2015年7月14日火曜日

明治以降の日本はイルミナティの植民地

イルミナティ: Illuminati)は、現実歴史、およびフィクションに登場する秘密結社の名称。
日本語では啓明結社パヴァリア啓明結社光明会とも訳され、澁澤龍彦『秘密結社の手帖』ではパヴァリア幻想教団と訳された。

イルミナティとは、ラテン語で「に照らされたもの」を意味するが、後に宗教的な活動から「啓蒙開化」をも意味するようになる。近世以降、この名前で呼ばれた秘密結社が数多くある。グノーシス的要素やテンプル騎士団シオン修道会アサシンフリーメイソンとの関連等を持つとされる。尚、イルミナティに入るためにはフリーメイソンに入らなければならないという説がある。
陰謀論においては非常に人気があり、現在でも密かに世界へ手を伸ばし影響を与えている影の権力であるとされる。ただし、日本ではそれほど有名ではなく「ユダヤ陰謀」や「フリーメイソンの陰謀」などの表現に置き換えられていることが多い。フリーメイソンと混同される場合もしばしばあるが、フリーメイソンとの関連性は低い。

単にイルミナティと言った場合、後述のアダム・ヴァイスハオプト主宰のものを指す場合が多いが、その後に復興運動があったとは言え、その本体の活動期間は実質8年間であり、陰謀論の主体としてはユダヤやフリーメイソンと比較して説得力に欠けるという側面もある。 真の主宰者はピタゴラスの説も。

バイエルン王国1776年に、インゴルシュタット大学英語版実践哲学教授アダム・ヴァイスハオプト英語版啓蒙主義的な Perfektibilismus(人類の倫理的完成可能説)を謳い、Perfektibilisten の同盟をつくり、のちに、イルミナティと改名した。原始共産主義を志向する側面と、内部の位階制の側面が同居している。ヴァイスハオプトからのキリスト教批判はあるが、それは倫理的完成へと向けるもので、他教への転向などを訴えるものではなく、ユダヤへの関連で語ってはいない。最盛期には各国に支部が置かれ、会員は貴族大富豪政治家インテリなど2,000人に及んだという。1777年、ヴァイスハオプト自身もフリーメイソンになっており、並行してフリーメイソンだった者も多かった。ヴァイスハオプトはミュンヘンでフリーメンソンと出会い、共感するところがあったために入会した。
通説では、1784年にバイエルン王国がフリーメイソンリー、イルミナティを含むすべての秘密結社を禁止するまで続いたとされている。1785年ローマ教皇ピウス六世はイルミナティがカトリックの教義になじまないと明言、異端であるとした。イルミナティの結社としての活動は1785年に終わったとされるが、今現在もその思想を受け継いで活動している団体があるという説がある。その団体には、アダム・ヴァイスハオプトのデスマスクが保存してあるという。[要出典]





アダム・ヴァイスハオプトの日本語WIKIが存在しない件。(爆wwwwwww

だって・・・




ですから。(爆wwwwwwwwwwww

要するに・・・

× ユダ金ガ~!
× 国際金融資本ガ~!
× ロス茶ガ~!
× フリーメーソンガー!
× ダメリカガ~!
× ベルファシガ~!

etc.
○ イルミナティガ~!
○ イエズス会とザクセン=コーブルク=ゴータ家ガ~!

で、そのケツモチがヴァチカンなわけです。(爆wwwwwwwww







Johann Adam Weishaupt (6 February 1748 – 18 November 1830[1][2][3][4]) was a German philosopher and founder of the Order of the Illuminati, a secret society.



Adam Weishaupt was born on 6 February 1748 in Ingolstadt[1][5] in the Electorate of Bavaria. Weishaupt's father Johann Georg Weishaupt (1717–1753) died[5] when Adam was five years old. After his father's death he came under the tutelage of his godfather Johann Adam Freiherr von Ickstatt[6] who, like his father, was a professor of law at the University of Ingolstadt.[7] Ickstatt was a proponent of the philosophy of Christian Wolff and of the Enlightenment,[8] and he influenced the young Weishaupt with his rationalism. Weishaupt began his formal education at age seven[1] at a Jesuit school. He later enrolled at the University of Ingolstadt and graduated in 1768[9] at age 20 with a doctorate of law.[10] In 1772[11] he became a professor of law. The following year he married Afra Sausenhofer[12] of Eichstätt.
After Pope Clement XIV’s suppression of the Society of Jesus in 1773, Weishaupt became a professor of canon law,[13] a position that was held exclusively by the Jesuits until that time. In 1775 Weishaupt was introduced[14] to the empirical philosophy of Johann Georg Heinrich Feder[15] of the University of Göttingen. Both Feder and Weishaupt would later become opponents of Kantian idealism.[16]

Founder of the Illuminati

At a time, however, when there was no end of making game of and abusing secret societies, I planned to make use of this human foible for a real and worthy goal, for the benefit of people. I wished to do what the heads of the ecclesiastical and secular authorities ought to have done by virtue of their offices ...[17]
On May day 1776 Johann Adam Weishaupt founded the "Illuminati" in the Electorate of Bavaria. He adopted the name of "Brother Spartacus" within the order. Even Encyclopedia references vary on the goal of the order, such as New Advent saying the Order was not egalitarian or democratic internally, and sought to promote the doctrines of equality and freedom throughout society;[18] while others like Collier's have said the aim was to combat religion and foster rationalism in its place.[19]
The actual character of the society was an elaborate network of spies and counter-spies. Each isolated cell of initiates reported to a superior, whom they did not know: a party structure that was effectively adopted by some later groups.[18]
Weishaupt was initiated into the Masonic Lodge "Theodor zum guten Rath", at Munich in 1777. His project of "illumination, enlightening the understanding by the sun of reason, which will dispel the clouds of superstition and of prejudice" was an unwelcome reform.[18] He used Freemasonry to recruit for his own quasi-masonic society, with the goal of "perfecting human nature" through re-education to achieve a communal state with nature, freed of government and organized religion. Presenting their own system as pure masonry, Weishaupt and Adolph Freiherr Knigge, who organised his ritual structure, greatly expanded the secret organisation.[18]
Contrary to Immanuel Kant's famous dictum that Enlightenment (and Weishaupt's Order was in some respects an expression of the Enlightenment Movement) was the passage by man out of his 'self-imposed immaturity' through daring to 'make use of his own reason, without the guidance of another,' Weishaupt's Order of Illuminati prescribed in great detail everything which the members had obediently to read and think, so that Dr. Wolfgang Riedel has commented that this approach to illumination or enlightenment constituted a degradation and twisting of the Kantian principle of Enlightenment.[20] Riedel writes: 'The independence of thought and judgement required by Kant ... was specifically prevented by the Order of the Illuminati's rules and regulations. Enlightenment takes place here, if it takes place at all, precisely under the direction of another, namely under that of the "Superiors" [of the Order].[21]
Weishaupt's radical rationalism and vocabulary was not likely to succeed. Writings that were intercepted in 1784 were interpreted as seditious, and the Society was banned by the government of Karl Theodor, Elector of Bavaria, in 1784. Weishaupt lost his position at the University of Ingolstadt and fled Bavaria.[18]

Activities in exile

He received the assistance of Duke Ernest II of Saxe-Gotha-Altenburg (1745–1804), and lived in Gotha writing a series of works on illuminism, including A Complete History of the Persecutions of the Illuminati in Bavaria (1785), A Picture of Illuminism (1786), An Apology for the Illuminati (1786), and An Improved System of Illuminism (1787). Adam Weishaupt died in Gotha on 18 November 1830.[1][2][3][4] He was survived by his second wife, Anna Maria (née Sausenhofer), and his children Nanette, Charlotte, Ernst, Karl, Eduard, and Alfred.[2] Weishaupt was buried next to his son Wilhelm who preceded him in death in 1802.
After Weishaupt's Order of Illuminati was banned and its members dispersed, it left behind no enduring traces of an influence, not even on its own erstwhile members, who went on in the future to develop in quite different directions.[22]

Assessment of character and intentions

Weishaupt's character and intentions have been variously assessed: from those such as the Abbé Barruel and John Robison who regarded him as a 'human devil' and saw his mission as one of malevolent destructiveness, to those who view him as a humane and benign, albeit wilful, social reformer. Writing on this topic, Dr. Tony Page comments:
"Weishaupt’s plan was to educate Illuminati followers in the highest levels of humanity and morality (basing his teachings on the supremacy of Reason, allied with the spirit of the Golden Rule of not doing to others what one would not wish done to oneself), so that if Illuminati alumni subsequently attained positions of significance and power (such as in the fields of education and politics), they could exert a benevolent and uplifting influence upon society at large. His project was utopian and naively optimistic, and he himself was certainly not without flaws of character – but neither he nor his plan was evil or violent in and of themselves. It is one of the deplorable and tragic ironies of history that a man who tried to inculcate virtue, philanthropy, social justice and morality has become one of the great hate-figures of 21st-century ‘conspiracy’ thinking."[23]

Adam Weishaupt in pop culture

Adam Weishaupt is referred to repeatedly in The Illuminatus! Trilogy, written by Robert Shea and Robert Anton Wilson, as the founder of the Illuminati and as an imposter who killed George Washington and took his place as the first president of the United States. Washington's portrait on the U.S. one-dollar bill is said to actually be Weishaupt's.
Another version of Adam Weishaupt appears in the extensive comic book novel Cerebus the Aardvark by Dave Sim, as a combination of Weishaupt and George Washington. He appears primarily in the Cerebus and Church & State I volumes. His motives are republican confederalizing of city-states in Estarcion (a pseudo-Europe) and the accumulation of capital unencumbered by government or church.
Weishaupt's name is one of many references made to the Illuminati and other conspiracies in the video game Deus Ex (2000). The protagonist uncovers a virus engineered by the VersaLife Corporation with its molecular structure in multiples of 17 and 23. An ally of the protagonist notes "1723. The birth of Adam Weishaupt" even though this reference is actually incorrect as Weishaupt was born in 1748.[24]
Adam Weishaupt is also mentioned ("Bush got a ouija to talk to Adam Weishaupt") by the New York rapper Cage in El-P's "Accidents Don't Happen", the ninth track on his album Fantastic Damage (2002).

Adam Weishaupt is briefly mentioned in Umberto Eco's novel The Prague Cemetery.[25]








日本は世界中で悪さしまくりのイルミナティの一番大きな資金源なんですよ。

明治以降、イルミナティは日本を完全植民地化したわけで、そんな一白人勢力の植民地がアジア諸国を白人から開放とかほざき、数百万人の自国民を無駄死にさせたわけです。(爆wwwwwwwww


で、

















と後は各自想像されたし。(爆wwwwwwwwwww


2 件のコメント:

匿名 さんのコメント...

民事再生手続き中のスカイマーク支援に米・デルタ航空も参戦
https://twitter.com/FNN_News/status/621210607371468802

ミネ さんのコメント...

ぁコッチで取りあげてたら先の投稿のコメこっちにすればよかった、、

で、本題について

てことは イルミナティ叩出せたら日本の格上げも見込めるってことっすか?
んなこと現実できるんか~ぃ というツッコミ承知で 仮の想定でも知りたいかな~
型に嵌り捲ってシンバブエも目の前っつう淵も淵から少しでも遠ざかれるもんなら遠ざかりたいもので