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Bravo, Albert! Excellent thread pulling on the tapestry of evil woven across millennia. This bunch is part of a far greater dark cult span in the world.

Recommended reading: https://realityzone.com/product/creature-from-jekyll-island-softbound/ by G. Edward Griffin.

Also: The War of the Antichrist with the Church and Christian Civilization

Author: Msgr George F. Dillon, DD

https://tanbooks.com/products/books/war-of-the-antichrist/?sku=3175&gc_id=17487855346

Time for us to have a RED PILL BOOK CLUB. Been assembling my vast library since 2009.

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Thanks Dar!! Since VAERS didn't drop this week which should be huge news by itself, I had some extra time. I hope people like my part 2 of the Suez and the deep story is coming from here: https://www.britishempire.co.uk/maproom/fromsueztokhartoum.htm

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comment re this part: "So if I get this straight China is a tributary state or pre-modern state in a particular type of subordinate relationship to a more powerful state which involved the sending of a regular token of submission, or tribute, to the superior power (the suzerain" <- no, opposite is what I read. China was left the suzerain of Outer Mongolia and Tibet but had to allow Russia access to Outer Mongolia and Britain to Tibet. per the quote in the image, below the flyer/old announcement.

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I found this: "miser, one who makes use of contemptible economy to keep money," c. 1700 ("Dictionary of the Canting Crew"), slang ; literally "kind of person who would skin a flint to save or gain something," from skin (v.) + flint. Flay-flint in same sense is from 1670s. Among the 18c. slang explicit... and a correlation to suede, suffer, ...

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I am not sure how skinflint relates to this topic. A flint I thought, was a type of stone used to create sparks for starting a fire without matches. = tightwad

My dad used a flintstone to sharpen knives too.

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Aaah! Now that makes sense. It’s so confusing but actually a critical point? Do you think the name of the canal could be derived from the word suzerain? Seems like an odd name? Is it French for something?

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Per Wikipedia "From French suzerain, based on sus (“up, above”) (from Latin sursum) with the ending of souverain (whence also English sovereign)."

Suez Canal is probably named that because it is in the Gulf of Suez and connects the city of Suez with another. https://www.quora.com/Why-is-it-called-the-Suez-canal?top_ans=273383001

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