Taking Back Our Stolen History
HISTORY HEIST
Corruption & Fraud

Corruption & Fraud

“Corruption is a tax on development. . . . Wherever it grows, it hollows out governing institutions and undermines prosperity and stability.”—Christopher Patten, former European Commissioner and Governor of Hong Kong

Corruption and fraud are rampant throughout the world today. It exists in every industry: science, medicine, technology, government, military, media, education, finance, religion, etc. Forms of corruption vary, but include bribery, extortion, cronyism, nepotism, patronage, and embezzlement. Corruption may facilitate criminal enterprise such as drug trafficking, weapons trafficking, money laundering, and human trafficking, though is not restricted to these activities. Misuse of government power for surveillance, repression of political opponents, and general police brutality are also on the rise. Certainly, with power, often comes the desire to meet self-serving agendas and there are plenty of people in powerful positions worldwide who fit that description.

As materialism has become the highest form of achievement for so many throughout the world, it is no wonder that many are quick to succumb to corruption in order to achieve it. In a world created by God, we, as spirits, have obtained a mortal body with passions, appetites, and desires and must learn to control our passions and lusts, but many cannot. They lack integrity and responsibility and often seek to hide their corruption or collude with others to prevent exposure. As secret societies  formed, they sought the most powerful positions in government and industry so that their corruption and secret agenda would never be exposed until it was too late. Cabal members at the highest positions can sometimes offer immunity for crimes and sins, however it is only through the process of repentance that sin can truly be erased through Christ. Immunity is another counterfeit to a Godly principle by those who would presume to be gods themselves.

Chronological History of Corruption and Fraud:

Young America's Miraculous Defeat of the French Fleet

Young America’s Miraculous Defeat of the French Fleet

On this day, a national fast was observed throughout America for the Lord to protect them as a fleet and armament to recover... Novascotia, and to lay waste the whole seacoast from Novascotia to Georgia. A large fleet of 70 ships neared the coast when Reverend Prince at the Old South Meeting House in Boston (as well as ministers throughout America) prayed for help. Historian Catherine Drinker Bowen relates that, "That very night God sent upon them a more dreadful storm than either of the former, and completed their destruction. Some overset, some foundered, and a remnant only of ...
Yale Founded to Further Christianity by Ministers Unhappy with the Liberalism at Harvard

Yale Founded to Further Christianity by Ministers Unhappy with the Liberalism at Harvard

It may come as surprise that when Yale University was founded on this day, October 16, 1701, it was by Congregationalist ministers unhappy with the growing liberalism at Harvard. It wasn't called Yale then, of course, but rather the Collegiate School. The ministers donated forty books and declared their objective, that "Youth may be instructed in the Arts and Sciences who through the blessing of God may be fitted for Publick employment both in Church and Civil State." The huge campus of today, with over one hundred buildings was not conceived. In fact, the first classes were held in ...
The Bank of England is Formed by Royal Charter - later to be Purchased for Pennies on the Dollar After a Rothschild Financial Coup

The Bank of England is Formed by Royal Charter – later to be Purchased for Pennies on the Dollar After a Rothschild Financial Coup

For purposes of a mainstream account, the official site of the Bank of England provides a flowery version about the background and purported success of the scheme proposed by “William Paterson, envisaged a loan of £1,200,000 to the Government, in return for which the subscribers would be incorporated as the "Governor and Company of the Bank of England". Although the new bank would have risked its entire capital by lending it to the Government, the subscription proved popular and the money was raised in a few weeks. The Royal Charter was sealed on 27 July 1694, and the Bank ...
John Lilburne was Arrested for Printing and Circulating 'Unlicensed Books' Critical of the King Charles I's Monarchy

John Lilburne was Arrested for Printing and Circulating ‘Unlicensed Books’ Critical of the King Charles I’s Monarchy

In 1638, John Lilburne was arrested upon his return from Holland and put on secret trial by the Star Chamber of Charles I. His crime? The writing and distribution of seditious pamphlets that skewered the legitimacy of the monarchy and challenged the primacy of the high prelates of the Church of England. He was promptly convicted of publishing writing of “dangerous consequence and evil effect.” For these intolerable opinions, the royal tribunal sentenced him to be publicly flogged through the streets of London, from Fleet Prison, built on the tidal flats where Fleet Ditch spilled out London’s sewage, to ...
Galileo Convicted of Heresy for Teaching the Heliocentric System of the Earth Revolving Around the Sun

Galileo Convicted of Heresy for Teaching the Heliocentric System of the Earth Revolving Around the Sun

Despite the considerable evidence that the Bible provided the necessary intellectual basis for science, atheists often claim that, historically, science and religion have been at war. For centuries, they say, the church opposed the advancement of science and human progress in general. When asked for evidence in support of this view, they usually cite the ‘Galileo affair’. Few, however, know what really happened, and many historians see the events of the time very differently to the caricatures often presented by the media. Galileo Galilei (1564–1642) was one of the giants of early science. Although best-known for his work in ...
The 'Petition of Right' Approved by King Charles I in England

The ‘Petition of Right’ Approved by King Charles I in England

The Petition of Right (see document) is a statement of the objectives of the 1628 English legal reform movement that led to the Civil War and deposing of Charles I in 1649. One of England's most famous Constitutional documents, it expresses many of the ideals that later led to the American Revolution. It was written by Parliament as an objection to an overreach of authority by King Charles I. During his reign, English citizens saw this overreach of authority as a major infringement on their civil rights. The Petition of Right contained four main points: No taxes could be levied without Parliament's ...
Gunpowder Plot: Guy Fawkes a False Flag Patsy?

Gunpowder Plot: Guy Fawkes a False Flag Patsy?

Is the story we've been taught about the Gunpowder plot really treason by Guy Fawkes and the group of Catholic men, or has history gone the way of the victors once again? What we're told... As midnight approaches on November the 4th – the eve of the traditional opening of Parliament – armed agents of the King raid a basement room of the Houses of Parliament. They discover and apprehend one Guy Fawkes. People know Fawkes today, of course, because protesters and “Anonymous” fans around the globe wear a mask of him as they gather in front of financial ...
St. Bartholomew's Day Massacre

St. Bartholomew’s Day Massacre

(Image) One Morning at the Gates of the Louvre, The day after St. Bartholomew’s Eve On this day commenced this diabolical act of sanguinary brutality. It was intended to destroy at one stroke the root of the Protestant tree, which had only before partially suffered in its branches. The king of France had artfully proposed a marriage, between his sister and the prince of Navarre, the captain and prince of the Protestants. This imprudent marriage was publicly celebrated at Paris, August 18, by the cardinal of Bourbon, upon a high stage erected for the purpose. They dined in great ...
Religious Reformer William Tyndale Burned at the Stake for Trying to Make the Bible Available to Common People

Religious Reformer William Tyndale Burned at the Stake for Trying to Make the Bible Available to Common People

William Tyndale, 12 years after he left England, was led from prison to the stake where he was strangled, then his body burned. He had time to utter one last cry: “Lord, open the King of England’s eyes.” Tyndale had suffered for the cause “poverty, … exile out of my natural country and bitter absence from my friends, … my hunger, my thirst, my cold, the great danger wherewith I am everywhere encompassed, … and hard and sharp rightings which I endure.” He insisted that death would be more pleasant than life if it were really true that men could ...
Joan of Arc Burnt at the Stake in Rouen's Market Square in France

Joan of Arc Burnt at the Stake in Rouen’s Market Square in France

A young peasant girl who could neither read nor write, she followed the voices and visions from God and completely reversed the course of the 100 Year War (with England occupying most cities) and kept France from becoming a colony of England. Greatly celebrated by her own people she was hated by the English who ultimately captured her and rigged a trial under the auspices of the Church to justify burning her at the stake. She fought for freedom for her people, but would not deny her religious convictions in order to obtain her own freedom. Twenty-five years later ...