Masonic Mass Murder on the Somme 101 Years Ago
“Testament of Youth,” poignantly dramatizes lives shattered by Judeo Masonic First World War.
On July 1,1916, General Douglas Haig, a Freemason, began the Battle of the Somme which by November resulted in the death of one million white, "Christian", British patriots in their prime. Fathers, sons, husbands, brothers, lovers. War is a ruse by which the globalist satanic elite kills patriots under the guise of national duty.
“When we started to fire, we
just had to load and reload. They went down in their hundreds. We
didn’t have to aim, we just fired into them. ” German machine gunner.
from July 12, 2015
by Henry Makow Ph.D.
About 10 million soldiers died in battle on both sides in World War One, one of the costliest wars in history. The needless slaughter in trench warfare is usually portrayed by the Masonic-controlled media and education system as an unintended consequence.
In fact, these wars are orchestrated by the Illuminati Jewish bankers and their Masonic minions
to kill Christians in order to degrade Western civilization in advance
of the Satanic NWO now clearly manifesting itself. (See, World War One- First Christian Holocaust) Ritual human sacrifice to their god Moloch may also be a factor.
All wars are designed to enrich and empower the bankers while destroying
and demoralizing humanity. Warmongering “patriotism” is a ruse. The
sooner gullible non-Satanists stop falling on a sword, the better.
I’m going to focus on the Battle
of the Somme, one of the biggest battles of the first world war. My
information is based on John Laffin’s British Butchers and Bunglers of World War One, (1988, p. 63ff.)
(left, Douglas Haig, Elgin Lodge #91)
Both General Douglas Haig,
Commander in Chief, Western Front, and his principal co-planner Sir
Henry Rawlinson were Freemasons. The Somme offensive (“The Big Push”)
was intended to end the stalemate and win the war. The Allies had 700,000 men, a 7-1 numerical superiority. Haig and Rawlinson anticipated losing 500,000 men.
The plan was simple: to bomb the Germans for five days and
nights then walk to the enemy trench and kill the remaining soldiers or
capture those who surrendered.
However, after 5 days of bombing, the German trenches and
their defences were barely scratched. The English neglected to
reconnoitre or observe this from the air. The Germans just had to shoot
their machine guns, reload and shoot again. The same type of attack
continued from the 1st of July until November 1916. Over a million men
died; 58,000 on the first day.
On July 1 1916, 11 British divisions attacked on a 13-mile front. By
7.30 am the six German divisions finished breakfast, wiped their faces
with their napkins, and carried their machine guns from comfortable deep
cellars. They began spraying the attackers who were advancing in neat
rows, “to maintain order.”
A German machine gunner wrote,
“We were surprised to see them walking, we had never seen that before.
The officers went in front. One was carrying a walking stick…When we
started to fire, we just had to load and reload. They went down in their
hundreds. We didn’t have to aim, we just fired into them. “
A German officer reported his impression of the attack.
“Whole sections appeared to fall. All along the line, Englishmen could
be seen throwing their arms into the air and collapsing, never to move
again. Badly wounded rolled about in agony, while badly wounded crawled
into shell-holes for shelter. “
John Laffin: “Of the 110,000 men who attacked, 60,000 were
killed or wounded on this one day. About 20,000 lay dead between the
lines. Haig and Rawlinson were
directly responsible for the assumption bombardment would cut barbed
wire and render the Germans vulnerable. The Germans lost an estimated
8000 men on July 1. 2000 were taken prisoner.” (64)
A hospital station dealt with 10,000 casualties in the first
48 hours. A surgeon wrote: ”Streams of ambulances a mile long waited to
be unloaded. The whole area of the camp, a field of six acres, was
completely covered with stretchers placed side-by-side, each with its
suffering or dying man. We surgeons were hard at it in the operating
theatre, a good hut holding four tables. Occasionally we made a brief
look around to select from the thousands of patients those few we had
time to save. It was terrible. (73)
Haig’s chronicler Colonel Boraston wrote that the attack,
“bore out the conclusions of the British High Command, and amply
justified the tactical methods employed.” (No doubt these men were all
Freemasons.)
Laffin writes: “This is an outrageous statement. It is more
accurate to call 1 July 1916, as H. L’Etang does, ‘probably the greatest
disaster to British arms since Hastings….Certainly never before nor
since has such wanton pointless carnage been seen…’ (70)
Laffin bemoans the complete “absence of cleverness” in the military strategy. He emphasizes that, “high casualties were a basic rule of the game and simply had to be accepted.” (76)
Who knows how the world would be different if the cream of
that generation of Christians had not been trampled into the mud of
France in 1915-18?
There is simply no explanation for sending wave after wave of
men to their slaughter other than that this was the deliberate goal.
Any sane general would have stopped the attack as soon as it became
apparent that the strategy was a failure.
Western society is controlled by a satanic cult whose goal is to degrade and exploit humanity.
It’s time we stopped we being complicit in our own destruction.