You may be familiar with Yves Lavigne’s books about the Hell’s Angels, Taking Care of Business and Into the Abyss. Here is my review.
Bullshit smokescreen.
That’s the two-word version.
The one-word version is “fiction.”
(Given that there’s no evidence being presented here that isn’t circumstantial, this post and the others like this are an exercise in hypothesizing for entertainment purposes only, whether or not the accounts presented correspond to real, not-fictional events.)
On the back of Taking Care of Business is this disclaimer: “This book has been neither authorized nor endorsed by the Hell’s Angels Motorcycle Corporation.”
It occurred to me: Doesn’t that sound like the language they’d use themselves? Who uses the term “Hell’s Angels Motorcycle Corporation” but the Hell’s Angels themselves?
That’s what it at least feels like. Like, “This book has been authorized and endorsed by the Hell’s Angels Motorcycle Corporation because this is what we want you to believe about us, courtesy of our agent, Yves Lavigne.“
This is one of the ways the book works for them: Someone at the Hamilton (Ontario) Public Library notifies the Hell’s Angels whenever someone checks out an Yves Lavigne book.
That’s the point of the book. A red herring, there to mislead people and act as a tip-off mechanism to identify potential investigators.
Here’s the thing. These are things you need to start telling yourself about the world, if you haven’t done so already.
- Most of the things that happen in the world happen in private, and are kept secret. The stuff that gets reported on and broadcast is just a small portion of the reality of things.
- A long time ago, people figured out that you can tell lies, fool people, and make them believe something that isn’t true.
- This has happened on a grand scale, and there are people out there who know about it, and keep secrets. Freemasons know this. The House of Plantagenet changed English royal history to erase the existence of the historical King Arthur. The real King Arthur actually repelled the Norman Invasion.
- This may be for just a portion of the audience. Remember the 90’s, when that JFK movie came out, and people realized that governments could cover up things with fictional accounts like that produced by the Warren Commission? And you had to conclude that the media and mainstream culture had been beating the drum of a false story for years? And then no one believed that Lee Harvey Oswald acted alone after that? I remember that.
- This is a world where conspiracies are the way of things.
- Basically, there is indeed a secret network of elites that aim to manipulate and control people on a large scale, and it has been in operation for centuries.
- The current version of it dates back, in some way, to the reign of Queen Elizabeth I, but includes the Plantagenet/Freemasonry people, whose organization dates farther back in time.
- The top of the “power pyramid,” basically the Evil People At The Top, in terms of structure, are the British Crown, with the Clintons as the strategic leader(s).
Some blurbs about motorcycle gang activity
As a hint of the kinds of things that go on out there, here are an assortment of short stories about satanist motorcycle gangs.
- Rick Sutcliffe, former major league baseball player and broadcaster for ESPN, is a high-ranking Hell’s Angel, if not a leader of the Hell’s Angels.
- Ryne Sandberg is pretty high up there; he was a teammate of Sutcliffe’s on the Cubs.
- Other names from the Cubs: Lee Smith, Steve Trout, Andre Dawson, and through an L.A. connection (Sutcliffe was a rookie with the Dodgers), Tommy Lasorda.
- Kim Seaman is a notable figure in the history of motorcycle gang involvement in Major League Baseball. Seaman is hardly a household name. He’s most notable for being part of a multitude of St. Louis Cardinals players who were batched off to San Diego for Rollie Fingers, Gene Tenace, and Bob Shirley in 1980. In his book, You’re Missing a Great Game, Cardinals manager Whitey Herzog described the Cardinals as having a bunch of “sorry people” on the team. He is connected to the Rock Machine motorcycle gang.
- Canada has a shameful secret history of genocide: I’d estimate that more than 100,000 Native Canadians have been murdered for the purpose of motorcycle gang initiations. A common method is to kidnap a young native man, roll him up in a carpet, and push him to death from a height, like a cliff. It also seems like the messaging about “missing and murdered Native women” is something of a smokescreen to distract people from a real, ongoing phenomenon–missing and murdered Native boys.
- The deaths of former major league baseball players Gary Carter and Tony Fernandez are related to their membership in motorcycle gangs.
- Basically, your secret-society-type people operate in terms of families, stretching across generations, across time, the way European royalty operate. That level of interaction in the world basically still operates that way, through elite families and connections, and it is a closed house. My first awareness of this type of activity began in my early twenties, when I read Antony Sutton’s book, America’s Secret Establishment: The Order of the Skull and Bones.
- Morley Safer, of 60 Minutes, was a “highest ranking” Satan’s Choice “captain.” The deaths of Max Robinson and Harry Reasoner were both murders related to their individual opposition to the secret world where famous media personalities have sex with children. In Reasoner’s case, it was after he retired. Robinson was courted by the team, but resisted, and was eventually murdered.
- If you know Ontario, you may be familiar with Intercounty baseball, as I am. Apparently, there’s biker involvement there, and John Hiller, former major league baseball player and namesake of the Stratford Hillers baseball team, is/was affiliated with Satan’s Choice.
- Sergeant Cam Wooley of the Ontario Provincial Police is a Hell’s Angel. I don’t know how much I’d trust those guys.
- Ontario Premier Doug Ford’s affiliation is/was Rock Machine.
- Canadian MLB Hall of Famer Larry Walker is a Satan’s Choice member.
- Jeopardy! is rigged, through biker involvement, and the rigging of McDonald’s contests, involving the first fourteen years or so of Monopoly and Scrabble games, was also a biker scheme. Certain Jeopardy! contestants are fed answers beforehand.
- There are at least a few game shows that have been rigged, like the $100,000 Name That Tune and The $1,000,000 Chance of a Lifetime. There’s a woman from a Canadian satanist/biker-family woman named Barbara Ann Eddy, whom I originally knew from my family’s 1980 edition of The Guinness Book of World Records, in which she, along with Don Chu, are listed as the biggest game show winners, having won the top prize on the second and first seasons, respectively, of The $128,000 Question. The second season of The $128,000 Question was taped in British Columbia, and Eddy, like other rigged contestants, was given the answers beforehand. Eddy also turned up on Jeopardy! years later as a five-time champion. The “winner” receives just a portion of their prize money.
- James Holzhauer was not a rigged contestant, and it took multiple attempts with rigged contestants to defeat him. As such, he got to keep all his prize money.
- There are at least a few game shows that have been rigged, like the $100,000 Name That Tune and The $1,000,000 Chance of a Lifetime. There’s a woman from a Canadian satanist/biker-family woman named Barbara Ann Eddy, whom I originally knew from my family’s 1980 edition of The Guinness Book of World Records, in which she, along with Don Chu, are listed as the biggest game show winners, having won the top prize on the second and first seasons, respectively, of The $128,000 Question. The second season of The $128,000 Question was taped in British Columbia, and Eddy, like other rigged contestants, was given the answers beforehand. Eddy also turned up on Jeopardy! years later as a five-time champion. The “winner” receives just a portion of their prize money.
- Canadian Olympic athlete Victor Davis was killed by members of the Rock Machine motorcycle gang (or possibly RM who had been absorbed by another club, possibly Satan’s Choice, that’s what I’m getting), the result of an innocent conflict that escalated to murder.
- John’s Men is a term reserved “for the most intelligent people.” It’s a reference to Sir John A. MacDonald. Sir John A. MacDonald killed people, raped young boys, and was the assassin who killed Canadian politician D’Arcy McGee, using Patrick Whelan’s gun to frame him.
- The Hell’s Angels/bikers were kept out of legal Ontario cannabis production. That’s why The Friendly Stranger can’t sell marijuana.
- Former leader of the federal Conservative party and Oshawa Member of Parliament Erin O’Toole is a high-ranking Hell’s Angel.
- Former Detroit mayor Kwame Kilpatrick is a Hell’s Angel.
More to come.