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Behold a Pale Horse

Behold a Pale Horse

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One adherent, Jake Angeli, has intentionally made a spectacle of himself by appearing at Arizona protests wearing a fur hat topped with horns and carrying a weathered sign that reads, “Q sent me.” Angeli said he has researched the secretive groups he believes control the world — Illuminati, Trilateral Commission and Bilderberg group, among others — and felt validated by finding Cooper mentioned them in his book. Hamblin called Eagar police. But, Hamblin said, it seemed like the department was reluctant to take action. Hamblin then told a high school friend who worked for the Apache County Sheriff’s Office about the confrontation. That agency, he said, decided to investigate. Cooper then pointed a gun at Hamblin’s head and told him he should find out who he was. And again, to stay away from the hill. The Act, which never became law, did spell out limitations to habeas corpus that went beyond those in the US Constitution, primarily by expanding the war clause to include the so-called War on Drugs and by details set forth by segregationist Strom Thurmond in Section 152, the "Strom Thurmond Habeas Corpus Reform Initiative". [22] Even if the bill had become law (not very likely since Bill Clinton was president at the time and the bill was basically a Republican wish list), it would have faced some serious constitutional challenges as has been the case for most other non-wartime abridgements of habeas corpus. [23] Chapter 7: Anti-Drug Abuse Act of 1988, H.R. 5210, P. L. 100-690 [ edit ]

Jacobson, in his book, quotes Ol’ Dirty Bastard explaining why “Behold a Pale Horse” was important to him. Everybody gets screwed, the rapper said, but Cooper tells you who is doing the screwing. That was, ODB said, “valuable information.” Contrary to Cooper's feeble attempt at the history of the book, the text of the book that now circulates was originally plagiaristically cobbled together from three sources: [41] :97 [52] :47,114 Some speculate that when the imagery of the Six Seals is compared to other eschatological descriptions throughout the Bible, the themes of the horsemen draw remarkable similarity to the events of the Olivet Discourse. The signs of the approaching end of the world are likened to birth pains, indicating that they would occur more frequently and with greater intensity the nearer the event of Christ's return. With this perspective the horsemen represent the rise of false religions, false prophets, and false messiahs; the increase of wars and rumours of wars; the escalation of natural disasters and famines; and the growth of persecution, martyrdom, betrayal, and loss of faith. Cooper claims that US tobacco crops were fertilized with " radioactive tailings from uranium mines" and thus caused an increase in cancer [4] :173 by misinterpreting both cancer statistics and radiation (which is basically everywhere in small amounts or greater). Tobacco does indeed contain radioactive elements, and it is true that phosphogypsum, a waste product from uranium mining, is processed into a fertilizer, [36] There are many carcinogens in burned tobacco, and radiation is not particularly significant compared to all of the carcinogens in tobacco. [37] [38] By 1984, Cooper was living in Fullerton, California, working at a small private technical college and was again ready to share what he knew.Baxter, Irvin. "The Apocalypse". Endtime Ministries. Archived from the original on 2023-01-13 . Retrieved 2006-12-05. Though, Cooper told readers to mentally edit out the anti-Semitism, saying it was written that way to “deceive people.” He suggested the reader replace “Jews” with “Illuminati” and “goyim” — the term for non-Jews — with “cattle.” Dr. Scott Hamblin, a physician in Eagar, had a violent confrontation with Milton William Cooper in 2001.

That wasn’t going to stop him, Cooper told listeners. He’d stay behind his microphone up in his hilltop studio. He’d keep sending out The Hour of the Time , speaking truth to the ultimate power, if it was the last thing he did. These conspiracy theories we’re talking about right now are ever present,” he said. “It’s been part of human civilization for a long time.” The quote is attributed to Pope John XXII in 1935, but John XXII lived from 1244-1334. Pope John XXIII lived from 1881-1963, but was only pope from 1958 onward. The English-language quote apparently derives from a collection of prophecies by John XXII, and was allegedly given during a secret meeting with ufologist George Adamski in 1963. [note 2] It is highly unlikely that Adamski ever met with the pope, [46] or that the pope would be sympathetic to ufology, which is rather heterodox to Catholicism. EAGAR, Ariz. — When authorities killed William Cooper in a burst of gunfire outside his hilltop home in eastern Arizona, he was an author and radio host who had attracted a rabid following among UFO buffs, prisoners and the militia movement. For them, his book, “Behold a Pale Horse,” and nightly shortwave radio show lifted the veil on how the world actually works.An anonymized letter dated June 13, 1987 regarding the author's UFO/Extraterrestrial experiences, including two blurry photos. [4] :397-403

But some doofus jerk‐off reporter with his little camera crew waltzes right into his secret hideout and interviews him!” Cooper and Lear's collaboration lasted for a few years, after which Cooper accused Lear of being a CIA plant. [12] Behold a Pale Horse Cooper repeats the idiotic idea that "Patriots must not be at home on any national holiday…" [4] :178 Chapter 10: Lessons from Lithuania [ edit ] Around the time he published his own book, Cooper became convinced his UFO theories were wrong. He told his radio listeners he had been duped when he was in the Navy. The documents he had seen were fake, he said, designed to further the myth of aliens and keep the population afraid.

FBI records show that agents worried the memorial service would attract militia members from around the country. But that didn’t materialize. Before the Reformation and the woodcut by Albrecht Dürer, the usual and more influential commentaries of the Book of Revelation thought there was only one horseman riding successively these four horses, who was the Christ himself. So did some medieval illuminations, and after that some modern commentators: Oecumenius, a Greek exegete writing in the sixth-century, Berengaudus a French Benedictine monk of Ferrières Abbey at the same period, Luis del Alcázar a Spanish Jesuit in 1612, Benito Arias Montano, a Spanish Orientalist, in 1622, Jacques de Bordes, a French capuchin in 1639, Emanuel Swedenborg a Swedish theologian in 1766. [72] Prophetic interpretation [ edit ]

The Sheriff’s Office issued a warrant for Cooper’s arrest on suspicion of aggravated assault — then started planning how best to serve the warrant on a man they assumed was loaded for bear. No one else was home. Cooper told Jacobs that he had moved his wife and children to a place where no one could harm them. Jacobs said something seemed off. The signs are increasing. The lights in the sky will appear red, blue, green, rapidly. Someone is coming from very far and wants to meet the people of the Earth. Meetings have already taken place. But those who have really seen have been silent. Revelation 6:8 Interlinear: and I saw, and lo, a pale horse, and he who is sitting upon him -- his name is Death, and Hades doth follow with him, and there was given to them authority to kill, (over the fourth part of the land,) with sword, and with hunger, and with death, and by the beasts of the land". biblehub.com. Archived from the original on 2023-01-13 . Retrieved 2022-08-10.In 1866, [14] when C.F. Zimpel defended the hypothesis that the first horseman was the Antichrist (and more precisely, according to him, Napoleon Bonaparte). [15] The Antichrist interpretation later found champions in the United States, such as R. F. Franklin in 1898 [16] and W. C. Stevens in 1928. [17] It remains popular in evangelical circles today, [18] for example with Pastor Billy Graham, for whom the horseman represented the Antichrist or false prophets in general. [19] As Roman Empire prosperity [ edit ] Four horsemen, by Julius Schnorr von Carolsfeld, 1860 The subtitle for this chapter is "Treason Committed by the Joint Chiefs: Phone Conversation with Randall Terpstra". Cooper presents the transcript of a longwinded phone conversation with Terpstra: Who was Terpstra and so what?



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