Nolte: Flashback —
Admitted Occultist Sally Quinn Ridiculed Sarah Palin’s Christian Faith
by John Nolte13 Sep 2017
Back in 2009,
when journalist/socialite Sally Quinn
used the pages of the leftwing Washington
Post to blast former-Governor
Sarah Palin’s Christian faith, all we knew about Quinn was that she was a
committed atheist (this is someone the Washington Post thought should
run its religious section).
What we did not know about Quinn, because she did not
want us to know, is that while The Queen of Pro-Science could not bring herself
to believe in God, what she did believe in was the occult, the dark arts,
voodoo, and the power of the hex. Quinn believes so strongly in her
own witch-like powers, she is certain that she is responsible for the deaths of
three people, three innocent people who died after Quinn hit them with a hex.
Their crime?
Daring to offend the Queen of Pro-Science.
Now that we know that Quinn is a practitioner of the dark
arts, now that we know who this wicked person (she believes she has the power
to murder and has used it) truly is, this important context can better inform
what she has written in the past, most especially her venomous attacks on those
she sees as apostates: Christian women who want no part of the leftwing
plantation.
And as we all know, for the last eight years, the
number-one target in this regard has been Governor Palin.
Displaying a painfully stupid, mind-bogglingly obtuse,
and achingly ignorant insight into all-things Christianity, Quinn attacked
Palin for — I swear I am not making this up — her youthful
decision to “put my life in my creator’s hands and trust Him as I
sought my life’s path.”
Quinn, whose inability to grasp even a rudimentary
understanding of Christianity, who comprehends the basics of the faith with the
brainpower of a tree stump on meth, just cannot quite reconcile Palin’s
decision with a number of beats in the 2008 vice presidential candidate’s life,
or the fact that Palin dared write a memoir.
The Wicked Witch of D.C. asks out
loud:
Did God plan for her to become Governor of Alaska. If so,
did God plan for her to step down. Did God plan for her to run for Vice
President? If so why did she and McCain lose?
Did God plan for her to have a child with Down’s Syndrome?
If so why did she consider an abortion? Did God plan for her to have a huge
wardrobe? Then why did she apologize for it? …
You would think that God would ask of her to live her
life as an example to others of a compassionate loving, caring person. One of
the most powerful examples of God’s love in the Bible is that of forgiveness.
Turning the other cheek. But Palin’s book is a screed against everyone who ever
done her wrong.
At the time, this was one of the stupidest things I had
ever read; the entire piece reads like an Onion satire ridiculing the
Sally Quinns of our world, the clueless elites who know all the correct things to say
and believe but who have no understanding whatsoever of how the real world
works, who real people are; no commons sense, no native intelligence, no
ability to function as anything resembling a useful human being outside of an
event involving cocktails, pretension and backbiting.
This is how depraved our Ruling Class is…
Rather than pick up Christianity for Dummies —
which probably on page one explains the basics: the concept of free will, the
notion of carving out a spiritual life in God’s natural world; the idea that
being a Christian does not mean being a doormat (can someone please tell the Washington
Post religion writer about Jesus turning over those money-changer tables);
that “turn the other cheek” is an act of defiance (duh); that uncomfortable
truths must be spoken out loud, and that God does not reward Christians with
awesome lives. In fact, the moment you turn your life over to Him your problems
have just begun — Quinn actually published her raging ignorance for all the
world to see.
But you see, in her shallow world, a narrow and
close-minded place populated with vacuous provincials, cattiness will always
trump knowledge and depth and charity.
Regardless, what is now important to keep in mind is that
Quinn did not write that as a committed non-believer. She lied. She covered up
the fact that her demonic attack on Palin was written by a practicing occultist
who believes she successfully used her dark powers to murder three people
guilty of nothing more than not kissing one of her diamond rings.
Quinn’s ridicule was not coming from a place only of
ignorance, and it certainly was not coming from a place of inquiry. Rather, it
was coming from a dark and unholy place, from an occult priestess using
deception to destroy an apostate.
This cannot be stressed enough…
Between the Spirit Cooking, Quinn’s occultism, and the
dismissive reaction to both from our Thought Leaders, we now know for a fact
that many in our Ruling Class are gripped by an unholy desire to summon evil as a means
to power — power over you and I — to control and organize our lives through
central government.
This is not a game or a joke. Whether you believe in
Satanism, the occult, hexes, voodoo or not, nothing changes the fact that those
willing to embrace such a thing are capable of anything, any evil, any
betrayal, any deception as a means to get what they want.
As I wrote yesterday,
Quinn coming out as an occultist explains so, so much.
P.S. Did I mention that this hideous woman believes she
has the power to murder people and has used that power? To me, that just
seems like an important insight into her character and the character of all
those in her social circle, which is pretty much anyone who is anyone.
Let’s connect the dot:
Sally Quinn
Sally
Quinn is a columnist for the Washington
Post, and was married to Benjamin C.
Bradlee.
Note: Benjamin C.
Bradlee was married to Sally Quinn,
and an executive editor for the Washington
Post.
E.J.
Dionne is a columnist for the Washington
Post, and a senior fellow for the Brookings
Institution (think tank).
Foundation
to Promote Open Society was a funder for the Brookings Institution (think
tank), the Carnegie Endowment for
International Peace (think tank),
George Soros
was the chairman for the Foundation to Promote Open Society, is the
founder & chairman for the Open
Society Foundations, and a friend of Michael
Douglas.
Open
Society Foundations was a funder for the Carnegie
Endowment for International Peace (think tank).
Robert Kagan is a senior
fellow for the Brookings Institution
(think tank), a contributing columnist for the Washington Post, was a transatlantic fellow for the German Marshall Fund of the United States
(think tank), and a senior associate for the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace (think tank).
David Ignatius
is a columnist for
the Washington Post, and was a
trustee at the German Marshall Fund of
the United States (think tank).
William M.
Drozdiak was a foreign correspondent for the Washington Post, and an executive director, Transatlantic Center
for the German Marshall Fund of the
United States (think tank).
John F. Harris
was a national political editor for the Washington
Post, and is a trustee at the German
Marshall Fund of the United States (think tank).
Jessica Tuchman Mathews was an honorary
trustee at the Brookings Institution (think tank), the president of the Carnegie
Endowment for International Peace (think tank), a trustee at the Rockefeller Foundation, is a director
at the Nuclear Threat Initiative (think
tank), a director at the American Friends of Bilderberg (think
tank), and a 2008 Bilderberg conference participant (think tank).
Ed Griffin’s interview with
Norman Dodd in 1982
(The investigation into the Carnegie
Endowment for International Peace uncovered the plans
for population control by involving the United States in war. He shows us that
the Carnegie Endowment, the Ford Foundation, the Guggenheim Foundation, and the
Rockefeller Foundation joined together to alter
American history and take over the whole education system in America, so
the children can be indoctrinated into accepting a World Government.)
ED GRIFFIN: This is the story
that emerged from the minutes of the Carnegie Endowment?
NORMAN DODD: That's right. It
was official to that extent.
ED GRIFFIN: Katherine Casey
brought all of these back in the form of dictated notes from a verbatimreading
of the minutes?
NORMAN DODD: On dictaphone
belts.
ED GRIFFIN: Are those in
existence today?
NORMAN DODD: I don't know. If
they are, they're somewhere in the Archives under the control of the Congress,
House of Representatives.
ED GRIFFIN: How many people
actually heard those, or were they typed up, a transcript made of them?
NORMAN DODD: No.
ED GRIFFIN: How many people
actually heard those recordings?
NORMAN DODD: Oh, three maybe.
Myself, my top assistant, and Katherine. I might tell you, this experience, as
far as its impact on Katherine Casey was concerned, was she never was able to
return to her law practice. If it hadn't been for Carol Reece's ability to tuck
her away into a job in the Federal Trade Commission, I don't know what would
have happened to Katherine. Ultimately, she lost her mind as a result of it. It
was a terrible shock. It's a very rough experience to encounter proof of these
kinds.
Carnegie
Endowment for International Peace (think
tank) was a funder for the German
Marshall Fund of the United States (think tank), and the Nuclear Threat Initiative (think tank).
Gregory B. Craig
is a trustee at the German Marshall Fund of the United States
(think tank), was a trustee at the Carnegie
Endowment for International Peace (think tank), and a lawyer for the Washington Post.
Washington
Post Co. was the owner of the Washington
Post.
Warren E. Buffett
was a director at the Washington Post Co.,
and is an adviser for the Nuclear Threat
Initiative (think tank).
Michael Douglas is
a director at the Nuclear Threat
Initiative (think tank), and a friend of George Soros.
Carnegie
Endowment for International Peace (think
tank) was a funder for the Nuclear
Threat Initiative (think tank), and the German Marshall Fund of the United States (think tank).
George Soros
was the chairman for the Foundation to Promote Open Society, is a friend
of Michael Douglas, and the founder
& chairman for the Open Society
Foundations.
Open
Society Foundations was a funder for the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace (think tank).
Steve
Coll is a global board member for the Open
Society Foundations, and was a managing editor for the Washington Post.
Robert Kagan is a contributing
columnist for the Washington Post, a
senior fellow for the Brookings
Institution (think tank), was a transatlantic fellow for the German Marshall Fund of the United States
(think tank), and a senior associate for the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace (think tank).
David Ignatius
is a columnist for the Washington Post,
and was a trustee at the German Marshall
Fund of the United States (think tank).
William M.
Drozdiak was a foreign correspondent for the Washington Post, and an executive director, Transatlantic Center
for the German Marshall Fund of the
United States (think tank).
John F. Harris
was a national political editor for the Washington
Post, and is a trustee at the German
Marshall Fund of the United States (think tank).
Carnegie
Endowment for International Peace (think
tank) was a funder for the German
Marshall Fund of the United States (think tank), and the Nuclear Threat Initiative (think tank).
Gregory B. Craig
is a trustee at the German Marshall Fund
of the United States (think tank), was a trustee at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace
(think tank), and a lawyer for the Washington
Post.
Washington
Post Co. was the owner of the Washington
Post.
Warren E. Buffett
was a director at the Washington Post Co.,
and is an adviser for the Nuclear Threat
Initiative (think tank).
Michael Douglas is
a director at the Nuclear Threat
Initiative (think tank), and a friend of George Soro’s.
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