Comments:
http://www.image-upload.net/images/lno7jh0dxebb8ko5fa1.jpeg<br />
<br />
Philip Gardiner, “Secret Societies: Gardiner's Forbidden Knowledge : Revelations About the Freemasons, Templars, Illuminati, Nazis, and the Serpent Cultsâ€<br />
New Page Books | 2007-06-30 | ISBN: 1564149234 | 256 pages | PDF <br />
<br />
With his recent best-selling books and hundreds of articles, as well as radio and TV appearances, Philip Gardiner has started a crusade for uncovering the truth, and nothing could be more indicative of that search than his latest foray into the dark and often sinister world of secret societies.<br />
<br />
Yet again, in Secret Societies, Gardiner finds himself on a journey across the world to uncover the ancient secrets of the world's most powerful men. In one dramatic episode he finds himself driven out of Berlin in a black Mercedes by a secret organization that was believed to have disappeared after the second World War and eventually arrives in a modern Nazi watering hole. Gardiner, however, survives this incredible journey and brings us the secrets of the Order held sacred for so long.<br />
<br />
Gardiner delves into a world that is often hidden from our eyes and finds himself in situations that seem to mirror the fictional world of the Da Vinci Code.<br />
<br />
In Secret Societies, Gardiner:<br />
-Gets to the core of the secret societies' belief systems.<br />
-Explores the secret origins of Freemasonry and the links to secret Serpent Cults.<br />
-Investigates the secret hidden meaning of King Arthur and Robin Hood. -Examines the claimants to the name of Illuminati, and analyzes the history of the group in Europe and America.<br />
-Reveals the secret links within the Vatican and the Nazi Party.<br />
-Looks in-depth at the white-powdered gold theory supposedly kept secret by orders throughout time and radically re-appraises it.<br />
-Shows the link between the so-called enlightenment experience and the control of our minds.<br />
<br />
Nobody in the genre involves themselves in the tale in the same way that Gardiner does, and here he shows that the search for ultimate truth can often be a terrifying one.
External comments