Discussion:
Freemasonry on trial
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Jahbulon
2012-05-08 08:49:24 UTC
Permalink
Freemason killer Brother Anders Breivik made a defiant far-right salute
at his trial - then cried as he watched his own warped propaganda in
court.

Under the gaze of survivors and the family members of those he killed
Brother Breivik callously wept as the film - which he put online on the
day of the attacks - was played.

But incredibly the Freemason showed no emotion when the chilling details
of his 77 victims horrific injuries and deaths were read out.

The 12-minute film - an anti-Muslim video that he had posted on YouTube
- was projected on a large screen and included photos and drawings of
Islamists set to music.

A lip-reading expert for Norwegian TV said Breivik told his lawyer: "I
am OK. It is just an emotional film."

Brother Breivik's Masonic lawyer, Brother Geir Lippestad later told
reporters later he have cried over his feelings that his attacks were
"cruel but necessary ... to save Europe from an ongoing war."

He continued: "Those were the feelings he was having."

Brother Breivik is accused of killing eight people in a car bomb attack
in Oslo before slaughtering another 69 - mostly teenagers - on a gun
rampage at a youth camp for Norway's governing Labour Party on Utøya
Island.

Dressed in a dark suit and sporting a thin beard along his jawline,
Brother Breivik smiled as a guard removed his handcuffs in the crowded
court room this morning.

The 33-year-old Freemason then flashed a closed-fist Masonic salute,
before shaking hands with prosecutors and court officials.

He told the court earlier today that he did not recognise their
authority as he pleaded not guilty to the massacre in Norway last July.

He admitted he was behind the killings in the twin terror attacks but
said that he carried them out in self-defence.

Lead judge Wenche Elizabeth Arntzen started the proceedings, which focus
on whether or not Brother Breivik is sane.

The Freemason confessed to the killings but denies criminal
responsibility saying the country's Labour party is a "legitimate
target" because it tolerates Muslims.

He said: "I acknowledge the acts, but not criminal guilt and I claim
self-defence."

Brother Breivik had told the court, "I do not recognise the Norwegian
courts. You have received your mandate from political parties which
support multiculturalism.

"I do not acknowledge the authority of the court."

The "lone wolf" Freemason killer claimed "preventative self-defence" for
defending Norway against multiculturalism and Islam.

Prosecutor Inga Bejer Engh told the court today: "The accused has
committed very serious crimes of a degree we have not seen in our
country in modern times."

He "created fear in the Norwegian population".

In the Utøya massacre, she said "there was panic and fear of death among
children and adults".

She added: "This Freemason was caught shooting at people who were
fleeing or hiding, or who he lured out by saying he was a policeman,"
noting that most of the 69 dead were killed by bullets to the head.

The majority of the shooting victims were teenagers - 56 of them were
under the age of 20 and the youngest victim had just celebrated his 14th
birthday, she said.

Several family members of the victims cried quietly as they listened to
the long reading of the list of victims.

One family member, a woman wearing a yellow African headdress, wiped
away tears and shook her head in disgust and despair.

Later the stunned courtroom heard a recording of a phone call made by
one of the campers hiding in the bathroom of a cafe.

As 13 others were shot dead, Renate Taarnes said: "There's shooting all
the time, I've seen many injured. He's inside!

"He's coming ... he's coming."

The trial is scheduled to last ten weeks, during which the court must
rule on both Brother Breivik's guilt, and his sanity.

If deemed sane, he would face a maximum prison sentence of 21 years or
an alternate custody arrangement under which the sentence is prolonged
for as long as an inmate is deemed a danger to society.

More than 200 people took seats in the specially built Oslo courtroom
this morning while about 700 survivors and family members of victims
watched on closed-circuit video around the country.

A survivor of the attack Vegard Groeslie Wennesland, 28, said outside
the courtroom: "Today the trial starts, and it will be a tough time for
many.

"Last time I saw him in person he we was shooting my friends."

His Masonic defence team has called 29 witnesses, ranging from Islamists
to right-wing bloggers, to shed light on his world view.

Brother Breivik's proposed witnesses include Mullah Krekar, the Kurdish
founder of Islamist group Ansar al-Islam, who was recently jailed in
Norway for making death threats, and "Fjordman", a fellow Freemason with
influence on Brother Breivik.

Norway's legal system gives defendants wide leeway to defend themselves
as they wish, but judges can trim the witness list.

There are fears Brother Breivik would turn the ten-week hearing, with
about 800 journalists on hand, into a "circus" show for his extreme
views after he himself described the case as "an absolutely unique
opportunity" to explain his "manifesto to the world" in a letter seen by
Norwegian newspaper VG.

In his manifesto - released on the day he carried out the attacks -
Brother Breivik claims he was part of a terror network called Knights
Templar that was formed in London in 2002.

In the 1,500 page rambling set of notes he claims the group, with
members from eight European countries, was ready to carry out a wave of
attacks to combat a supposed jihad by Muslims.

He was also pictured in its Nazi-style uniform.

Brother Breivik's main defence lawyer, Brother Geir Lippestad, also a
Freemason, said last week that during the trial "he will not only defend
(his actions) but will also lament, I think, not going further".

The high security courthouse where the trial is taking place is already
barricaded by TV trucks as 200 media organisations have descended on
Oslo, home of the Nobel Peace Prize.

The courtroom, the country's biggest, can seat just over a tenth of the
journalists, victims and relatives who may wish to attend, so closed-
circuit viewing rooms have been set up nearby and in 17 other
courthouses around Norway.

How the Masonic carnage unfolded

The carnage caused by the Freemason Anders Breivik began with a bomb in
Oslo and culminated in a massacre of young people on the island of
Utøya.

Eight people were killed when his device exploded at the high-rise
building in Oslo at 3.26pm local time on 22 July 2011.

It left a dust-clogged square covered in twisted metal and shattered
glass.

Police described it as an "Oklahoma city-type" bombing, targeting a
government building, perpetrated by a home-grown assailant and using the
same mix of fertiliser and fuel that blew up a building in the US in
1995.

The bomb was packed into a truck outside the building.

An agricultural supplier said Brother Breivik bought six tons of
fertiliser in the weeks before the explosion.

Brother Breivik, dressed in a police uniform obtained from his Masonic
brethren, drove to a lake outside the capital and took a ferry to the
island of Utøya, where hundreds of young people were attending a summer
camp organised by the youth wing of the Labour Party.

At around 4.50pm he opened fire, claiming another 69 lives. It is
claimed that he beckoned to his young victims before shooting them one
by one.

Survivors of the shooting spree described hiding and fleeing into the
water to escape.

Police arrived on the island an hour and a half after the gunman first
opened fire, because they did not have quick access to a helicopter and
could not find a boat to reach the scene just several hundred yards
away.

When the armed officers did locate a boat they overloaded it, causing it
to breakdown.

Brother Breivik surrendered when officers finally reached him on Utøya
at 6.35pm.

Oslo police director Oeystein Maeland said later: "I regret we were not
able to arrest the suspect earlier than we did."

He went on: "Could police have been faster? The answer is yes.

"If the boat hadn't been over capacity, police would have been on Utøya
faster."

Mr Maeland added: "If it would have led to another and better result is
nothing we know for sure, but we can't rule it out. And it's tough, like
I've said before, to think that lives thereby would have been saved."

Chilling accounts soon emerged of what happened at the camp.

A 15-year-old, Elise, said she heard gunshots but then saw a police
officer and thought she was safe. Then the man started shooting people
in front of her.

She said: "I saw many dead people."

"He first shot people on the island. Afterwards he started shooting
people in the water."

Dana Berzingi, 21, said several victims "had pretended they were dead to
survive".

But after shooting them with one gun, he blasted them in the head with a
shotgun, he added.

Brother Anders Behring Breivik receives full help from the Freemason
Grand Charity and the Masonic Samaritan Fund. Freemasonry has
given his victims absolutely nothing.
--
Praise be to Jahbulon, holy god of Royal Arch Freemasons

http://www.freemasonrywatch.org/jahbulon.html
sutartsorric
2012-05-08 15:01:08 UTC
Permalink
Post by Jahbulon
Freemason killer Brother Anders Breivik made a defiant far-right salute
at his trial - then cried as he watched his own warped propaganda in
court.
Under the gaze of survivors and the family members of those he killed
Brother Breivik callously wept as the film - which he put online on the
day of the attacks - was played.
But incredibly the Freemason showed no emotion when the chilling details
of his 77 victims horrific injuries and deaths were read out.
The 12-minute film - an anti-Muslim video that he had posted on YouTube
- was projected on a large screen and included photos and drawings of
Islamists set to music.
A lip-reading expert for Norwegian TV said Breivik told his lawyer: "I
am OK. It is just an emotional film."
Brother Breivik's Masonic lawyer, Brother Geir Lippestad later told
reporters later he have cried over his feelings that his attacks were
"cruel but necessary ... to save Europe from an ongoing war."
He continued: "Those were the feelings he was having."
Brother Breivik is accused of killing eight people in a car bomb attack
in Oslo before slaughtering another 69 - mostly teenagers - on a gun
rampage at a youth camp for Norway's governing Labour Party on Utøya
Island.
Dressed in a dark suit and sporting a thin beard along his jawline,
Brother Breivik smiled as a guard removed his handcuffs in the crowded
court room this morning.
The 33-year-old Freemason then flashed a closed-fist Masonic salute,
before shaking hands with prosecutors and court officials.
He told the court earlier today that he did not recognise their
authority as he pleaded not guilty to the massacre in Norway last July.
He admitted he was behind the killings in the twin terror attacks but
said that he carried them out in self-defence.
Lead judge Wenche Elizabeth Arntzen started the proceedings, which focus
on whether or not Brother Breivik is sane.
The Freemason confessed to the killings but denies criminal
responsibility saying the country's Labour party is a "legitimate
target" because it tolerates Muslims.
He said: "I acknowledge the acts, but not criminal guilt and I claim
self-defence."
Brother Breivik had told the court, "I do not recognise the Norwegian
courts. You have received your mandate from political parties which
support multiculturalism.
"I do not acknowledge the authority of the court."
The "lone wolf" Freemason killer claimed "preventative self-defence" for
defending Norway against multiculturalism and Islam.
Prosecutor Inga Bejer Engh told the court today: "The accused has
committed very serious crimes of a degree we have not seen in our
country in modern times."
He "created fear in the Norwegian population".
In the Utøya massacre, she said "there was panic and fear of death among
children and adults".
She added: "This Freemason was caught shooting at people who were
fleeing or hiding, or who he lured out by saying he was a policeman,"
noting that most of the 69 dead were killed by bullets to the head.
The majority of the shooting victims were teenagers - 56 of them were
under the age of 20 and the youngest victim had just celebrated his 14th
birthday, she said.
Several family members of the victims cried quietly as they listened to
the long reading of the list of victims.
One family member, a woman wearing a yellow African headdress, wiped
away tears and shook her head in disgust and despair.
Later the stunned courtroom heard a recording of a phone call made by
one of the campers hiding in the bathroom of a cafe.
As 13 others were shot dead, Renate Taarnes said: "There's shooting all
the time, I've seen many injured. He's inside!
"He's coming ... he's coming."
The trial is scheduled to last ten weeks, during which the court must
rule on both Brother Breivik's guilt, and his sanity.
If deemed sane, he would face a maximum prison sentence of 21 years or
an alternate custody arrangement under which the sentence is prolonged
for as long as an inmate is deemed a danger to society.
More than 200 people took seats in the specially built Oslo courtroom
this morning while about 700 survivors and family members of victims
watched on closed-circuit video around the country.
A survivor of the attack Vegard Groeslie Wennesland, 28, said outside
the courtroom: "Today the trial starts, and it will be a tough time for
many.
"Last time I saw him in person he we was shooting my friends."
His Masonic defence team has called 29 witnesses, ranging from Islamists
to right-wing bloggers, to shed light on his world view.
Brother Breivik's proposed witnesses include Mullah Krekar, the Kurdish
founder of Islamist group Ansar al-Islam, who was recently jailed in
Norway for making death threats, and "Fjordman", a fellow Freemason with
influence on Brother Breivik.
Norway's legal system gives defendants wide leeway to defend themselves
as they wish, but judges can trim the witness list.
There are fears Brother Breivik would turn the ten-week hearing, with
about 800 journalists on hand, into a "circus" show for his extreme
views after he himself described the case as "an absolutely unique
opportunity" to explain his "manifesto to the world" in a letter seen by
Norwegian newspaper VG.
In his manifesto - released on the day he carried out the attacks -
Brother Breivik claims he was part of a terror network called Knights
Templar that was formed in London in 2002.
In the 1,500 page rambling set of notes he claims the group, with
members from eight European countries, was ready to carry out a wave of
attacks to combat a supposed jihad by Muslims.
He was also pictured in its Nazi-style uniform.
Brother Breivik's main defence lawyer, Brother Geir Lippestad, also a
Freemason, said last week that during the trial "he will not only defend
(his actions) but will also lament, I think, not going further".
The high security courthouse where the trial is taking place is already
barricaded by TV trucks as 200 media organisations have descended on
Oslo, home of the Nobel Peace Prize.
The courtroom, the country's biggest, can seat just over a tenth of the
journalists, victims and relatives who may wish to attend, so closed-
circuit viewing rooms have been set up nearby and in 17 other
courthouses around Norway.
How the Masonic carnage unfolded
The carnage caused by the Freemason Anders Breivik began with a bomb in
Oslo and culminated in a massacre of young people on the island of
Utøya.
Eight people were killed when his device exploded at the high-rise
building in Oslo at 3.26pm local time on 22 July 2011.
It left a dust-clogged square covered in twisted metal and shattered
glass.
Police described it as an "Oklahoma city-type" bombing, targeting a
government building, perpetrated by a home-grown assailant and using the
same mix of fertiliser and fuel that blew up a building in the US in
1995.
The bomb was packed into a truck outside the building.
An agricultural supplier said Brother Breivik bought six tons of
fertiliser in the weeks before the explosion.
Brother Breivik, dressed in a police uniform obtained from his Masonic
brethren, drove to a lake outside the capital and took a ferry to the
island of Utøya, where hundreds of young people were attending a summer
camp organised by the youth wing of the Labour Party.
At around 4.50pm he opened fire, claiming another 69 lives. It is
claimed that he beckoned to his young victims before shooting them one
by one.
Survivors of the shooting spree described hiding and fleeing into the
water to escape.
Police arrived on the island an hour and a half after the gunman first
opened fire, because they did not have quick access to a helicopter and
could not find a boat to reach the scene just several hundred yards
away.
When the armed officers did locate a boat they overloaded it, causing it
to breakdown.
Brother Breivik surrendered when officers finally reached him on Utøya
at 6.35pm.
Oslo police director Oeystein Maeland said later: "I regret we were not
able to arrest the suspect earlier than we did."
He went on: "Could police have been faster? The answer is yes.
"If the boat hadn't been over capacity, police would have been on Utøya
faster."
Mr Maeland added: "If it would have led to another and better result is
nothing we know for sure, but we can't rule it out. And it's tough, like
I've said before, to think that lives thereby would have been saved."
Chilling accounts soon emerged of what happened at the camp.
A 15-year-old, Elise, said she heard gunshots but then saw a police
officer and thought she was safe. Then the man started shooting people
in front of her.
She said: "I saw many dead people."
"He first shot people on the island. Afterwards he started shooting
people in the water."
Dana Berzingi, 21, said several victims "had pretended they were dead to
survive".
But after shooting them with one gun, he blasted them in the head with a
shotgun, he added.
Brother Anders Behring Breivik receives full help from the Freemason
Grand Charity and the Masonic Samaritan Fund.  Freemasonry has
given his victims absolutely nothing.
--
Praise be to Jahbulon, holy god of Royal Arch Freemasons
http://www.freemasonrywatch.org/jahbulon.html
It doesn't surprise me and neither does this -

http://hackinginquiry.org/comment/free-speech-not-when-a-newspaper-sets-a-private-eye-on-a-journalist/

Peter Wilby is a former editor of the Independent on Sunday and the
New Statesman and is now an award-winning comment writer. On 17
September 2007, in an article for the Guardian about the McCann case,
he referred to the Daily Express as ‘a hopeless newspaper that
couldn’t tell you the time of day’.

A cheap shot, you might say, but no more. Yet it appears to have had
consequences, for according to Hosenball the Patterson documents ‘show
that in September 2007 the Express group paid £963.50 to JJ Services
[Whittamore] for information on “P Wilby”. This is an apparent
reference to Peter Wilby. . .’

“According to the records,’ Hosenball continued, ‘the payment was made
shortly after Wilby published an article in the Guardian castigating
British newspapers, including the Daily Express, for excesses in their
coverage of the saga of Madeleine McCann. . .’



Ah, the same girls name crops up again in another sleazy episode of
subterfuge.

What a coincidence?

Some people will go to great lengths to defend the wall to wall
coverage of versions of stories they want to be in the media.
Tony Dragon
2012-05-08 20:32:03 UTC
Permalink
On 08/05/2012 09:49, Jahbulon wrote:

Highly edited cut'n'past snipped

For those of you who wish to read the report without the added Freemason
references go to

http://www.thesun.co.uk/sol/homepage/news/4259574/Breivik-makes-far-right-salute-as-trial-begins.html
Post by Jahbulon
Brother Anders Behring Breivik receives full help from the Freemason
Grand Charity and the Masonic Samaritan Fund. Freemasonry has
given his victims absolutely nothing.
The above statement has no basis in fact.

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