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Vatican Assassins

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434<br />

<strong>Vatican</strong> <strong>Assassins</strong><br />

An article, nearly identical to the narration of Eugene Sue, appeared in<br />

“Harper’s Weekly” of May 21, 1870. We read of the Jesuit command post in Rome:<br />

“The operations of this powerful Society embrace every part of the<br />

world, and are carried on by means of the most intricate machinery ever<br />

contrived by man. The Society is divided in five classes:<br />

1. Professed [Fathers]Members (Professi) [priests who have taken the<br />

three perpetual vows and the deadly Jesuit Extreme Oath of the<br />

perpetual Fourth Vow administered by the Jesuit General himself]<br />

2. Spiritual Coadjutors [priests of the perpetual three vows]<br />

3. Lay [Temporal] Coadjutors [lay brothers of three perpetual vows]<br />

4. Approved Pupils [Juniors and Scholastics of three perpetual vows]<br />

5. The Novices [training, concluded by taking three perpetual vows]<br />

From his Residence in Rome the General directs the movements of the<br />

Society in every part of the world by means of a system in which the art<br />

of ‘espionage’ is brought to perfection. Every month or every quarter he<br />

receives reports from the heads of all the subordinate departments; and<br />

every third year the catalogues of every province, with detailed reports on<br />

the capacity and conduct of every member, are laid before him. Besides<br />

this, the most active correspondence is maintained with all parts of the<br />

world, in order to supply the Offices of the Society with the information<br />

they require. In the central house at Rome are kept voluminous registers,<br />

in which are inscribed the names of all Jesuits, of their adherents, and of<br />

all the considerable persons, whether friends or enemies, with whom they<br />

have any connection. In these registers, we are told, are reported without<br />

alteration, without hatred, without passion, the facts relating to the life of<br />

each individual. It is the most gigantic biographical collection that has<br />

ever been formed. The frailties of a woman, the secret errors of a<br />

statesman, are chronicled in these books with the same cold impartiality.<br />

Drawn up for the purpose of being useful, these biographies are<br />

necessarily exact. When the Jesuits wish to influence an individual, they<br />

have but to turn to these volumes to know immediately, his life, his<br />

character, his faults, his family, his friends, his most secret ties. By the<br />

use of such machinery the Order has attained its high position and<br />

widespread influence.” {5} [Emphasis added]<br />

As we can see, by the beginning of the Twentieth Century the Jesuit Order had<br />

this all-pervading power of intelligence. To know everything about everyone was one<br />

of its chief goals. We must remember that the Jesuits had been in control of England<br />

no later than 1800 during the reign of King George III. Over the years, with the aid<br />

The Jesuits – 1908

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