Chapter 4/J-Skull and Bones Brotherhood of Death There are a handful of these Illuminati-backed college fraternities in the U.S., but we are going to focus on the most influential and nefarious of them all: The Yale chapter of the Skull and Bones Brotherhood of Death. Sounds like a real wholesome organization, doesn’t it? There are other illuminized fraternities preying upon our most promising young Americans, such as Yale’s other two lesser-influential secret societies, “Scroll and Key”, and “The Wolf’s Head Society”. Ivy League secret society-themed fraternities, and very specifically the Skull and Bones, were created with one purpose in mind: To find likeminded people and put them on the path to help create the New World Order after they graduate and enter into the work force. Skull and Bones is located at Yale University in New Haven, Connecticut. The society's alumni organization, which owns the society's real property and oversees the organization, is the Russell Trust Association, named for General William Huntington Russell. Russell co-founded Skull and Bones with classmate Alphonso Taft. Taft’s son William Howard Taft, also a “Bonesman”, ended up as our 27th President of the United States. In 1823, Samuel Russell, William H. Russell’s cousin, established Russell and Company for the purpose of acquiring opium in Turkey and smuggling it to China. Many of the great American and European family fortunes were built upon the smuggling of opium to China in the 1800’s. Russell and Company's Chief of Operations was Warren Delano, Jr., grandfather of President Franklin Delano Roosevelt. Other Russell partners included John Cleve Green, who financed the founding of Princeton; Abiel Low, who financed construction of Columbia University; Joseph Coolidge; and the Perkins, Sturgis and Forbes families. Johan Fitche, who headed the University of Berlin until 1817, was a disciple of the Illuminati. It was his philosophy that the children of Germany should be taken and raised by the State in order to be told what to think and how to think it, a core concept of Communism. George Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel took over Fitche's chair at the University Of Berlin in 1817, and was a professor there until his death in 1831. William Huntington Russell, Samuel's cousin, studied in Germany under Hegel in 1831 until his death. To Hegel, our world exists as a world of reason. The state is “absolute reason” and the citizen can only become free by worship and obedience to the state. Hegel called the state the "march of God in the world" and the "final end". This final end, Hegel said, "has supreme right against the individual, whose supreme duty is to be a member of the state." Both fascism and communism have their philosophical roots in Hegelianism. Hegelian philosophy was very popular and influential during William Russell's time in Germany.
122