On Monday, November 3, 2003, at 01:01 PM, David Sutherland wrote:

 
The alleged founder of the Illuminati, himself a former student of the Catholic Jesuits himself repelled by their dogmatism, one Adam Weishaupt, was stigmatized by Barruel whom he labelled "a human devil".
 
The Supremacist Aryan Nations, and Conspiracy monger and Fascist La Rouche, both imbibe the same idiom-ology in their own propaganda. 
 


actually larouche and his researchers quite vigorously denounce abbe barruel as a fraud [*], and are definitively anti-jesuit. they also sideline right-wing illuminati theories in general. every time i've come across a mention of weishaupt / illuminati in larouche-related writings, i've found it to be outright dismissive.

nice try, no cigar. what are you trying to accomplish by piling bald-faced lies on top of your obviously hysterical prejudices?

* in a related matter, on pp. 152-153 of "treason in america" by larouche's lead researcher anton chaitkin, there is documentation on how the founders of the american branch of scottish rite masonry originated a variation of the "jewish masonic conspiracy" myth in their official histories to obscure the origins of their order in the british oligarchy. in the same book chaitkin discusses the effects the barruel material had on some american politicians of the time, and describes it as a hoax created by the british to create a cover story for the infiltration of the jacobins by lord shelburne's secret intelligence service. incidentally, chaitkin is the jewish son of jacob chaitkin, one of america's leading nazi-hunting lawyers in the 1930s. accusations of "neo-fascism" and "anti-semitism" against larouche have been hammered out endlessly by the ADL and b'nai brith, which happen to be the only two major "jewish" organizations who opposed the anti-nazi boycott of 1933 (the boycott for which chaitkin sr. served as legal counsel)!!!!! put that in your pipe and smoke it . please be careful not to choke.

whatever larouche's real faults may be -- and i'm not necessarily saying he should be trusted in general -- i find some of the accusations against him downright funny. obviously, a game is being played. can't say i've figured out what's behind it yet. but i can say for sure that i don't think i'll learn much from david sutherland.

"When fascism comes to america, it will come calling itself anti-fascism." -- Huey Long

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