Send CathInfo's owner Matthew a gift from his Amazon wish list:
https://www.amazon.com/hz/wishlist/ls/25M2B8RERL1UO

Author Topic: Brotherhood of the Bell (movie)  (Read 355 times)

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Offline Thursday

  • Full Member
  • ***
  • Posts: 698
  • Reputation: +517/-0
  • Gender: Male
Brotherhood of the Bell (movie)
« on: February 01, 2013, 08:36:35 PM »
  • Thanks!0
  • No Thanks!0
  • Watched this film last night.



    From Henry Makow

    The fact that our society is completely subverted and run by a satanic cult, Fɾҽҽmαsσɳɾყ, is confirmed by the fact this entity is rarely mentioned in the
    mass media. And if it is, never portrayed in its true light.  

    A 1970 made-for-TV movie "Brotherhood of the Bell" is a rare exception. It shows what happens when a successful university professor disobeys his vow of secrecy.

    Andrew Patterson, played by Glenn Ford, is ordered to blackmail a close friend and colleague. When the colleague commits ѕυιcιdє, Patterson is consumed by guilt and vows to out the Brotherhood.

    His experience mirrors a description recently posted on this site. See The Masonic Intelligence Network.

    Patterson has the air of a self-made man. But when he goes public about the ѕυιcιdє, he discovers that his success is largely due to his 20-year membership in the "fraternity."

    Money that supported his academic department is cut off, and he finds himself unemployed.  His father's engineering company is suddenly audited and accused of fraud.

    His wife rages at his silly honor and starts packing her bags.

    In a wonderful scene, he realizes that not only did he own his success to this cult, he owed his wife to it as well. Her father is a member of the Brotherhood.

    "You were part of my reward," he tells her. "Get the hell out."

    The film captures Patterson's naivety. He was a member of this group for 20 years but apparently doesn't realize the extent of its power. He doesn't realize that the President of the US and everyone else of importance is involved in this conspiracy.

    The film was written by David Karp (The Untouchables, The Defenders) based on his novel; and directed by veteran TV director Abraham Paul Wendkos (Ben Casey, Dr. Kildare.)  

    I think it got made because they spun the Brotherhood as being wholly WASP. When a member of a TV audience (left) tries to connect it with the "Jєωιѕн Conspiracy" she is wholly discredited and hooted down.

    In fact, Freemasons represent a class of Gentile traitors put in power by the Illuminati Jєωιѕн bankers to carry out their pernicious agenda.

    Otherwise, the movie is pretty realistic. It sizzles with the intensity characteristic of the Golden Age of TV drama, and captures the helplessness of the individual against a shadowy, well organized and financed conspiracy.

    Patterson is able to recruit one other member of the Brotherhood to his cause, and the movie ends on this dubious, positive note.

    If humanity goes the way of the dinosaurs, or just descends into a comatose  slave state, it will be because men didn't stand up, like Andrew Patterson does. This is because they never grew up.

    Instead they chose the easy way: Personal gain by betraying their community and their culture to an alien satanic conspiracy.

    Now all that is left, is for us all to reap the whirlwind.