assassins also?<br />

The Jesuits – 1568 - 1648

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