Tuesday, March 17, 2020

Skull & Bones have sworn an oath never to reveal what goes on inside and they’re legendary for the lengths to which they’ll go

9-1977   But none of them will tell you a thing about it. They’ve sworn an oath never to reveal what goes on inside and they’re legendary for the lengths to which they’ll go to avoid prying interrogation….And Bones, it was said, was the most ritualistic and secretive of all.  Even the very door to the Bones tomb, that huge triple-padlocked iron door, was never permitted to open in the presence of an outsider….
  Before I could say, “A line of what?” the source continued:  “The alumni still care.  Don’t laugh.  They don’t like people tampering and prying. The power of Bones is incredible. They’ve got their hands on every lever of power in the country. You’ll see--it’s like trying to look into the Mafia.  Remember, they’re a secret society too.” http://reprints.longform.org/skull-and-bones-yale
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1-2011  Alexandra Robbins has published a book entitled Secrets of the Tomb: Skull and Bones, The Ivy League, and the Hidden Paths of Power.  In doing so she experienced harassment and not-so-subtle threats; she related a telephone call from an irate Bonesman who berated her for her work and warned her that “there are a lot of us [Bonesmen] in journalism and political institutions across the country--good luck with your career.”…In her book, Alexandra Robbins has emphasized the power and influence of the “patriarchs,” the graduate members of the society, over the affairs of Skull and Bones….
  Let us now examine the life of Daniel Coit Gilman, the founding president of The Johns Hopkins University and a prominent member of Skull and Bones.  Gilman was born on July 6, 1831, to William Gilman and Eliza Coit Gilman in Norwich, Connecticut.  Through his mother's family, there were strong ties to Yale and to Skull and Bones.  Gilman attended Yale from 1848 to 1852 and was elected to Skull and Bones in 1851. Among his close friends and lifelong colleagues were Timothy Dwight, Yale 1849 and Skull and Bones, later to be Yale's president, and Andrew D. White, Yale 1853 and Bones, who was the founding president of Cornell….In 1872, at age 41, Gilman left Yale for the presidency of the University of California. This was a new school, chartered in 1868, and Gilman was its second president.
  William Henry Welch, the founding dean of the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine.  Welch was elected to Skull and Bones in 1869–1870.  He wrote his father “The honor is more agreeable to me than any other in college could have been.” Later, in writing to a relative whose son was considering another college, Welch wrote: “If a man has no chance at Bones it makes little difference to him whether he goes to Yale or someplace else, but if he is the right sort of man for Bones, then I say Yale over any other college or university in the world.”  https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3012287/
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  Skull & Bones Society:  How The Order Controls Education    Science has largely been a success when applied to "dead" things such as matter and energy - electronics, mechanics, civil engineering, physics and chemistry.  It has been a complete failure when applied to individuals (i.e. psychiatry, modern psychology) and societies (sociology, group psychology, mass manipulation, behavioral control).  Instead, "science", working with governments and "advertizers" have primarily spent all their time and energy figuring out how to control and manipulate minds to forward their ideas of "order", "social harmony" and "peace".    -Antony Sutton, 1985, ch. 1
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1-24-2006   Skull & Bones is above all the example of how the United States has improved a reproduction system of elites through a selection that, contrary to the myth of self-made man, does not have anything to do with the fate or individual qualities.  In fact, as underlined by Anthony Sutton, the most active members of the organization come from a “group of 20 or 30 families”, very interested in the defense of their legacy and descent. That is why there are a lot of marriages among the representatives of the families which the members of the Skull and Bones belong to   https://www.voltairenet.org/article30109.html
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from  R.J. DeSocio:  Rockefellerocracy: Kennedy Assassinations, Watergate and Monopoly2013






https://books.google.com/books?id=2Uv5mgQMdFYC&pg=PA146&lpg=PA146&dq=rockefeller+skull+bones&source=bl&ots=ekwBTWzaHC&sig=ACfU3U0a7ufj_91XJTxsIn5S5Qg1lEwl8w&hl=en&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwjz8K3fp6LoAhXLFzQIHYVHDfAQ6AEwJXoECCcQAQ#v=onepage&q=rockefeller%20skull%20bones&f=false
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 the first cousins of Percy Rockefeller, were. Walter Jennings, S&B 1880, was a director of the Standard Oil Co. of New Jersey, president of the National Fuel Gas Company, and a trustee of the New York Trust Company [out of whose 26 trustees in Jan. 1933, 7 bore the names of Bonesmen]
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  Founding officers of the Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research:   Dr. William H. Welch, Professor of Pathology at Johns Hopkins University, President; Dr. T.M[itchell] Prudden, Professor of Pathology at Columbia University, Vice President; Dr. L. Emmet Holt, Clinical Professor of Children's Diseases at Columbia, Secretary; Dr. C.A. Herter, Professor of Pathological Chemistry at the University of New York and Bellevue Hospital Medical College, Treasurer. Directors:  Dr. Herman M. Biggs, director of laboratories for the Board of Health, New York City; Dr. Theobald Smith, Professor of Comparative Pathology at Harvard University; and Dr. Simon Flexner, Professor of Pathology at the University of Pennsylvania. (Mr. Rockefeller Gives $200,000 to Science. New York Times, June 2, 1901, p.1.) 
  In 1913 the International Health Commission (later Board) was founded with Wickliffe Rose as its director, and the Rockefeller Foundation, which had been operating for nearly a decade under John D. Rockefeller's direct supervision, was incorporated.  Flexner became a trustee of the Foundation in 1913, along with John D. Rockefeller Jr., Frederick L. Gates, Henry Pratt Judson, Starr J. Murphy, Jerome D. Greene, Wickliffe Rose and Charles O. Heydt.  (A Guide to Selected Files of the Professional Papers of Simon Flexner at the American Philiosophical Society, by Margaret Miller.)       http://www.smokershistory.com/Rockefel.htm

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