Thursday, April 17, 2008

Waterproof Tent Trailer

The order of Jacques-Cartier (the Patent) A party

This article was written by Leo Patenaude JZ which was initiated in 1963 at the Grand Orient de France in Paris and later founded the lodge Montcalm. This lodge Montcalm was the local subsidiary company GODF. Patenaude was also a founding member of the secular movement in Quebec and the League of Rights and Freedoms. The Grand Orient de France he took over the license fee? One is inclined to believe when you look at the secularists and suicidal policies of the current oligarchy Quebec ...

Le Devoir
Saturday, March 25, 1989

"La Patente" and social justice

Z. J. LEÓN PATENAUDE

MY PARTICIPATION is limited to two aspects who have never been mentioned in the working life Laurendeau. Having experienced the early 40's the young nationalist leader at the time of my activities at the Laurentian Youth at The ACJC, the League forthe defense of Canada and in the popular block, I was invited to address two aspects just known commitments on human activities and some of its concerns that some still remember. A company

discrete
Commanders of the Order of Jacques Cartier ("La Patente") was founded in Ottawa in 1926 by Father Barrette and a group of federal officials in order to promote interests of French Canadians in the federal public service. The founder and first permanent secretary was a Freemason. The company will OCJC discreet service to the nation and will grow rapidly, especially in Quebec from 1939 to 1945. "La Patente" will consolidate the elites, leaders and leaders of the Francophonie.
members came from all walks of life and all classes of French Canadian society, many belonged to political parties as the Union Nationale, the Bloc Populaire, Crédit social or liberal National Action. The College was a absolute political neutrality and apolitical on the selection of its members to belong or not to a political party. Thus we find in the 40s, many Liberal Party politicians (MPs, senators).
Andre Laurendeau, returned from Europe in 1937, will lead the review of the ACJC, The Sower which we never mention. A famous trial held in Montreal involving the future provincial secretary, Hector Perrier, and Arthur Laurendeau, following an introduction to school Querbes in Outremont in 1939. The young Andrew was a member of the Order and he certainly should follow the event closely that, at the time, concerns nationalist circles. Let's not forget he led the National Action from 1937 to 1943.
In 1942 he founded the Bloc populaire canadien and became the provincial leader. In 1944 he was elected MP for Laurier in the north-central Montreal.
Without Order intervene directly, the vast majority of officers and members, as was the case of the Commandery which included eleven parishes of the county (XC Louis Riel, No. 90) dedicated to supporting and electing Laurendeau and three other brothers in the Parliament of Quebec. And Jean Drapeau is defeated.
Emigrants Polish
In November 1946, he accepted, in formal dress, to go to the XC Louis Riel in the room McGaughan on Rue Christophe-Colomb, although the place was kept secret meetings. On 21 November the same year, he send me a letter as secretary of "The Watch", a national association of north of the city while I was secretary of the XC. "... I am particularly pleased to attend the meeting as most of our friends are part of the County .. Laurier
Monday, December 2, 1946, 75 members (brothers of the XC) are all present: 35 brothers XC of neighbors and the Regional Council No. 5 of Montreal (CPR, leaders of Credit Unions, Society of Saint-Jean-Baptiste de Montreal, Laurentian Youth, the CGAC). The room is decked out the national flag of French Canadians. Our guest is greeted by the Carillon O; among the topics discussed before the conference, there's what we need to do to help Polish immigrants, we seek an organization that could
reach and educate our ideas ... They are Catholic. Other topics are discussed as the campaign in Ontario against minority schools and the expansion of Credit Unions.
During this meeting, Mr. Laurendeau deals current problems as recorded in the minutes: work, desertion of the countryside and communicates messages to other members of the college with the competence, personality and social commitment. Presented by Dr. Azarie Cousineau and thanked the secretary, the party continues late and gives rise to a fraternal meal.
Laurendeau felt at ease among his people, he knew all the dedication and selflessness of those who supported him, He knew the seriousness of the discussions in the study.
In a letter to Rosaire Morin, dated 23 January 1948, he wrote: "Finally it's a victory! There was no need to scrap in the House for this purpose: your work was so leveled the road that has been recognized without fleurdelysÚs new struggle ... you have certainly been among those most actively promoted and who wanted consistency, so it is a part of your work, and I commend you .. Among the most loyal sponsors, there was Paul-Emile Robert, Robert Orphir, and the Agency of Duvernay SSJBM. The 5th degree

The culprit in the Legislature was René Chaloult.
Between 1962 and 1964, Laurendeau will be a member of the Standing Committee of the Montreal Regional OCJC and it will be hard all meetings according to his colleagues survived. It will participate actively. On 15 June 1964, Rosario Morin transmits the text of the "Manifesto" and "agenda ..
The Council also requests Laurendeau write the promise of a new 5th grade just created with the collaboration of Father Louis Lachance, op The text will be delivered, but several months later, we will proceed with the dissolution of OCJC Laurendeau actively involved until completion.
Next Saturday, the DUTY submit comments MM . Fernand Dumont and Claude Ryan.

Thursday, April 10, 2008

Impetigo Dogs And Humans



Excellent radio interview of Radio-Canada about the history of the national holiday of Quebec, St. Jean Baptiste.
http://www1.radio-canada.ca/radio/emissions/document.asp?docnumero=10439&numero=26

historian Jean-Claude Germain said the Masonic origin and English of this feast. Then he recounts the founding of the Societe Saint-Jean Baptiste by the freemason and Ludger Duvernay revolutionary and how after the crackdown of 1837 to 1839 (because it is the English who have learned the first, the Patriots were simply defending) The Catholic church has invested the Society of St. John the Baptist in order to make harmless and to remove any aspect of Masonic and make St. John a religious festival.
The historian also mentions the role played by the powerful cruxial English Lodge St. Paul in the plot to purge the Party Patriot . This lodge was so famous as members representatives of the most influential of the English population such as Molson and McGill who also controlled the legislative council, a sort of unelected assembly which held the real power at that time.

Monday, March 10, 2008

Makloo's Male Animal Genitalia Gallery

The Masonic Grand Lodge of Quebec: obedience that has a dual history of liberal

Freemasonry arrived in Quebec in the luggage of the conquering British in 1759, the year of the invasion of New France by England.

Press November 14, 1963 By Gilles
Pratte

"0n generally regarded as the Freemasons or Canada arrived at the same time as the English flag. The boxes were attached to seven or eight regiments of the army Wolfe besieged Quebec in 1759, and many regiments of the army of Amherst the following year, obtained the capitulation of Montreal. "

The English version of the history of the Grand Lodge of Quebec feels the same way:

http://www.glquebec.org/English/history.htm

"The Grand Lodge WAS ESTABLISHED of Quebec on October 20th, 1869.
This important event in history o civile about A Hundred and Ten Years After The Introduction [note: in 1759] Into the hand of Freemasonry of Canada now Known As The Province of Quebec, By The Masons serving in the Regiments Which Formed The British Force "under the command of General James Wolfe."

For cons, the Freemasons French have a history quite different from their allegiance:

http://www.glquebec.org/francais/historique. htm

This text is frankly implausible and contradictory. It says, for example, that French lodges have existed in New France before the conquest. It cites two boxes with names in English stating that they were created in 1752 under the French but later in the notes to text, it highlights the obvious absurdity of this theory:

"Contrary to what some believe Brothers, it is clear that this box was speaking at the time of its creation. One may also wonder how and especially why the Freemasons would have given French in 1752 (thus before the Conquest of New France by the British) at their lodge, the name of Albion, by which the Greeks and Romans of antiquity means Great Britain ... "
Lodge "Hearts United" Montreal goes even further into ridicule by claiming that there were lodges in Quebec in 1721, although this is contradicted in the story of their grand lodge. So it will be understood that the FM francos have vivid imaginations ...

But why the history of this lodge is so different by language spoken?
The Grand Lodge of Quebec is a breed of colonialism, an instrument of British power. Its origins date amply demonstrates, as its membership, consisting mostly of English. Regular Freemasonry is undoubtedly a source of progress elsewhere, but here it is strictly an organization to recruit collaborators to serve the colonial power. In 1823, the Masons Montreal Anglophones were separated from the Provincial Grand Lodge as a Freemason Francophone, Claude Dénéchau, had been elected Grand Master of the Order. The English could not bear to be run by a francophone. In 1896, the Freemasons have left the French Grand Lodge of Quebec to join the Grand Orient of France and found the lodge and enjoy for the Emancipation of the "total lack of moral influence of masonry English" on the French-Canadian population.
Later in the 1970s, Francis Marsh, a former venerable master of the lodge "Hearts United" decides to leave the Grand Lodge to form his own obedience by saying that the Grand Lodge of Quebec was led from London.

(both historical are reproduced in full in the comments of this post).