01.25.18 An FBI Secret Society?

in #politics7 years ago

Artboard 2-80.jpgFox News reported on Monday that FBI's Strzok and Page spoke of 'secret society' after Trump election, lawmakers say

Two top FBI officials under fire for exchanging anti-Trump text messages during the 2016 election spoke of a “secret society” the day after President Trump's victory, according to two lawmakers with knowledge of the messages.

Peter Strzok -- a top counterintelligence official involved in both the Hillary Clinton email probe and FBI Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s Russia probe -- exchanged more than 50,000 messages with senior FBI lawyer Lisa Page, with whom he was romantically involved.

House Oversight and Government Reform Committee Chairman Trey Gowdy, R-S.C., and Rep. John Ratcliffe, R-Texas, said Monday that among the messages the pair exchanged are references to a “secret society” within the Department of Justice and the FBI.

CNN went as far as they could to dismiss the notion that there could be a secret society in the FBI.

There's no question that how and why the FBI lost thousands of texts over a 5-month period deserves more scrutiny. But to assume that the lost texts, the words "secret society" and one person telling Johnson that the FBI has off-site, secret meetings are a) deeply connected and/or b) indicative of a massive anti-Trump scheme within the upper ranks of the FBI remains something of a leap. To put it mildly.

I am not at all surprised that there could be a secret society within the FBI. Almost certainly, there are many secret society members already in the FBI, as with most if not all law enforcement agencies. It's apparent. Look at the symbolism on their badges and their hats. Can't get more occult than that. Order followers.

As Q says, their symbols will be their downfall.

Anyway, forming a secret society within an agency would be very much in line with how the most nefarious secret societies work. After the Inquisition, the Knights of Templar disappeared and spawned Freemasonry. The Illuminati was believed to be disbanded less than a decade after its formation in 1776. But it appears that they simply infiltrated other Freemasonry lodges and formed a secret society within them. Most freemasons would have no idea except those in the upper echelon, and all would be sworn to secrecy upon an oath of death.

Thus it seems completely within the character of a secret society to form secret society within other organizations for nefarious purposes.