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What the bleep - education


Your children’s teachers are paid an average yearly wage of £30,000. Their head teacher could be earning as much as £200,000 a year to indoctrinate them with ‘facts’ that are actually fiction. If your child questions these ‘facts’, he is likely to be disciplined for disputing what he is being told.

How then are our young expected to gain information and knowledge they need to grow into correctly informed, free spirited beings, able to continue their lives knowing it is acceptable to question anything they do not feel comfortable about, thus leaving them secure that anything they are being told/taught is actually the truth, and comfortable about their perception of truth.?

 

 

Shakespeare

The idea that the word famous plays were written by an illiterate from Stratford-upon-Avon called William Shakespeare is patently ridiculous and like so many accepted ‘truths’, does not survive the most basic research.

From

The Biggest Secret - by David Icke

 

Shakespeare, the ‘Bard’ grew up in Stratford, a town with no school capable of communicating such a high degree of learning. His parents were illiterate and he showed a total disregard for study. Yet the plays were written by someone with a great knowledge of the world, which could only be gleamed from a fantastic range of books and personal experience through travel. Shakespeare had no such library, not that he could have used it if he had, and he is never known to have left the country.

So who did write these plays and books?

One of the most important men of this era was Francis Bacon. His influence was colossal. He was the ‘father’ of science, and a possible contender as the real author of the ‘Shakespeare’ plays.

There is little doubt that Bacon was born from a liaison between Queen Elizabeth 1, the ‘virgin queen’ and her lover Robert Dudley, the Earl of Leicester. Bacon was bought up by Nicholas and Anne Bacon and would become the most influential man in the country, overtly and covertly, with the title of Viscount of St. Albans and the role of Lord Chancellor of England.

Bacon belonged to esoteric brotherhoods that had many connections to Secret Societies who worked to change many ‘stories’ of history, including the Bible. He worked with esoteric magicians like John Dee and Sir Francis Walsingham, who were in the spy networks across Europe, now known as British Intelligence. Walsingham was posted as ambassador to France to expand the spy networks. John Dee was the Queen’s astrologer, a Rosicrucian Grand Master, a black magician, and a secret agent for the new intelligence network.

During this era many codes were written in books. In this John Dee-Francis bacon circle were all the leading figures of Elizabethan society, including Sir Walter Raleigh. It may have been Bacon who communicated some of the secret knowledge ‘for those who have ears’ in ciphers and symbolism in the works called the Shakespeare plays.

He, like the writers of the Old and New Testaments and the King Arthur ‘Grail’ stories, was a high initiate of the secret mysteries communicating through code and hidden meaning. Manly P. Hall says that Bacon indicated that he was the true author in a series of codes. His esoteric number was 33 and on one page in the first part of the ‘Shakespeare’ play, Henry the Forth, the name ‘Francis’ appears 33 times. Bacon also used watermarks in paper to transmit his symbols, as did the Rosicrucian and secret societies in general.

In a Shakespearean Folio of 1623, the Christian name of Bacon appears 21 times on page 56. Shakespeare is known as the Bard. A Bard was a Druidic initiate of the secret knowledge and, the concise Oxford dictionary says, there is another definition of Bard…..”a slice of bacon placed on meat or game before roasting”

So, if Shakespeare really did write the plays, where did he acquire his knowledge of French, Italian, Spanish, and Danish and classic Latin and Greek? Answer…he didn’t. Ben Jonson, a close friend of Shakespeare, said, that the ’Bard understood small Latin and less Greek’. Shakespeare’s daughter, Judith, was known to be illiterate and could not even write her name at the age of 27. It makes no sense that a man who wrote such plays would have a daughter who could not write her own signature. There are only six known examples of Shakespeare’s own handwriting, all signatures, and three of these are on his will. They reveal a man unfamiliar with a pen and a hand that was probably guided by another. Nor is there one authentic portrait of Shakespeare.

We continue to teach our children that Shakespeare wrote these plays. Shouldn’t we encourage our kids to ask, research other possibilities instead of just accepting the ‘story’ they are told. Even decipher the plays to see if they are able to find hidden knowledge.

Nothing better sums up the attitude of ‘education’ than the words of the Witches in the play, Macbeth: ‘Fair is foul and foul is fair’. As Manly P. Hall, the Freemasonic historian wrote:

…….those enthusiasts who for years have struggled to identify Sir Francis Bacon as the true ‘Bard of Avon’ might long since have won their case had they emphasised its most important angle, namely, that Sir Francis Bacon, the Rosicrucian initiate, wrote into the Shakespearean plays the secret teachings of the Fraternity of R.C. and the true rituals of the Freemasonic order, of which order it may be discovered that he was the actual founder. ……..by David Icke.