Results 1 to 2 of 2

Thread: Keeping your money safe in days to come - Catherine Austin Fitts / Dr. Tenpenny

  1. #1
    Iridium Dachsie's Avatar
    Join Date
    Mar 2014
    Posts
    7,982
    Thanks
    1,301
    Thanked 2,526 Times in 1,857 Posts

    Keeping your money safe in days to come - Catherine Austin Fitts / Dr. Tenpenny

    https://clouthub.com/v/14rWeSSc

    28:51 video runtime


    This Week with Dr.T is up on CloutHub: This Week with Catherine Austin Fitts - Hear What Advice Catherine shares about keeping your money safe in days to come.


    03-11- 22 Special Edition - Catherine A. Fitts
    Spring Boot Camp - "Expect to Rescue Yourself" - Prepping and Survival Boot Camp Four-week online course - Begins April 1, 2022 REGISTRATION OPEN NOW https://learning4you.org/prepping-bc-signup

    also

    Catherine Fitts mentioned this book on this brief interview and she has this book review on her website and hear it s.
    (I am an old-school traditional Roman Catholic and I do not think I go along with this "Red Pill Gospel" and I do not really even know what it is about that much. But still some people may find this information helpful.)


    https://home.solari.com/book-review-...rrest-maready/

    Book Review: Red Pill Gospel by Forrest Maready
    July 8, 2020 2




    "For God has not given us a spirit of fear, but of power and of love and of a sound mind." ~ Paul the Apostle, 2 Timothy 1:7

    By Catherine Austin Fitts

    Author Forrest Maready describes Red Pill Gospel: Christianity, before it was ruined by Christians as follows:

    "Over the course of hundreds of years, man-made doctrines have accumulated and warped the Christian faith so drastically many of its early believers would scarcely recognize it. The world's most popular religion is a far cry from the message Jesus preached through villages and towns during his ministry. For those unafraid to look, Red Pill Gospel peels back the layers of lies man has added to the gospel and reveals the beautiful hope inside."

    I was raised as a Quaker in Philadelphia. Since first exposed to the gospel of Jesus in Quaker school and meeting, I could not reconcile those teachings with the actual behavior of institutional churches. First and foremost in my mind, there was the Catholic church, which was deeply involved with pedophilia and narcotics trafficking. Admittedly, the church had numerous partners in these operations: the Masons and their secret societies, Jewish organized crime, the intelligence agencies, law firms, and the police. Whatever those groups were, however, they did not profess to be a church or insist that they had the power to intermediate between us and God. Nor did they spend Sundays shrieking about how bad we were. By the time I left Philadelphia, I had the distinct impression that the Catholic church was simply a perpetual projective identification machine. The Protestants—who were more tight-lipped and played along—did not seem much better.

    I converted to Christianity in the late 1990s having discovered a Pentacostal church with an extraordinary Bible Institute. That experience inspired me to visit churches around the United States during my extensive travels. I wanted to understand how a high percentage of the American people could say they were Christians. When you looked at how our economy worked, we were anything but Christian in action, deed, and profit.

    My uncle, a retired Army Colonel and West Point lecturer, once insisted in frustration, "God is for Sunday. You don't bring God to work during the week!" What I found in my travels was that many Americans implement institutional sinning for their daily bread. From the wages of sin, we have been paying taxes to the war and debt machine, and investing our money in the national security state and its banks. Then we go to church and are absolved of our sins. Churches largely serve the function of "wash, rinse, repeat." We enjoy the profits of sin, confident in the understanding that we are "good Christians."

    It became clear to me that there was a wide discrepancy between what was being preached in most churches and my understanding of the teachings of Jesus and experience of the love of God. However, it was also clear that to dive into thousands of years of church writings and translations was an enormous job—one that I was not prepared to take on. To my delight, I discovered that Forrest Maready and his wife did take that job on, resulting in the publication of Red Pill Gospel and an explanation of what happened.

    Fear porn has destroyed a lot of families and family wealth—in financial markets, in medicine (as Maready describes so well in his other books), and in the churches. The good news is that we have the power to stop allowing others to control us through fear and enjoy the divine love that is our birthright. After reading Red Pill Gospel, here is another tip of the hat to author Forrest Maready.

    Reviews of books by Forrest Maready:

    The Moth in the Iron Lung

    Crooked

    unvaccinated

    The Autism Vaccine

    Related reading:

    Purchase book

    Forrest Maready webpage

  2. #2
    Great Value Carrots
    Join Date
    Oct 2017
    Posts
    3,332
    Thanks
    498
    Thanked 1,631 Times in 1,142 Posts

    Re: Keeping your money safe in days to come - Catherine Austin Fitts / Dr. Tenpenny

    501(c)(3)

    A 501(c)(3) organization is a nonprofit organization established exclusively for one of the following purposes: charitable, religious, educational, scientific, literary, testing for public safety, fostering national or international amateur sports competition, or preventing cruelty to children or animals.

    The U.S. of A. Is a 501(c)(3) as the Rule Against Perpetuities only excludes charitable entities after life (of the founder) +21 years + a gestation period. This is frequently shortened for convenience to 99 years. The Articles of Confederation were declared perpetual from the gitgo so there was no grace period...the U.S. of A. began as a charitable trust from inception.

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •