EMBARRASSING but true, it wasn’t until researching the Nanteos Cup and then later writing King Arthur’s part in my Seven Thousand Year Timeline Deception thesis, notably in 537AD: The End of Camelot, that I first learned about the Dissolution of the Monasteries in England. “Dissolved” is a rather nice way of putting it. In a few short years, King Henry VIII destroyed over 800 cathedrals, monasteries, friaries, and nunneries, all of which I now suspect were Millennial Kingdom buildings. I am 44 years old as of this first publication. How had that fact escaped me all these years? The Dissolution was not a part of my education in America, probably because I attended private schools for the most part, all of which were of protestant design. Why am I not surprised to learn that my grade school educators put nothing on the test unless the propaganda gloried in Protestantism? The Reformation, as well as the Counter-Reformation which met it head on, truly was a dark period in world His-Story.
Learning about the Dissolution got me looking closely into the man of the hour as well as the players around him, and cross-pollination is everywhere. Choose your [fill in the blank] protestant denomination, I was already aware that spooks hugged the pulpits of the Reformation and that not all was as it seems. Henry VIII’s six wives had long been in my peripheral vision, and I’d also known that Henry VIII had not only created but declared himself the head of the Church of England in 1534. There’s not even a pole large enough to hold that red flag. Need I remind you that the church is a woman? The whore of Babylon is also a woman. And so, what I had never stopped to appreciate until now is that Henry VIII committed the deed, and in fact went about England destroying Millennial Kingdom buildings, over women.
This will take some review.
The entire report can be read in the PDF below.