fill me in, whats going on with Watchtower and awake?
Ianone
JoinedPosts by Ianone
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42
Ozzie's Weekend Poll #127
by ozziepost inyes, we're early this weekend!
well, you know what they say, "the early bird catches the worm"?
and we need to take full advantage of the days which have been "cut short"!!
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54
Watchtower, Russell, Freemasons and the Illuminati
by truth_about_the_truth indear friends,
here is some intriguing info on the real history of the watchtower organization and the hidden agenda and role that they play in relation to the new world order.
i've pasted an excerpt here which i find especially interesting.
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Ianone
The evidence on this subject is abundant. People just need to open their eyes, and they will. It will just take some time. As long as they dont shut down or censor the internet they will find out sooner or later, like you said in an earlier post, truth, SOONER OR LATER the truth will come out.
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54
Watchtower, Russell, Freemasons and the Illuminati
by truth_about_the_truth indear friends,
here is some intriguing info on the real history of the watchtower organization and the hidden agenda and role that they play in relation to the new world order.
i've pasted an excerpt here which i find especially interesting.
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Ianone
Who really controls world events from behind-the-scene? Years of extensive research and investigation have gone into this massively documented work. In this 544 page, large format book, Fritz Springmeier discloses mind-boggling facts and never before revealed truths about the top Illuminati dynasties. Discover the amazing role these bloodlines have played?and are now wielding?in human history, with family names such as Astor, DuPont, Kennedy, Onassis, Rockefeller, Rothschild, Russell, Van Duyn, and Krupp. You?ll also learn of the secretive, Chinese Li family, which operates with impunity in the U.S.A. and around the world. Along the way you?ll find out why President John F. Kennedy and actress Grace Kelly were killed; who created the United Nations; who controls the two major U.S. political parties; how the Rothschilds invented and control modern-day Israel; who secretly founded false religions such as the Jehovah?s Witnesses; and much, much more. A literal encyclopedia of rare, unbelievable information!
623 pages by Fritz Springmeier for $25
Three ways to order: Order online now or, if you prefer, phone us toll free 1-800-234-9673 (Monday-Friday, 8-5 CST), or simply send check or money order to: Power of Prophecy 1708 Patterson Rd. Austin, TX 78733 [Please include 10% for domestic shipping and handling or 20% for international shipping and handling] -
54
Watchtower, Russell, Freemasons and the Illuminati
by truth_about_the_truth indear friends,
here is some intriguing info on the real history of the watchtower organization and the hidden agenda and role that they play in relation to the new world order.
i've pasted an excerpt here which i find especially interesting.
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Ianone
AUDIOTAPE: Watchtower and the Masons (The)
.
Texe Marrs interviews Fritz Springmeier, author of The Watchtower and the Masons.Three ways to order: Order online now or, if you prefer, phone toll free 1-800-234-9673 (Monday-Friday 8-5 CST), or simply send check or money order to: Conspiracyworld.com 1708 Patterson Rd. Austin, TX 78733 [Please include 10% for domestic shipping and handling or 20% for international shipping and handling]
Please enter quantity in QTY box, then click on "Add to Shopping Cart"
60 min Audiotape --- $8.00 -
54
Watchtower, Russell, Freemasons and the Illuminati
by truth_about_the_truth indear friends,
here is some intriguing info on the real history of the watchtower organization and the hidden agenda and role that they play in relation to the new world order.
i've pasted an excerpt here which i find especially interesting.
-
Ianone
Keep up the good work "truth_about_the_truth." It has taken many years for people to realize that there was a massive plot in Dallas that killed JFK, and its only been a few years and people are waking up to the fact that the WTC was an inside job. Remember, these ex j dubs who scoff at the masonic and Talmudic Jewish founding the Watchtower are still under the mindset of Cognitive Dissonance. Although they have finally exited a highly conditioned mind controlling cult, they are still under the influence to discredit and even demonize anyone or anything that shows them information contrary to their currently held views. Keep spreading the truth.
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Ianone
Yeah what Neo said and because they dont want anyone's mind wandering and thinking independently and critically while they conduct their MKultra bore talks.
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23
Parents ripped apart by religious interpretation
by Ianone in4. overcast about calgaryherald.com | = subscriber only contentwelcome, college sait [profile] [register] [logout] classifieds?
find a job.
find a car.
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Ianone
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OvercastAbout CalgaryHerald.com | = subscriber only content Welcome, COLLEGE SAIT [Profile] [Register] [Logout] CLASSIFIEDS ? Find a job
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Sound Off! 7:00 PM It's a Great Game 8:00 PM Last Chance for Romance 8:30 PM Whose Design Is It Anyway? 9:00 PM Warren Buffett: Money Master 10:00 PM Consumer Choice AwardsCITY & REGION Parents ripped apart by religious interpretation
February 26, 2005John Gradon Calgary Herald 1 | 2 | NEXT >> CREDIT: Jenelle Schneider, Calgary Herald Arliss Hughes leaves court Friday past pickets demonstrating against her Jehovah's Witnesses faith, which they blame for her daughter's death. They sit in court, and separated by an aisle that might as well be as wide as a mile, exhibit stark evidence of a house forever divided.
It is not unusual for families ripped apart by circumstances or events or a combination of both to end up in either a criminal or civil courtroom setting.
When it does happen, there can be much at play, but the deep-seated problems involved would most often and most likely be rooted in such causes as abuse, for instance, or alcohol, drugs, neglect, assault, or even homicide.
But seldom does it occur in the name of God . . . or rather, as on this occasion, the consequence of diametrically opposing interpretations of His word and His teachings.
Oh yes, sadly, there is a death involved here.
It is that of 17-year-old Bethany Hughes who died of leukemia in highly controversial circumstances Sept. 5, 2002.
The teenager passed away less than six months after she underwent a series of blood transfusions, allegedly against her wishes, when Alberta Children's Services assumed custody of her after she refused conventional treatment for the disease.
Various court hearings have heard that Bethany, a devout believer in the Jehovah's Witness faith and in the Watch Tower Society, fought the transfusion process to such an extent that she had been known to rip medical tubes from her arms in Calgary's Alberta's Children's Hospital.
When she contracted the cancer, her father Lawrence Hughes left the Witnesses and proceeded to battle to allow her to receive the transfusion he was convinced that, if applied early enough, might save his daughter's life.
On the other hand Bethany's mother, Arliss Hughes, backed by her religion and senior proponents of it, wanted the procedures terminated in accordance with their faith's belief that blood transfusions are inherently wrong and unacceptable.
In the wake of Bethany's death, the courtroom has become a family battleground with Lawrence Hughes -- he has been granted the role of overseer of his daughter's estate -- attempting to launch a $1-million wrongful death lawsuit against the church, Arliss Hughes, and doctors for allowing or persuading his daughter to refuse the transfusions.
In Court of Queen's Bench Friday, Justice Ged Hawco ruled that Lawrence Hughes' status as estate overseer should stand and that therefore he should be allowed to proceed with his case -- although the judge did emphasize the fact that "Whether the claim is legitimate or not is a decision to be made by this court on another day."
And so, for now, the impending lawsuit will stand.
Afterwards, the bitterness, the agony, and all the torment involved in addition to the natural and shared grief at the awful loss of a child is captured in the words of the respective and now estranged parents.
Somewhat mildly and perhaps in understatement, Arliss Hughes begins by saying: "I am a little disappointed with today's procedural decision.
"Not a day passes without me thinking of my wonderful daughter Bethany. Her exuberance, thoughtfulness, and maturity brought much joy to our family, her friends and schoolmates."
...Continued<< PREVIOUS | 1 | 2 More Columns By This Writer :: Loss unites Trudeau, city mother :: Tension thick at Quinn hearing :: Finding missing son would make family's day :: When a parent's worst fears become sad reality :: City transit passes take trip down memory lane :: City transit passes take trip down memory lane :: Back Door opens up new life :: Inevitability greets cattle barons' victory :: Stampede's archivist loves living in the past :: Princess takes pleasure in rugby and poetry She says: "It is unfortunate Mr. Hughes still cannot come to grips with the reality that Bethany's tragic death was due to her terminal leukemia . . . it is offensive and deeply disturbing for Mr. Hughes to now blame Bethany's death on me, Bethany's friends, her doctors, the hospital in Edmonton (where Bethany ultimately died) and our faith."
Meanwhile, Lawrence Hughes is pleased at this day's procedural victory.
Then, with scarcely concealed passion and intent, he vows: "I will now continue this fight, for Bethany's sake, until there is no breath left in my body . . . or until my two other daughters are safely out of harm's way."
He swears Bethany was in no condition to make wise decisions about her treatment herself . . . saying that the Watchtower Society had "pressured and brainwashed her" against accepting the blood transfusions.
"I would have gone to hell and back for Bethany, and I did. I would go to hell and back for my other daughters, and, if I have to, I will."
He says his victory means he can bring forth more evidence about the crucial treatment decisions made in Bethany's case, her final days, and expose the fact that his daughter did not really accept she must not have transfusions.
"And hopefully when that happens it will be Bethany's first opportunity to tell her story in a sense . . . for people to hear her speak through that evidence."
For Bethany, the pain is blessedly over.
But as this complex, grave and emotive case now moves forward into new chapters, it is obvious that the pain and acrimony of the divided family she left behind will not only endure but intensify.
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6
WTBTS Tries To Have Lawsuit Thrown Out
by Ianone in4. overcast classifieds?
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Ianone
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Sound Off! 7:00 PM It's a Great Game 8:00 PM Last Chance for Romance 8:30 PM Whose Design Is It Anyway? 9:00 PM Warren Buffett: Money Master 10:00 PM Consumer Choice AwardsCITY & REGION Father retains control of estate
Saturday, February 26, 2005Leanne Dohy Calgary Herald A Court of Queen's Bench judge ruled Friday that a Calgary father will remain administrator of his daughter's estate, allowing him to pursue a lawsuit on her behalf against the church he believes caused her death.
After being named administrator of his daughter Bethany's estate last Aug. 25, Lawrence Hughes launched a $1-million wrongful death lawsuit on her behalf against the Watchtower Bible and Tract Society of Canada, Edmonton's Cross Cancer Institute, several doctors and several Jehovah's Witnesses.
Bethany's mother, Arliss Hughes, the Watchtower Bible and Tract Society and several other defendants wanted the administration order set aside on the grounds that Lawrence Hughes had failed to disclose relevant facts when he made his application.
Justice Ged Hawco refused to set the order aside.
"This has been a very good day," Lawrence Hughes said outside the courthouse. "My daughter Bethany will have the opportunity to speak for the very first time and tell what happened to her. She was a sick, frail child who was pressured, coerced and brainwashed by the Watchtower Society."
Bethany Hughes died Sept. 5, 2002, less than six months after a series of blood transfusions she was given against her wishes. Alberta Children's Services assumed custody of the girl after she refused conventional treatment for the disease. Lawrence Hughes, who had been a practising Jehovah's Witness until after Bethany's diagnosis, also battled to have his daughter receive the transfusions.
Bethany fought the transfusions, trying to pull the medical tubes from her arms while being treated at Alberta Children's Hospital.
"If Bethany had accepted the blood transfusions, she would have been . . . shunned by her family and all of her friends," Hughes said. "If Bethany had accepted the blood transfusions, she was taught to believe, God would have destroyed her at Armageddon."
Arliss Hughes said that it is unfortunate that Bethany's father "cannot come to grips with the reality that Bethany's tragic death was due to her terminal leukemia."
"Mr. Hughes and I . . . were present in court proceedings on July 2, 2002 when Provincial Court Judge Vickery ruled Bethany's leukemia was terminal and the treatment recommendation was palliative care without blood transfusions," Hughes said in a statement. "It is offensive and deeply disturbing for Mr. Hughes to now blame Bethany's death on me, Bethany's friends, her doctors, the hospital in Edmonton and our faith."
Justice Hawco said in his ruling that although there was a failure to disclose some material information, appointing Lawrence Hughes administrator was appropriate.
"(Hughes) is alleging that his daughter opposed the transfusions because of the pressures exerted upon her by the defendants," Hawco said. "No other member of the family has come forward to vigorously pursue such a claim. Whether there is a legitimate claim is yet to be determined."
Arliss Hughes, the Watchtower Society and the other defendants are pursuing an action to strike Lawrence Hughes' statement of claim, Hawco said, and are entitled to do so.
"Whether the claim is legitimate or not is a decision to be made by . . . this court on another day. If I were to grant their application today, they would effectively be successful in striking the statement of claim without a hearing on the merits."
© The Calgary Herald 2005 -
Dad fights to control daughter's estate (Calgary Herald)
by Ianone inthursday, february 24, 2005 8. a few clouds classifieds?
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Ianone
Thursday , February 24 , 2005 8°
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Sound Off! 7:00 PM Train 48 7:30 PM Entertainment Tonight 8:00 PM Joey 8:30 PM Will & Grace 9:00 PM Survivor: Palau 10:00 PM The ApprenticeCITY & REGION Dad fights to control daughter's estate
Thursday, February 24, 2005Shelley Knapp Calgary Herald CREDIT: Grant Black, Calgary Herald Lawrence Hughes, who has launched a lawsuit against the Jehovah's Witness church over the death of his daughter Bethany, walks by supporters who gathered Wednesday near the courthouse. A judge will decide Friday whether a Calgary father will remain the overseer of his daughter's estate, which could allow him to pursue a lawsuit against the faith he believes helped kill her.
Lawrence Hughes, a former Jehovah's Witness, blames the church and his wife, Arliss Hughes, for allowing their daughter Bethany to refuse blood transfusions to help treat her leukemia.
"If you conduct yourself in a way that you are legally complicit in a death of an individual, then that claim should remain after the death," said Vaughn Marshall, Lawrence Hughes' lawyer.
At question in Wednesday's Court of Queen's Bench hearing was whether Hughes should remain the administrator of his 17-year-old daughter's estate -- a position he was appointed to last Aug. 25.
Hughes then launched a $1-million wrongful death lawsuit on behalf of Bethany's estate against the Watchtower Bible and Tract Society of Canada, Edmonton's Cross Cancer Institute, several doctors and several Jehovah's Witnesses. To date, the society has not been formally served with the lawsuit.
Winnipeg lawyer Allan Ludkiewicz, who is fighting Hughes' claim, argues that the judge who appointed him as the administrator didn't have all of the information necessary to make that ruling -- including the fact Bethany was a firm believer in the Jehovah Witness faith and the Watchtower Society.
Bethany Hughes died on Sept. 5, 2002 -- less than six months after she underwent a series of blood transfusions against her wishes when Alberta Children's Services assumed custody of her after she refused conventional treatment for the disease. Lawrence Hughes also fought for her to have the transfusions.
Bethany fought the treatments, trying to pull the medical tubes from her arms while bedridden at Alberta Children's Hospital.
"He (Lawrence) will not recognize the validity of Bethany's instructions, so he should not be the administrator of her estate, especially since he and Bethany had taken completely opposite actions," Ludkiewicz told Justice Ged Hawco.
Marshall argues there is no one else who will take on this battle and time has elapsed for a new statement of claim to be filed.
"The estate will lose that right if this order is not upheld," Marshall told the judge.
Earlier in the day, a handful of Hughes' supporters in his crusade against the Watchtower Society protested outside the downtown courthouse.
"This protest is for Bethany and all the other Bethanys who haven't had blood transfusions," said Hughes while waving a placard reading "Save the Children."
Hawco will make his ruling on the application Friday afternoon.
© The Calgary Herald 2005 -
20
Da cross....hee hee
by emmamess22 inby show of hands?
who thinks it was a cross?
who thinks it was a "stake" ?
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Ianone
Excellent post Leolalia