Christopher Columbus
and the New World
“We may fairly agree that the subject of history, as commonly taught, is one
of the most boring of all subjects. However, the study of how the subject of
history has been manipulated is surely one of the most interesting of all
subjects.”
Michael Tsarion, “Astrotheology and Sidereal Mythology”
“The falsification of history has done more to mislead humans than any
single thing known to mankind.”
JeanJacques Rousseau
“History is the lie commonly agreed upon.”
Voltaire
Our Rockefeller
textbooks tell us that
Christopher Columbus discovered America in 1492. The
dictionary says “to discover” means “to learn something unknown,” but the
tens of millions of indigenous “Indians” would certainly contest Columbus’
discovery of anything. Perhaps the occult meaning of “discovery” coincides
with
Columbus’ occult knowledge of exactly where he was going.
Perhaps the word
discover, means just that:
“to take the lid off something that has been
covered up.”
“The Phoenicians were not confined to the Mediterranean and the Middle East.
They landed in Britain around 3,000 BC and unmistakable Phoenician artifacts
have been found in Brazil, as well as possible Egyptian remains in the Grand
Canyon in America. The Phoenicians landed in the Americas thousands of years
before the manufactured ‘photo opportunity’ better known as the journey of
Christopher Columbus.
The reason that the native legends of the Americas
speak of tall ‘white gods’ coming from the sea bringing advanced knowledge
is because that is precisely what happened, if you forget the
gods bit.”
David Icke, “The Biggest
Secret” (63)
When critics objected saying Columbus’ mission was impossible, he often
countered those objections saying he “might discover some very beneficial
island or continent about 750 leagues to the west.” At this point the ships
would be able to restock on food/supplies and continue on towards Asia.
Then
low and behold Columbus discovered a “very beneficial continent” precisely
750 leagues to the west.
“In the agreements signed on April 17th, 1492, (The Capitulo) and on April
30th, 1492, (The Titulo) the strange fact is that more attention is given to
the rulership and jurisdiction of problematical lands that might be
discovered en route than to a division of spoils from wealthy Asia.”
Alex
Christopher, “Pandora’s Box – The Ultimate Unseen Hand Behind the New World
Order,” (42)
In Scotland's
Knights Templar Rosslyn Chapel, there are clear depictions of
corn and aloe cactus found on the archways and ceiling. These plants were
officially discovered in America and first brought to Europe in the 16th
century.
How then did the Masons building
Rosslyn Chapel, completed in 1486,
know about these plants at least 6 years before Columbus set sail?
“The official story that Christopher Columbus discovered the Americas is
ludicrous. A few miles from Edinburgh in Scotland today still stands Rosslyn
Chapel, that holy grail of the Brotherhood Elite. It was built in the shape
of a Templar cross by the St Clair-Sinclair family and is a mass of esoteric
symbolism. The foundations were laid in 1446 and it was completed in the
1480s. How remarkable then that the stonework at Rosslyn includes depictions
of sweet corn and cacti which were only found in America and Christopher
Columbus did not ‘discover’ that continent until 1492! How could this be?
There is, in fact, no mystery. Christopher Columbus was not even nearly the
first white person to land in the Americas. The Phoenicians, Norse, Irish,
Welsh, Bretons, Basques and Portuguese, all sailed to America before him and
so did Prince Henry Sinclair of Rosslyn, as documented in a rare book by
Frederick I. Pohl called Prince Henry Sinclair’s Voyage To The New World
1398. Sinclair made the journey with another Brotherhood bloodline, the Zeno
family, one of the most prominent Black Nobility families in Venice.
Sinclair and Antonio Zeno landed in what we call Newfoundland and went
ashore in Nova Scotia (New Scotland) in 1398 … The Brotherhood had known
about the Americas for thousands of years and Christopher Columbus was used
to make the official discovery so that the occupation of the Americas could
begin.”
–David Icke, “The Biggest
Secret” 1789
Columbus’ supporters were European royalty and the Templars.
His father-in-law
was a former Templar Knight and Catherine de Medici of the Illuminati
bloodline (along with others) financed his voyage. Columbus’ three ships
sailed under the Templars Red Cross flag, used today by the Red Cross and
Switzerland.
The royals also sent out fleets of conquistadors and
swashbuckling pirates flying the Skull and Bones flag their orders to rape,
kill, and pillage all they could from the New World.
“The Skull and Bones cross used by the secret society comes from the pirate
skull and cross bones. They weren’t just a bunch of swashbucklers like
you’ve seen in the movies. No, these were agents sent onto the high seas by
the British royal family to colonize the Americas.”
Michael Tsarion, “The
Subversive Use of Sacred Symbolism in the Media” Lecture, Conspiracy Con
2003
The Knights of Columbus third degree emblem is a “fasces,” the fascist
symbol overlaying a Nazi Iron Cross in black, red and white just as in
Hitler’s Germany.
The “fasces” fascist symbol is an axe supported by bundled
reeds representing the power of the many when bound to one ideal.
Disturbingly the fasces is also found at US
Senate, the Colorado seal, and the dime. The Knights of Columbus seem to be
a philanthropic male fraternity, so why all the Nazi symbolism?
Perhaps the
hidden history of their namesake Christopher Columbus will shed some light.
“The most obvious symbol of the Brotherhood’s intent is the fasces, from
which we get the word, fascism. You can see it at the bottom of a United
States ‘liberty’ symbol and in the Congress Building. It was a symbol used
widely in the Roman Empire and it consists of rods bound together around an
axe. This axe is the origin of the term Axis Powers for the fascist
countries in the Second World War. The symbolism is of people and countries
bound together under a common centralized dictatorship, the axe.”
David Icke,
“The Biggest Secret” (365)
When Columbus first came ashore and was greeted by the
Arawak native
Americans with smiles, gifts and food, he wrote in his log:
“They brought us
parrots and balls of cotton and spears and many other things … they
willingly traded everything they owned … They do not bear arms, and do not
know them, for I showed them a sword, they took it by the edge and cut
themselves out of ignorance. They have no iron. Their spears are made of
cane … They would make fine servants … With fifty men we could subjugate
them all and make them do whatever we want.”
Howard Zinn’s “A People’s
History of the United States”
From the very outset Columbus was writing about conquering and enslaving the
natives. Meanwhile the Arawaks, brought gifts, prepared food, and traded
everything they owned.
Columbus wrote that the natives,
“are so naïve and so
free with their possessions that no one who has not witnessed them would
believe it. When you ask for something they have, they never say no. To the
contrary, they offer to share with anyone.”
He also wrote,
“I believe that
they would easily be made Christians, because it seemed to me that they had
no religion.”
The European settlers took a free society without possessions,
property, currency, hierarchy or written religion and replaced it with
today’s America – the world’s shining beacon of selfish materialism, where
every square inch of land/water/airspace is publicly or privately owned,
taxed, and governed through a corrupt hierarchical system of laws and
regulations where Mother Nature’s gifts are treated as personal possessions
to be bought, sold, owned and defended.
Howard Zinn, in “A People’s History of the United States” continues:
“Columbus wrote:
‘As soon as I arrived in the Indies, on the first Island
which I found, I took some of the natives by force in order that they might
learn and might give me information of whatever there is in these parts.’
The information that Columbus wanted most was: Where is the gold? … His
second expedition was given seventeen ships and more than twelve hundred
men. The aim was clear: slaves and gold … They went from island to island in
the Caribbean, taking Indians as captives … roaming the island in gangs
looking for gold, taking women and children as slaves for sex and labor.”
“It was his [Columbus’] avowed aim to ‘convert the heathen Indians to our
Holy Faith’ that warranted the enslaving and exporting of thousands of
Native Americans. That such treatment resulted in complete genocide did not
matter as much as that these natives had been given the opportunity of
everlasting life through their exposure to Christianity. The same sort of
thinking also gave Westerners license to rape women. In his own words,
Columbus described how he himself ‘took [his] pleasure’ with a native woman
after whipping her ‘soundly’ with a piece of rope.”
Helen Ellerbe, “The Dark
Side of Christian History” (86-88)
By 1496 the settlers were responsible for 34 million native American deaths.
We are not talking about some guy who accidentally bumped into America
looking for a spice-trade route to India, but that’s what the standardized
textbooks continue to tell our children.
Columbus, the conquistadors, the
Pirates, and many pilgrims were hostile and ruthless groups of settlers who
were collectively responsible for the deaths of tens of millions of natives.
Howard Zinn continues:
“the Spaniards thought nothing of knifing Indians by
tens and twenties and of cutting slices off them to test the sharpness of
their blades … Las Cases says, ‘from 1494 to 1508 over three million people
had perished from war, slavery, and the mines. Who in future generations
will believe this? I myself writing it as a knowledgeable eyewitness can
hardly believe it.’”
Bartolome De Las Cases was a catholic priest who witnessed the atrocities
being committed in the name of God and wrote prolifically denouncing his
fellow countrymen.
Bartolome De Las Casas sailed to the “New World” in 1502
and recorded many of the things he saw in his book, “The Devastation of the
Indies”:
“With my own eyes I saw Spaniards cut off the nose, hands and ears of
Indians, male and female, without provocation, merely because it pleased
them to do it … Likewise, I saw how they summoned the caciques and the chief
rulers to come, assuring them safety, and when they peacefully came, they
were taken captive and burned … (The Spaniards) took babies from their
mothers’ breasts, grabbing them by the feet and smashing their heads against
rocks … They built a long gibbet, low enough for the toes to touch the
ground and prevent strangling, and hanged thirteen at a time in honor of
Christ Our Savior and the twelve Apostles …
Then, straw was wrapped around
their torn bodies and they were burned alive … When the Spaniards had
collected a great deal of gold from the Indians, they shut them up in three
big houses, crowding in as many as they could, then set fire to the houses,
burning alive all that were in them, yet those Indians hand given no cause
nor made any resistance …They would cut an Indian’s hands and leave them
dangling by a shred of skin … they would test their swords and their manly
strength on captured Indians and place bets on the slicing off of heads or
cutting of bodies in half with one blow.”
On every island Columbus ‘discovered’ he planted a cross, claiming ownership
for his Spanish Catholic patrons.
He read declarations of Godgiven right to
the native’s land in a language they couldn’t understand:
“I certify to you
that, with the help of God, we shall powerfully enter in your country and
shall make war against you … and shall subject you to the yoke and obedience
of the Church … and shall do you all mischief that we can, as to vassals who
do not obey and refuse to receive their lord and resist and contradict him.”
D. Stannard, “American Holocaust”
Perhaps you can understand why the word “cretin” derives from “Christian.”
Native American chief Hatuey was captured and burned alive by the
Christians. As he was being tied down, a Franciscan friar urged Hatuey to
take Jesus into his heart so that he may go to heaven and not hell.
The
chief replied that if heaven was where Christians went, he would rather go
to hell.
“Christopher Columbus is a symbol, not of a man, but of imperialism.
Imperialism and colonialism are not something that happened decades or
generations ago, but they are still happening now with the exploitation of
people … dispossessed from their land and forced out of subsistence
economies and into market economies – those processes are still happening
today.”
John Mohawk, Seneca, 1992 (http://www.indians.org/welker/columbu1.htm)
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