A Freemason is Always Evil

written by Ravel Śāśwata Petershagen


How can that be?

A Freemason is always evil, because in Freemasonry murder of children and cruelty is a requirement. By joining Freemasonry one automatically participates in deliberate murder of young children (lambs) from peoples of the sheep species. All religions (atheistic religions included) on this planet is either based upon or contaminated by evil, or both. Many religions have animal sacrifice—of other humans (a type of mammal) or of persons of other animal species—in other words a practice of customized or mandatory murder, founded in speciesism. The Freemasons are males who use the skin from murdered babies (lambs) over their genital area, to enshrine their penis, and “no substitute should be used”—a device which they call an apron—and use as a reference to “purity of heart” and to “innocence of conduct”. These perverted adult male, secret phallos-worshippers murdering an innocent, little child to symbolize their imagined innocence. What a painful irony! As a reference to this information, here is a quote from masonicworld.com (located on 11th October 2012):

APRON: The badge of a Mason. Originally among priesthoods as a badge of office and a means of ornamentation. The Masonic apron should be white lambskin, fourteen inches wide and twelve inches deep. It should be presented to the candidate at his initiation and not at some subsequent time. No substitute should be used. From the French word napron meaning "an apron of cloth." From earliest times in Persia, Egypt, India, the Jewish Essenes, the white apron was a badge of honor and candidates were invested with it, or a sash, or a robe. Its reference is to purity of heart, to innocence of conduct.

Instructions

How to use this document

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Clearing Method

Because all the columns are floated, this layout uses a clear:both declaration in the footer rule. This clearing technique forces the .container to understand where the columns end in order to show any borders or background colors you place on the .container. If your design requires you to remove the footer from the .container, you'll need to use a different clearing method. The most reliable will be to add a <br class="clearfloat" /> or <div class="clearfloat"></div> after your final floated column (but before the .container closes). This will have the same clearing effect.

Logo Replacement

An image placeholder was used in this layout in the header where you'll likely want to place a logo. It is recommended that you remove the placeholder and replace it with your own linked logo.

Be aware that if you use the Property inspector to navigate to your logo image using the SRC field (instead of removing and replacing the placeholder), you should remove the inline background and display properties. These inline styles are only used to make the logo placeholder show up in browsers for demonstration purposes.

To remove the inline styles, make sure your CSS Styles panel is set to Current. Select the image, and in the Properties pane of the CSS Styles panel, right click and delete the display and background properties. (Of course, you can always go directly into the code and delete the inline styles from the image or placeholder there.)