End Time deception

Explaining the goals and aspirations of the New World Order

Brotherhood of Death
'THE HANGMAN EQUALS DEATH!

THE DEVIL EQUALS DEATH!

DEATH EQUALS DEATH!'
Those three words are said by every new initiate of the skulls Little wonder why the Skull and bones society is often referred to as the "brotherhood of death" and the reason is not far fetched.They believe that in order to be reborn into their world(which they call the elysian company of the elect of "The Order)It was necessary to die to the old self which they call the barbarian world(this death symbolises change and shouldnt be taken to mean physical death)just the way adam and Eve died to God and were changed to become sinners(lived to sin)

The article below on the skulls and the lists were culled from www.wikipedia.com (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Skull_and_Bones_members">http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Skull_and_Bones,http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Skull_and_Bones_members)
Secrecy:
The secrecy surrounding Skull and Bones has been a fertile ground for speculation, and all sorts of conspiracy theories include Skull and Bones. The society is supposed to have illicit connections to the CIA, Illuminati, Bilderbergers, and/or Freemasons. These theories were the basis of the 2000 film The Skulls which concerns a highly elaborate secret society with clear parallels to Skull and Bones. Bones was also included, as well as the a cappella group the Whiffenpoofs, in the 2006 film The Good Shepherd, about the Central Intelligence Agency.

Skull and Bones has also figured from time to time in the Doonesbury comic strips by Garry Trudeau; especially in 1980 and December 1988, with reference to George H. W. Bush, and again at the time that the society went co-ed.

Probably the most famous fictional Bonesman among young people is Montgomery Burns, of The Simpsons, who attended Yale and was a member of Skull and Bones.

In the 2004 U.S. Presidential election, both the Democratic and Republican nominees were alumni. George W. Bush writes in his autobiography, "[In my] senior year I joined Skull and Bones, a secret society; so secret, I can't say anything more."[3] When asked what it meant that he and Bush were both Bonesmen, former Presidential candidate John Kerry said, "Not much because it's a secret."[4][5]



Founders

* William Huntington Russell (1832), Connecticut State Legislator[2]
* Alphonso Taft (1832), U.S. Attorney General (1876–1877); Secretary of War (1876); Ambassador to Austria-Hungary (1882) and Russia (1884–1885); father of William Howard Taft[3]

[edit] 1830s

* Morrison R. Waite (1837), U.S. Supreme Court Justice[4]
* William Maxwell Evarts (1837), U.S. Secretary of State; Attorney General; Senator; grandson of Roger Sherman[5][6]

[edit] 1840s

* Dwight Foster (1848), Justice of the Massachusetts Supreme Court, grandson of U.S. Senator Dwight Foster and nephew of U.S. Senator Theodore Foster.

Timothy Dwight (Bones 1849), President of Yale (1886-1899) and one of a number of Bonesmen to go on to posts at the university

* Timothy Dwight V (1849), Yale acting Treasurer 1887–1889, Yale President 1886–1899[7]

[edit] 1850s

* Daniel Coit Gilman (1852), president of the University of California, Johns Hopkins University, and the Carnegie Institution[8]
* Andrew Dickson White (1853), Co-founder and first President of Cornell University[9]
* Chauncey Depew (1855), U.S. Senator (R-New York 1899–1911)[10]

[edit] 1860s

* Simeon Eben Baldwin (1861), Governor and Chief Justice, State of Connecticut; son of Roger Sherman Baldwin[11]
* Franklin MacVeagh (1862), US Secretary of the Treasury[12]

[edit] 1870s
William Howard Taft (Bones 1878), son of the society's co-founder and the first of three Bonesman to become US President

* William H. Welch (1870), dean of Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine[13]
* Edwin F. Sweet (1871), Assistant Secretary of Commerce*[14]
* Arthur T. Hadley (1876), Yale president 1899-1921[15]
* Edward Baldwin Whitney (1878), New York Supreme Court Justice[citation needed]
* William Howard Taft (1878), 27th President of the United States; Chief Justice of the United States; Secretary of War; son of Alphonso Taft[16]
* Lloyd Wheaton Bowers (1879), United States Solicitor General

[edit] 1880s

* Walter Camp (1880), founder of American football[17]
* Maxwell Evarts (1884), Vermont State Representative, son of William Maxwell Evarts.
* Frank Bosworth Brandegee (1885), U.S. Representative (R-Connecticut 1902–1905); U.S. Senator (R-Connecticut 1905–1924)[citation needed]
* William Kent (1887), U.S. Representative from California.
* Amos Alonzo Stagg (1888), College football Hall of Fame coach[18][19]
* Henry L. Stimson (1888), US Secretary of War[20]
* George W. Woodruff (1889), College Hall of Fame football coach, Acting Secretary of the Interior and Pennsylvania state attorney-general[13]
* Gifford Pinchot (1889), First Chief of U.S. Forest Service[citation needed]

[edit] 1890s

* Lee McClung (1892), Yale Treasurer 1904–1909; U.S. Treasurer 1909–1912[citation needed]
* Pierre Jay (1892), first chairman of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York[21]
* Henry Sloane Coffin, president of the Union Theological Seminary[22]
* Harry Payne Whitney (1894), husband of Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney; investment banker[23]
* Amos Pinchot (1897), progressive leader[24]

[edit] 1900s

* John Magee (missionary) (1906), Chaplain at Yale, documenter of Japanese atrocities during the Rape of Nanking, assistant rector at St. John's Episcopal Church, Lafayette Square (Washington, D.C.), father of High Flight poet John Gillespie Magee, Jr. [25]
* Ashley Day Leavitt (1900), Congregational clergyman
* Percy Rockefeller (1900), director of Brown Brothers Harriman, Standard Oil, and Remington Arms[14]
* Charles Seymour (1908), President of Yale 1937–1951[26]
* Harold Stanley (1908), founder of investment house Morgan Stanley[citation needed]

[edit] 1910s
Archibald MacLiesh (Bones 1915), poet, diplomat, three-time Pulitzer Prize winner, and Librarian of Congress
Senator Prescott Bush (Bones 1916) has long been rumored to have played a role in Skull and Bones' alleged theft of the skull of Native American leader Geronimo[27]

* George L. Harrison (1910), banker; President of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, former Chairman of the board of New York Life Insurance Co., and special consultant to fellow Bonesman, Henry L. Stimson.[28][29]
* Robert A. Taft (1910), U.S. Senator (R-Ohio 1939–1953)[28][30]
* Alfred Cowles (1913), founder of the Cowles Commission[citation needed]
* Averell Harriman (1913), U.S. Ambassador and Secretary of Commerce; Governor of New York; Chairman and CEO of the Union Pacific Railroad, Brown Brothers & Harriman, and the Southern Pacific Railroad[31]
* C. Montgomery Burns (1914), Industrialist (fictional character)
* Archibald MacLeish (1915), poet and diplomat[32]
* Donald Ogden Stewart (1916), author and screenwriter, Academy Award winner for The Philadelphia Story[33]
* Prescott Bush (1916), U.S. Senator (R-Connecticut 1952–1963), Father of George H.W. Bush, grandfather of George W. Bush[34]
* E. Roland Harriman (1917), businessman; railroad executive; president of American Red Cross[citation needed]
* H. Neil Mallon (1917), CEO of Dresser Industries [35]
* Kenneth F. Simpson (1917), U.S. Representative from New York.
* Artemus Gates (1918), president of New York Trust Company, Union Pacific Railroad, TIME-Life, and Boeing Company[citation needed]
* F. Trubee Davison (1918), Director of Personnel at the CIA[36][37][38]
* Howard M. Baldrige (1918) - U.S. Representative (R-Nebraska 1931–1933)[citation needed]
* Robert A. Lovett (1918), US Secretary of Defense[39] [40]

[edit] 1920s

* Briton Hadden (1920), co-founder of Time-Life Enterprises[41]
* Henry Luce (1920), co-founder of Time-Life Enterprises [42]
* John Sherman Cooper (1923), U.S. Senator (R-Kentucky 1946–1949, 1952–1973); member of the Warren Commission[1]
* Russell Davenport (1923), editor of Fortune magazine; created Fortune 500 list[43]
* F. O. Matthiessen, historian, literary critic[44]
* George Herbert Walker, Jr. (1927), financier and co-founder of the New York Mets; uncle to President George Herbert Walker Bush[45]
* John Rockefeller Prentice (1928), Grandson of John D. Rockefeller; pioneer of artificial insemination[citation needed]
* Granger Kent Costikyan (1929), a banker, partner of Brown Brothers Harriman & Co.

[edit] 1930s

* H. J. Heinz II (1931), Heir to H. J. Heinz Company; father of H. John Heinz III[46]
* Jonathan Brewster Bingham (1936), U.S. Representative (D-New York)[47]
* Potter Stewart (1936), U.S. Supreme Court Justice[48]
* William P. Bundy (1939), State Department liaison for the Bay of Pigs invasion, brother of McGeorge Bundy[49]

[edit] 1940s

* McGeorge Bundy (1940), Special Assistant for National Security Affairs; National Security Advisor; Professor of History, brother of William Bundy [50]
* William Sloane Coffin, clergyman and peace activist[51]
* James L. Buckley (1944), U.S. Senator (R-New York 1971–1977) and brother of William F. Buckley, Jr.[52][53][54]
* John Chafee (1947), U.S. Senator; Secretary of the Navy and Governor of Rhode Island; father of Lincoln Chafee[55]
* George H. W. Bush (1948), 41st President of the United States; 11th Director of Central Intelligence; son of Prescott Bush; father of George W. Bush[56]

[edit] 1950s

* Evan G. Galbraith (1950), US ambassador to France; managing director of Morgan Stanley[57][58]
* William F. Buckley, Jr. (1950), founder of National Review[59]
* William Henry Draper III (1950), Chair of United Nations Development Programme and Export-Import Bank of the United States[60]
* William H. Donaldson (1953), appointed chairman of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission by George W. Bush; founding dean of Yale School of Management; co-founder of DLJ investment firm [61][62]
* David McCullough (1955), U.S. historian; two-time Pulitzer Prize winner[63]
* Robert Gow (1955), business associate of George H. W. Bush; president of Bush's Zapata Oil[64]
* R. Inslee Clark, Jr. (1957), Director of Undergraduate Admissions; former Headmaster of Horace Mann School[65]
* Winston Lord (1959), Chairman of Council on Foreign Relations; Ambassador to China; Assistant U.S. Secretary of State [66][67]

[edit] 1960s
John Kerry (Bones 1966) faced off against George W. Bush (Bones 1968) in the 2004 US presidential election, the first time two Bonesman had run against one another for that office [68]

* David Boren (1963), Governor of Oklahoma, U.S. Senator, President of the University of Oklahoma[69][70]
* Frederick W. Smith (1966), founder of FedEx[71][72]
* John Kerry (1966), U.S. Senator (D-Massachusetts 1985.present); Lieutenant Governor of Massachusetts 1983–1985; 2004 Democratic Presidential nominee[73]
* Don Schollander Olympic Gold medal swimmer.[74]
* Victor Ashe (1967), Tenn. State House (1968–1975); Tenn. State Senate (1976–1984); Mayor of Knoxville, Tenn. (1988–2003); appointed Ambassador to Poland (2004–Present) by George W. Bush[75][76]
* George W. Bush (1968), 43rd President of the United States; 46th Governor of Texas[77]
* Robert McCallum, Jr (1968), Ambassador to Australia[78][79]
* Roy Leslie Austin (1968), appointed ambassador to Trinidad and Tobago by George W. Bush[80][81]
* Strobe Talbott (1968), U.S. Deputy Secretary of State.
* Stephen A. Schwarzman (1969), co-founder The Blackstone Group[82][83]

[edit] Since 1980

* Earl G. Graves, Jr. (1984), president of Black Enterprise[84]
* Edward S. Lampert (1984), founder of ESL Investments; chairman of Sears Holdings Corporation [85][86]
* Dana Milbank (1990), political reporter for The Washington Post[87] [88] [89]
* Austan Goolsbee (1991), economic advisor to Barack Obama[90]
* John Wertheim (1990), American lawyer and politician[91]

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