Further Reading

Monday, 22 April 2019

Who is this 'god' who Theresa May speaks of?

[David Icke]: WERE you moved by Theresa May’s Easter message?

It’s more likely, I’d contend, that you moved away from your television or computer if you were one of those confronted by the sight of our very unpopular Prime Minister speaking about Christianity at this highly sensitive time of year.

This is not a comment on Mrs May’s party politics or even, in some senses, a comment on the woman herself.

The answer, I believe, lies in the true nature of the ‘god’ members of the elite claim to be serving – and it’s far different from the nice image on the tin.

Delve into the world of secret societies and Freemasonry and a belief in the divine is a must. Only when an initiate scales the full 33 degrees of the Masonic order, however, is the name of this ‘god’ revealed and that name is Lucifer.

In the Biblical story, Lucifer is declared to have rebelled against God, expelled from heaven and thrown out to torment the earth. It is said Lucifer was beguiled with his own beauty, intelligence, power and position.

Now can you connect this perhaps symbolic story with our world leaders?

I don’t doubt for a moment that Mrs May, David Cameron, Tony Blair, Margaret Thatcher and even The Queen are genuine in professing a faith.

But, through their pride, thirst for power and the influences in the shadows that got them there, they have attracted the ‘god’ that best befits them.

She mentions often, as she does in this contrived message, that she is a ‘vicar’s daughter’. Again this is quoted by her ever-diminishing number of supporters to somehow give the impression she cares about ordinary people.

But her father the Rev Hubert Brasier was at best an ambiguous figure. Much of the information trail to his past was interestingly removed from the Internet when Mrs May became Prime Minister.

All we know for certain is that he served in parishes that were plagued by child abuse perpetrated in the name of this same ‘god’. He also worked for six years with the notorious serial killer Dr John Bodkin Adams, described as the Dr Harold Shipman of his age. His delightful modus operandi was to persuade mostly elderly patients to include him in his will and then treat them to a lethal injection.

Was it tragic for the then 25-year-old Mrs May or a stroke of career luck when her father was killed in a car crash in October 1981? Perhaps only his maker himself knows what, if anything, his sudden passing has hidden...read more>>>...