Beginning in May 1917 to October 1917, a monthly message from God was delivered to three children and others in the town of Fatima, Portugal. The message warned the people against supporting the illuminated Communists that were quickly gaining public support throughout the world. This message was largely unheeded. In 1918 to 1919, an influenza epidemic killed millions of people worldwide.
Charles Darwin’s book “Origin of the Species” (first) published in (1859), discussed the process of natural selection in animals. During the early 1900’s the book’s ideas were transformed and were applied to human beings becoming the foundation of the eugenics movement. Hitler’s plan to develop his own godlike “Aryan Nation” was based on eugenics theory publications that were popular reading at that time.
An influential woman in the Communist movement in the United States was Margaret Sanger. She was born one of eleven children in 1879 to a poor family living in Corning, New York. Margaret Sanger’s sister helped to pay (for) Sanger’s tuition at a nursing school (that) she attended in early adulthood. Her training as a nurse was used to promote birth control to the poor living in New York City during the early years of the 1900’s. Sanger was an atheist who proclaimed “No God, No Masters”. Additional quotes spoken by Margaret Sanger (*author’s note: were offered on a website that is no longer available, one quote in particular shown on this website, indicated that Sanger desired to eliminate African Americans.) Sanger aligned herself with like minded Communists promoting eugenics, euthanasia, selective breeding, and sterilization. She became Planned Parenthood’s first president and eventually promoted the use of the abortifacient birth control pill through that agency.
Malignant Roots Spread
Illuminated Communists continued to infiltrate the nations across Europe, Asia, and America with their Godless society ideologies. The Second World War instigated by the governments of Germany and Japan began in 1939. Adolf Hitler, Germany’s leader envisioned a consolidated Europe under his Nazi control. Hitler attended Catholic a school as a child, was an altar boy, and considered becoming a priest. Hitler’s fragmented knowledge of religion served an illuminated dictatorial agenda. As leader of the Nazi regime, Hitler implemented eugenics programs to accomplish his goal of achieving a “master race”. He deemed that the Jews and the handicapped were not human beings and were to be killed. Dissenting people who spoke out against the Nazi government were also murdered. A total of twelve million people were killed under the Nazi regime. Meanwhile in the Soviet Union “Stalinist Purges” continued as more than twenty million Russian people were killed for dissenting against government policies. To replace the dwindling population, Stalin outlawed abortion in 1936 (*authors’ note: by 1955, abortion was reapproved in the Soviet Union). In 1939, Germany and the Soviet Union signed an agreement called the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact to divide Europe between the two countries. Japan had similar ambitions to consolidate Asia under Japanese authority. China was suffering from internal strife as the Communists continued to gain influence in that nation.