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Vatican Assassins

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Chapter 26 335<br />

James Buchanan, 1791 – 1868 #91<br />

Fifteenth President of these United States of America, 1857 - 1861<br />

At first a Federalist and witnessing the alarming centralizing tendencies of<br />

the party, James Buchanan switched to Jefferson’s Democratic Party and<br />

became a great admirer of President Andrew Jackson. As a Democrat and<br />

an advocate of the rights of the States not expressly delegated to the<br />

Federal government by the Constitution, President Buchanan refused to<br />

make war on the Southern States threatening to leave the Union. Like<br />

John F. Kennedy seeking to end Cardinal Spellman’s War in Vietnam, he<br />

blamed Southern secession on the radical Red/Black Republican Northern<br />

abolitionists and refused to ignite Archbishop Hughes’ War Between the<br />

States, as he opposed the conspiracy of Prince Metternich’s Holy Alliance.<br />

Therefore, on the 23 rd of February 1857 at the Order’s National Hotel in<br />

Washington, D.C., the President and his Northern men were poisoned with<br />

arsenic sprinkled in their tea. Thirty-eight people died as the Order<br />

fulfilled its bloody Oath once again. But Buchanan survived and toward<br />

the end of his Presidency, on January 5, 1861, he sent a merchant steamer<br />

called the “Star of the West” to reinforce Fort Sumter, it carrying “troops<br />

and foodstuffs.” This act ignited the Jesuits’ “American Civil War.”<br />

Photograph of James Buchanan, purchased at the Wheatland Mansion, Lancaster,<br />

Pennsylvania.<br />

The Jesuits – 1861 - 1865

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