Neoconservative pundits howled when Yale historian Paul Kennedy suggested in his 1987 study The Rise and Fall of the Great Powers that America and its global Empire, like all empires before it, was in a process of decline.
The disintegration of the Soviet
Union just a few years later in 1991 seemed to undermine Kennedy’s thesis, as
the United States expanded its influence into the U.S.S.R’s former territories
and moved on Moscow to bury the former communist economy.
However, following the financial
crash of 2008 and the chaos caused by Washington’s military adventurism in Iraq
and Afghanistan, the illusion of American inevitability quickly vanished.
Now, 30 years later,
the idea that any empire facing unprecedented debt, political gridlock and
military failure could somehow sustain itself purely on willpower and social
media can only be described as delusional.
Yet, despite rising opposition to the
costs and consequences at home and abroad, Washington’s demented imperialists remain committed to Unipower dominance and are desperate to
force the incoming Trump administration to obey its ghost.
Understanding the forces that drive
Washington’s quest for empire may appear on the surface to be limited to money
and power. But when it comes to the ultimate objectives of the so called Anglo/American
“deep state”, the foundations of today’s realities may be better explained by
looking into the deep past.
The term Anglo/American itself bears
within it a complex matrix of races, heterodox religious beliefs, families and
family grudges that date back before the Norman Conquest of 1066. The army of
Normans and mercenaries that gathered under William the Conqueror to invade
England was drawn from across Europe, but differed little from the population
of Celts, Anglo-Saxons, Danes and Normans that had already migrated there in
previous centuries. The battle of Hastings established the nation of Britain as
we know it today, but what remains unappreciated is the degree to which those
original Anglo/Norman warrior families continue to control decision-making and remain at the epicenter of financial and political
power nearly 1000 years later.
In its current expanded iteration
consisting of the United States, Canada, Britain, Australia, and New Zealand;
known as the “Five Eyes”,
the Anglo/American “deep state” came to gain political hegemony over the world
following the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991. However, although popularly
known as the “Anglo/Saxon” nations, a more accurate description of the genetic
legacy should read Anglo/Norman.
In 2005,
when a historian in Wexford, Ireland,
discovered that President George W. Bush was a descendant of the 12th
century Anglo/Norman Earl Richard de Clare, “Strongbow” it caused something of a commotion in the British press, not to mention our own personal shock.
I’d first heard the name Strongbow
at the age of ten, when my family-historian-aunt told me that our branch of the
Fitzgerald family had come to Ireland with him. During the 1990s, I had written
a novel about his influence on the family, and here he was again staring out
from the imperial White House of George W. Bush.
As Strongbow’s vassals and veterans
of the conquest of Wales, the Fitzgeralds had done their share of the dirty
work of empire building. After taking part in the Norman conquest of England in
1066, the family and their extended clans had become deeply entwined in Angevin
family politics as part of King William I’s invasion force of South Wales.
The marriage (arranged by Henry I)
of the patriarch of the Fitzgerald family, Gerald FitzWalter of Windsor to Princess Nest, daughter of Rhys Ap Tewdwr (Tudor) the
last king of the Britons, cemented the Fitzgeralds to an ancient British dynasty of kings and the Arthurian legends surrounding them. But our
discovery of an old book, entitled Strongbow’s Conquest of Ireland, forced us to realize that the standard historical accounts
we were accustomed to have never included the deeper inside forces at work that
make possible a true understanding of the past.
The first
Crusade to Jerusalem in 1099 came at a time of deep
social unrest in Europe. Muslims occupied Portugal, Spain, Sicily and Southern
Italy. Pagans warred with Christian Crusaders throughout Eastern Europe. Pope
Urban II’s call for a Crusade to the holy land began a movement that would last
until the failed Crusade of the Spanish Armada against Elizabeth I’s English
heretics in 1588. Unlike most dry, bowdlerized accounts of the origins of
British history, Strongbow’s Conquest offered a personal account by a family
prelate, named Gerald de Barry (Gerald of Wales).
Gerald was also the personal tutor
to the future Angevin King John and offered plenty of insight into dealing with
Henry II’s internecine warfare with and among his three sons. For us, the
family feuds surrounding the conquest of Ireland detailed by Gerald of Wales
personalized our understanding of an historical event and the beginnings of
British history. Now with the Bush connection to Strongbow came a chance to
take those family feuds and track them a thousand years into the future.
Ever since John Fitzgerald Kennedy,
tracing a presidential candidate’s lineage to Ireland is a common pastime. But
the Guardian’s description of Strongbow as “a desperate land-grabbing warlord
whose calamitous foreign adventure led to the suffering of generations” was a
sadly deficient twist on what had really happened.
Strongbow was an Anglo-Norman Earl
with a long Viking lineage from one of the most powerful Norman/French families
in 12th century England. His grandfather Gilbert and great uncle
Roger were closely affiliated with William the conqueror’s
son, King William Rufus, and were among
the few intimates present at his mysterious murder by Walter Tyrell in the New
Forest in 1100. The de Clare brothers were never implicated in Rufus’s death,
but along with a select handful of Norman barons, they gained great wealth and
prominence from backing the rise of his successor, Henry I.
Evidence of heretical cult practices
swirls around the 11th century court of William Rufus and his ruling
nobles. William Rufus regarded himself as divine, was an avowed pagan, openly
homosexual and fiercely anti-Christian. He surrounded himself with long-haired,
clean shaven “effeminati”, compared himself to Alexander the Great, and acted
as a patron to the Troubadours. The conquest of Wales brought him into contact
with a Prince of Dyfed named Bledri, author of the original Grail romances, who
remained friendly to William Rufus throughout the wars against the Welsh.
Norman mercenaries who had fought Muslims in southern Italy were no strangers
to dualist life-denying heresies, and neither were the courts of France from where the new
English royalty drew its political base.
The threat to the Roman Church by
these heresies was not a simple challenge. As described by Reverend V.A.
Demant, Canon of London’s St. Paul’s Cathedral in a preface to a 1947 book on
the subject titled The Arrow and the Sword, “It was in fact a rival religion, and almost succeeded in
being a counter-Church with its own rival and ritual system.”
By 1170 the struggle for power
within that system extended to Strongbow’s challenge to the authority of King
Henry II’s House of Anjou and his threat to set himself up as a rival Norman
King of Ireland. Upon his death in 1176, the challenge extended to the
Fitzgerald antecedents of John Fitzgerald Kennedy.
At the
behest of Strongbow, a number of Fitzgerald vassals married directly into the de Clare family line shortly after coming to Ireland and to the horror of the
Angevin royal court, proceeded to establish themselves as a competing dynasty.
With political and military
independence and with religious connections to Rome, the Fitzgerald’s ambitions
were viewed from London as dangerous from the very beginning, and as the
medieval Catholic Church evolved, that danger would grow in bitter hatred.
Strongbow had been a Crusader,
served in the Holy Land and was known to be a generous supporter of both the Knights Hospitaller and the infamous Knights
Templar, the warrior monks for whom the Cistercian Abbot Bernard of Clairvaux
penned De Laude Novae Militiae (In Praise of the new Knighthood) thereby redefining
the very nature of murder when done in the name of Christ.
The early Catholic Church was riven
with multiple dualist heresies left over from the conversion of the Roman
Empire from pagan to Christian. Much has been romanticized in the past decades
about the Knights Templar and their supposed dedication to the divine feminine
as represented by the Holy Grail. Credited with magical powers of prophecy and
divination, popular mythology such as Dan Brown’s Da Vinci Code has them
guarding the secrets of the Messianic Grail lineage, i.e. the royal descendants
of the House of David from the marriage of Jesus Christ and Mary Magdalene.
Other supposed Templar secrets link
them to life-denying Gnostic cults like the Paulicians, Manicheans and Cathars.
But less has been said about the Templar’s central role as bankers to Europe’s
royalty and their practice of financing wars between Europe’s rival kings and
princes.
The
Templar Knighthood walked a fine line between two worlds in their role as bankers and “warrior monks”, and often
failed to maintain a balance between them.
The Knights Templar’s circular
“Temple” in the very center of the city of London still echoes their primary military
and financial role as a prototype multinational bank opening trade routes
between Europe and the Middle East.
But their internecine political
rivalries with the other Christian knighthoods, the Knights Hospitaller and the
Teutonic Knights and their long string of military defeats causing them to lose
Jerusalem, precipitated their downfall.
On Friday October 13, 1307 the
French King Philip IV, who was deeply indebted to the Templars, ordered them
arrested and charged with heretical practices, and on November 22 of that year
under pressure from Philip, Pope Clement V issued the papal bull Pastoralis Praeeminentiae instructing all the monarchs of Europe to seize their
assets.
Instead of capping a feud between
the rival knighthoods and their benefactors, the dissolution of the Templars
and the subsequent transfer of their vast assets to the Hospitallers by Pope
Clement in 1312 would create an anti-Catholic firestorm.
The repercussions from November 22,
1307, would set the stage for the Protestant Reformation, the rise of Britain’s
empire and the destruction of the competing dynasties, especially the
Fitzgeralds.
Join us for the finale of this saga
as we explain how this hatred for Catholic Rome would establish a life and
death struggle within the European deep state. This conflict would in turn lead
to the rise of a crypto-Cathar counter church, whose apocalyptic world-ending
goals would finally come to fruition in the Anglo/Norman America of the present
day.
Copyright - 2022 Fitzgerald &
Gould All rights reserved
Paul Fitzgerald and Elizabeth Gould are authors of Invisible History: Afghanistan’s Untold Story, published by City Lights (2009), Crossing Zero The AfPak War at the Turning Point of American Empire, published by City Lights (2011).
Their novel The Voice , was published in 2001. Their memoir, The Valediction Three Nights of Desmond was
published by TrineDay (2021) and The Valediction Resurrection was published by TrineDay (2022). For more information
visit invisiblehistory , grailwerk and valediction.net
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