I always check out Google's recommended personages because I assume that I will be led in the direction of deception and occultism and I find my starting hypothesis is never disavowed.
So today, December 10th 2019, we have Bertha von Suttner, according to Wikipedia the second woman Nobel laureate after that colourful pretender known as Marie Curie (aka Mercury - a Roman god).
I assume, due to my previous research, that Ms von Suttner is actually a Mr von Suttner (the photographs do seem to lend credence to that idea although there remains a degree of conjecture of course), because no one is ever elevated before the populace until they have changed their gender, an act which in itself is deemed to imbue the individual with power and make them worthy priests to pursue the dissemination of witchcraft around the world.
The iconography offered by Google images (the truth is always in plain sight) produces the picture I have included above.
I became curious, so I counted the points on the crown and found they are seven in number, or indeed seven and seven, since they are replicated in orange and white.
Now where have I seen a seven pointed crown before?
Let's have a look at the crown of Ishtar, (also called Innana or the Queen of Heaven, an androgynous Babylonian deity) and indeed of the very Statue of Liberty, both of which have seven points.
"Well, what of it?", you say.
Look, the cult of Ishtar, which is referenced in the Bible, was one of the main mystical religions of ancient times (and remains so to this day - as can be seen in the manly Statue of Liberty with his headdress). It is of course Satanic, with practices of child sacrifice, ritual sodomy, cross-dressing, orgies and so forth. The Bible often speaks of God's hatred for the passing of children through the fire, among many other ungodly practices, but true worshippers of the Queen of Heaven (updated by the Catholic Church to be personified by the Virgin Mary) continue to believe that sodomising and sacrificing children are power-inducing acts... and they surely do induce some kind of powerful emotion, in the same way that exerting absolute control over another person is thrilling and sexually alluring to the deviated mind, bringing substance and a sense of worth to the controller, although very few (none?) outside the cult would resort to actual sacrifice.


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