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Religious Manipulation Tricked Muslims into Circumcision 95% of Muslim and 92% of Israeli Men Cut- Muslim Brotherhood PUSHED Circumcision.  Problem is, Muslim Brotherhood is not who everyone thinks they are.

Religious Manipulation Tricked Muslims into Circumcision 95% of Muslim and 92% of Israeli Men Cut- Muslim Brotherhood PUSHED Circumcision. Problem is, Muslim Brotherhood is not who everyone thinks they are.

Psychopath In Your Life with Dianne Emerson · Dianne Emerson

August 2, 20251h 59m

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"The gypsies are thieves and witches, feared for their knives and curses... The people say they dance for your money and stab you while you sleep." -Victor Hugo – The Hunchback of Notre-Dame (1831)

Clip Played: Sunnah Actions for a Newborn baby, is it Sunnah to Circumcise on the 7th day? assimalhakeem -JAL (youtube.com)

Music: Bill Withers - Lean on Me (Official Audio) (youtube.com)

Boys & men are being raped, as often or MORE than girls & women, from boys in Pakistan to men raped by other men. Rape in USA Military, Prisons, Schools and NO Shelters for victims of MALE RAPE, why not? WHY don't we know much about it? (psychopathinyourlife.com)

USA created Arab Spring setting off murder and chaos– Ghaddafi Lies and Libya *USA = ISIS (psychopathinyourlife.com)

Intel Drop: Muslim Brotherhood and Masonic plot to Conquer Islamic World | Greek News On Demand / ΕΛΛΗΝΙΚΑ ΝΕΑ ΤΩΡΑ

The Muslim Brotherhood – The Globalists' Secret Weapon (bibliotecapleyades.net)

Roots of "Islamic" Terrorism | Office of Justice Programs (ojp.gov)

Islamic terrorism - Wikipedia

'Agents of Destruction': How CIA Helped Create Islamist Frankenstein - 19.03.2016, Sputnik International (sputnikglobe.com)

Barack Obama, ISIS and the Muslim Brotherhood — Secret History — Sott.net

The US's standard operating procedure: How the CIA created 'Islamist terrorism' — Puppet Masters — Sott.net

America enabled radical Islam: How the CIA, George W. Bush and many others helped create ISIS - Salon.com

The CIA and The Muslim Brotherhood: How the CIA Set The Stage for September 11 (Martin A. Lee – Razor Magazine 2004) | ce399 | research archive: (anti)fascism (wordpress.com)

The CIA and ISI Axis of Synthetic Terror – The Millennium Report

USA, CIA Created Sunni Islamic Terrorism | ThereAreNoSunglasses (wordpress.com)

Phallic Festivities Around the World - Men's Health Clinic CA (menshealthclinic.com)

Phallic architecture - Wikipedia

9 phallic celebrations from around the world — Wienerology

The Obelisk: History, Origin, Purpose, Definition & Facts (egypttoursportal.com)

Obelisk - Wikipedia

Egyptians Act 1530 - Wikipedia

The History of the Muslim Brotherhood (org.s3.amazonaws.com)

Muslim Brotherhood - Wikipedia

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Introduction

This report examines claims and narratives that suggest a deep-rooted ideological and structural connection between the Muslim Brotherhood and Freemasonry, placing both in a larger historical and geopolitical context that includes Zionist aspirations, colonial manipulation, and secret societies like the Knights Templar.

Freemasonry: Origins and Structure

  • Freemasonry is a secretive fraternal organization often traced to:
  • Hiram Abiff, the biblical architect of Solomon's Temple.
  • The Knights Templar, a Catholic military order active during the Crusades.
  • Anderson's Constitutions (1723), written by James Anderson, formalized Masonic doctrine rooted in Old Testament values and Jewish symbolism.
  • Freemasonry promotes:
  • Universal brotherhood
  • Enlightenment values
  • Global unification of beliefs under symbolic structures
  • Critics argue its goals include the dissolution of religious distinctiveness to enable global control—allegedly consistent with themes in the Protocols of the Elders of Zion.

Freemasonry's Goals and Religious Manipulation

  • The organization has been accused of operating through ambiguity, symbolism, and hidden agendas:
  • Undermining national and religious identities
  • Promoting global governance aligned with Zionist and Talmudic principles
  • Exploiting spiritual language for political and financial goals

The Muslim Brotherhood: Founding and Ideological Roots

  • Founded in 1928 in Egypt by Hassan al-Banna
  • Claimed purpose: Islamic revival and resistance to secularism and Western imperialism
  • However, some researchers argue:
  • The Brotherhood is not purely Islamic, but a derivative of Freemasonic organization and ideology, created with help from colonial and Zionist intelligence networks

Jamal al-Din al-Afghani: The Link Between Freemasonry and the Muslim Brotherhood

  • Afghan thinker Jamal al-Din al-Afghani (Iranian Shiite by background) is cited as a key bridge:
  • President of a Masonic lodge in Egypt
  • Alleged British intelligence collaborator
  • Roamed freely under colonial empires, traveling through India, Russia, Europe, and the Ottoman Empire
  • His student, Hassan al-Banna, adopted much of his organizational strategy, allegedly forming the Brotherhood using Freemasonic principles of brotherhood, secrecy, and hierarchy

Structural and Ideological Parallels

  • Egyptian lawyer Tharwat al-Kharbawi, a former Brotherhood member, has written extensively on the organizational similarity between Freemasonry and the Muslim Brotherhood:
  • Secret initiation ranks
  • Absolute loyalty among "brothers"
  • Rejection of national allegiance in favor of a universalist ideology
  • Brotherhood aims align with Freemasonic globalist vision: the erosion of state borders and religious distinctions under one unified ideological order

Brotherhood Members and Alleged Masonic Ties

  • Hassan al-Hudaibi, Brotherhood leader after al-Banna, accused of Masonic ties by critics such as Sheikh Mohammed al-Ghazali
  • Sayyid Qutb, the Brotherhood's most influential theorist:
  • His 1943 essay allegedly titled Why I Became a Mason suggests ideological flirtation
  • His later extremism laid the foundation for Al-Qaeda and ISIS ideologies, which mirror radical interpretations of "purification" in both Freemasonry and takfiri thought

Arab Revolutions and Freemasonic Strategy

  • The 2011 Arab Spring is seen by critics as:
  • Engineered chaos using sectarianism and popular unrest
  • Promoted by Qatar and Iran, aligning with Israeli geopolitical interests
  • A continuation of the "divide and conquer" strategy linked to Freemasonic and Zionist agendas
  • Designed to fragment the Middle East into weak, manageable states

Historical Origins: The Knights Templar and the Temple of Solomon

  • The Knights Templar, founded in 1118 AD in Jerusalem, originally claimed to protect Christian pilgrims
  • However:
  • They amassed immense wealth, engaged in usury, and were accused of heresy
  • After their suppression in 1307–1314 (notably under King Philip of France), survivors allegedly regrouped under Masonic guilds
  • By infiltrating operative stonemason guilds in Britain, the Templars are believed to have morphed into speculative Freemasonry
  • Their obsession with Solomon's Temple carried forward the mystical, Kabbalistic, and esoteric traditions still embedded in modern Masonic rituals

Modern Continuity and Influence

  • Freemasonry today is considered by some scholars to be:
  • An extension of the Templar cult, repackaged for enlightenment-era secrecy
  • Still deeply tied to Zionist political aspirations and globalist frameworks
  • A network through which ideologies like the Muslim Brotherhood are promoted under religious or revolutionary banners

Conclusion

The narrative suggests the Muslim Brotherhood is not simply an Islamic movement, but rather a Freemasonic-Zionist creation designed to:

  • Fragment Islamic unity from within
  • Co-opt religious language for geopolitical manipulation
  • Advance a long-term project of global control aligned with Freemasonic and Zionist ideologies

The Brotherhood's hierarchical structure, slogans of universal brotherhood, disregard for national borders, and susceptibility to foreign influence echo Freemasonic principles. Its legacy—through figures like Qutb—continues to influence radical movements today.

Report: The Roots of Islamic Terrorism

Overview

This report explores the origins and growth of Islamic terrorism, with emphasis on the ideological, political, and strategic factors that influenced the formation and global spread of militant Islam. It argues that the emergence of radical Islamist movements, especially the Muslim Brotherhood, was not an organic phenomenon but a strategically manipulated development involving British imperialism, Freemasonry, and globalist interests.

Decline of Religion and the Islamic Exception

While the West and East have seen religious decline, the Middle East has experienced a revival of Islamic identity. This revival is not coincidental but reflects deliberate manipulation by global elites to use militant Islam as a political tool.

Origins of the Muslim Brotherhood

Founded in 1928 by Hasan al-Banna in Egypt, the Muslim Brotherhood (MB) emerged as the most influential Sunni revivalist organization of the 20th century. Banna's formative years were shaped by Sufi practices and connections with reformist Islamic figures linked to Freemasonry, such as Jamal al-Din al-Afghani and Mohammed Abduh.

British Intelligence and Freemasonry Links

  • Allegations persist that the MB was created or influenced by British intelligence and Masonic networks.
  • Egypt under British rule was home to many Masonic lodges, which included aristocrats and Islamic reformers.
  • Abduh, an Islamic scholar and Grand Mufti of Egypt, was also the Masonic Grand Master of Egypt.
  • These networks advanced economic and political agendas, including legitimizing banking practices like usury under Islam.

MB's Ideological Network

  • MB founder Banna was influenced by Mohammed Rida, a Masonic ally and British sympathizer.
  • MB's structure mirrored Freemasonry: secret cells, hierarchical leadership, and brotherhood loyalty.
  • Despite early cooperation with British rulers, MB turned radical and anti-colonial in the 1930s and 1940s.

Suppression and Resurrection

  • After accusations of political violence, including the assassination of Egyptian officials, the MB was banned and driven underground in 1948.
  • Banna was assassinated in 1949. Successive MB leaders operated under state repression.
  • By the 1950s, MB clashed with Egyptian nationalists under Nasser and sought support from Western intelligence services.

The Ideological Architects

Sayed Qutb

  • Chief MB ideologue
  • Advocated for Islamic revolution against secular Arab states
  • Authored "Milestones" promoting violent jihad
  • Executed in 1966

Mustafa al-Sibai (Syria)

  • Founded MB's Syrian branch
  • Advocated resistance to Western economic colonialism

Abul Ala Maududi (Pakistan)

  • Founder of Jamaat-e Islami
  • Developed concept of Islamic democracy based on divine sovereignty
  • Allied ideologically with MB

Ali Shariati (Iran)

  • Marxist-Islamist philosopher
  • Linked to British intelligence and Freemasonry
  • Inspired Iranian revolution and Ayatollah Khomeini

Western Elites and Population Control

  • Influential figures and institutions (e.g., Bertrand Russell, Julian Huxley, Kissinger, Club of Rome) saw population growth and industrialization as threats.
  • Strategies included environmental alarmism, population control policies, and fostering internal conflict in developing nations.

The Arc of Crisis Strategy

  • Term coined by Brzezinski, referring to the destabilization of the Middle East from Pakistan to North Africa.
  • Western elites used militant Islam to halt secular modernization and suppress industrial growth in Muslim nations.
  • Supported Islamist groups through intelligence networks and institutions like the Islamic Council of Europe and Islamic Foundation in Leicester.

Brotherhood's Expansion and Offshoots

  • Spread into Syria, Pakistan, Iran, and Gaza
  • Linked to Islamic Jihad, HAMAS, and terrorist activities across the Middle East
  • Established bases in London and Geneva under Said Ramadan and Salem Azzam
  • Supported by Saudi funding and CIA operations in Afghanistan

Osama bin Laden's Trajectory

  • Mentored by MB-linked scholars (Mohammed Qutb and Abdullah Azzam)
  • Founded Al Qaeda from MAK in Peshawar during Afghan-Soviet War
  • Sponsored by bin Laden family fortune and CIA-backed operations
  • Developed global jihad network rooted in MB ideology

Conclusion

The rise of Islamic terrorism is deeply intertwined with the Muslim Brotherhood and its ideological forebears. Far from being a grassroots religious revival, it has been shaped and manipulated by Western imperial powers, intelligence agencies, and Masonic networks to serve geopolitical objectives, destabilize nationalist movements, and control Third World development. The Muslim Brotherhood remains the ideological core of global Islamist militancy, with financial, political, and religious networks that continue to shape conflicts today.

1916 – Sykes–Picot Agreement

  • Secret pact between Britain and France (with Russian assent) to divide the Arab provinces of the Ottoman Empire after WWI.

  • It sowed deep resentment in the Arab world by ignoring promises of Arab independence and laid the groundwork for future conflicts in the Middle East.

1924 – Abolition of the Ottoman Caliphate

  • The formal end of the Islamic Caliphate by Mustafa Kemal Atatürk in Turkey.

  • Created a vacuum in Islamic leadership and religious authority that later movements like the Muslim Brotherhood sought to fill.

1928 – Founding of the Muslim Brotherhood

  • Established in Egypt by Hassan al-Banna.

  • Aimed to revive Islamic governance, resist Western influence, and re-establish a unified Islamic society under Sharia law.

  • Created a dual structure: a public religious and social movement and a covert militant wing (al-nizam al-khass).

1930s–1940s – Brotherhood Expansion and Nazi Collaboration

  • The Brotherhood expanded across Arab nations (e.g., Jordan, Syria, Palestine).

  • Grand Mufti of Jerusalem Amin al-Husseini (closely aligned with al-Banna) collaborated with Nazi Germany during WWII.

  • Helped form the Handschar SS—a Nazi Muslim division used against Yugoslav partisans and Jews.

1950s – Brotherhood Exile and CIA Interest

  • After Brotherhood opposition to Egypt's President Nasser, many members fled to Saudi Arabia, Europe, and North America.

  • U.S. intelligence (CIA) began to see the Brotherhood as a bulwark against communism, particularly in exile communities like Munich.

  • Brotherhood thought spread through academic and religious institutions funded by Gulf states.

1979 – Soviet Invasion of Afghanistan

  • The CIA and Saudi Intelligence launched Operation Cyclone to fund and arm Islamic fighters (mujahideen) against Soviet forces.

  • Osama bin Laden, from a wealthy Saudi family and a Brotherhood affiliate, becomes a key figure in recruiting fighters and funds.

  • Ayman al-Zawahiri, a lifelong Brotherhood member and Egyptian militant, joins bin Laden's inner circle.

1987 – Formation of Hamas

  • Established as the Palestinian branch of the Muslim Brotherhood during the First Intifada.

  • Combines political Islam, militancy, and social services; considered a terrorist group by Israel, the U.S., and EU.

1988 – Al-Qaeda Founded

  • Formed by Osama bin Laden and Ayman al-Zawahiri, drawing from mujahideen veterans and Brotherhood-linked ideology.

  • Al-Qaeda aimed to globalize jihad and target the "far enemy" (primarily the U.S.).

1993 – World Trade Center Bombing

  • Led by Sheikh Omar Abdel-Rahman, a radical Egyptian cleric with Brotherhood ties.

  • A precursor to more significant jihadist attacks against the West.

2001 – 9/11 Attacks

  • Coordinated by Al-Qaeda under Osama bin Laden and Ayman al-Zawahiri.

  • Triggered the U.S.-led War on Terror, targeting Al-Qaeda and Taliban forces in Afghanistan.

2003–2010 – Rise of Al-Qaeda in Iraq (AQI)

  • After the U.S. invasion of Iraq, jihadists under Abu Musab al-Zarqawi (later merged into Al-Qaeda) begin sectarian warfare.

  • AQI becomes a precursor to ISIS.

2011 – Arab Spring and PSD-11

  • The Obama Administration's Presidential Study Directive-11 (PSD-11) orders U.S. agencies to reassess support for political change in the Arab world.

  • U.S. begins engagement with the Muslim Brotherhood in countries like Egypt, Tunisia, Libya, and Syria.

  • Brotherhood-backed governments briefly take power in some Arab Spring countries (e.g., Egypt's Morsi government, 2012–2013).

2013 – Egyptian Military Overthrows Brotherhood Government

  • Mohamed Morsi, a Brotherhood leader and Egypt's first democratically elected president, is removed by the military.

  • The Brotherhood is outlawed in Egypt and designated a terrorist group by some countries.

2014 – Rise of ISIS (Islamic State of Iraq and Syria)

  • Emerges from Al-Qaeda in Iraq under Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi.

  • Declares a caliphate, capturing large territories in Iraq and Syria.

  • Uses Brotherhood-style ideological roots with more extreme tactics and a global recruitment strategy.

2015–Present – ISIS Expansion and Collapse

  • ISIS spreads globally through affiliates (e.g., in Libya, West Africa, Southeast Asia).

  • Coalition military efforts decimate its territory by 2019, but sleeper cells and ideology persist.

Connections Summary:

  • Muslim Brotherhood: Provided the ideological foundation — sharia law, jihad, Islamic governance.

  • Al-Qaeda: Formed by Brotherhood-affiliated figures (bin Laden, al-Zawahiri); globalized jihad.

  • ISIS: Evolved from Al-Qaeda in Iraq, merged Brotherhood-inspired ideology with apocalyptic violence.

All three movements share roots in revivalist Islamism and the belief in restoring a caliphate, rejecting secular governance, and enforcing Islamic law through both social influence and armed struggles.

Timeline Overview of the Muslim Brotherhood
  • 1928: Muslim Brotherhood founded in Egypt by Hassan al-Banna.
  • 1945: Brotherhood formally established in Jordan.
  • 1940s–1960s: Brotherhood influence spreads into Palestine (West Bank and Gaza).
  • 1970s–1980s: Heightened coordination between Palestinian and Jordanian branches.
  • 1987: Hamas is established as the Palestinian arm of the Muslim Brotherhood.

U.S. Policy and the Muslim Brotherhood: PSD-11

  • During the Obama Administration, Presidential Study Directive-11 (PSD-11) was signed, initiating a classified reevaluation of political reform in the Middle East and the role of the Muslim Brotherhood.
  • Former House Intelligence Committee Chairman Peter Hoekstra testified that PSD-11 ordered U.S. government agencies to prepare for "change," which meant support for the Muslim Brotherhood during the Arab Spring (2011).
  • American diplomats were directed to make formal contact with Brotherhood leadership, despite the organization's secretive and extremist history.

Nature and Structure of the Muslim Brotherhood

  • The Brotherhood is a dual-faced organization:
  • Public side: Claims peaceful charity and religious education.
  • Secret arm: Known as al-nizam al-khass (Special Section) or al-jihaz al-sirri (Secret Apparatus), operating as a covert military and assassination wing.
  • Guiding motto: "Allah is our goal; The Prophet is our Leader; The Qur'an is our Constitution; Jihad is our Way; Death in the service of Allah is the loftiest of our wishes."

The organization promotes:

  • Jihad as personal obligation.
  • Sharia law and total Islamization of society.
  • Death as martyrdom in service to Islam.

Brotherhood-Nazi-CIA Connections

  • During WWII, Brotherhood figures such as Amin al-Husseini collaborated with Nazi Germany and SS chief Heinrich Himmler, creating Muslim SS units.
  • After the war, the CIA utilized Brotherhood members exiled in Munich to support anti-Soviet Islamist movements.
  • The Brotherhood later spawned key terrorist organizations:
  • Al Qaeda: Osama bin Laden and Ayman al-Zawahiri (both Brotherhood affiliates).
  • I