Philosophy Information


Illuminati in Kentucky


Illuminati in Kentucky:

My fevered imagination includes the probability that Andrew Jackson and stories of the Bell Witch are connected with this kind of knowledge.

"In his 1806 book Travels In America, Thomas Ashe writes of his experiences with a vast cavern originally discovered in 1783 beneath the city of Lexington, 300 feet long, 100 feet wide and 19 feet high, containing exotic artifacts, a stone altar for sacrifices, human skulls and bones piled high, and mummified remains. The mummies are very strange looking and have red hair. The local native Americans claimed that these were the remnants of an ancient civilization that died out long ago. Respected historian George W. Ranck also discusses this "lost city" buried beneath Lexington in 1872. It is said that local Native Americans identified the bodies as being from the ancient race who inhabited the area long before them.

In 1792 an early settler, General John Payne, made a strange discovery while building his house in the tiny town of Augusta, KY, 63 miles North of Lexington. From Historical Sketches of Kentucky by Lewis Collins, Maysville, Ky. 1847, page 205:

'The bottom on which Augusta is situated is a large burying ground of the ancients...They have been found in great numbers, and of all sizes, everywhere between the mouths of Bracken and Locust Creeks, a distance of about a mile and a half. From the cellar under my (Payne's) dwelling, 60 by 70 feet, over a hundred and ten skeletons were taken. I measured them by skulls, and there might have been more, whose skulls had crumbled into dust...The skeletons were of all sizes, from seven feet to infant.

David Kilgour (who was a tall and very large man) passed our village at the time I was excavating my cellar, and we took him down and applied a thigh bone to his. The man, if well-proportioned, must have been 10 to 12 inches taller than Kilgour, and the lower jaw bone would slip on over his, skin and all. Who were they? How came their bones here?'

'When I was in the army, I inquired of old Crane, a Wyandot and of Anglerson, a Delaware, both intelligent old chiefs, and they could give me no information in reference to these remains of antiquity. Some of the largest trees of the forest were growing over the remains when the land was cleared in 1792.'

A few years later, on December 21, 1806, the town of Augusta, KY was visited by Harman Blennerhassett, lawyer, occultist, and member of the Illuminati. Was he aware of the ancient underground civilization in the region?

Blennerhassett was born on October 8, 1764 in Ireland {The Black and Red Lodge of Masonry and Keogh's grandfather in my researches on this probable great great-grandfather of mine is connected I suspect.}and moved to the USA after graduating. He and his wife (who was also his niece which is in-line with the Merovingian genetic programming so long as there are adequate foreign genes put into the mix which the Hapsburgs forgot for a few centuries) lived on Blennerhassett island on the Ohio River. Blennerhassett was a friend and colleague of Adam Weishaupt {Son of a Rabbi}, and a member of his Order of the Illuminati, reaching the level of Illuminatus Magus. He was also a friend of Vice President Aaron Burr, with whom he engaged in a conspiracy to remove President Thomas Jefferson from power. The plot was discovered and Blennerhassett's secret camp at Marietta was destroyed on December 19, 1806.

Blennerhassett fled with about 50 of his fellow initiates, leaving his wife, his sons and the rest of his guerrilla troops behind. But instead of making a direct exit, Blennerhassett risked making a mysterious side trip to Augusta, KY, arriving on the day of the solstice. Clearly, there was some occult significance to his visit to Augusta. But what? That Blennerhassett was interested in the forgotten ancient civilization is a distinct possibility." (7)

World-Mysteries.com and many Ezines or journals support my work and there is much more to come.


MORE RESOURCES:

Globe and Mail (blog)

Kingdoms of Amalur delivers high fantasy, deep philosophy in equal measure
Globe and Mail (blog)
Just moments ago I made the decision to focus my review of Kingdoms of Amalur: Reckoning – a hugely ambitious open-world fantasy role-playing game conceived and designed by a dream team of collaborators including Bethesda Softworks alum Ken Rolston, ...
Latest National NewsProvidence Business News

all 208 news articles »


DNR claims mission statement isn't a philosophy change
TheNewsTribune.com
The commissioner of the Alaska Department of Natural Resources told lawmakers Tuesday that no philosophical change is intended in a proposed a new mission statement deleting the words "conserve" and "enhance." By AUSTIN BAIRD; Associated Press A state ...

and more »


Philosophy Of Nonviolence: Local Librarian To Make Presentation
Patch.com
"For most people it will be the first time they have ever heard of this," said McDonald about King's philosophy. Of course, she will only be able to lightly touch on the topic during her 45-minute presentation on Fri. Feb 10.



The Guardian

André Villas-Boas' Philosophy of Composition?
A Football Report
Yet and perhaps least harrowing for Chelsea fans, could be the suggestion that Villas-Boas' time at the helm at Stamford Bridge could be viewed a great deal more positively through the lens of Poe's Philosophy of Composition. Written as an exposition ...
Luiz: I'll never change my styleThe Sun

all 160 news articles »


Occupied philosophy
Corvallis Gazette Times
Oregon State University philosophy professor Joseph Orosco, left, and philosophy and sociology instructor Tony Vogt lead a discussion during a recent political philosophy of Occupy Wall Street class meeting. (Gail Cole | Corvallis Gazette-Times) The ...

and more »


New philosophy sparks old debate between cynic and optimist
Chicago Tribune
What prompted Cook County State's Attorney Anita Alvarez to announce Thursday a "change in philosophy" signaled by the formation of a special unit in her office to review claims of wrongful convictions? The cynic wonders what took so long.

and more »


Telegraph.co.uk (blog)

Compulsory philosophy lessons would teach young rioters a thing or two
Telegraph.co.uk (blog)
By Allan Massie History Last updated: February 7th, 2012 In 2008 the Brazilian parliament passed a law requiring philosophy to be taught in every high school. So nine million teenagers now study philosophy for at least two hours a week.



Titan Sized

Some notes from Tennessee Titans Front Office, and their philosophy
Titan Sized
I missed this earlier, but a few days ago the Official Tennessee Titans site had a post put up about an interview recently held with GM Ruston Webster. In it, he talks about the direction of the team, and the Front Office's approach to draft and fee ...

and more »


Maryland Coach Randy Edsall grilled by WTEM's 'Sports Reporters'
Washington Post (blog)
By Matt Bonesteel “I can only comment on what my philosophy is, what I've done, and it's been a philosophy that's won, it's been a philosophy that's developed young men into better people, and that's what I believe in,” Randy Edsall said on WTEM on ...



Students Explore Majors at Fordham
The Ram
He planned on majoring in philosophy when he began his collegiate career, but found that he didn't enjoy many aspects of philosophy. Taking computer science for the core sparked an unknown interest which led him to meet with teachers in the department.

and more »

Google News

home | site map
© 2007