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Originally posted by Hellas
Kim jong Il was just 69?? I thought he was way older..
Originally posted by samsamm9
Originally posted by Basilisk
OH NO! well we already have the 27 club... i guess its time to start the 69 club. I don't really think there is any connection here.
The "69 club" sounds confusing
Originally posted by stumason
Originally posted by Hellas
Kim jong Il was just 69?? I thought he was way older..
No, he was 70....
Kind of blows that out the water then, although the fact that blokes are dying aged 69 is hardly shocking, new or even unheard of.
Originally posted by MasterGemini
He is only 70 if you go by the Russian calculation.
Originally posted by MasterGemini
He was 69.
Originally posted by MasterGemini
What is hardly shocking that the names I see coming to all the same threads and trying to derail them?
Also, I think it would have been more suspicious if they had died at the age of 66.
Route 66 = 11 (one above God as in 9 - 11 with 10 = positive negative))*6(number of man)= The Great Work
Originally posted by Aloysius the Gaul
reply to post by IAMIAM
something out of the ordinary - so basically forget tsunamis & earthquakes (which are apparently decreasing).
From Publishers Weekly
Accused of fostering international terrorism and contravening the stability of the Middle East, Muammar Khadafy has been viewed as a threat by the West for some 20 years. The author of this sprawling, superficial look at Libya and its leader argues that the U.S. has overestimated Khadafy's danger, underestimated his achievements and distorted his character. The Libyan's motives have been "in the main, admirable," according to Tremlett, a British MP during the '70s and '80s. He contends that Colonel Oliver North's anti-Khadafy campaign during the Reagan years produced flimsy or false evidence to use as pretexts for several assassination attempts, most notably the 1986 raid by F-111s when the Americans tried to bomb Khadafy in his bed. The most convincing sections of the book deal with Tremlett's personal impressions of Libya, a country he claims would not survive without the foreign technicians who shore up its fragile infrastructure. Photos.
Copyright 1993 Reed Business Information, Inc.
All children growing up in America learn who the Founding Fathers were. Most, however, never learn of the founders’ connections to the Freemasons, the Rosicrucians, and other esoteric orders. In Founding Fathers, Secret Societies Robert Hieronimus investigates these important connections--as well as the founders' connections to the League of the Iroquois--and how the influence of these groups can be traced throughout our most significant national documents and symbols, especially the Great Seal. He reveals in detail how the reverse of the Great Seal, which appears on the back of the one-dollar bill, is a blueprint that conveys the secret destiny of America. By understanding the kabbalistic meaning of the Great Seal’s reverse, we discover the unique opportunities the current era presents for achieving the Founding Fathers’ spiritual vision.
ROBERT HIERONIMUS, Ph.D., is a historian, visual artist, and radio host. His weekly program, 21st Century Radio with Dr. Bob Hieronimus, broadcasts New Paradigm topics across the United States. He lives in Maryland.
There are some great freemasons and there are some great men who were freemasons. Winston Spencer-Churchill belonged to the latter category. Justifiably our world-wide fraternity takes pride in having men of stature as members: George Washington, Franklin D and Theodore Roosevelt, Harry Truman, King George VI and Prince Philip, the Duke of Edinburgh; Masonic sportsmen Malcolm Campbell and Arnold Palmer; actors and composers: Clark Gable and John Wayne, Beethoven, Mozart, Hayden and Sibelius and astronaut John Glenn, jazz great Duke Ellington, even Casanova and Houdini, to mention just a few, all freemasons. But have we at times attributed too much significance to their Masonic association?
Originally posted by Aloysius the Gaul
reply to post by IAMIAM
Yeah I see your posts...I am amazed all right ....probably not in the manner you would like me to be though.
Without any feeling at all,
A complete stranger and certainly not your brother
Originally posted by Aloysius the Gaul
reply to post by IAMIAM
Who said anything about being ashamed of anyone?
You should try presuming less, and perhaps you could then think more