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Vatican Assassins

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Chapter 26 337<br />

Benito Pablo Juarez, 1806 – 1872 #93<br />

President and Protestant Reformer of Mexico<br />

1860 - 1863 and 1867 - 1872<br />

This full-blooded native Zapotec Indian is Mexico’s greatest patriot, Civil<br />

War commander and finest statesman of integrity, ability and undying<br />

determination in his quest to make his beloved country a nation among<br />

nations. Having studied for the priesthood as a young man, he became the<br />

most dreaded enemy of the Society of Jesus while hating the Temporal<br />

Power of the Papal Caesar in Rome. He exiled the Archbishop of Mexico<br />

along with five Bishops, confiscated all of the Pope’s Church property<br />

composing the finest lands of the Nation, expelled the Spanish ambassador<br />

and hated Prince Metternich’s Holy Alliance. He enforced the “liberal”<br />

Constitution of 1857 securing the Protestant rights of freedom of speech<br />

and freedom of the press, utterly condemned by the Black Pope’s Council<br />

of Trent. He sought to establish a Middle Class and repudiated the<br />

National Debt. In 1867 he rightly executed Mexico’s usurper and tyrant,<br />

Ferdinand Maximilian of the Order’s House of Hapsburg, sent by France’s<br />

Napoleon III, further outraging the Jesuits! For refusing to uphold the<br />

Pope’s Temporal Power, Juarez became a “rebel king” and therefore a<br />

“tyrant” according to the Satanic doctrines of the Spanish Jesuit, Francisco<br />

Suarez. In 1872 he died at his desk, a victim of “the poison cup.”<br />

The McGraw-Hill Encyclopedia of World Biography, (New York: McGraw-Hill<br />

Inc., 1973) Vol. 6, pp. 75-78.<br />

The Jesuits – 1861 - 1865

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