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From the start, Jesuits understood the power of psychology as a tool for control
By Rhoda Wilson | June 6, 2025 | 7 Comments
The Jesuit order, founded by Ignatius Loyola in 1534, has a complex and secretive structure that exerts significant influence over global policy, with some critics viewing it as a force of geopolitical warfare.
The order's spiritual exercises, as outlined in Loyola's Meditations, aimed to break down a person's sense of internal sovereignty and personal responsibility, promoting a "corpse-like obedience" to the hierarchy. How? Using psychological conditioning, a tactic others subsequently adopted.
From the start, Jesuits understood the power of psychology as a tool for control
By Rhoda Wilson | June 6, 2025 | 7 Comments
The Jesuit order, founded by Ignatius Loyola in 1534, has a complex and secretive structure that exerts significant influence over global policy, with some critics viewing it as a force of geopolitical warfare.
The order's spiritual exercises, as outlined in Loyola's Meditations, aimed to break down a person's sense of internal sovereignty and personal responsibility, promoting a "corpse-like obedience" to the hierarchy. How? Using psychological conditioning, a tactic others subsequently adopted.
Historically, the Jesuits have been involved in various controversies, including subversive activities, terror operations and counter-revolutionary efforts, with notable figures such as Friedrich Schiller, Antoine Arnauld, Marquis de Lafayette and Fyodor Dostoyevsky warning about the dangers of the order.
Matthew Ehret has been writing a series of essays on the Jesuit perversion of Christianity stretching back across four centuries and the higher oligarchist-Venetian priesthood shaping this powerful sect.
In the first, titled 'The Pope is Dead … but the Damage he did to Christianity Lives on', he discusses Jorge Mario Bergoglio (1936-2025), the Jesuit priest who took on the name Pope Francis in 2013, and the damage he did to the image of Christianity. Pope Francis, Ehret explains, transformed Christianity into a conduit for Gaia worship, depopulation and enslavement, undermining the concept of humanity being made in the image of a Creator. Unfortunately, the damage Bergoglio did to how the world perceives Christianity will likely continue to live on for many more generations.
The second article, 'Unravelling the Jesuit Enigma', is published below.
In the third, titled 'Pierre Teilhard de Chardin and the Gnostic Perversion of Christianity', Ehret discusses Pierre Teilhard de Chardin (1881-1955), a Jesuit, who's mission was to reconcile Christianity with Darwinism. Chardin was involved in the discovery of the Piltdown Man, which was later proven to be a hoax, and also participated in the discovery of the Peking Man, whose remains mysteriously disappeared.
Chardin's theories led to a new form of Darwinian Christianity, where he introduced the concept of the "Omega Point" and the "Noosphere", and replaced moral change with "quantitative complexity", effectively removing moral judgment from acts of evil. Pierre Teilhard de Chardin believed that evil is a necessary part of evolution, leading to the ultimate goal of the Omega Point, where humanity would become a transhuman species.
And he supported eugenics, advocating for the development of a "nobly human form of eugenics" to improve the human gene pool, and saw no issue with eliminating "life's rejects” to make way for the strong.
Chardin's ideas aligned with those of Sir Julian Huxley, a leading eugenicist and founder of Transhumanism, and together they promoted a vision of a future where humanity would merge with machines to achieve a collective consciousness.
Please go to The Expose to continue reading on how to unravel the "Jesuit enigma."
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