Post date: Dec 14, 2015 3:9:13 AM
The Luciferian world is infected with a nasty, grisly human soul-sucking insidious pervasive evil here in the Maritime Provinces which are said to be "owned" by "Irving". That pervasive evil would be the Irving Mafia that surrounds or flows from the Irving family that is at the centre of it. The mafia was designed and built by the patriarch Kenneth Colin Irving and the cult of personality and the corporate cult that flows from him.
It is a cult, it is not just a business conglomerate or a family dynasty. It is a cult and these people incredibly for no noble reason at all are perceived by some or many as some kind of demigods or gods and a "royal family" of sorts.
Not a good sort.
KC Irving is said to be dead tho that seems at least questioinable for more than one reason. For one the incredible wealth this megalomaniac sucked out of the Maritimes and which the said mafia continues to siphon away apparently.
Old KC could literally purchase nonending life with his his kind of money. The best in food, the best in medicine and medical technology, life extension technology ... all underpinned by the FACT that the human body is programmed for survival. There is no logic behind the death of the super elite. Much of it at least, has to be faked. We live in a world of delusion fomented by the like of Irving with is propagandizing printing presses.
Just how wealthy (and thus powerful) is/was he and the family - well apparently it is beyond what they like you to believe and what some do believe or let on that they believe. This is NOT just a local tyrant.
According to a now out-of-print book by writer John DeMont, Irving is or was - incredibly - the most wealthy individual in North America and Europe.
Unconscionably he extracted this wealth from a chronically economically depressed region which is also so poor of human spirit now that Illuminati Irving et al are terraforming or mutating the local breed of humanoid that now is so dim it lacks any collective drive to be free from fascist slavery - in total antithesis to a divine-source soul human being. Irving has defeated these people as there is no organized collective resistance to a fascism (Satanism) that is so thick you taste it in the air.
The Irving Mafia is terraforming the Maritime herd the way he is terraforming the New Brunswick forest over into his own image rather than that of nature's.
According to this book published in 1991 by Doubleday Canada <Citizens Irving: K. C. Irving And His Legacy; The Story Of Canada's Wealthiest Family: John DeMont>:
"Forbes magazine has listed K.C. Irving as the richest man in North America and Europe, the third richest non-monarch in the world. Citizen Irving is the story of the business empire he built. It is also the story of Canada's wealthiest family - and one of its most secretive. John DeMont, Halifax bureau chief for Maclean's magazine, has written a controversial book telling how the patriarch of the family, K.C. Irving, starting 65 years ago in his tiny home town of Bouctouche, New Brunswick, built an empire estimated at more than $7 billion, all without ever having to leave his economically depressed home province. This book sheds fresh light on this secretive 92-year-old, known simply as K.C., who has emerged victorious over small competitors, faced down multinational oil companies, and battled provincial and federal governments in his drive for wealth and power. Citizens Irving also portrays K.C.'s sons, the economic and political power they have inherited, and the way they run their companies. It details the family's holdings in the Maritimes and the U.S., where the empire has expanded widely, particularly into Maine; the Irvings' recent conflict with New Brunswick's other dynastic family, the McCains; and the domination of the Maritimes' economy by the Irvings that makes it almost impossible to live or travel there without contributing to the Irving companies' success. JOHN DeMONT is uniquely qualified to write this book. In his ten years in Canadian journalism he has been a columnist and reporter in Calgary and in Toronto for the Financial Post, and a senior writer for Maclean's magazine. DeMont, who was born in Halifax and is currently Maclean's bureau chief there, co-authored the Financial Post Guide To Mutual Funds and Hong Kong Money." [from flap]
The richest man in North Amercia and Europe. This is the foundation of the Irving Mafia or the Irving Corporate Cult that grew up around the personality of KC. This obscene wealth does help to explain what is going on here in the heavily mind-kontrolled Maritime Coven (Mcoven). It has been reduced now to a structurally economically depressed fiefdom or a giant cult, something like North Korea apparently. There is no way outa here either. Once the Irving Cult gets its crosshairs on you they can make your career and break your career and if they they think they should they will try to break your mind too if they, for some reason of their own deciding, deem it to be the right thing for them to do.
This is not a benevolent mafia organization. This is a cult and it does not want things to change in the region for the better. The Maritimes has been reduced to the dark ages and the same time of collectivist darkness is now enveloping the entire world. The Maritimes appears to be a model now for were the global Luciferian elite is trying to take the entire planet.
They are not trying to kill off most of the population as some theorists believe, they are trying to mutate the human species - which is in fact a soul death. The Luciferian agenda is mass murder alright but it is not at the body level. It is at the mind level, and the elite thinks, at the soul level.
Time will tell how it all works out. As it is, one could make a case that the Millennials now flooding the economy are the mutant generation. Time is getting short for humanity. Irving likes it.
There is no overt collective resistance in the Maritimes now to the Irving superfascism. The people of the Maritimes have cut the umbilical chord to their ancestors who fought in war against fascism or collectivism supposedly.
This mafia should not exist. Nothing else exists in the "developed world" like the Irving fiefdom in New Brunswick, even according to the impotent Kanadian Senate which along with the House of Commons does nothing like it should to bring about humanity's release from the Irving generated Inferno in the Martimes.
Now here is the text of a review of then DeMont book which indicates a little insight surly into the apparently megalomaniacal personality of KC that is at the root of the now totally out-of-control Irving Mafia:
By Ian Gordon Malcomson HALL OF FAMETOP 50 REVIEWER on May 23 2011
This book is a carefully crafted, critically analytical biography of one of Canada's last great robber barons of the twentieth century. K.C.Irving, born in Bouctouche, New Brunswick, in the early 1900s, developed a vision for becoming wealthy by shrewdly and painstakingly taking control of the province's industrial base. DeMont portrays a man who had the protestant work ethic down pat to the point that making lots of money became his only goal in life. While he is made out to be a decent man who operated with the customer in mind and the investor not far behind, there is another, not so complimentary side to Irving worth noting. Irving, according to DeMont, did not spare any expense in attempting to influence the government of the day in Fredericton when it came to gaining concessions for his various commercial interests stemming from his vast oil holdings. DeMont does a credible job in covering these various maneuvers to win political support. In short, Irving was always there seeking what he would claim was in the best interests of New Brunswick: jobs, in-house control of its own resources, and a chance to control its economic future. As you read this book, you will get a strong impression that Irving saw his role in life as saving the province from economic decline by hard work and ingenuity. To that end, the Irving business empire controlled the majority of New Brunswick's newspapers, radio stations, gas stations, and oil refineries. He had the uncanny ability to take failed companies and profitably integrate them into the Irving matrix. He could also be ruthless in destroying those who resisted his overtures to buy out. His pulp and mining companies had an unenviable record of being able to fight and win numerous litigations over illegal dumping of chemical wastes. As the province began to modernize in the seventies, the allure of the Irving monopolistic name started to wane and his legacy took on a very troubling face. His financial capital - St.John - had become a environmental disaster; the courts were starting to render unfavourable decisions against his iron-tight grip on newspapers; and foreign corporations were entering the picture to challenge the Irving name. The last part of the book deals with how the next generation of Irvings hope to expand their father's vision to compete in the New England market. If the history of the last twenty years has been anything to go by, this very secretive family consortium has spread its financial tentacles to other parts of the global economy to the tune of billions of dollars. Read this book if you want to learn how this family's name got started with one man's dream to become wealthy the old-fashioned way.
A part of the text here suggests a (self-appointed) messianiac quality in the mind of KC that would indicate delusion. He apparently believes himself to be some sort of a savior. What he doesn't understand is that a real hero would not rape and pillage and feel it was his right to destroy any resistance or anyone who dare not capitulate to his tyranny. This part:
While he is made out to be a decent man who operated with the customer in mind and the investor not far behind, there is another, not so complimentary side to Irving worth noting. Irving, according to DeMont, did not spare any expense in attempting to influence the government of the day in Fredericton when it came to gaining concessions for his various commercial interests stemming from his vast oil holdings. DeMont does a credible job in covering these various maneuvers to win political support. In short, Irving was always there seeking what he would claim was in the best interests of New Brunswick: jobs, in-house control of its own resources, and a chance to control its economic future. As you read this book, you will get a strong impression that Irving saw his role in life as saving the province from economic decline by hard work and ingenuity. To that end, the Irving business empire controlled the majority of New Brunswick's newspapers, radio stations, gas stations, and oil refineries. He had the uncanny ability to take failed companies and profitably integrate them into the Irving matrix. He could also be ruthless in destroying those who resisted his overtures to buy out. His pulp and mining companies had an unenviable record of being able to fight and win numerous litigations over illegal dumping of chemical wastes.
Now here are extracts from another article that indicate how the media solidifies this savior myth about Irving. It actually is quite incredible how this Irving scenario of evil has come about in New Bruswick. This text also displays the less violent ways that the Irving Mafia deploys mindkontrol against the defeated population and torture against any authentic resistance. This text would prove that Irving is a cult.
NOVEMBER 10, 2003
[....]
The papers routinely present the view that what's good for the company is good for the province. When Irving Oil maintained high production levels while replacement workers and management ran the plant during the 1994 refinery strike, the Irving-owned media heralded their accomplishment with laudatory headlines about this boon for New Brunswick's fiscal health. Yet when strikers threaten to initiate a boycott of Irving products, this was proclaimed as a dire threat to the health of the provincial economy. [19]
Finally, the Irvings' coverage of their own empire is particularly marked by a strategy of defeatism where those who oppose the company are routinely portrayed as naive, foolish and irrational in their futile effort to challenge the Irvings. Last month's coverage of the closure of the Irving-owned Saint John shipyard and the decertification of five unions reveals examples of this classic response. The Saint John Telegraph Journal's news coverage and editorial on the story was filled with phrases such as 'end of an era', 'stalemate', 'spin their wheels' and 'going nowhere fast'. The media stated that the Irving's compensation package to the union 'isn't going to get any better' and 'like it or not, we believe they hold all the cards.' [20]
A consequence of this discourse of defeatism is that the public "may begin to feel increasingly alienated and disconnected from the civic life of their communities. They may develop a sense that they are without relevant, actionable information and, therefore, powerless to control the course of their own lives." [21]
Earlier there is this:
The coverage of the issue in the Irving papers failed to identify any of the context for the labour dispute and didn't reveal the proposed 30% wage cut at all. [10] For example, when the twenty-seven month strike at Irving Oil concluded in 1996 with a humiliating defeat for the Communications, Energy and Paperworkers union, the company required a process of ideological re-education which was essentially a means for the company to control the hearts and minds of its now broken labour force. Refinery workers spent two weeks at a local hotel with facilitators from an American consulting firm where they were required to go through a reorientation agenda which included "venting emotions", "problem people" and a participation in a "public declaration". Successful completion of the first week of this program was a prerequisite to being "invited" to week two, which involved "team building" exercises for union members and their former colleagues who crossed the picket lines as well as replacement workers who had been kept on. Week two in turn was followed by a practical test at the refinery lasting up to four weeks. Workers were assessed every day and did not get full pay until they passed the entire program.
Returning workers at the refinery said that in reality, the reorientation program was a combination "bitterness test" and "attitude alteration" exercise. Workers were told that they were misled by their local union and to doubt the credibility of the executives of their national union. Labour observers noted at the time that the Irvings were blacklisting the striking workers and the back to work protocol was identified as a 'brainwashing' exercise. [11]
Not surprisingly, the words 'brainwashing' and 'blacklisting' of strikers never appeared in the Irving papers' coverage of the strike. In contrast, the New Brunswick papers published the names of the 37 striking workers who were fired by the company under the headline "Not welcome at the Refinery". [12] The re-orientation was described as a "back-to-work program" that was a "tough transition" for the men who "failed" and were "told to go home". [13]
But it is interesting to note that the Irvings' coverage of the issue was paralleled in the only national newspaper at the time, the Globe and Mail. The Globe and Mail allowed the Irvings to set the agenda on the tone and coverage of the strike and its unorthodox back to work protocol and presented virtually identical coverage to the national audience.
That Irving Mafia can get away with deploying such soul-sucking tactics and can control the national press and not just the local press that they own indicates that the organization that surrounds KC Irving is connected to some really big malevolent power. The Luciferian power that rules the world for the moment. Indeed as this post suggests old KCwould at least be a candidate for Antichrist status <Shortlisted for anti-Christ status: the Dalai Lama ... KC Irving ... Obama ... >