The Real History of the USA
- Ester

- Jun 29
- 4 min read
As we celebrate our 250th birthday as a nation, this country has been in the makings for 908 years. Christopher Columbus wasn't the first person to step foot in this country.
It all started after the Crusades when a couple of knights from the Poor Knights of Christ had a conversation. They believed that there was an advanced civilization before the flood and there must be proof somewhere of their existence. They got together with some other knights and formed the Knights Templar in 1118, when nine knights decided that we were born with certain God-given rights that no king or church could take away from us.
They began by escorting travelers to the Holy Land, giving them protection against robbers while doing some archaeological work in the area. The Templars began a banking system at the time, eventually lending money to both the king and the church. They only answered to the church, but kept most of the treasures themselves. During their 'digs' the Templars eventually found items that would turn the church upside down if the information was revealed. By this time, the King of France and the Roman Catholic Church owed the Templars a lot of money and word got to the Templars that the two plotted against them. So, in 1307, the grand master of the Templars ordered the Templars to take ships with all the treasures and the money from their banks to Scotland to hide the treasure until they could go to the West Lands and form a New Jerusalem, where people could be free and not answer to a monarchy or church. This happened in early October of that year. By Friday, October 13th, the church and the King of France rounded up 600 Templars who remained and arrested them. They tortured them for seven years trying to get the information of where the money and treasures were. Since the Templars take an oath, they never gave up the information and they were finally burned alive at the stake in 1314. But the grand master cursed the king and the pope while he burned and within the year, the king and the pope were both dead. Just knowing that the Catholic Church would actually do something so evil for money is very upsetting. The Templars sacrificed themselves for the future generations to survive and thrive as free people in a New Jerusalem.
In the meantime, the Scots protected the Knights and their treasure. When the Scots fought against Great Britain for their freedom, the Knights helped them win the war at Bannockburn. Around 1358, the Sinclairs, along with eight ships and several knights left for the West Lands. First landing in Nova Scotia (New Scotland), the Templars met the natives and discovered they had similar religious beliefs and handshakes. They hid some treasure there and the natives promised to protect it. The Templars went further south and met more natives who told them their ancestors had survived a great flood and that they had been part of a bigger civilization. The Templars practice the Gnostic faith and it seemed the natives believed similarly. Some Templars stayed behind in the New World and the rest returned to Scotland.
Again, in 1398, another group of ships led by a Sinclair and the Templars headed west with more treasures. This time, they had some storms to deal with, but they made it. They met with the same natives and checked on the treasure in Nova Scotia. They headed south once more and found evidence of a tower built by the Templars they had left behind the first time. This tower lined up with a land claim left in Minnesota called the Kensington Ruin Stone and was dated 1398. (All this was done before Columbus was born) The Templars left more buried treasure in other parts of the country.
The Templars returned again to the West Lands with the Weems family (related to the Sinclairs). They left more treasures, checked on the others, and some Templars remained in the new world to start families, taking native wives.
The history goes on and on with the treasures being used to finance the Revolutionary War and possibly more. A lot of the founding fathers were Templars. After the massacre of 1314 of the Templars, they went underground, eventually changing their name to Masons in 1717. There is evidence of their work in France, like Notre Dame Cathedral, done by masons of the Templar order.
I recommend reading "The Greatest Templar Tale Never Told" by Scott F. Wolter, which is the journals of the Sinclairs and Weems families who were also Templars. And if you want to get into the Templars more deeply, I recommend listening to the podcast of MatrixQdeBreaker@rumble.com He has twelve chapters on the Templar story, but be prepared; each chapter is about twelve hours long. I had to listen in chunks of time and it took about two weeks, but he has videos which take up much of the time and each one is fascinating. You will also learn more about what those treasures are that the Templars hid here in the USA. All this history has given me a different perspective of what our founding fathers went through, building a new nation for over 658 years at the time of its founding. It makes me appreciate this country more now for the foresight of a handful of knights.
HAPPY FOURTH OF JULY!


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