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[–] 2 pts (edited )

https://poal.co/s/VaxTax/643021/8b0341a8-03cb-4b69-a3a3-f8cfabcd1afd#cmnts

Have you been reading your Protocols? In it you will find the Zionist plan to “weary the nations”. The zionists have been encouraging corruption at every level of government to frustrate, weary, and anger the peoples of the world. Why? So that when they seat their man on the Throne of David, his rule will appear righteous and just compared to previous administrations. It will be a totalitarian rule that the people will embrace because of all of the former corruption... ... ...when I read the Protocols years ago, I came to the conclusion that there had to be an awakening. I coined it the “controlled awakening”, because I figured your average NPC is unable to come to any sort of conclusion without the media telling them what to think. So I figured the information would have to be slow-rolled, with various actors “defecting” and leaking information to the public as the public slowly came to an awareness of how they had been screwed. And then Q came on the scene with “The Great Awakening” and I just had to shake my head…

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Beyond the controversy surrounding the book, if it keeps getting validated by current events and trends, it is then unlikely due to just a mere coincidence, IMO. Now maybe I'm wrong, I haven't read it myself, but I know that this particular book keeps coming back on the table despite the fact that it is officially labelled as a forgery since pretty much forever https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Protocols_of_the_Elders_of_Zion

"forgery" - The author(s) knew what the enemy was up to and decided to expose them by pretending to be them, and it backfired

"pseudo forgery" - The author(s) actually worked for the enemy while pretending the contrary (or were instrumental and manipulated), and getting the plan exposed as a forgery was part of the plan, in order to discredit any possible past or future leak

"great forgery" - The book was a forgery but it was so great it became an instruction manual for the enemy

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Protocols_of_the_Elders_of_Zion#Political_conspiracy_background

Jacob Brafman, a Lithuanian Jew from Minsk, had a falling out with agents of the local qahal and consequently turned against Judaism. He subsequently converted to the Russian Orthodox Church and authored polemics against the Talmud and the qahal.[8] Brafman claimed in his books The Local and Universal Jewish Brotherhoods (1868) and The Book of the Kahal (1869), published in Vilna, that the qahal continued to exist in secret and that it had as its principal aim undermining Christian entrepreneurs, taking over their property and ultimately seizing power. He also claimed that it was an international conspiratorial network, under the central control of the Alliance Israélite Universelle, which was based in Paris and then under the leadership of Adolphe Crémieux, a prominent freemason.[8] The Vilna Talmudist, Jacob Barit, attempted to refute Brafman's claim.

The impact of Brafman's work took on an international aspect when it was translated into English, French, German and other languages. The image of the "qahal" as a secret international Jewish shadow government working as a state within a state was picked up by anti-Jewish publications in Russia and was taken seriously by some Russian officials such as P. A. Cherevin and Nikolay Pavlovich Ignatyev who in the 1880s urged governors-general of provinces to seek out the supposed qahal. This was around the time of the Narodnaya Volya assassination of Tsar Alexander II of Russia and the subsequent pogroms. In France, it was translated by Monsignor Ernest Jouin in 1925, who supported the Protocols. In 1928, Siegfried Passarge, a geographer who later gave his support to the Nazis, translated it into German.

Aside from Brafman, there were other early writings which posited a similar concept to the Protocols. This includes The Conquest of the World by the Jews (1878),[9] published in Basel and authored by Osman Bey (born Frederick Millingen).

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