Just for the record, someone recently delivered paper airplanes with a printed image of late Canadian actor John J. Dee and the caption, “‘You can’t win if you don’t play,'” to both the Scottish Rite Cathedral in Hamilton, and the Manresa Manor House in Pickering. That person was me.
I also sent the John J. Dee message to a series of Anglican churches, so if you’re wondering, that was me as well. For the return address on the envelopes, I used the W. Averell Harriman State Office Building in Albany, New York. I assume that the implied connections were not known to most of the immediate recipients.
(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.)
These were the recipients in question:
John J. Dee, who played Max on the CBC sitcom King of Kensington from 1975 to 1978, was openly opposed to satanic child-sex practices that, I have learned through channeling, are commonplace in the entertainment business. I learned that after his time on the show was over, he was tortured and killed in a ritualistic ceremony with his Kensington co-workers present.
Afterwards, his remains were used as part of a “sacred” candle that was thereafter kept at the Scottish Rite Cathedral in Hamilton, Ontario. I also learned, through channeling, about another incident involving that candle, and why it’s a really bad idea to try to steal it.
So that’s why I sent that message to the Scottish Rite and Manresa, which is connected with those people. “You can’t win if you don’t play” was the slogan on Ontario Lottery and Gaming Commission commercials for years, and the slogan originates with John J. Dee, who appeared in commercials for Ontario lotteries in the 1970s and came up with the phrase.
Photo credit:
https://looklocal.ca/hamilton/blog/2017/10/23/not-secret-society-scottish-rite-club/