Is the New Leader of Canada a Victim of Illuminati Mind Control?Review of Common Ground
By Ann Diamond
Justin Trudeau's autobiography Common Ground was not easy to review. Its unspoken subtext involves abuse due to the Illuminati/Luciferian background of both sides of his family.
In her book TRANCE-FORMATION OF AMERICA MK-ULTRA survivor Cathy O'Brien stated that many world leaders, including
Pierre Trudeau and Brian Mulroney, are pedophiles. She met them in the course of her life as a sex slave trained (with her young daughter) to service high-profile politicians. Other sources support Cathy O'Brien's allegations.
Over the years, insiders have told me that Pierre's 1968 marriage to Margaret was "arranged" by the military. The couple programmed with LSD at a remote farm in British Columbia.
According to Trudeau's Jesuit mentor, Trudeau ordered the
kidnap and murder of his enemy Pierre Laporte in October 1970, because Laporte was threatening him with blackmail and exposure as a pedophile.
After Margaret ran off with the Rolling Stones in 1977, the marriage was over. Soon after, as a single father, Pierre turned to a York University sociologist, John Seeley, for parental advice.
John Seeley, a self-proclaimed 'sadist and pedophile' would fly up to Ottawa on weekends to "advise" Pierre on how he should be raising his three sons. Justin was six.
Quite a childhood. First the trauma of being separated from the mother he adored, then frequent exposure to his father's unsavory friends.
Children often idealize their abusive parents. During his eulogy at Pierre's funeral, a smiling 28-year-old Justin seemed dissociated, almost giddy.
He began the eulogy with a weird story about a trip he took at age six, with his father and grandfather "to the North Pole," to a "military installation" at Alert NWT.
There the awe-struck boy discovered Santa Claus and "that's when I understood just how powerful and wonderful my father was."
Carolyn Hamlett, a victim of Illuminati mind control and pedophilia, said these abuses took place at military installations.
Is Justin referring to
MK-Ultra brainwashing? In general, the eulogy rings insincere and hollow. There is no trace of love or grief. His father had little time for his children.
A few years ago, I was shown a 1984 letter signed by Pierre Elliot Trudeau expressing enthusiastic interest in meeting a ten-year-old boy. The letter may have been used in a blackmail attempt by the boy's father.
If Pierre Trudeau was abusing their children, Margaret's history of bipolar illness takes on a whole different cast.
Common Ground by Justin TrudeauPOIGNANT PR
Common Ground is all about the heir to the Trudeau throne.
The book is persuasive and well put together, probably with help from a seasoned journalist. It flows like slick PR, but has much unhealed trauma in the margins. Posing as saviours, Trudeaus and Sinclairs may be well-paid agents of national decline, but their story is emblematic and unavoidable.
Here and there, a reader encounters tragedy almost worthy of a Russian novel. Certain passages actually moved me to tears: his parents' divorce and the loss of his brother. His love for his mother, who skidded into depression while partying with rock stars and royals.
As for the politics - you're not really interested in Liberal rhetoric, are you? Young Trudeau manfully appeals to Liberal platitudes: tolerance, openness to cultural differences, gender equality, all of which sound good after the Harper decade.
There are odd references suggesting the author has rubbed shoulders with elite perverts.
Prince Andrew and the Starlight Foundation. Jacques Hebert and Katimavik. West Point Grey Academy and his mate Christopher Ingvaldson, convicted of possessing child porn.
All in all, Justin's very likeable, although Post Traumatic Stress glimmers from his eyes. In Common Ground, he reminds us that everyone has a story to tell.
Justin could have flown away like Le Petit Prince, but instead is doing his utmost to move back to the scene of his childhood trauma: the cold, drafty mausoleum called "24 Sussex Drive."
Source: HenryMakow.com
http://www.mindpowernews.com/JustinTrudeau.html
It's all about "how much you made when you were right" & "how little you lost when you were wrong"