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 Assassination of President Harrison

    William Henry Harrison was elected to the Presidency of the United States in the year 1841.  He was already well up in years at 67, but he was very healthy and robust.  All who knew him felt that he would have no problem going through his full four years in office.  However, just thirty-five days after taking the oath of office, President Harrison was dead on April 4, 1841.  Most, if not all, encyclopedias will tell you that he died of pneumonia after giving his inaugural address in the severe cold of Washington D.C., but that is not correct.  He did not die of pneumonia.

    When Harrison came to office a very tense situation existed in the country.  Trouble was brewing between the North and the South over the issue of slavery.  There was contention over the annexation of Texas, whether it would be admitted free or slave.  An attempt had been made on President Jackson's life just six years before.  Harrison took office a short twenty years before the Civil War.  The influence of the Jesuits was weighing heavily upon America.

    The Congresses at Vienna, Verona, Chieri, were determined to destroy popular government wherever it was found.  The prime target was the United States and the destruction of every Protestant principle.  The despicable Jesuits were ordered to carry out this destruction.

     Andrew Jackson faced the onslaught of the Jesuits via the political mine fields of John C. Calhoun and the financial wizardry of Nicholas Biddle.  William Henry Harrison had also refused to go along with the Jesuits goals for America.  In his inaugural address he made these comments:

     "We admit of no government by divine right, believing that so far as power is concerned, the beneficent Creator has made no distinction among men; that all are upon an equality, and that the only legitimate right to govern, is upon the expressed grant of power from the governed." The Suppressed Truth About the Assassination of Abraham Lincoln p. 44  by Burke McCarty

     By this statement, President Harrison had just incurred the deadly wrath of the Jesuits.

     "With these unmistakable words President Harrison made his position clear; he hurled defiance to the Divine Right enemies of our Popular Government. [Burke McCarty is talking about Rome when she says that.]  Aye, he did more--for those were the words that signed his death warrant.  Just one month and five days from that day, President Harrison lay a corpse in the White House.  He died from arsenic poisoning, administered by the tools of Rome.  The Jesuit oath had been swiftly carried out:

     'I do further promise and declare that I will, when opportunity presents, make and wage, relentless war, secretly or openly, against all heretics, Protestants and Liberals, as I am directed to do, to extirpate them and exterminate them from the face of the earth.... That when the same cannot be done openly, I will secretly use the poison cup regardless of the honor, rank, dignity or authority of the person or persons... whatsoever may be their condition in life, either public or private, as I at any time may be directed so to do by an agent of the Pope or Superior of the Brotherhood of the Holy Faith of the Society of Jesus." Ibid pp. 44, 46

    For nearly a thousand years, the Roman Catholic popes felt that they ruled by divine right, that their power had come directly from God, and that all men were to bow to their authority and control.  If a ruler would not submit his position and the country he ruled into the hands of the Pope, then that person had no right to rule.

     Harrison's statement was a slap in their face, that they felt must be dealt with.

    Harrison was not alone, our Constitution rejects the control of the papacy as well.

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