Pages

Friday, November 22, 2013

John F. Kennedy and the Vatican


President John F. Kennedy Departs the Vatican After Meeting with Pope Paul VI
Photo (Courtesy) http://www.jfklibrary.org/Asset-Viewer/Archives/JFKWHP-ST-C231-23-63.aspx

"In 1960, John Kennedy went from Washington to Texas to assure Protestant preachers he would not obey the pope. In 2001, George Bush came from Texas up to Washington to assure a group of Catholic Bishops he would obey the pope." Washington Times, April 16, 2001.
 
Shortly after being inaugurated as the new President in 1961, Kennedy reluctantly went along with a plan of the previous Eisenhower Administration to attempt to invade Cuba at the Bay of Pigs. In so doing, Kennedy, having described himself to the Protestant preachers as being nominally a Catholic, violated Vatican Canon Law in that as a Catholic and head of a nation, he sought to invade Cuba, still even under Fidel Castro, as a Catholic nation. To do so, Kennedy put himself under a Canon Law death warrant. Further, the leader of Cuba, Fidel Castro, described by some as a supposed "Communist", was a Jesuit.
 
Some set all the books of esoteric conspiracies on the side, and consider that the Jesuits were behind the plot to assassinate John F. Kennedy which was blamed onto others. Moreover, some consider the 1913 creation of the conspiratorial private Central Bank, masquerading as a supposed U.S. government entity, namely the Federal Reserve, as being at least in part, instigated by the Jesuits. Shortly before being murdered, JFK, in defiance of the Federal Reserve, authorized an issue of genuine U.S. paper money, two dollar bills.
 
From the beginning of the United States of America, the Vatican has condemned this nation's founding documents.  
 
"The Vatican condemned the Declaration of Independence as wickedness and called the Constitution of the United States a Satanic Document." Avro Manhattan, "The Dollar and the Vatican", Ozark Book Publishers, 1988, page 26. 
 
  
Source
.

No comments:

Post a Comment