The silent massacre



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Silent-Massacre by Max H. Williams
Religion and Targeting
In this book, I am neither attempting to imbue the reader with my religious beliefs nor offering him a mini-course on religion. However, I include this section because many targets believe that religion may somehow figure in their targeting. Some victims use religion to help themselves get through their ordeal; others feel that certain religious people and religious institutions have created their ordeal. I offer the reader the following views on religion. I do not ask that the reader accept those views, and, as usual, I do not strive to be religiously correct.
Concurrent with the beginnings of my targeting, back in the 1970s, I also started to examine my religious beliefs, which, like most people, I had never before questioned. I had been raised in a Southern Baptist home. In most cases, we follow what we are TAUGHT to believe. If one’s parents are Catholic, he will also be Catholic. If his parents are Baptists, he will in all likelihood become Baptist. That is simply the way it is. People do not examine their beliefs, they normally simply accept the beliefs that they inherit. The church wants its churchgoers to accept everything “on faith,” faith with a capital F.
Historically, the concept of one single all-powerful god is a relatively new belief. For many thousands of years before the one-god idea, people worshiped multiple gods. The main ones represented the earth, the sky, and the sea. In addition, there were other minor gods who dealt with rain, the sun, good crops, and other objects. Rulers and people had their favorite gods. The belief in one god first came from the Egyptians; then the Israelites adopted the one god theme. The Romans much later accepted that religious concept, and as a result the
Western world today believes in one god. God, Jesus, and the Holy Spirit make up what
Christians call the Trinity.
Christianity is a Middle Eastern religion based on Judaism that was foisted upon Europe,
North America, and Middle and South America by subversion and conquest. Does that mean that the conquered people of Europe and later America had no religious beliefs prior to being

subjugated and coerced into Christianity? Of course not. They followed their native beliefs, which gradually disappeared because of punishment from the Church for disbelief in
Christianity. At that time, there was only one church, the Roman Catholic Church.
Not content to accept what I had been taught “on faith,” as churches ask their members to do,
I began to question the tenets of Christianity. When I did, I learned that I did not agree with most of the pillars on which it stood. I shall not go into my in-depth analysis of those tenets, as analysis is very tedious.
However, as a result of my questioning what I actually believed and not what I had been taught to believe, I completely forsook Christianity. I might also add that my examination of
Islam and other religions finds them all equally lacking in substance. The only belief that I share with Christianity is that there is a deity. In fact, unlike Christians, I believe there may be several or many deities. I do not worry about how many gods there might be. What does it really matter? Like my Native American ancestors, when I pray, I simply refer to The Great
Spirit, which may be one or more entities. The Great Spirit is genderless and colorless.
Christians follow what they have been led to believe is god’s model for their lives. They even added to that model the idea of “salvation,” which made them immortal. If they believed that
Jesus was the son of God, upon death, they went to heaven. If they did not accept that avenue to heaven, they went to hell. There is not one shred of proof in any of that model; yet, we are told that we must accept it “on faith.” I am amused when I sometimes imagine that the one god that Christians worship might actually be a very fun-loving god who wants all humans to drink, party, smoke, curse, use drugs and alcohol, and practice promiscuity.
My personal beliefs revolve only around The Great Spirit (or spirits). There are no sons or daughters of that god or those gods that we humans know of, no written word of god’s
“model” (except that written by man, The Old Testament and the New Testament), no virgins giving birth, no Trinity, no heaven and hell, no sins (but simply logical, moral, and sensible human actions that allows us to live in harmony with each other), nobody dying because of our sins, no promise of an after life (either heaven or hell), no churches, no dogma, no priests/ministers, no Holy city or any other Holy place, and no prophets.
Christian belief is based on Middle Eastern teachings found in The Old Testament and The
New Testament, collectively known as the Bible. Many Christians are surprised when I tell them that their religion is Middle Eastern, for they have been prejudiced from birth toward the
Middle East. They do not realize that the Bible was put together over the hundreds of years by clergy and scholars, who, over time, added to and took from those writings, with the
Church compromising on various concepts such as the date of the birth of Christ, the Trinity, the role of Mary, alleged mother of Jesus, baptism, etc. Christians are taught that the Bible, as it presently exists, represents the true word of god and that to question anything in it is sacrilegious and heretical. .
Sorry, folks. I do not buy that package. Thus, it should not be surprising to the reader that religious friends of mine pray for my “soul,” firmly believing that I am doomed to hell. Of course, others believe that Jews and other non-Christians are also bound for hell. To me, whatever happens to me after death is completely immaterial. I do not seek immortality, or to be “born again.” Only the god or gods will determine that, if they wish to.


I know. Christian readers would probably love to debate me about my view of Christianity.
However, the only reference they can provide for their statements is the Bible. Therefore, debate is useless. Since to me the Bible is simply a book and not the word of god, no
Christian and I could possibly engage in a meaningful discussion on religion.
Now, having described my religious beliefs and disbeliefs, let us turn to religion and targeting.
Many targets believe that there is a religious group called the Illuminati that targets them for some reason, probably in an attempt to take over the world. I find that notion completely illogical. If that were so, the group would concentrate on those in power, not the average citizen. Moreover, many of the targets are very religious.
I also doubt that the Masons have any such ambition. Although Masonry is based on
Christianity, Masonic members represent many faiths and denominations. That does not mean that some of the attackers may not be Masons. It is highly likely that Masons figure among the attackers and accomplices. That does not indict Masonry in general.
Some Christian churches and their members do seemingly cooperate with the powerbrokers as accomplices in carrying out the spurious targeting activities. Many of my correspondents mention the role of a minister or some other clergy in their targeting. Usually those cases involve organized stalking. Again, that does not mean that all Christian churches and all
Christians participate either in organized stalking or remote-delivered physical and neurological attacks.
It does appear that the powerbrokers would like to Christianize the entire American population, not to “save” them but to encourage conformity and discourage non-conformity. I believe that the powerbrokers look upon Christianity as the one unifying factor that will provide that conformity. That in turn makes the population far easier to control.
Judeo-Christianity is simply a convenient tool that can be used not only to impose conformity on the populace but also to buttress the notion that Israel is god’s favored nation and to engender antipathy for Moslems. Any degree of non-conformity, whether religious, political, social, or economic, is a threat to the status quo and to the powerbrokers’ aims.
Americans are polarized as they have probably never before been over abortion, gay rights, human rights, the distribution of wealth, loss of control of their government, mortgage foreclosures, job displacement, race/ethnicity, and other issues. The Occupy Movement that began in October, 2011 epitomizes that polarization. I predict that in fewer than twenty-five years an all-encompassing class war will erupt on a worldwide basis, starting probably first in the United States. Call it what you will: the haves against have-nots; the disenfranchised against the powerbrokers, the poor against the rich. Tens of millions of people will probably lose their lives in that conflict.

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