On April 17 at 8:57 in the morning, Trump wrote an X tweet stating, in part, “Israel will not be bombing Lebanon anymore. They are PROHIBITED from doing so by the U.S.A. Enough is enough!!! Thank You! President DJT.”
What’s
interesting is there is a Tarot card from the 1982 Illuminati Card Game showing
a screaming head that looks very much like Trump and the title of the card is “Enough
is Enough!”
From
Wikipedia: “The 1982 game has ominous secret societies competing with each
other to control the world through various means, including legal, illegal, and
even mystical. It was designed as a ‘tongue-in-cheek rather than serious’ take
on conspiracy. It contains groups named similarly to real-world organizations,
such as the Society for Creative Anachronism and
the Symbionese Liberation Army. It can
be played by two to eight players. Depending on the number of players, a game
can take between one and six hours.”
So, what’s
even more telling is there’s a famous Tarot card showing a
magician wearing a red shawl over a white robe, exactly like Trump was depicted
in his personally sent message on Orthodox Easter (April 12 ) showing himself
as a Jesus-like figure healing a man in his sick bed. The name of the Tarot
card is “The Magician.”
Here’s
commentary from a YouTuber who is a Bible-believing Baptist preacher:
“When you’re
a man like Donald Trump and you’re obsessed with higher consciousness and the ‘Power
of Positive Thinking’ (ala Norman Vincent Peale who was Trump’s preacher growing
up) and stuff like that, you want everybody around you to be propping you up like that because, in a
sense, you think that feeds the mantras and the spiritual energy that you are
getting so that you will eventually become who they think you are.
“We talked
about how, in the esoteric meaning, he posted what he posted because he
believes in the ‘Power of Positive Thinking’ and its manifestation, which is
magic.
“Donald
Trump, by his philosophy of life, basically practices magic; he’s a white magic
magician. That’s what he is.
“Now there’s
another layer to this picture, in that it was obviously an AI image created
from an account that has been depicting Donald Trump as a messianic figure more
than one time.
“Of course,
Donald Trump is on the ‘I’m big on myself’ side, but when he has people around
him who are enabling him (like his personally picked White House spiritual adviser Paula White-Cain), feeding this side of this
man, it’s not healthy for him spiritually, and so naturally he thinks of
himself as a messiah-type figure.
“But all of
this is groundwork for this. There is a strange coincidence with this image. I
looked at it and I thought, 'Man, there’s something up.' Everybody was talking about
how there was this Baphomet figure above his head (with the three spikes coming
out) in this AI portrait that Trump says he thinks was meant to show himself as a Red
Cross doctor.
“I looked at
this and I thought, ‘I have seen what he’s wearing before; I’ve seen that,’ and
I just couldn’t place it, and I had a listener send me an email and they
connected the dots for me.
“It’s just a
‘strange coincidence,’ but let me compare what Trump is wearing in this AI image
to a Tarot card called ‘The Magician.’ You look at that and you tell me that
that’s not weird. I mean, ‘Yee-haw, guys, yee-haw.’ We’re in the kooky
territory now.”
*****
Here is a post
from last year:
Isaiah
47: [10] For thou hast trusted in thy wickedness: thou hast said, None
seeth me. Thy wisdom and thy knowledge, it hath perverted thee; and thou hast
said in thine heart, I am, and none else beside me.
[11]
Therefore shall evil come upon thee; thou shalt not know from whence it riseth:
and mischief shall fall upon thee; thou shalt not be able to put it off: and
desolation shall come upon thee suddenly, which thou shalt not know.
[12] Stand now with thine enchantments, and with the multitude of thy
sorceries, wherein thou hast laboured from thy youth; if so be thou shalt be
able to profit, if so be thou mayest prevail.
You know
what an enchantment is--you have these code words to try to release power. You
have the chants and all that stuff people do. They're going to use these
sorceries and stuff, casting spells to try to gain an upper hand, explains
Richard Jordan.
[13]
Thou art wearied in the multitude of thy counsels. Let now the astrologers, the
stargazers, the monthly prognosticators, stand up, and save thee from these
things that shall come upon thee.
They have
the word of prophecy and are going to tell the future and they're going to use
what look like signs and wonders and so forth to do these things and it's going
to deceive the nations.
*****
Nahum is a
book of judgment and chapter 3 is sort of walking it out the door. This is the
final judgment of God against Nineveh, which is the stronghold of the
Antichrist and the book's looking to the time in the last days, especially at
the time of the Second Advent.
Verse 1: [1]
Woe to the bloody city! it is all full of lies and robbery; the prey departeth
not;
He's
describing a battle going on here. He's talking about the violence that makes
the city of Nineveh the capital of bloodshed.
In verses
2-3 He literally describes the carnage of the battlefield: [2] The noise
of a whip, and the noise of the rattling of the wheels, and of the pransing
horses, and of the jumping chariots.
[3]
The horseman lifteth up both the bright sword and the glittering spear: and
there is a multitude of slain, and a great number of carcases; and there is
none end of their corpses; they stumble upon their corpses:
This is a
description of a live, contemporary military engagement. It's not talking about
some cemetery; this is the battle going on right then and the city's just being
wiped out.
Here's
what's behind the military carnage: [4] Because of the multitude of the
whoredoms of the wellfavoured harlot, the mistress of witchcrafts, that selleth
nations through her whoredoms, and families through her witchcrafts.
That's a
description of the power, the spiritual activity that lies behind that
militaristic world dominion domination kind of conquest that Nineveh
represents. The Antichrist has sought to be the ruler of the world.
There are
two forces that propel that militaristic world dominion idea and these two
forces don't just compel the Antichrist; he's harnessing what's there in life
all along.
If you went
around today and tried to explain what it is that causes nations to rise
against nations and causes the militaristic dominion over nations, there's two
reasons . . .
In verse 1,
he's talking about just that lust for wealth: "You've got something I
want; I'm going to come and rob you and I'm willing to shed blood to get
it."
In 3:16,
talking again about Nineveh as it's being destroyed, [16] Thou hast
multiplied thy merchants above the stars of heaven: the cankerworm spoileth,
and flieth away.
That's like
that thing in Ezekiel 28 about Satan's merchandise and how he's out selling his
ideas.
They're
pillaging, robbing and it's that greed; that lust for wealth and gaining things
that other people have. That's why Jesus warned His apostles, "Take heed,
and beware of covetousness: for a man's life consisteth not in the abundance of
the things which he possesseth."
The second
thing is down in Nahum 3:4 and it's more sinister. You understand the greed
issue, the human nature kind of thing, but Satan uses that human nature to
accomplish his purposes
That verse
is not talking about a house of ill-repute; that's talking about that thing in
Revelation 17:
[5]
And upon her forehead was a name written, MYSTERY, BABYLON THE GREAT, THE
MOTHER OF HARLOTS AND ABOMINATIONS OF THE EARTH.
[6]
And I saw the woman drunken with the blood of the saints, and with the blood of
the martyrs of Jesus: and when I saw her, I wondered with great admiration.
It's
talking about that satanic-inspired religious dominion and you remember that
city in Revelation is the city that rules over the kings of the earth and it's
made the kings of the earth drunk with the wine of her fornication.
She's
literally intoxicated them and put a spirit within them that causes them to
fall in line with the Adversary's goal of making the Antichrist the head ruler
of the nations, and no matter what kind of bloodshed it takes to do it, they'll
do it.
In Nahum 2,
back in verse 11, the thing about those three lions there: [11] Where is
the dwelling of the lions, and the feedingplace of the young lions, where the
lion, even the old lion, walked, and the lion's whelp, and none made them
afraid?
I've tried
to say to you Egypt, Babylon and Assyria are associated together and the issue
about the Antichrist being an Assyrian, the terminology goes all the way back
to Genesis 11 and the idolatry with Nimrod. That's that spiritual power.
The
Egyptian, the Pharoah in Isaiah 14, Babylon is called Assyria. In Isaiah 52,
Pharoah is said to be the Assyrian running them. So, there's a spiritual power
behind the political manifestation.
You'll see
that city in Isaiah 47: [1] Come down, and sit in the dust, O virgin
daughter of Babylon, sit on the ground: there is no throne, O daughter of the
Chaldeans: for thou shalt no more be called tender and delicate.
[2]
Take the millstones, and grind meal: uncover thy locks, make bare the leg,
uncover the thigh, pass over the rivers.
[3] Thy nakedness shall be uncovered, yea, thy shame shall be seen: I
will take vengeance, and I will not meet thee as a man.
You have the
virgin daughter of Babylon, which would be Revelation 17. Here's the virgin. In
that religion when you worship the queen of heaven she's the virgin, the
Madonna. This city, in verse 5: [5] Sit thou silent, and get thee into
darkness, O daughter of the Chaldeans: for thou shalt no more be called, The
lady of kingdoms.
So, she's
'Our Lady,' she's the queen of heaven, she's the virgin. All of those terms
have to do with the religious system called Baal worship.
*****
Here is
a post from last June entitled “Trump’s Appeal Comes From Peale”:
I remember once near the beginning of my years in New York I sought out an authentic Norwegian restaurant in Manhattan (my father was 100 percent Norwegian; his parents came over from the Kristiansand area) and when I walked out of it after dining there by myself, not far from it (possibly even next door or across the street, as I remember) I was shocked to find I was outside the Marble Collegiate Church made famous by Norman Vincent Peale, who, and this was the real shocker for me, has a life-sized statue of himself, in preacher-mode, right off of the sidewalk on Fifth Avenue!!
When I was
in high school, living in the Sunday morning TV realm of Robert Schuller's
Crystal Cathedral out of Garden Grove, Calif., (especially when my dad decided
to my delight some Sundays at the last minute that we would not be attending
the main service at our First Baptist church in downtown Loudonville, OH), I was
totally aware of Norman Vincent Peale.
Peale was
Schuller's mentor who appeared on his nationally televised Hour of
Power service. Peale had best-selling books on how to be a happier,
fully confident, always upbeat--and above all,
"successful"--Christian.
Think about
this. Trump was following his parents in going to Marble Collegiate when he was
young. That's where HIS father made him go and he LOVED it--worshipped it, in
fact. There are quotes from him saying that no one wanted Peale's sermon to end
on those Sunday mornings he was in attendance.
I never
remember being told by anyone as a kid that Peale was a phony preacher. He was
admired and respected--just like a kind of Dale Carnegie, really!
I can now
see the great marketing job with Peale, a 33rd Degree Scottish Rite
Freemason!!! This is where Trump got his skills to be such a master trickster.
It's been engrained in his psyche starting with his childhood preacher!
From the
website Esoteric Freemasons: "The 33rd degree Mason Ritual has
its origins in 18th century France, when members of the Masonic Lodge developed
rituals as a way to bring new members into their ranks. These rituals were used
to symbolize various concepts, such as brotherhood, justice, and morality. Over
time, more elaborate rituals were developed and eventually the Scottish Rite
emerged as an independent organization with its own set of rituals.
"The
33rd degree Mason Ritual consists of four parts: initiation, instruction,
instruction in symbolism, and passing through the degrees. During initiation,
new members are instructed in the principles and values of
Freemasonry. They are then instructed in symbolism such as handshakes and
symbols that represent various concepts. Therefore, they pass through each
degree until they reach the 33rd degree."
*****
Here's an
excerpt from an online article posted by Politico magazine in
2016, entitled "How Norman Vincent Peale Taught Donald Trump to Worship
Himself":
Is this
guy for real? Or more to the point, could anyone really possess that much
self-confidence? There has been no shortage of explanations—a huge inferiority
complex, infantile narcissism, delusional thinking—for Trump’s undying
self-assurance. But as I discovered when writing a book about Donald, his
father, and his grandfather, if you want to understand what goes on underneath
the blond comb-over, you’d do well to look back to two crucial events in the
early 1950s.
Event No.
1 occurred in October 1952, when a book appeared called The Power Of
Positive Thinking. Written by Dr. Norman Vincent Peale and translated into 15
languages, it remained on the New York Times best-seller list for 186 weeks and
sold 5 million copies. Donald was only 6 years old at the time and didn’t read
the book until much later, but it quickly became important in the large Queens
household in which he grew up, and it would play a critical role in his future.
His parents, Fred and Mary, felt an immediate affinity for Peale’s teachings.
On Sundays, they drove into Manhattan to worship at Marble Collegiate Church,
where Peale was the head pastor. Donald and both his sisters were married
there, and funeral services for both Fred and Mary took place in the main
sanctuary.
“I still
remember [Peale’s] sermons,” Trump told the Iowa Family Leadership Summit in
July. “You could listen to him all day long. And when you left the church, you
were disappointed it was over. He was the greatest guy.” A month later, in the
same news conference at which Trump tossed out Univision anchor Jorge Ramos, he
again referred to Peale as his pastor and said he was “one of the greatest
speakers” he’d ever seen.
Known as
“God’s salesman,” Peale merged worldliness and godliness to produce an
easy-to-follow theology that preached self-confidence as a life philosophy.
Critics called him a con man, described his church as a cult, and said his
simple-minded approach shut off genuine thinking or insight. But Peale’s
outlook, promoted through his radio shows, newspaper columns and articles, and
through Guideposts, his monthly digest of inspirational messages, fit perfectly
into the Trump family culture of never hesitating to bend the rules, doing
whatever it took to win, and never, ever giving up.
“Believe
in yourself!” Peale’s book begins. “Have faith in your abilities!” He then
outlines 10 rules to overcome “inadequacy attitudes” and “build up confidence
in your powers.” Rule one: “formulate and staple indelibly on your mind a
mental picture of yourself as succeeding,” “hold this picture tenaciously,” and
always refer to it “no matter how badly things seem to be going at the moment.”
Subsequent
rules tell the reader to avoid “fear thoughts,” “never think of yourself as
failing,” summon up a positive thought whenever “a negative thought concerning
your personal powers comes to mind,” “depreciate every so-called obstacle,” and
“make a true estimate of your own ability, then raise it 10 per cent.”
Peale’s philosophy fell on willing and eager ears in the Trump family. Long before this self-esteem guru codified his canon, Donald’s grandfather Friedrich used Peale-like confidence and tenacity to make the first Trump fortune during the Klondike gold rush. A few decades later, Donald’s father, Fred, deployed proto-Peale thinking to become a multimillionaire real estate developer in Brooklyn and Queens. And Donald Trump himself has cited Peale’s advice many times in his own career.