It does: They want fear, uncertainty, and death. They want hell on Earth and they're using coronavirus, in addition to everything else, to advance these ends. If you look up the etymology of "the end justifies the means", you'll find an oath by the Society of Jesus (aka Jesuit Order) and discover that there is nothing good in that end; most people don't properly understand this and thing the end usually being referred to when this is uttered is good.
Look, man, I loathe the Jesuits. I probably loathe them more than you do. But that oath you're referring to was produced by a Democrat in 1912 who was trying to discredit his Republican opponent, who happened to be a Catholic.
It does: They want fear, uncertainty, and death. They want hell on Earth and they're using coronavirus, in addition to everything else, to advance these ends. If you look up the etymology of "the end justifies the means", you'll find an oath by the Society of Jesus (aka Jesuit Order) and discover that there is nothing good in that end; most people don't properly understand this and thing the end usually being referred to when this is uttered is good.
Look, man, I loathe the Jesuits. I probably loathe them more than you do. But that oath you're referring to was produced by a Democrat in 1912 who was trying to discredit his Republican opponent, who happened to be a Catholic.
"The following is the Jesuit Extreme Oath of Induction given to high ranking Jesuits only. This oath is taken from the book Subterranean Rome by Carlos Didier, translated from the French, and published in New York in 1843."
So you're going to need more to convince me of that claim. Do you have a citation?
The Library of Congress has it listed as 1912
Do you have a link? I don't know my way around the Library of Congress.