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On the right is page 292 of a book called “Morals and Dogma” written in 1878. The book itself represented a …uhm… “declassification” of information that was previously only privately circulated. In it, the author describes ancient symbols that will be used (in the future) to affect World change. The Nazi party had yet to be formed and the Star of David was not yet associated with Judiasm. So how did Pike (the author) know to be this SPECIFICALLY prescient?
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The man pictured below is Sir Rudyard Kipling, the famed author of childhood favorites like “The Jungle Book” and “The Man Who Would Be King”. His signature always included the symbol we would later know as the Swastika.
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The same symbol (we now call the Swastika) was also watermarked on the Soviet “dollar” even though, they allied with the U.S. to defeat the Nazis in World War 2. Odd. 🤔🤔🤔
Well, Thomas Carr’s book and Albert Pike’s book when combined, offer us an explanations for why it was on Rudyard Kipling’s signature and on the Bolshevik dollar…
SPOILER: it was (is) actually the sacred emblem of a supra-national fraternal order (secret society), according to historian M. Hoffman and Viscount Leon De Poncins.

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