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The First World War, Cecile Rhodes and Conspiracy Facts – Veterans Today | Military Foreign Affairs Policy Journal for Clandestine Services


“History is always written by the winners. When two cultures clash, the loser is obliterated, and the winner writes the history books books which glorify their own cause and disparage the conquered foe. As Napoleon once said, ‘What is history, but a fable agreed upon? ‘” Professor Robert Langdon
The Decline of an Empire
Why did World War One happen?  The conventional fable agreed upon begins on June 28, 1914 with the assassination of Austria’s Archduke Ferdinand in Sarajevo.  The aftermath of the assassination spiraled out of control.  It was like an unstoppable train speeding down the tracks.  Suddenly all of the Western powers were at war.  When the armistice was signed on November 11, 1918 forty million people lay dead.  Exactly five years to the day after the assassination of the Archduke, the Treaty of Versailles was signed.  Germany alone accepted all the guilt for the war.  The end. ....

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From uninvited guests to excitable horses... everything you didn't know about royal funerals


Queen Elizabeth, the Queen Mother, lies in state at Westminster Hall
Credit: PA
We never saw so motley, so rude, so ill-managed a body of persons,  complained
The Times, in July 1830, of the behaviour of the congregation at the funeral of George IV.
Official guests found themselves unable to sit down: their seats had been taken by servants of the household, the friends of the carpenters and upholsterers, the petty tradesmen of the town , who forced their way uninvited into St George’s Chapel, Windsor, ahead of a splendid procession that included drummers, trumpeters, Grenadier Guards, banner-carrying peers and resplendent officers of state. ....

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Queen Victoria's wedding dress – a huge contrast to the deepest black of her mourning dresses we are used to seeing – Royal Central


10th February 2021
Queen Victoria’s wedding dress is a powerful symbol of what she would refer to in her journal as the ‘
happiest day of my life’. Most probably, it represents more than any other item of clothing or object, the Queen’s identity as a royal bride. Certainly, she chose to wear it again in 1847, when she was painted in her wedding attire by the fashionable portraitist Franz Xaver Winterhalter, as a gift for Prince Albert on their seventh wedding anniversary. The simplicity of the dress could not be mistaken. Queen Victoria was appearing as a woman, dressed as she was on the day she became a royal wife. ....

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Cecil Rhodes and the Society of the Elect


Cecil Rhodes and the Society of the Elect
From the Lecture Series: The Real History of Secret Societies
Most secret societies have unknown goals, with rituals and gatherings only to have fun. Wealthy men gather in highly selective circles to interact with like-minded people. Among elite secret societies, there is one that achieved big goals like ousting a government or raging a war. A wealthy man called Cecil Rhodes had a central role in this.
Cecil Rhodes established the British South Africa Company. He believed that Britons were the “first race of the world,” so he wanted to bring the whole world under British hegemony. (Image: Fvasconcellos and Mangwanani/Public domain) ....

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