rooshvforum.network is a fully functional forum: you can search, register, post new threads etc...
Old accounts are inaccessible: register a new one, or recover it when possible. x


French vs American Revolutions (1776 vs 1790)
#9

French vs American Revolutions (1776 vs 1790)

Quote: (07-13-2017 05:03 PM)Enigma Wrote:  

I was actually looking for some good books on the French Revolution recently, particularly ones that detail the Reign of Terror. Any recommendations?

There are lots in French, I think I've found some good ones in English earlier and posted those recs in another thread, will look for them.

Haven't had too much time lately, but it's almost day and night as far as the French and American revolutions. The America Revolution was pretty much a rebellion against the globalists and the City of London financial system, whereas the french Revolution is a globalist operation. The FR is a somewhat milder bolshevik genocidal revolution, because they've "only" managed to kill about 300,000 to 500,000. It's a full-on masonic movement. The motto, liberté égalité fraternité is masonic, a truncation of the original liberté égalité fraternité ou la mort (or death), similar to masonic oaths where disobeying = death.

[Image: 220px-LibertyEqualityorDeath.jpg]

The chain circle pattern is very masonic, it is the inspiration behind the EU flag, here is an official masonic commemoration of the Treaty of Rome, which kicked off the Union:

[Image: drapeau-Europe-chaine-union-60-Rome.png]

[Image: f1.highres]
Masonic deity symbol on top of it all.

Fraternité is brotherhood, a masonic reference (brother=fellow mason). Liberty is not quite the same as freedom, it implies freedom from religion and traditional morality (as in "libertine"). Equality is about the end of the old order of monarchy and the beginning of a new one, the bankers supplanting aristocrats.

There is an incredible amount of propaganda about the french revolution, that goes on intensifying today in France. The main myth is that the oppressed, starving French people rose up against the monarchs and the clergy, when in fact is was mostly a masonic, globalist, anti-Christian coup. The king wasn't that unpopular, and the French people by and large was devoutly Catholic. The French revolution tried to supplant Catholicism with a masonic state religion and a year zero ethos (this is where that whole concept started out), but that totally failed to take root.

Don't have the time to go into details to support this thesis now, might do so later.

“Nothing is more useful than to look upon the world as it really is.”
Reply


Messages In This Thread

Forum Jump:


Users browsing this thread: 1 Guest(s)