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Thursday, June 21, 2012

"...beheaded for the witness of Jesus"

And I saw thrones, and they sat upon them, and judgment was given unto them: and I saw the souls of them that were beheaded for the witness of Jesus, and for the word of God, and which had not worshipped the beast, neither his image, neither had received his mark upon their foreheads, or in their hands; and they lived and reigned with Christ a thousand years. (Rev 20:4)

 

Behind Mexico's Wave of Beheadings - TIME

Some say decapitation, a tactic in drug gang warfare, was inspired by al-Qaeda; others see its roots in Central …

www.time.com/time/world/article... - 

 

Beheadings in Mexico: The Foreign Element in Mexico's Drug Wars ...

Though killing police officers is not uncommon in Mexico, beheading them is. Mexican gangs have used guns, knives and even grenades …

www.stratfor.com/beheadings_mex... -

 

Behind Mexico's Wave of Beheadings - TIME

Some say decapitation, a tactic in drug gang warfare, was inspired by al-Qaeda; others see its roots in Central …

www.time.com/time/world/article... - 

Jul 10, 2010 … Sorry, but it's completely reasonable to think the regular practice ofbeheading bodies in Mexico can cross an …

digg.com/news/politics/Gov_Brew... – 

 

Soldiers beheaded as Mexican drug cartels step up terror to ...

Dec 23, 2008 … The number of people killed inMexico through violence … The gruesome tactic ofbeheading is used to spread fear …

www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/... – 

 

MSNBC: Mexican blog sheds grim light on drug war:

The resulting unofficial news blackout means that gunbattles, rapes, beheadings, and shootouts at parties and drug treatment centers often get neglected. The cartels have effectively shut down the news media in whole sections of the country.

http://worldblog.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2010/09/08/5069426-mexican-blog-sheds-grim-light-on-drug-war

 

 

La Santa Muerte & Jesus Malverde, the Narco-Saint:

 

This miracle worker, this guardian of the most defenseless and worst of sinners, is La Santa Muerte, Holy Death.

 

[..]

 

The new era had arrived, and the foot soldiers in the escalated drug wars, facing the prospect of such a terrible death, increasingly turned to death itself for protection. It was during the first antidrug campaigns that the myth of Jesus Malverde, the original narco-saint, spread beyond the borders of Sinaloa. According to legend, Malverde was a 19th-century outlaw who robbed from the rich and gave to the poor, was hanged for his sins, and then worked miracles from the grave. His cult took off in the 1970s, after a former street vendor, Eligio Gonzalez, began praying to him. Sitting outside the Malverde shrine in Culiacn, Gonzalez's sturdy, relaxed, and unsmiling young son, Jesus, told me the story of the miracle. Eligio had been working as a driver in 1976 when he was knifed and shot in a holdup and left for dead. He prayed to Malverde, whose only monument at the time was a pile of rocks where his grave was said to be, promising to erect a proper shrine in Malverde's honor if the saintly bandit saved his life. When he survived, he kept his word.

 

González appears to have understood that people would grasp Malverde's real importance only if there were an image of him they could worship, but unfortunately no photograph of Malverde existed—and, in fact, no evidence at all that he'd ever lived. In the 1980s González asked an artisan in the neighborhood to create a plaster bust: "Make him sort of like Pedro Infante and sort of like Carlos Mariscal," Infante being a famous movie star from Sinaloa and Mariscal a local politician.

 

The Malverde shrine is a makeshift cinder-block temple directly in front of the Sinaloa state government office complex, and its green walls are covered, inside and out, with testimonials left by the faithful. The plaster bust is enshrined in a glass case and surrounded by dozens of flower bouquets, mostly plastic. Many accompanying photographs and engraved plaques feature the image of a marijuana plant or a "goat horn": an AK-47 rifle. No one seriously disputes Malverde's status as a narco-saint—in Sinaloa it is stated as fact that whenever a major trafficker wants to pray, the entire street is closed down so he can worship in peace. But as a warden of the Culiacán prison pointed out, Malverde is now so popular among Sinaloans in every walk of life that he is really more of an identity symbol.

 

 

[...]

 

Daniel Bucio loves these romerías, or reli­gious fiestas, what with the jostling crowds and the street food and the endless parade of statues of St. Jude—some as large as a man can carry, some small but fantastically decorated, like his own, which in obedience to the ancient religious traditions of his hometown is dressed in a glittering ankle-length robe and the feathered headdress of the Aztec emperors. In recent years, though, Bucio's pleasure in the monthly pilgrimage has been spoiled by growing throngs of unsmiling young men and women with tattoos and chains who arrive in groups and push their way through the crowd, often exchanging what look like small, wrapped candies in swift transactions. Bucio thinks he knows what they're up to.

 

[...]

 

An offshoot of this group was the Zetas, a band of rogue military personnel originally trained as elite antinarcotics forces. Ordinary Mexicans had their first inkling of how much more brutal the drug violence was going to be in September 2006, when a group of men dressed in black walked into a roadside discotheque in the state of Michoacn and dumped the contents of a plastic garbage bag on the floor. Five severed heads came rolling out.

http://ngm.nationalgeographic.com/print/2010/05/mexico-saints/guillermoprieto-text

 

Photos:

http://ngm.nationalgeographic.com/2010/05/mexico-saints/schwartz-photography

 

 

A thirty-three year old conquistador landed in Mexico with five hundred men.

He was shocked to find the Aztecs taking prisoners of the weaker tribes, ripping their hearts out atop temples, and in a frenzy eating their bodies.

With help from other tribes, the conquistador fought the Aztecs, freed prisoners, knocked down idols and erected crosses.

His name was Hernando Cortez, and he died DECEMBER 2, 1547.

His personal secretary, Francisco Lopez de Gomara, recorded how Cortez spoke to the Tabascan tribe through his interpreter, Jeronimo de Aguilar, a Catholic priest who had been shipwrecked on the Yucatan eight years earlier:

"Cortez told them of their blindness and great vanity in worshiping many gods and making sacrifices of human blood to them, and in thinking that those images, being mute and soulless, made by the Indians with their own hands, were capable of doing good or harm.

He then told them of a single God, Creator of Heaven and earth and men, whom the Christians worshiped and served, and whom all men should worship and serve."

Gomara's report on Cortez continued:

"In short, after he had explained the Mysteries to them, and how the Son of God had suffered on the Cross, they accepted it and broke up their idols."

American Minute with Bill Federer (December 2)

www.AmericanMinute.com

 

 

King Camp Gillette, Seething Energies of Lucifer, Three World Wars, Masonry, & Mormonism

http://forthtell.blogspot.com/2012/03/king-camp-gillette-seething-energies-of.html

 

Wiki: Anti-Masonic Party::

The Anti-Masonic Party was formed in upstate New York in 1828.

Some people feared the Freemasons, believing they were a powerful secret society that was trying to rule the country in defiance of republican principles. These opponents came together to form a political party after the Morgan affair convinced them the Masons were murdering their opponents. This key episode was the mysterious disappearance, in 1826, of William Morgan (1774-1826?), a Freemason of Batavia, New York, who had become dissatisfied with his lodge and intended to publish a book detailing the secrets of the Freemasons. When his intentions became known to the lodge, an attempt was made to burn down the publishing house. Finally in September 1826 Morgan was arrested on charges of petty larceny. Someone paid his debt and upon his release he was seized by parties and taken to Fort Niagara, after which he disappeared.[2]

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anti-Masonic_Party

 

Wiki: Mormonism and Freemasonry::

The relationship between Mormonism and Freemasonry began early in the life of Mormon founder Joseph Smith, Jr., as his older brother and possibly his father were Freemasons while the family lived near Palmyra, New York. Nevertheless, in the late 1820s, the western New York region was swept with anti-Masonic fervor, and the Book of Mormon, a foundational religious book published by Smith in 1830, is generally considered to reflect that anti-Masonic sentiment by condemning what it portrays as oath-bound conspiratorial organizations.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mormonism_and_Freemasonry

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