
The Gilded Age McKinley & Trump -The Romanov Family Russia History Lies - Lenin and Stalin were Illuminati -Bolshevik Revolution -Planned Genocide of White Christians- White Circassians & Armenian Children on Orphan Trains. Karl Marx paid by Rothchilds.
Psychopath In Your Life with Dianne Emerson · Dianne Emerson
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Show Notes
When a clown moves into a palace, he doesn't become a sultan. The palace becomes a circus. - Ancient Turkish Proverb
Clips Played: The Downfall Of The Romanov Family (youtube.com)
The UnXplained: Rasputin's Dark Prophecies Revealed (Special) (youtube.com)
Music: Buffalo Springfield - For What It's Worth + Lyrics (Stop Hey What's that Sound) (youtube.com)
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NEW: Magnesium Discoveries - Psychopath In Your Life
Inside The Romanov Family's Most Opulent Palaces (youtube.com)
Illuminati Give Young Stalin a Makeover - henrymakow.com
USSR - Illuminati Experiment Was "Social Catastrophe" - henrymakow.com
The Bolshevik Revolution: An Illuminati Takeover of Russia? – HISTORY HEIST
Bolshevik revolution | James Perloff
Order of the Illuminati (nobulart.com)
Two Guitars Russian Gypsy Music (youtube.com)
The Iron Cross Meaning: Uncovering Its Symbolism and History (bignetworks.co.uk)
Trump Appears to Be Targeting Muslim, "Non-White" Students for Deportation (theintercept.com)
Epsom Salt Hand Soak Guide
Soaking your hands in Epsom salt offers a practical and effective alternative to traditional foot or full-body soaks, especially for those who find those methods challenging. This approach requires a large bowl or basin big enough to comfortably fit both hands, warm water (not too hot, around 95–100°F or 35–38°C), Epsom salt (magnesium sulfate) — ½ cup, and a towel. Fill the bowl with enough warm water to submerge your hands up to the wrists. Dissolve ½ cup of Epsom salt into the water, stirring until fully dissolved.
Soak your hands for 15–20 minutes. During this time, relax — read, breathe deeply, or just chill while the magnesium works its way in. After soaking, dry your hands gently and optionally apply a moisturizer to lock in hydration.
You can do this 3–5 times per week for stress relief, joint stiffness, or sore muscles. It's great for people with arthritis, carpal tunnel, or even just dry skin (add a little coconut oil!). It works best if your skin is clean beforehand; that way, absorption is smoother.
Does It Work as Well as Feet?Soaking your hands in Epsom salt is just as effective as soaking your feet, delivering comparable benefits with greater ease. The skin on your hands, particularly around the palms and inner wrists, is just as absorbent as the skin on your feet. This method still provides a magnesium boost, support for relaxation and sleep, and help with pain or inflammation, making it an excellent option for anyone seeking the advantages of magnesium absorption without the hassle of a foot or bath soak.
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A Historical Journey: Jewish and Roma Families Across Europe and Beyond 1. Spain, 1492In 1492, Spain issued the Alhambra Decree, expelling all Jews who refused conversion to Christianity. Around the same time, Roma communities, often called "Gypsies" in historical sources, faced increasing suspicion and persecution as nomads outside the established feudal order.
Both groups, though different in origin and culture, found themselves as persecuted minorities, often traveling similar roads of exile.
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Jewish families: Many Sephardic Jews left Spain for Portugal, North Africa, Italy, and eventually the Ottoman Empire and northern Europe.
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Roma families: Initially arrived in Europe from northern India centuries earlier, and by the 15th century were traveling through Spain, France, and Germany, often fleeing local bans or violence.
Historians note that Jewish and Roma groups sometimes traveled side by side, offering complementary trades: music, metalworking, horse trading, herbal medicine, and healing.
2. Northern Movement: From Spain to the Low CountriesBy the 1500s–1600s, Amsterdam, Antwerp, and parts of what is today Belgium and the Netherlands became havens for exiled minorities:
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Amsterdam allowed Sephardic Jews to live and worship freely — leading to one of Europe's most prominent Jewish communities.
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Roma communities were more tolerated in rural areas and on the trade routes between France, Germany, and the Low Countries.
Both populations were seen as useful but suspicious, often welcomed for their skills but later blamed for social unrest, plague, or moral decline.
Some Jewish families from Spain and Portugal also made their way to England (especially Norfolk) after the lifting of Jewish bans under Oliver Cromwell in the mid-1600s.
3. Movement to the United StatesIn the 18th and 19th centuries, Jewish and Roma families, often fleeing pogroms in Russia, Poland, or Austria-Hungary, or economic hardship in Western Europe, began migrating to the Americas.
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Franklin D. Roosevelt's family, the Delano-Roosevelt line, has connections to Dutch Sephardic Jewish merchants who lived in New Amsterdam (present-day New York) and Amsterdam.
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Roma groups also migrated to the U.S., especially in the 19th century, settling in both urban areas and traveling in traditional caravan circuits, mainly in the American South and Midwest.
Many of these immigrants retained oral histories of persecution and migration that crossed religious and cultural boundaries.
4. The Rise of Underworld Networks (20th Century Onward)In the post-WWII world, certain port cities in Belgium (Antwerp), the Netherlands, Germany, and southern France became hubs for smuggling, trafficking, and black-market finance.
This development was fueled by:
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The destruction of state institutions during war.
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The influx of post-war refugees, many of whom had learned to operate in the shadows for survival.
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The legacy of interconnected families who maintained diaspora relationships across continents — Jewish, Roma, and others — often using family trust and ethnic networks rather than formal institutions.
While only a small fraction of these communities ever participated in organized crime, family loyalty, secrecy, and mobility made them effective at adapting to underground economies.
This gave rise to rumors — some based in fact, many exaggerated — that certain families had both Old World ancestry and New World power, linking them to:
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Art smuggling
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Drug trade
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Human trafficking
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Money laundering through antique, gold, and jewelry markets
Antwerp, for example, became a global diamond center, with Jewish and Indian families deeply involved, but also targeted by criminal networks due to its wealth and trade fluidity.
Incest and Intermarriage in Elite Families: Why It Happened 1. Royal and Noble Dynasties (Europe, Middle East, Asia)
Throughout history, dynastic marriages between cousins, uncles and nieces, or even siblings (in some ancient cultures) were not only accepted, they were often strategically planned.
Reasons:-
Preserve wealth and land within the family.
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Keep political power centralized (especially in monarchies).
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Prevent "outsiders" from marrying into the bloodline.
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Maintain racial or religious purity, especially in insular dynasties.
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Habsburgs of Austria-Spain: Infamously practiced repeated cousin marriages, leading to the Habsburg jaw and other genetic issues.
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Egyptian Pharaohs: Married siblings to preserve the "divine bloodline."
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British Royal Family: Queen Victoria's descendants married into nearly every European royal house, often among cousins.
Intermarriage Among Jewish and Roma Communities
In Jewish and Roma (Gypsy) communities, especially in exiled or isolated settings, marriages among cousins were more common than today, but for different reasons:
Jewish Communities:Ashkenazi Jews in medieval and early modern Europe often married within small, tight-knit communities due to:
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Legal segregation (ghettos, bans on intermarriage with Christians)
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Preservation of religious identity in hostile environments
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Lineage-based rabbinical status (certain families were highly respected)
First-cousin marriages were allowed in Jewish law (unlike some Christian laws) and were relatively common in the diaspora.
➤ Example: In 19th-century Eastern Europe, it wasn't unusual for scholars (rabbis, yeshiva families) to marry into the same learned families.
Roma Communities:-
Roma often lived on the edges of society, maintaining oral traditions and strong family identity.
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Intermarriage within clans or extended families helped preserve culture and language.
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In smaller traveling groups, marrying within the group was seen as safer and more acceptable than marrying outsiders.
Genetic Risks and Modern Science
Today, we know that marrying close relatives can increase the risk of recessive genetic disorders, especially in populations that have done so over generations.
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Among Ashkenazi Jews, certain genetic conditions (like Tay-Sachs, Gaucher disease) became more common due to genetic bottlenecks and intermarriage.
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Some Roma populations also show increased incidence of rare hereditary diseases for similar reasons.
Modern Jewish and Roma communities often screen for these conditions, and cousin marriage has decreased sharply with increased mobility and cultural integration.
Is This Still Happening?In royal or aristocratic circles, strict intermarriage is now rare.
However, in tight-knit traditional communities, whether religious, ethnic, or isolated, cousin marriage still occurs in some parts of the world, and isn't always considered taboo (e.g., in parts of the Middle East, South Asia, and North Africa).
5. Shared Survival, Not Shared GuiltIt's important to separate myth from reality:
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Most Jewish and Roma families have been victims of discrimination and violence, not perpetrators of crime.
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However, interconnected family networks did play a historical role in trading, finance, and underground survival systems, especially when excluded from formal economies.
Legacy Today
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Jewish and Roma families continue to thrive globally, with deep roots in art, politics, medicine, law, and music.
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In cities like Brussels, Paris, and Brooklyn, you'll still find families whose ancestors once fled together, sharing stories, cuisine, and customs inherited across centuries of exile.
Some may work in law, some in trade, some in crime. The story of their journey is ultimately one of adaptation, memory, and survival — a mirror to Europe's own complex and often painful past.
The Habsburgs: Masters of Dynastic MarriageThe Habsburgs, especially in the Austrian and Spanish branches, were notorious for repeated cousin marriages, even uncle-niece marriages. Their goal? To preserve their empire and consolidate claims across Europe without going to war.
The Result:
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The infamous "Habsburg Jaw" (mandibular prognathism) — a protruding lower jaw and other physical deformities.
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Mental and physical disabilities, especially in later generations.
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The last Habsburg king of Spain, Charles II, was so inbred that his family tree was more of a loop than a tree. He was physically disabled, mentally challenged, and died childless — ending the Spanish Habsburg line.
The Romanovs: Strategic Marriages with Europe's Royals
The Romanov Dynasty ruled Russia from 1613 to 1917, and while not as inbred as the Habsburgs, they still married into European royal houses to build alliances.
Who Did the Romanovs Marry?-
Many Romanovs married German princesses, who often converted to Russian Orthodoxy.
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Empress Catherine the Great was born Sophie of Anhalt-Zerbst, a minor German princess.
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Tsar Nicholas II married Alexandra Feodorovna, born Princess Alix of Hesse, a granddaughter of Queen Victoria.
That makes the Romanovs directly tied to the British royal family.
Shared Bloodlines: Habsburgs and RomanovsWhile the Habsburgs and Romanovs were not direct cousins, they were tied through intermarriage with German nobility, especially the House of Hesse, House of Württemberg, and others in the Holy Roman Empire.
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Habsburgs intermarried heavily within the Holy Roman Empire nobility.
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Romanovs married German princesses from similar circles.
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By the 19th century, many European royal houses were interconnected, often all descended from Queen Victoria, Christian IX of Denmark, or earlier Germanic dynasties.
Comparison Table
Dynasty
Inbreeding Level
Key Marriages
Health Effects
End of Dynasty
Habsburgs
Very High
Repeated cousin/uncle-niece
Deformities, infertility, mental illness
Spain: 1700; Austria: 1918
Romanovs
Moderate
Married German & Danish royals
Hemophilia via Queen Victoria line
1917 (executed by Bolsheviks)
Visual Family Tree Snapshot: Romanov, Habsburg, and Interconnected Royals
(Note: This is a simplified visual in text format. For actual visual graphics, this can be mapped into a chart or diagram software.)
Queen Victoria of the United Kingdom (1819–1901) └── Daughter: Princess Alice of the UK └── Daughter: Princess Alix of Hesse (Empress Alexandra Feodorovna) └── Married: Tsar Nicholas II of Russia (Romanov Dynasty) └── Children: Olga, Tatiana, Maria, Anastasia, Alexei (last of the Romanovs)
Christian IX of Denmark (1818–1906) ("Father-in-law of Europe") └── Daughter: Dagmar of Denmark (Empress Maria Feodorovna) └── Married: Tsar Alexander III of Russia └── Son: Nicholas II of Russia
Habsburg Dynasty (Austria and Spain) └── Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor (1500–1558) └── Son: Philip II of Spain └── Descendants through cousin marriages to: └── Charles II of Spain (1661–1700) — end of Spanish Habsburgs
└── Austrian Habsburg Line Continues: └── Maria Theresa of Austria (1717–1780) └── Married: Francis I, Holy Roman Emperor └── Son: Joseph II / Leopold II └── Descendants include: └── Archduke Franz Ferdinand (assassination sparked WWI)
Connections:-
Many Romanov tsars married German princesses with ties to Habsburg or Danish royal lines.
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Queen Victoria's descendants married into most European monarchies, creating a web of related rulers before WWI.
This family web shows how tightly knit the ruling houses of Europe became. Royal families of Russia, Britain, Germany, Denmark, and Austria were all first or second cousins by the late 19th century.
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When was the Gilded Age?Roughly 1870s to about 1900, though some extend it to the early 1910s.
When were the homes built?
Iconic Gilded Age homes — like the Newport mansions in Rhode Island (e.g., The Breakers, Marble House) — were built between the 1870s and early 1900s.
Early Gilded Age homes were lit by gas lamps or candles and heated by coal or wood stoves.
When did electricity show up?
Electricity started being installed in upper-class homes in the 1880s, but it was rare and often experimental.
Thomas Edison's first power station opened in 1882 in NYC (Pearl Street Station).
Wealthy homeowners were often early adopters, but full electrification could take years or decades, depending on location.
Some Gilded Age homes were built before electricity was practical, and later retrofitted with wiring as it became more available and reliable.
Example: The Breakers (Newport, RI)
- Built in 1893–1895.
- Originally wired for electricity and gas, as a backup system. Electric systems were still unreliable at the time.
TL;DR:
- Gilded Age homes: built ~1870–1900.
- Electricity: began appearing in wealthy homes in the 1880s, but many were retrofitted later.
- Full electrification for average homes didn't really hit until the 1920s–1930s.
When Did Homes Get Electrical Systems?
A lot of Gilded Age homes were constructed just before or during the rise of electricity, meaning many were retrofitted with electrical systems shortly after completion or designed with early wiring in mind. Homes built in the 1870s and 1880s typically started with gas lighting.
Here's how it usually played out:
- Homes built in the 1870s–1880s: These were typically gas-lit originally. As electricity became available in urban areas in the 1880s and 1890s, wealthy homeowners often added wiring within a few years — especially in places like New York, Boston, and Newport.
- Homes built in the 1890s and early 1900s: These often had dual systems — wired for both gas and electric lighting. Electricity was new and unreliable, so gas was the backup.
- By the early 1900s, electricity was more stable, and newer Gilded Age mansions were fully electric from the start.
The Breakers (1895): It was wired for both gas and electricity right from the beginning, just in case the power went out. It was like having a backup generator today — a luxury flex and practical.
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