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The global power of freemasonry - Gnostic Liberation Front

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year old student leader and freemason Juan Roa Sierra, hours before<br />

he shot the politician in a central Bogota street. <strong>The</strong> assassination<br />

brought on riots where 5000 people died. CIA agents William A. Wie-<br />

land and Robottom kept an eye on the events.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Cuban Ambassador to Washington, Octavio Belt, was present in<br />

Bogota, and in charge <strong>of</strong> providing a plane for Castro and the other<br />

communist terrorists to return to Cuba.<br />

Castro got his law degree in 1949 in Havana and thereafter worked<br />

as a lawyer. At this time he also became a freemason. He lacked<br />

principles, and labelled himself a 'revolutionary'. He found inspi-<br />

ration in the Spanish dictator Primo de Rivera. As long as the Cuban<br />

economy was thriving, he was unable to introduce communism.<br />

Castro together with Batista planned all the details <strong>of</strong> Batista's<br />

takeover from 1948 to 1950, sometimes in Batista's villa Cookyness.<br />

Batista was called a symbiant, because the only purpose for having<br />

him in <strong>power</strong> was to help Castro and the communist takeover. Castro<br />

received communist training in the Soviet Embassy in Havana from<br />

1948 to 1949. Batista's coup on 10 March 1952 was like a bad TV<br />

movie repeated.<br />

On 26 July 1953, Castro led an armed riot against the dictator<br />

Fulgencio Batista in Santiago de Cuba, which <strong>of</strong>ficially rendered him<br />

a 15-year prison sentence. He was, however, granted amnesty in<br />

1955, after which he moved to Mexico.<br />

Exiled in Mexico, Castro got even more help from the communists.<br />

Veterans <strong>of</strong> the red brigades <strong>of</strong> Spain trained Castro in Mexico. <strong>The</strong><br />

Mexican press accused them <strong>of</strong> being communist terrorists. <strong>The</strong><br />

socialist President Lazaro Cardenas and London's bankers protected<br />

them. Cardenas also provided them with some fancy weapons and<br />

several farms and security houses where to train and live.<br />

Benjamin Vega published Castro's interviews in Alerta, a newspaper<br />

owned by Vasconcelos and Batista.<br />

On 2 December 1956, he returned from Tuxpan together with 82<br />

terrorists that landed near Belic-Niquero, Oriente, in Cuba intending<br />

to fight Batista with the support <strong>of</strong> the CIA.<br />

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