Archibald Ramsay was released in 1944. He never changed his anti-Semitic views. He died in 1955. Anna Wolkoff was released in 1947. She died in a car crash in 1983 while visiting a former Right Club member in Spain. ibid. caption
Bertie continued to work his way through a series of mistresses. Including Lillie Langtry, and one Jennie Churchill, mother of a pushy young lad called Winston. Timewatch: Edward VII – Prince of Pleasure, BBC 2010
Blair’s Biggest Secret: How far has the ancient Illuminati secret society network penetrated world politics? If you read the many books published about conspiracies, then you will learn that many leading authors have alleged that British Prime Minister Tony Blair is a high ranking Freemason. Mr Blair is a Queen’s Counsel barrister, a profession which has its roots in the Temple Bar built in London by the Knights Templar secret society in the 12th century. According to many authors, Tony Blair follows the tradition of Masonic membership amongst large numbers of barristers and judges. Mr Blair is allegedly a member of the 1591 Studholme Masonic Lodge, which meets amongst other places at the Café de Paris in London. Chris Everard, The Illuminati I
Knight says that the Palace of Westminster, home to the British parliament, is used as a meeting place for at least two Masonic lodges. ibid.
Many researchers claim British Prime Minister Tony Blair is a high-ranking 33rd degree Freemason. This is this highest rank of Mason, and this elite cabal of British freemasonry has its own headquarters at Number 10 Duke Street which some claim is connected to Number 10 Downing Street via a secret underground tunnel. Inside the Duke Street headquarters of the Supreme Council of the 33rd Degree there is a Red Room, a Black Room and a Chamber of Death which Masons use for macabre rituals based on ancient Jewish mysticism and Enochian Magic. Once initiated into the 33rd Degree, Masons are told they are superior beings, and the human population are referred to as being profane goyen which means cattle. If Tony Blair is indeed a 33rd Degree Freemason, then he is following in the footsteps of previous prime ministers who have all been members of either freemasonry, the Knights Templar, or the Round Table which was started by Sir Cecil Rhodes following his economic conquest of Zimbabwe during the 19th century. Winston Churchill was also a 33rd Degree Freemason initiated into the Studholme Lodge at the headquarters of the 33rd Degree in May 1901. ibid.
Winston Churchill was also a member of the Order of Druids who often meet at Stonehenge during the Spring Equinox, whilst members of the public are forcibly restrained from this ancient megalithic site by thousands of police officers. The ancient druid rituals at Stonehenge can be considered harmless when compared to the murderous Satanically inspired ceremonies of freemasonry. ibid.
Winston Churchill often visited Asni in Morocco. Where he would bugger young Arabian boys whilst writing his memoirs completely exonerating his father’s memory in a sycophantic fake biography. Chris Everard, Illuminati III
There never was a Churchill from John of Marlborough down that had either morals or principles. William Gladstone
I thought he was a young man of promise, but it appears he is a young man of promises. Arthur James Balfour, My Early Life, 1930
I cannot yet think of Winston as prime minister. King George VI, diary entry
A war to save Europe from domination by Louis XIV’s France. And it was the first truly global conflict of the modern age. The British were victorious ... led by another Churchill. Dr David Starkey, The Churchills, Channel 4 2012
William of Orange became Louis’s implacable foe. ibid.
Events in Germany began to echo Louis XIV’s France. ibid.
At exactly the moment that everybody else in Britain was saying, Mr Hitler is a man that we do business with, Churchill says, Look at what he really is. He is murdering the Jews and if you don’t stop him, he will murder you. ibid.
July 1944 ... The outcome of the war hung in the balance. But Winston Churchill, the man who led Britain in the fight against Hitler, was also waging a war against mental and physical enemies of his own. Altered Statesmen, Discovery 2003
This high-flyer had a secret: he was sometimes gripped by dark moods of introspection and periods of melancholy he couldn’t shake off. ibid.
Churchill was First Lord of the Admiralty, the man in charge of the British Navy ... At the start of the First World War Churchill was in an excited state. But from the first weeks of the conflict all military activity got bogged down in the trenches of Belgium and France. Churchill wanted action, so he began to champion a controversial plan for a huge naval attack on the Dardanelles ... Admiral Fisher was so opposed to the plan he resigned from the Admiralty ... But his Dardanelles adventure was to usher in a political and psychological disaster ... The assault cost 46,000 lives and 250,000 casualties. ibid.
Churchill’s enthusiasm for the assault [on Norway] wasn’t totally matched by a consistent strategic vision. As many as three times in a single night Churchill revised his orders to the fleet. The Norwegian landings began on 14th April 1940 by which time the Nazis themselves had already occupied Norway. Without clear planning and air support the attack was a disaster. ibid.
On 10th May 1940 Churchill became prime minister. ibid.
As a teenager Churchill developed a taste for champagne. But his drinking habits began to change in the 1930s. If Churchill started to use alcohol to ease depression, by the 1940s he had become used to drinking daily. ibid.
In 1944 Churchill was 70 and was drinking constantly throughout the working day. ibid.
He turned to a drug called Benzedrine to help preserve an image of strength. ibid.
The picture of his final years is a dark one. ibid.
He always felt it was his destiny to lead the nation to victory. And at the most dangerous moment in history his leadership was making the greatest Briton of all time. Great Britons s1e8: Churchill, Mo Mowlam, BBC 2002
He was kept out of his parents’ way and packed off to boarding school ... He was a small and sickly child. ibid.
She [mother] was a New York heiress ... She was cold and distant to him ... He [father] would go for months on end without seeing his children. ibid.
The British opened fire and ten thousand [Sudan] dervishes were killed. ibid.
He didn’t really care about party politics. ibid.
He fought for better labour conditions, trade union rights, old age pensions and prison reforms. He even wanted to get rid of the House of Lords. ibid.
He wasn’t keen on women having the vote, and he strongly disapproved of the suffragettes’ aggressive protests. It was Churchill who sent in the vicious Black and Tans ... His brutality came to the fore when he was Home Secretary ... He behaved like the general he always wanted to be. ibid.
Churchill was appointed First Lord of the Admiralty ... The solution he believed was a naval attack on Turkey ... Seven hundred men were killed ... It was an unmitigated disaster. Churchill was removed from the Admiralty. ibid.
He had always been prone to bouts of depression: he called them his black dog. And now he fell into his worst depression ever. ibid.
He insisted that surrender wasn’t an option. The Battle of Britain was about to begin. Churchill gave a call for arms. ibid.
Against all the odds our spitfires fended off invasion. But it wasn’t over yet – the Germans started launching bombing raids on our cities. ibid.
Hitler accused Churchill of being an alcoholic. ibid.
The famous victory at El Alamein was a turning point in the war. ibid.
The very soldiers who had fought for him were not convinced he was the right man to rebuild Britain. ibid.
We know Winston Churchill as the greatest war leader in British history. How was it then that he spent much of the Second World War at loggerheads with the generals on whom his fate and that of the nation depended? Max Hastings, Winston’s War: The Circus
The first serious engagement of the war – the Norway Campaign ... His first big test. ibid.
He intervened in naval and military command decisions relentlessly. ibid.
Churchill was the worst offender causing the generals to despair. ibid.
The Norway Campaign was a fiasco. ibid.
Lord Gort’s chief anxiety was now to get his men home leaving the French to their fate. ibid.
The nightmare in France confirmed all his worst fears about the fighting power of Hitler’s legions, and his own lack of effective commanders. ibid.
Churchill was determined to shake up Britain’s forces from top to bottom. ibid.
They were always won back by his warmth, wit and wonderful humanity. ibid.
The value of gestures. ibid.
Egypt was crucial ... Churchill needed a victory in the desert. ibid.
British defeats in Greece, Crete and Libya reduced Churchill one more into deep gloom. ibid.
The Prime Minister revelled in the challenges of war. Yet he hated the practical problems of translating his visions into reality. Max Hastings, Winston’s War part II
8th Army: this was Bernard Montgomery. ibid.