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Fellow Aspirant
3rd March 2018, 03:20
At the outset, I must caution (warn?) you that the source for this copy of "Bloodlines of the Illuminati" by Fritz Springmeier (pub 1995) is the CIA website. So, downloading anything may be problematic. For those of us who suspect that we have long been on a list somewhere anyway, not so much.

Caveat issued, here's a link to the website where they (you know who) have posted the entire text of this classic. It appears that the agency wanted 'everyone' to know the contents of Osama Bin Laden's 'library', and have published this book as a PDF. Whether one of their goals was to deprive Springmeier's estate of the royalties I don't know. Making it free would certainly accomplish this. As such, it's simple to download and read. Save, even, if you're shy a copy of this tome. It's a must-have for most of us around here. And the price is right. I don't know if it was part of any of the previous free offerings that periodically pop up on the forum. If so, please advise.

https://www.cia.gov/library/abbottabad-compound/FC/FC2F5371043C48FDD95AEDE7B8A49624_Springmeier.-.Bloodlines.of.the.Illuminati.R.pdf

Cheers,

Brian

Bluegreen
3rd March 2018, 04:10
Available for some time thanks to our friends at bibliotecapleyades.net
"The 13 Satanic Bloodlines of the Illuminati" by Fritz Springmeier (Complete)
www.bibliotecapleyades.net/bloodlines/index.htm

This website is an enormous database in multiple languages of conspiracy research and documents. Here is the homepage arranged by subject matter (Alien Life, Exopolitics, Mysticism, Parascience, etc):
www.bibliotecapleyades.net/esp_tema.htm

Cardillac
3rd March 2018, 18:45
@Fellow Aspirant

Hi Brian,

""Bloodlines of the Illuminati" by Fritz Springmeier (pub 1995) is the CIA website"

could you please explain this/your sources?

if I recall correctly Fritz Springmeier is still doing jail-time for this book (or for whatever- I just don't know for sure)- please expain the Springmeier/CIA connection- would interrest me greatly- many thanks in advance-

Larry

Fellow Aspirant
3rd March 2018, 19:34
@Fellow Aspirant

Hi Brian,

""Bloodlines of the Illuminati" by Fritz Springmeier (pub 1995) is the CIA website"

could you please explain this/your sources?

if I recall correctly Fritz Springmeier is still doing jail-time for this book (or for whatever- I just don't know for sure)- please expain the Springmeier/CIA connection- would interrest me greatly- many thanks in advance-

Larry

Hi Larry

I really don't recall the site where I stumbled across this link, unfortunately. However, given the address in the link, which begins with CIA, gov., library, and Abbotabadd, I deduced that the CIA had "published" one of the books that it had 'recovered' during the operation to kill Osama Bin Laden at his hideout in Abottabad. I recall that after they announced the raid and his death, they had listed all of the books that they had discovered in his 'library', which seemed to consist of a single shelf. I'm pretty sure that this was one of the titles they mentioned at the time. Why they would want the world to know that he had knowledge of such information is unknown to me.

Here's the Wikipedia entry on Fritz:

Fritz Artz Springmeier (also known as Viktor E. Schoff)[1] is an American right wing conspiracy theorist author, formerly a resident of Corbett, Oregon, who has written a number of books claiming that Satanic forces are behind a move toward world domination by various families and organizations. He has described his goal as "exposing the New World Order agenda."[2][3]

Contents

1 Background
2 Conspiracy theories
3 Criminal conviction
4 Selected works
5 References
6 External links

Background

Springmeier grew up with his father,[citation needed] James E. Schoof, who worked for the United States Agency for International Development.[4] His work involved developing the agricultural needs of countries internationally, including the Balochistan area of Pakistan.[4]
Conspiracy theories

Springmeier has written and self-published a number of books based on the subject of the bloodline Illuminati and their use of mind control. He has endorsed the existence of Project Monarch, an alleged CIA mind control project whose existence is based on the assertions of Cathy O'Brien.[5][6]

Springmeier's early work, The Watchtower & the Masons, focuses on the relationship between Jehovah's Witnesses and Freemasonry. In this book he describes a relationship between Charles Taze Russell and the so-called "Eastern Establishment". Springmeier followed these links into Masonry and did a further examination of the Eastern establishment.[citation needed]
Criminal conviction

On January 31, 2002, Springmeier was indicted in the United States District Court in Portland, Oregon[7] in connection with an armed robbery. On February 12, 2003, he was found guilty of one count of armed bank robbery in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 2113(a) and (d) and one count of aiding and abetting in the use of a semi-automatic rifle during the commission of a felony in violation of 18 U.S.C § 924(c)(1).[8][9] In November 2003, he was sentenced to 51 months in prison on the armed robbery charge and 60 months on the aiding and abetting charge, fined $7,500, ordered to pay $6,488 in restitution, and assessed an additional $200.[10] Springmeier's conviction was affirmed by the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit.[11] He was imprisoned, and was released from federal prison on March 25, 2011.[12][13]
Selected works

The Illuminati Formula Used to Create an Undetectable Total Mind Controlled Slave, Cisco Wheeler, Fritz Springmeier, On Demand Publishing, ASIN B0006QXVU4, ISBN 1-4404-9022-8
Deeper Insights into the Illuminati Formula, Wheeler, Fritz Springmeier, CreateSpace, 2010, ISBN 1-4515-0269-9
Bloodlines of the Illuminati, Fritz Springmeier, Ambassador House (November 1998), ISBN 0-9663533-2-3

References

"Couple tied to separatist movement face drug-trafficking charges". Eugene Register-Guard. March 3, 2001. p. 2B. Retrieved 2014-03-10.
Redden, Jim. "FBI probes alleged threat to officer" Portland Tribune October 30, 2009
Redden, Jim (Oct 30, 2009). "FBI probes alleged threat to officer". Portland Tribune. Portland, OR. Archived from the original on January 21, 2011. Retrieved 2011-06-02.
Schoof, James E. (December 1991), Balochistan Area Development Project : Final Report (PDF), NY, NY: The United States Agency for International Development, retrieved 2014-03-10
Barkun, Michael (2006). A Culture of Conspiracy: Apocalyptic Visions in Contemporary America. Berkeley, California: University of California Press. p. 76. ISBN 0-520-24812-0.
Parfrey, Adam (1995). Cult Rapture. Portland, Oregon: Feral Press. p. 241. ISBN 0-922915-22-9.
United States v. Bateman et al., case no. 3:02-cr-00024-RE, U.S. District Court for the District of Oregon (Portland Div.).
Docket entry 105, Feb. 12, 2003, United States v. Bateman et al., case no. 3:02-cr-00024-RE, U.S. District Court for the District of Oregon (Portland Div.).
"United States v. Springmeier, 254 F. Supp. 2d 1192 (D. Ore. 2003)".
Docket entry 144, Nov. 14, 2003, United States v. Bateman et al., case no. 3:02-cr-00024-RE, U.S. District Court for the District of Oregon (Portland Div.).
United States v. Springmeier, docket no. 03-30534, U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit (Oct. 14, 2004).
"Inmate Locator". bop.gov.
Blejwas, Andrew; Griggs, Anthony; Potok, Mark (Summer 2005). "Almost 60 Terrorist Plots Uncovered in the U.S." Southern Poverty Law Center. Retrieved 2010-11-22.

Cheers,

Brian

Cardillac
3rd March 2018, 23:42
@ Fellow Aspirant

hey, Brian, many thanks for your extremely detailed response- greatly appeciated-

but I just think we should all use extreme caution when it comes to Wikipedia; after all it's the encyclopedia to which anyone can contribute, let alone edit-

I know this 1st hand due to at least 1 former co-worker who has a Wikipedia entry but her 1st hand stories told to me during her lifetime (she's sadly dead now) conflicts a bit (well, a lot) with her Wikipedia entry; either she was lying to me at the time about her very controversial life (which I hardly doubt) or her Wikipedia entry is a partial lie (which is sadly the truth)-

be well-

Larry

Fellow Aspirant
4th March 2018, 00:26
@ Fellow Aspirant

hey, Brian, many thanks for your extremely detailed response- greatly appeciated-

but I just think we should all use extreme caution when it comes to Wikipedia; after all it's the encyclopedia to which anyone can contribute, let alone edit-

I know this 1st hand due to at least 1 former co-worker who has a Wikipedia entry but her 1st hand stories told to me during her lifetime (she's sadly dead now) conflicts a bit (well, a lot) with her Wikipedia entry; either she was lying to me at the time about her very controversial life (which I hardly doubt) or her Wikipedia entry is a partial lie (which is sadly the truth)-

be well-

Larry

Of course, Larry. But it's a pretty good place to start.

Checking for inconsistencies/lies has to begin with some claims. As far as I know, this info is accurate. Course I haven't fact checked any of it. Has anyone in Fritz' camp raised objections? That would be a red flag, for sure.

B.

Smell the Roses
13th March 2018, 03:43
Thanks for putting this link here. This book is one that I have always been interested in reading, but have never gotten around to purchasing. It is interesting to see author Wilkie Collins mentioned in the Collins bloodline. I was not aware of this Illuminati connection. I liked "The Moonstone" the first time I read it. But when I recently tried re-reading it, I found it a bit dull.

I agree with what he says in the introduction that the U.S. Constitution has not been in effect for quite some time. He says since WWII, but surely it was shredded long before that. The Founding Fathers would have been appalled at our entrance in to WWI, for example, as well as with all of the shenanigans involved with the Civil War. Limited government didn't seem to last very long at all, in fact.