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Originally Posted by Inter.spem.et.metum
Does anyone believe in the Free Masons, I mean as a group that somehow controls the world?
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As an occult organization that controls the world, no. As a large, fairly well managed not for profit organization that provides a lot of beneficial services, particularly healthcare and pensions, yes. As a startlingly weird yet accessible semi-secret mystical society responsible for some eerily cool architecture, yes.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Inter.spem.et.metum
My neighbor used to be a Free Mason. He said that he lost his soul and his faith after two decades with them. He CLAIMS that the Free Masons are literally building a pyramid of events, each one building up to one final event, some kind of an "End Game".
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I intuit from ISEM’s emphasis on the word “claims” that he has a reasonable suspicion that his neighbor is not of entirely sound mind. At first glance, I suspect the neighbor is either enjoying the attention he receives from peoples’ reactions to his claims, or at least mildly delusional.
Masonic initiation rituals
are weird, and rooted in a profoundly supernatural worldview. Some masons do use magical techniques to make decisions (as do some non-Masons, myself and my family included). I know several Masons who seem to enjoy this quality and suffer no ill mental health effects from their participation in it. Though Masonic rituals are secret – you’re not supposed to tell people, in some cases even fellow lodge members, the details of them – every Mason I know denies that they are involved in any capacity in a vast, world-controlling conspiracy. Freemasonry is, according to those I consider most knowledgeable (such as Israel Regarde) about personal growth and wellbeing, and being a positive influence on your neighbors and local community. Dogmatically, it’s essentially as esoteric magical society, and like most such societies, do not share the apocalyptic beliefs common among fundamentalist Christians, but rather a belief in a long and positive future of humankind.
However, I can imagine that a person with a predisposition for delusional thinking might have their mental health badly upset by Masonic initiation. In my experience, Masons make a concerted, good-faith effort not to invite such people into their lodges, but I imagine are not always successful.
It’s also been my experience that the people with the most dramatic and alarming accounts of Masonic schemes of world domination are rarely actually Masons, and often have very poor understanding with Masonry’s history, current organization, or esoteric literature – in short, that they are mentally dysfunctional kooks claiming knowledge and experience they don’t truly possess.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Inter.spem.et.metum
I don't want to say I believe in conspiracy theories, but I can't help but believe that these people are that blind to make such drastic and illogical decisions without some ulterior motive....
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It’s important, I think, to distinguish between secret societies. A remarkable number of US leaders and policy makers, including current US president G.W. Bush, are
Bonesmen. Although Skull and Bones is “Masonic-inspired”, it’s not a Masonic lodge, nor affiliated with the Masons, but is essentially an single-lodge organization associated with Yale University. It’s known with some confidence that the 19th century founders of Skull and Bones claimed it to be a new lodge of the 18th Century
Bavarian Illuminati, though proof of this claim is only circumstantial and conjectured. The Illuminati was not a Masonic lodge, either.
However, as Buffy suggests, discussion of secret societies and the conspiracy theories associated with them is best continued in a separate thread. I think I’ve gone on in that vein too long already – perhaps my walking distance proximity to the treasure trove of Masonic architecture that is Washington DC has so permeated me with such talk that I can’t help myself

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