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Serpo
10th March 2012, 02:14 AM
they are getting desperate for new members




Would you want to be a Freemason?


By Tom de Castella BBC News Magazine http://news.bbcimg.co.uk/media/images/58903000/jpg/_58903769_freemasonssplash.jpg



Dogged by conspiracy theories, Freemasons insist theirs is a modern, open organisation. But can this male-dominated body cast off its secretive image and win over a sceptical public?
They designed the pyramids, plotted the French Revolution and are keeping the flame alive for the Knights Templar. These are just some of the wilder theories about the Freemasons. Today they are associated with secret handshakes and alleged corruption in the police and judiciary.
But dogged by this "secret society" image, the Freemasons have launched a rebranding exercise.
On Friday, the United Grand Lodge of England, the largest Masonic group in Britain, publishes its first independent report. The Future of Freemasonry, researched by the Social Issues Research Centre, aims to start an "open and transparent" discussion ahead of the group's tercentenary in 2017.
Nigel Brown, grand secretary of the United Grand Lodge, says it's time to banish the reputation for secrecy. "We're being proactive now. It's essential we get people's minds away from these myths." For instance, there is no such thing as a secret handshake and professional networking is forbidden under Masonic rules, he says.
Even this is disputed. Martin Short, who wrote about the Masons in his 1989 book Inside the Brotherhood, says the handshake is real. "If you meet a middle-ranking police officer, you'll suddenly find this distinctive pressure between your second and third fingers. The thumb switches position and you feel that someone is giving you an electric shock."
http://news.bbcimg.co.uk/media/images/58947000/jpg/_58947055_handshake_thinkstock.jpg How the Masonic handshake is believed to be done
The report for the most part dodges such controversy, surveying members and the wider public on Masonic themes such as male bonding, charitable work and ritual. It argues that members value the community of Freemasonry and that outsiders are largely ignorant of how the organisation works.
With 250,000 members in England and Wales and six million around the world, they are a minority, albeit one associated with the levers of power. The first US President, George Washington, and another leading American revolutionary, Benjamin Franklin, were Masons. Today a significant proportion of the Royal Household are members, and the Duke of Kent is grand master of the United Grand Lodge of England.
Masonic rules demand that members support each other and keep each others' lawful secrets, which has led to fears of corrupt cliques developing.
It's nothing new, says Observer newspaper columnist Nick Cohen.
Ever since the 1790s Masons have been "whipping boys" for global conspiracy theorists, he argues, adding that after the French revolution, Catholic reactionaries were looking for a scapegoat and the Jews - the usual target - were too downtrodden to be blamed.
Freemasons in popular culture

http://news.bbcimg.co.uk/media/images/58909000/jpg/_58909672_spookspic.jpg
Freemasons Hall in London's Covent Garden stood in for MI5 headquarters in the BBC spy drama, Spooks (http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b006mf4b) (pictured above)
An episode of The Simpsons (http://www.thesimpsons.com/) charted Homer's attempts to join a fictional secret society called the Stonecutters, and the comic disasters that ensued
Fred Flintstone of the eponymous 1960s cartoon (http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0053502/) belonged to a club with Masonic echoes - the Loyal Order of Water Buffaloes Lodge, for men only

It was the Freemasons' turn and the narrative of a secret society plotting in the shadows has never gone away, says Cohen. "You can draw a straight line from the 1790s onwards to the Nazis, Franco, Stalin right up to modern Islamists like Hamas."
The charter of Hamas - the Islamist party governing Gaza - states that the Freemasons are in league with the Jews and the Rotary Club to undermine Palestine.
These theories are "clearly mad", says Cohen, but attacking the Masons has become a staple for anyone suspicious of a New World Order.
There's also the sense that Freemasons are "weird", says James McConnachie, author of the Rough Guide to Conspiracy Theories.
Initiations include rolling up one's trousers, being blindfolded with a rope round one's neck, and having a knife pointed at one's bare breast. "They offer a progression to a higher level of knowledge," McConnachie says. "It's alluring and cultish."
Grand secretary Brown argues that the initiations are allegorical one-act plays. They give people "from all walks of life" the chance to stand up in front of an audience, conquer their fears, and make friends, he says.
"People don't associate fun and enjoyment with Freemasonry but it's the common thread for us. It's about camaraderie and making lasting friendships."
Another vexed issue is its male-only image. There are women's orders in Britain with 20,000 members, but Freemasonry is overwhelmingly male.
The report talks of a "quiet revolution". But some information should be withheld from public view, Brown says. "Keeping a bit of mystery is good news. If people joining know absolutely everything, where would the excitement be?"
http://news.bbcimg.co.uk/media/images/58911000/jpg/_58911522_painting_thinkstock.jpg The centuries-old veil of secrecy is falling away
The Masons are walking a difficult tightrope, says brand consultant Jonathan Gabay. For the rebrand to be effective, they have to demonstrate they are serious about being open and transparent. And yet, in the process, they risk alienating members who value the "cachet" of secrecy and tradition, he says.
People join the Masons not because it is a community group raising money for charity but for its "snob factor" and history, argues McConnachie. If this is overtaken by a transparent, inclusive approach then the organisation would be indistinguishable from many other dining clubs. "You'd have to ask - why would you want to be a Freemason rather than a Rotarian?"
Distrust remains strong. Last year, the Archbishop of Canterbury Rowan Williams controversially named a Freemason as the next Bishop of Ebbsfleet. He had previously said that Freemasonry was "incompatible" with Christianity. In August 2010 it emerged that a new national Masonic lodge had been set up by senior police officers.
Former Home Secretary Jack Straw tried to address the issue of Freemasons working in the criminal justice system. In 1999, new judges were required to publicly disclose whether they were Masons.
But after a ruling from the European Court of Human Rights, the requirement was dropped in 2009. Police officers have a voluntary requirement to disclose - but only to their superiors.
http://news.bbcimg.co.uk/media/images/58948000/jpg/_58948622_openday_getty.jpg An open day at the Masonic lodge in Paris
Researching his book in the 1980s, Short found that "corruption in the police was enhanced and shielded by the Masonic lodges."
It's difficult to know whether anything has changed as the Freemasons do not make their membership list freely available, he says. Brown responds that to do so would breach data protection rules.
Given all the suspicion, it's hard not to feel sorry for Freemasons, says Cohen.
"Researching them, you do become rather sympathetic. If people want to say Freemason lodges are nests of corruption then fine. But they've got to prove it. It's no good just saying it."
However, there is something amusingly peculiar about Masonic ritual. It is this rather than the historical baggage that is their biggest obstacle to getting a fair hearing, he argues. "Rolling your trouser leg up is quite funny. If they do want to rebrand then perhaps they should drop the trouser leg rolling."


http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-17272611

Twisted Titan
10th March 2012, 02:40 AM
"The Blue Degrees are but the outer court or portico of the Temple. Part of the symbols are displayed there to the initiate, but he is intentionally misled by false interpretations. It is not intended that he shall understand them, but it is intended that he shall imagine he understands them. Their true explanation is reserved for the Adepts, the Princes of Masonry."


Albert Pike and his whole fricken lodge can kiss my Silver @$$.


Many here have had a personal experince as to What a "Good" Mason can do

Heimdhal
10th March 2012, 08:09 AM
My dad was a Mason back in the day. Low level guy, way before I was born. Mostly he and childhood friends from his small town in Mass. He took pride it in though, but was not really an inner circle guy or anything. For guys like that, the Masons are a fraternity of friends to socialize with, hang out and have common interest. One of my brothers recently became a mason, and if theyll let a guy like him in.......


The upper levels is a dark world of mystery. I persued becoming a mason myself at one point, to follow my father more than anything. When I began to enter the world, it just kind of hit me one day like "hey, Im not sure this is for me." The lodge was understanding, the local one I would have been a member of. They were mostly VERY old retiree's, fwiw.

Your average mason is being lied to as much as the non masons. I dont worry much about them. Even some 33rd degree masons are just average guys who run a lodge and are told they are top circle, but even they know they arent. Talk to 'em some time, its no secret.

iOWNme
10th March 2012, 08:10 AM
Whats wrong with helping old ladies cross the street and cleaning up your community? Plus you get to learn cool secrets, wear cool uniforms and even get a decoder ring. My friends grandpa belonged to the local Lodge. They mostly sat around and talked about old war stories and drank booze. I sure would like to get into one of those 'temples' someday......

I met a guy local to me that said he might be able to get me in. He said i shouldnt ask to many questions, and be ready to make a donation on the first day. He also said that they will welcome my religion with open arms....!

midnight rambler
10th March 2012, 08:20 AM
He also said that they will welcome my religion with open arms....! I'd be real interested in hearing his response if you said, "I love making donations to worthy causes! BTW, I worship Molech (or Baal, etc.), are y'all ok with that?"

Santa
10th March 2012, 08:41 AM
I don't know. Sometimes I think this is just another canard. Misdirection. Of course wicked decisions are made behind the scenes, but really, the worst shit gets done right out in the open for everyone to see. Through the Media. Through the Justice System. Through Pop Culture. Through the Military. Through City Hall. Through the PTA. Through Tony The Fucking Tiger.

People doing shit are everywhere. Endemic throughout.
Through Gov. Through Corps. Through Private enterprise.
Through Church. Through the Girl Scouts.

Arghhhhgargarg Spliftttt.... Fuck!!!!

iOWNme
10th March 2012, 08:52 AM
I'd be real interested in hearing his response if you said, "I love making donations to worthy causes! BTW, I worship Molech (or Baal, etc.), are y'all ok with that?"

Maybe I should just show up with a giant Owl on my T-shirt and politely say "Im a fellow traveler..."?