Saturday, March 05, 2011

Jesuits and the Hippie Movement

Jesuit Reverend Richard McSorley.
Source:
Life in Legacy Online.
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Author: Professor Walter J. Veith, PhD
Summary: The main goal of
the Jesuit order is to counter Protestantism. One way this was accomplished in the 20th century was the hippie movement.

This article is part of a series. We recommend that you first read:
The Jesuits, Protestantism Destroyed.

The hippie movement was led by Jesuits such as Father Richard McSorley of Georgetown University (1914-2002). McSorley was known as a peace activist and even "Marxist priest." He was a trusted adviser and tutor to the Kennedy presidential family,iand was also associated with Bill Clinton, who studied at Georgetown in the early 1960s.

In an interview with Rick Martin of SPECTRUM magazine, one controversial author and talk-show host claims that "the Beatles were Jesuit-controlled" and that the drug world is controlled by Rome via the Mafia—which is Jesuit controlled.ii Sir George Martin, the Beatles' producer, attended a Jesuit college.

This hippie movement twisted the true understanding of Christ. Instead of God and Saviour, Jesus was seen as a political activist. It was taught that Jesus fulfilled the needs of all cultures, creeds, and aspirations—Christian or not. This new culture—rife with drugs, fictional entertainment, and rock music—effectively distracted Protestants around the world from true spirituality, which was exactly what the Jesuits were striving to do.

New Age theology and Earth-worship also spread in this era, partially through the work of scientist James Lovelock and his Gaia hypothesis.

Today, powerful organizations such as Greenpeace, Friends of the Earth, American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), the Global Recycling Network, and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service continue what was started in the 1960s, worshiping the earth as a something more important than human life.iii All of these initiatives are a disguise for papal domination.

Ahead to "Caring" and a New Morality

This article is adapted from Walter Veith's Rekindling the Reformation DVD The Jesuits and the Counter Reformation Part 1.


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i. "The Kennedy's Jesuit," The Georgetown Voice (January 2004).

ii. Rick Martin, "The Most Powerful Man in the World? The 'Black' Pope Count Hans Kolvenbach — The Jesuit's General," The SPECTRUM (May 15, 2000).

iii. Timothy Youngblood, The Ecumenical Movement: Just What is It? (The Master's Table)
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1 comment:

Douglas Andrew Willinger said...

An another note- I suspect the Jesuits were behind that term "don't trust anyone over 30" which I always throught was wrong as a gross oversimplification presuming that people born after say 1937 (I remeber the slogan as a child in 1967) were somehow neccessarily morally superior.

That is what leads many people to be surprised that the Clintons turned out to be so bad, because they were of the younger, yet not neccesarily better generation (despite his connections with Jesuit Georgetown).