QAA Podcast - The Taxil Hoax and Satanic Freemasonry Part 1 (Premium E245) Sample
Episode Date: May 25, 2024In the late 19th century a Frenchman pulled off one of the greatest hoaxes of all time and inspired countless conspiracy theories about Freemasonry that still circulate today. The man, who went by th...e pseudonym Leo Taxil, started his career by publishing several texts smearing the Pope and the Catholic Church. But then he switched sides and claimed he converted to Catholicism. To prove his devotion he started publishing anti-Masonic texts. These new works included wild stories about a secret satanic sect with freemasonry called Palladism. Despite the fact that these stories are far beyond the limits of believability, they were taken seriously by the Catholic Church. Taxil finally admitted that his multiple books about satanism in Freemasonry were all part of an elaborate, 12-year-long-hoax. In part 1 of this series, we explore the childhood of “Leo Taxil,” his hoaxes in France and Switzerland, and the anti-Church writings that forced him to fend off lawsuits and criminal charges. In part 2, we’ll get into the thousands of pages he wrote about secret satanism in Freemasonry, how the public swallowed these stories up, and his dramatic confession that it was all a lie. REFERENCES Dickie, John. The Craft: How the Freemasons Made the Modern World. Public Affairs, 2020 Ziegler, Robert. Satanism, magic and mysticism in fin-de-siècle France. Springer, 2012. Van Luijk, Ruben. Children of Lucifer: The origins of modern religious Satanism. Oxford University Press, 2016 Mellor, Alec. A Hoaxer of Genius https://skirret.com/papers/ahoaxerofgenius-leotaxil.html Wikisource: The Works of Leo Taxil https://fr.wikisource.org/wiki/Auteur:L%C3%A9o_Taxil Editing by Corey Klotz. Theme by Nick Sena. Additional music by Pontus Berghe. Theme Vocals by THEY/LIVE (https://instagram.com/theyylivve / https://sptfy.com/QrDm). Cover Art by Pedro Correa: (https://pedrocorrea.com) https://qaapodcast.com QAA was known as the QAnon Anonymous podcast.
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If you're hearing this, well done.
You found a way to connect to the internet.
Welcome to the QAA podcast Premium Episode 245,
The Taxel hoax and Satanic Freemasonry, Part 1.
As always, we are your host, Jake Rakatansky,
Julian Fields, and Travis View.
Now, I don't know about you guys,
but I am personally comforted by learning about the ways
in which previous generations or foreign cultures are just like us.
Because feel like we live in strange times that are moving too fast,
it's easy to think that they're so strange
that the people who were born and died before us
could not possibly relate to anything we're going through as a modern society.
That's a very alienating, lonely thought
that are fairly recent ancestors would understand nothing at all about this current moment.
So it's always a delight to learn about how the past is weird
in some of the same ways that the present,
moment is weird and that some aspects of human behavior don't change with technological improvements
or political upheaval.
Yeah, it's not a great surprise that Travis, he doesn't think that the people French are
these are human, and that they have a value, and that their history also can be the history
of the humanity.
For him, it's just a sub-oom.
He, he's just, he's just, you don't know what you do, in the Biblewood, in the bibliotheque.
No, Jake, you just, you comprehend what you do, you comprehend what I do.
Well, I'll, I assume as a compliment.
meant, so thank you, Julian. I think it sounds bad. I think it's bad what he's saying. Yeah.
So in the spirit of, you know, learning about historical analogies, I'm going to talk about
a notorious 19th century case of a hoaxer who anonymously published incredible tales of
scandal, corruption, conspiracy, abuse, and satanic worship. He did it for the lulls and he did it for
money. And the consequences of this hoax are still felt today. I'm talking about the taxile
hoax. A French man who went by the pseudonym Leotaxil published a lot of anti-clerical texts
smearing the Pope and the Catholic Church, and then very suddenly he switched sides. It claimed
that he converted to Catholicism and then started publishing anti-Masonic texts. That included
making up wild stories about a secret satanic sect within Freemasonry called pallidism. Despite the
fact that these stories are far beyond the limits of believability, which we'll get into,
they were taken seriously by a bunch of people, including the Catholic Church.
Though Taxel's hoaxe was fully refuted by Taxel himself in the 1890s, its legacy lingers to this day.
Some evangelical Christians still oppose Freemasonry as a satanic cult.
Major figures in the 20th century, such as Pat Robertson and Jack Chick,
have used details invented by Taxel to denounce the Freemasons,
despite the fact that they are just totally false.
I, Julian Field, I
VIII, President of the United States
Joe Biden.
I know that you said
you, Julian Field,
are going to
President of the United States
Joe Biden.
I don't know what the verb
was, what you're going to do
to him, but
I figured out
most of the rest.
As recently as
1995, there was a book
called Cult and Ritual Abuse
is History, Anthropology, and
recent discovery.
and contemporary America, which treats the hoax as a serious revelation.
So this is a hoax that literally is able to resonate more than a hundred years after it
was finally exposed as a fraud.
It's also a presage to Operation Mindfuck, basically something where he's like, I'm going to
fuck with all this shit.
And then he just ends up creating like a more paranoid and more bizarre situation for the
whole world.
Yeah.
He really is a proto-discordian, definitely.
Yeah.
When you use the tools of the conspiracy,
theorist. Even if you are not one yourself, you end up creating the very thing that you're
kind of poking fun of. Although I bet Taxel would love that he still has an effect on like modern
America. I mean, I'm sure he would hate everybody involved. Oh, he would, he absolutely
reveled in in duping people, making fools out of people. So yes, he would love it.
Ha ha ha, ha, these idiotic Americans, at this day, I've destroyed. I'm affected, I
this has empoisoned, their culture is in trying to degenerate, to pourir on the vign.
This episode was partly inspired by the fact that I've been reading some more about the
history of Freemasonry recently.
And what's interesting about the history of Freemasonry is that it's not the world-controlling
Satan-worshipping organization that the conspiracies claim it to be.
But there are ways in which Freemasonry has shaped history in some meaningful ways.
But generally, it's more subtle than a grand.
top-down conspiracy of puppet masters.
Now, some of this is due to the networking effect that is part of any organization of educated
and like-minded people.
You know, in that sense, I would argue that the Freemasons are probably less influential
and harmful than, say, the Harvard Alumni Association.
But it's not nothing.
The 18th century Italian adventure, Giacomo Casanova, once remarked,
In this day and age, any young man who travels, who wants to get to know the great world,
who doesn't want to find himself inferior to others.
or excluded from the company of his equals,
must get himself initiated into what is called masonry.
Now, let me tell you about the nipples on the mole people
that I'm found in the hollow earth.
Oh, they are so suckable.
He's like, I have discovered the most enlightened group.
I encourage everybody who wants to live,
who really live, to join them,
and then I will proceed to write.
I mean, you do remember, right, Travis?
Yes, I do remember.
You do remember this is the same guy.
I like you just call him like 18.
century Italian adventure, not
whack job who thought they were like
sexy mole teats at the center of
the earth. Well, that's part of the adventure.
That's a great adventure. Yeah, that's true.
And that's part of being Italian, too.
Where there's a nipple, there's a way.
And occasionally, the corruption and
plodding among some Freemasons is
real. And we saw this with the case
in the 1820s with
William Morgan, in which Morgan
wrote a book purporting to expose
the Masonic secrets and a group of masonic
retaliated by harassing, kidnapping, and possibly even murdering him.
Well, those unsolved mysteries of history.
But generally, whenever people really attempt to investigate and dig into what Masons actually
believe and what their ceremonies actually consist of and what they actually do,
they always walk away feeling unsatisfied.
It might be strange and esoteric at worst, but investigators always expect something
bloodier and more sinister.
So as a consequence, there's always a feeling that the real secrets,
are still being kept secrets, and the real expose is just around the corner.
It was in this environment that the man with a fake name of Leo Taxol stepped in and provided
a paranoid public exactly what they were looking for.
He also took advantage of a long-standing hostility between Catholics and Freemasons.
The church viewed the secrecy and potential influence of Masonic lodges with suspicion,
fearing that they could harbor anti-clerical and revolutionary ideas.
The Catholic Church teaches that it holds the fullness of religious truths, while Freemasonry promotes a form of religious relativism.
Masonic lodges often welcome members of various faith, emphasizing moral and ethical principles over specific religious doctrines.
This inclusivity was seen as undermining Catholic doctrine.
Freemasons take oaths of secrecy and allegiance to the fraternity.
The church interpreted these oaths as potentially conflicting with a Catholic's primary loyalty to the church
and its teachings. The Catholic Church formally condemned Freemasonry in several papal encyclicals and
documents. Pope Clement the 12th 1738 encyclical was the first official condemnation, warning Catholics
against joining Masonic lodges. Subsequent popes reaffirmed the stance, and the church maintained
that membership in Freemasonry was incompatible with Catholicism. In 1884, Pope Leo the 13th
issued the most damning and vitrolic of all papal attacks on Freemasonry, which was called
the humanum genus. The 1917 Code of Cannon Law states, quote, those who join a Masonic sect
or other societies of the same sort, which plod against the church or against legitimate
civil authority, incur ipso facto and excommunication simply reserved to the Holy See.
The beef between Catholics and Freemasons stands to this day. The 1983 Code of Canon Law
doesn't explicitly mention Freemasonry, but does reaffirm that
those who join associations that plot against the church are in a state of grave sin and may not receive
holy communion. Oh, no. See, I didn't realize that this was a thing that, like, you know, there were
people that the church didn't allow to come up and receive communion. And I discovered this because I was
at a fairly religious wedding not too long ago. And before he invited it up, there was all sorts of
kind of like exceptions of people who, who, you know, couldn't walk up and receive communion. And you
had to walk up with your arms crossed, like, over your chest, which was very interesting to me.
My man's trying to get baptized as a Catholic, like, as a Jew.
You've been listening to a sample of a premium episode of the QAA podcast.
For access to the full episode, as well as all past premium episodes and all of our podcast miniseries,
go to patreon.com slash QAA.
Travis, why is that such a good deal?
Well, Jake, you get hundreds of additional episodes of the QAA podcast for just
$5 per month.
For that very low price, you get access to over 200 premium episodes, plus all of our miniseries.
That includes 10 episodes of Man Clan with Julian and Annie, 10 episodes of Perverts with
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It's a bounty of content and the best deal in podcasting.
Travis, for once, I agree with you.
And I also agree that people could subscribe by going to patreon.com.
slash QAA. Well, that's not an opinion. It's a fact. You're so right, Jake. We love and appreciate
all of our listeners. Yes, we do. And Travis is actually crying right now, I think, out of gratitude,
maybe? That's not true. The part about be crying, not me being grateful. I'm very grateful.