WinterWatch.net ————-By Russ Winter ————–Wed., April 28, 2021
The Zionist-evangelical story goes back several decades, with 90-year-old televangelist Pat Robertson being a prime case study.
One of the more notable “coincidences” or anomalies Winter Watch brings to your attention is the image of Robertson on the cover of Time magazine in 1986 — back before the public was red pilled by the Internet –as the pastor posed with a gesture called the Freemason “Sign of a Fellow Craft.”
The Times cover story appeared just as Robertson’s ministry left the launch pad, and it grew rapidly from there. He was also preparing to run for the 1988 presidential election. His physical gesture on the Times’ cover was a giant dog whistle to high-level Freemasons to support and promote this otherwise rather mediocre tele-minister.
Robertson was then given regular exposure during his presidential bid and ran on a standard Christian values platform. He also became an important ally of the Bush dynasty.
Robertson was then given regular exposure during his presidential bid and ran on a standard Christian values platform. He also became an important ally of the Bush dynasty.
During the next decade following the Freemason dog whistle, his television network, CBN, expanded to 180 countries and was broadcast in 71 languages. In 1988, it was renamed the CBN Family Channel; and later, simply the Family Channel.
Significantly, Robertson in 1991 wrote a bestselling book of some merit: “The New World Order”. Borrowing heavily from Eustice Mullins’ and the great Nesta Webster’s work, in many respects the book played a major role in putting terms like “NWO conspiracy” within the Overton Window vernacular – at least for a period.
Robertson stated, “a conspiracy has existed in the world working through Freemasonry and a secret Order of the Illuminati, a group combining Masons and Jewish Bankers.”
He described American policy with accuracy as a “behind-the-scenes establishment” with “enormous power” for which the “principal goal is the establishment of a one-world government where the control of money is in the hands of one or more privately owned but government-chartered central banks.”
Without naming the 8,000-pound elephant in the room, he pointed out Jewish bankster Paul Warburg’s role as the “true draftsman” and “catalyst” of the sinister U.S. central bank — the Federal Reserve — in 1913.When the book was published, Robertson was subjected to the well-worn one-trick-pony epithets of “antisemitism TM” and labeled a “conspiracy theorist.” But that didn’t stop the sales and distribution of “The New World Order” in the least.
Despite getting relatively close to some fundamental truths, it seems that shortly thereafter someone had “the talk” with Pat. Perhaps it was the same such “talk” given to Alex Jones before he turned into a hack. Winter Watch reported particulars of “the talk” as it related to the downfall of the British National Party in which Jewish interests tried to pay off that party to demonize Muslims and refrain from critiques of bankster interests. Anything else BNP espoused was fine.
The Nation of Islam’s Louis Farrakan revealed, with some humor, what he called the Jewish plutocrat’s Edgar Bronfman talk and treatment in the sermon below. Unlike Robertson and others, Farrakan wasn’t buying.
Par for the course, after “the treatment” Robertson hit the personal financial jackpot when his Family Channel network became part of the Big Media consolidation and was sold to News Corp. in 1997, which renamed it Fox Family. A condition of the sale was that Robertson’s show, “The 700 Club,” would run twice a day in perpetuity, regardless of any changes of ownership.
The channel is now owned by Jewish-managed Disney.
Continues at the link below.
https://www.winterwatch.net/2021/04/anomalous-behavior-in-christian-circles-the-curious-case-of-pat-robertson/ Via Henry Makow.com