Comment

Apr 21, 2017
For those serious persons who have the intelligence and perseverance to read this great work of Dante, I may suggest to find and read another work by a Hungarian aristocrat, Imre Madach, who published his theatrical drama in 1861, titled: "The Tragedy Of Man." Some say if this work had been written in English or other great languages, it would figure among the greatest works of world literature. There is an English translation of it by William N. Loew, a Hungarian Jew, a genius, who immigrated to the USA from Hungary in the early 1900s and who got a law degree in New York, and was member of the Bar there. I found his translation on the I-net; it's in the California Public Library as an e-book. He, the translator says that the original (archaic) Hungarian language of this work is so terse and so expressive, it's impossible to render its full strength in any other languages. (He's right - I as a Hungarian can tell). This "Tragedy Of Man" is allegedly (by official sources) a "poetic vision" of the past and future of Humanity, but me, being a Hungarian myself and having learned from Canadian library sources, I discovered that it's not exactly a "vision," it's also a broad picture of the human condition, and it includes many details that I learned from other Western books about the plans of ancient secret societies about the planned future of Mankind. I'm sure the author was initiated into those plans in the mid-1800s and he took an overall view of the past and the planned and the possible future of Mankind. Read Act 12 (the Phalanx) and you will find there all the plans for the future robotic world, and the rule of science, and even genetic modification plans for the living world. The author even foresees space travel. In the end he rejects those "scientific" society's plans of the Phalanx, and says that Man (Adam, or the author himself) should accept Nature as God has given it to us, and try to live more sensibly to resolve the problems of overpopulation and the depletion of resources. My overall view is that Madach, the author was let in on secret plans by secret societies that created America and spread over Europe in the early 1800s, and as he breached his vow of secrecy, he was punished by those secret societies that have no mercy for those who betray their secrets. He (the author) fell ill after he published his work in 1861, and was consumed by a mysterious illness, and died at age 41 in 1864. He presents his work as a fight between God Creator and Lucifer the Rebel who says that the original Creation is imperfect and Lucifer is opposed to it and He wants to create a better world of his own, using Science, which is "holy" for him. And it's holy for those secret societies too, who initiated Madach. (Those secret societies in question are Luciferians and they are among us today - they hold that by acquiring knowledge men can become gods). In another library book I read that those secret societies (Weishaupt's was one of them) spread in Europe starting from 1819, when they recruited the wealthy and influential aristocracy into their camp, and the most renowned Hungarian aristocratic families joined them. What Madach shows and tells us in Act 12 of the "Tragedy Of Man," can also be found in some modern books, including Dr. John Coleman's book "The Conspirators' Hierarchy" (1992, 1997), and it's amazing that 131 years after Madach he tells as the future plans for Mankind, the exact same details as you find in Act 12 of Madach's work - an absolute robotic world with no family, no private property, no nations states; a totally controlled society. So, the plans for Man's future are old, at least 150 yrs old, but probably at least 2,000 yrs old. Unfortunately, the Luciferian plan is necessary, bec. people are selfish and don't care. This is the tragedy of Man.