One hundred years ago, the ship that couldn’t sink sank. It’s the centennial anniversary of RMS Titanic’s ill-fated end on its debut transatlantic crossing.
On April 10, 1912, the Titanic, largest ship afloat, left Southampton, England on her maiden voyage to New York City. The White Star Line had spared no expense in assuring her luxury. A legend even before she sailed, her passengers were a mixture of the world’s wealthiest basking in the elegance of first class accommodations and immigrants packed into steerage.
She was touted as the safest ship ever built, so safe that she carried only 20 lifeboats – enough to provide accommodation for only half her 2,200 passengers and crew. This discrepancy rested on the belief that since the ship’s construction made her “unsinkable,” her lifeboats were necessary only to rescue survivors of other sinking ships. Additionally, lifeboats took up valuable deck space.
At the time of her construction, the Titanic was the largest ship ever built. She was nearly 900 feet long, stood 25 stories high, and weighed an incredible 46,000 tons. With turn-of-the-century design and technology, including sixteen major watertight compartments in her lower section that could easily be sealed off in the event of a punctured hull, the Titanic was deemed an unsinkable ship. According to her builders, even in the worst possible accident at sea, two ships colliding, the Titanic would stay afloat for two to three days, which would provide enough time for nearby ships to help.






On April 14, 1912, however, the Titanic sideswiped a massive iceberg and sank in less than three hours. Damaging nearly 300 feet of the ship’s hull, the collision allowed water to flood six of her sixteen major watertight compartments. She was on her maiden voyage to the United States, carrying more than 2200 passengers and crew, when she foundered. Only 705 of those aboard the Titanic ever reached their destination. After what seemed like a minor collision with an iceberg, the largest ship ever built sank in a fraction of the time estimated for her worst possible accident at sea.
Two government investigations (U.S.A. & Britain) conducted immediately after the disaster agreed it was the iceberg, not any weakness in the ship itself, that caused the Titanic to sink. Both inquiries concluded the vessel had gone to the bottom intact. Blame for the incident fell on the ship’s deceased captain, E. J. Smith, who was condemned for racing at 22 knots through a known ice field in the dark waters off the coast of Newfoundland. The case of the Titanic was considered closed.
Father Francis Browne
Captain Smith believed this high-ranking ‘Jesuit General’ was God. Browne instructed him on what to do in the North Atlantic waters. ‘Edward Smith was given orders to sink the Titanic and that’s exactly what he did.’ According to Jesuit secret philosophy: The innocent can be massacred for the greater good; the ends justifies the means.
Captain Smith had been traveling the North Atlantic for 26 years. He was the ‘world’s most experienced master’ in these cold waters. The Captain knew all along that his ship was built for the enemies of the Jesuits. Its purpose was always to be a ‘deathship’ and sink on its first voyage. Captain Smith also knew exactly where the icebergs were. Under secret orders, he propelled the Titanic full speed at 22 knots on a moonless night and through a huge ice field 80 square miles in area! He had been ‘given orders from his God in the Vatican, and nothing would turn him from his course.’


Around 9.40 p.m. more ice warnings were received but these were not passed on to the officers. A great number of private telegrams requiring transmission had accumulated during the day, and the wireless operators were busy all evening dealing with these. In the general confusion of private wireless traffic, the ice warnings were largely ignored. In fact, the wireless operator who accepted the last warning was extremely irritated at the interruption. But clearly, the officers too did not have enough experience in dealing with icebergs and contented themselves with the information coming from the crow’s nest. However, the lookout did not even have a pair of binoculars – these had already been misplaced in Southampton.



Captain Smith’s actions in his last hours were not those of a strong leader. He seemed as if he was wrestling with his conscience. Should he be the brave sea captain or obey his master and sink the ship?
There were purposely not enough lifeboats. Many of the lifeboats only had a few passengers of women and children during the emergency. White distress flares were jettisoned. Passing ships thought those aboard the Titanic were having a party. The distress flares should have been red. These examples were not because of an arrogant crew who believed the Titanic was unsinkable. These shortcomings were planned.


Those richest of men, who opposed the Federal Reserve System, were killed along with the middle and lower classes. John Jacob Astor’s wife was rescued. Molly Brown was also saved. The sinking of the Titanic was possibly the greatest disaster of the 20th Century outside of the World Wars. According to ‘The Secret Terrorists,’ the cause of this tragedy was the Jesuit Order of the Roman Catholic Church.
The unsinkable ship, the floating palace was created to be a tomb for the wealthy, who opposed the Federal Reserve System. On April 14th (the same date in history as the assassination of Abraham Lincoln) of 1912, the Titanic struck an iceberg and all opposition to the Federal Reserve was eliminated. In December of 1913, the Federal Reserve System came into being in the United States. Eight months later, the Jesuits had sufficient funding through the Federal Reserve Bank to begin World War I.‘ Notice the F.R.S. was established soon after the disaster of the Titanic.


The rich have always created unnecessary wars where the poor have to fight and die. The pages of ‘The Secret Terrorists’ do not specifically name the Templars, Freemasons or Illuminati. But these Secret Societies are related and do control: The banks; the money system; the oil companies; corporations; governments; the politicians; the military; the police; the law and judicial system; the churches; the schools; the media, etc., etc…
The rich and powerful have always ruled the world. The elite make the news; they create the great, international events.
IT IS NOT INCONCEIVABLE THAT WE HAVE HEARD SO MUCH ABOUT THE FAMOUS VOYAGE OF THE TITANIC BECAUSE IT WAS ONE OF THE MOST PERFECT CRIMES EVER COMMITTED!
There is no record in history of an association whose organization has stood for three hundred years unchanged and unaltered by all the assaults of men and time, and which has exercised such an immense influence over the destinies of mankind… ‘The ends justify the means,’ is his favorite maxim; and as his only end, as we have shown, is the order, at its bidding the Jesuit is ready to commit any crime whatsoever. – G.B. Nicolini, The History of the Jesuits, Henry G. Bohn.
Let us remember the oath that every person takes to become a part of the Jesuit Order:
I should regard myself as a dead body, without will or intelligence, as a little crucifix which is turned about unresistingly at the will of him who holds it as a staff in the hands of an old man, who uses it as he requires it, and as it suits him best. – R.W. Thompson, The Footprints of the Jesuits, Hunt and Eaton.
When a person takes the Jesuit Oath, he is bound to his master until the day he dies.
Edward Smith became a man without will or intelligence. He would commit any crime the Order wanted him to commit. Edward Smith had been required for martyrdom. Aboard the Titanic that night, Edward Smith knew his duty. He was under oath. The ship had been built for the enemies of the Jesuits.
After three days (3) at sea, the Titanic was propelled full speed ahead, twenty-two(22) knots, on a moonless dark night through a gigantic ice field nearly eighty square miles in area. Edward Smith did this despite at least eight telegrams warning him to be more cautious because he was going too fast.Question? What is the number of Skull and Bones? 322.
Did Edward Smith need more caution? No, he had traveled those waters for twenty-six years. He knew there were icebergs in that area. But eight warnings didn’t stop this man who was under the Jesuit oath, and under orders to destroy the Titanic.
An iceberg, presumed to be the one that was struck by the RMS Titanic, is pictured from the deck of the cable ship Mackay-Bennett on April 15, 1912.
Survivors of the sinking of the RMS Titanic approach the RMS Carpathia in this April 15, 1912 photo
Survivors of the sinking of the RMS Titanic rest on the deck of the RMS Carpathia on April 15, 1912
Survivors of the sinking of the RMS Titanic are interviewed by reporters as they come off the RMS Carpathia in New York on April 18, 1912.
Benjamin Guggenheim with his wife
The funeral procession of John Jacob Astor IV, who died in the sinking of the RMS Titanic, enters Trinity Church Cemetery in upper Manhattan in this May 1912 photo.

The story that the Olympic was switched for the Titanic has a great deal of merit and it made money for JP Morgan. I worked for a shipping company for over 10 years and insurance frauds are continuing to be perpetrated today.
http://www.paullee.com/titanic/switch.html
http://www.rmstitanicremembered.com/?page_id=283
http://www.oxfordmail.co.uk/news/9648097._I_can_prove_it_was_not_Titanic_that_sank_/
I got past the build pictures and then started reading the jebus jumper crap and immediately moused down to here. I have no time or interest for this garbage. The jews invented christianity to stifle the goy masses, to dope them up and lull them to sleep. Anything related is just a waste of time.
That tub sank because morons. Fail! That is all.
What complete bullshit! The Titanic sank because Ismay wanted more speed, no one heeded the ice warnings, it was a moonless night, the berg was only 80 feet high and could NOT be seen from the crows nest against the horizon line, there were no lookouts on the bow (as there were on the Californian) to see a lower berg against the horizon line, nor were there any waves breaking against it to reveal its presence. There had also been a fire in the coal bunkers which was not put out until Tues. of the sailing which is why , some say, JP Morgan did not sail and pulled all his art off. The fire weakened bulkhead 5 which let go unded the immense pressure of the water flooding the other compartments. Lightoller also left the gangway door open when trying to get people to lifeboats (none of the boats ever came back to the gangway door to pick up passengers) and because they ran hoses from the pumps, the pcrew passage known as Scotland Road also flooded. Finally the ship broke in half along the expansion joint. the Jesuits had nothing to do with it. OTOH, if you want mysticism..the scholar who was an expert on Queen SobekNeferu also went down, although her haunted mummy case is still give trouble to night guards at the British Museum…and BTW, poor Titanic was launched under a horrible constellation of bad fixed stars.
PS, the ship’s cat, Jenny, took each one of her 4 kittens, born during the sea trials off, before Titanic left on the maiden voyage from South Hampton. when it doubt, follow your cat.
References for everything above supplied if inquired.
Great post, but why didn’t you post the picture of the hull lettering showing that the sunken “Titanic” was actually the Olympic? Purposefully sunk by JP Morgan in an insurance scam that killed thousands,
Remind anyone of the World Trade Center?
By the way I have that picture taken by Woods Hole oceanographic institute when Bob Ballard dove on the “Titanic”.
Timeout 1
@5 War…
Glad you mentioned that reality. I’m hoping this one actually gets thoroughly outed soon. The absolute proof is down there.
Great post, but why didn’t you post the picture of the hull lettering showing that the sunken “Titanic” was actually the Olympic? Purposefully sunk by JP Morgan in an insurance scam that killed thousands,
Remind anyone of the World Trade Center?
By the way I have that picture taken by Woods Hole oceanographic institute when Bob Ballard dove on the “Titanic”.