Friday, 5 August 2016

Jay Dyer on Tragedy & Hope 5: UK PsyOps, Hitler & the Axis Powers





Tragedy & Hope is the academics book that unveiled the global conspiracy to play a divided planet off against itself at a tidy banksters profit. It is written from an insider's point of view who was mistakenly given access to the Council on Foreign Relations archives. The author Carroll Quigley was also Bill Clinton's mentor.

In this episode we learn the British trained Wild Bill Donovan who went on to train Mao's Guerilla's. Y'know, the sort of facts that never enter mainstream discourse when discussing the effects of say Marxism, Zionism, Freudianism, Neoconservatism, Leninism and Trotsky and all the other intellectual ideological infections of the last century or two.

Monday, 1 August 2016

Lessons For Sexually Abused Children Who Survived




This post is dedicated to the broken lives created by Lord Greville Janner, Lord Leon Brittan and Sir Clement Freud, who along with Cyril Smith claimed they were the victims of hate while raping young British children. 

This group (who were likely blackmailed by the British Intelligence services) also enjoyed the fruits of quintessential British establishment power in the highest offices and considerable mainstream media respect along with titled endorsements by Royalty.


Sunday, 31 July 2016

St Elizabeth of Hungary


Philip Hermogenes Calderon (1833–1898) St Elizabeth of Hungary's Great Act of Renunciation. 1891 (Tate)
He was an English painter of French birth (mother) and Spanish (father) ancestry who initially worked in the Pre-Raphaelite style before moving towards historical genre. He was Keeper of the Royal Academy in London.
Calderon was born in Poitiers, France. His father was a professor of Spanish literature and a former Roman Catholic priest who had converted to Anglicanism. Calderon planned to study engineering, but he became so interested in drawing technical figures and diagrams that he changed his mind and devoted his time to art. In 1850, he trained at Leigh's art school, London, then went to Paris to study under Picot in 1851. His first successful painting was called 'By the Waters of Babylon' (1853), which was followed by a much more popular one called 'Broken Vows' (1857). From the beginning he was inspired by the Pre-Raphaelites, and some of his work showed the detail, deep colours, and realistic forms that characterize the style.
Calderon became a leading member of the St John's Wood Clique, a group of artists interested in modern genre and historical subjects. Historical, biblical, and literary themes were common in Calderon's later work. Many of his pieces show female forms wearing rich, silky clothing in gently-coloured landscapes. His Morning (1884) features a copper-haired maiden watching a sunrise. His 'Juliet' (1896) shows Shakespeare's young heroine seated on her balcony gazing at the stars. His later paintings adopt more classical style, comparable to Edward Poynter.
Calderon served in The Artists Rifles in the 1860s.