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Was Bobby Fischer a Satanist? seems like it

THEB!GBOWSSS

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I feel bad for the guy, society labeled him as a lunatic and tarnished his reputation. For a bit of a cliffnoted version of a life, the guy had a recorded IQ 25 points higher than that of Einsteins (around 185). He undeniably established the greatest chess legacy ever to come about.

On his wiki page you could go read the anti-semetic portion of his life, and everything he does points to the fact that he might have known the truth. Found in his library was Mein Kampf and the Protocols of the Elder Zion,

The guy was a legend, really. The jews even tried pinning allegations on him that he was a kike, but like usual, fisher proved them wrong. Can anyone contact the guy, see how he's carrying himself about in Satan's plains? I hope he's doing fine, I see Hitler exalted here all the time, but never a mention for Bobby. May his soul carry on.

Hail Satan.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bobby_Fis ... migr.C3.A9
 
He was a jew, [/IMG]</var>   Einstein was a mentally retarded fraud who was denounced by entire panels of Gentile scientists in his field, who went as far as to pen major documents debunking him. As a flim flam, man. He was also a major communist.   Albert Einstein Plagiarist Of The Century   About the Author


Richard Moody, Jr, has a Master's Degree in Geology, is the author of three
books on chess theory and has written for the Mensa Bulletin. For the past four
years, he has done intensive research into Albert Einstein. He can be contacted
by email at Slmrea@...


Einstein plagiarized the work of several notable scientists in his 1905 papers
on special relativity and E = mc2, yet the physics community has never bothered
to set the record straight in the past century.


Abstract


Proponents of Einstein have acted in a way that appears to corrupt the
historical record.



Albert Einstein (1879 -1955), Time Magazine's "Person of the Century", wrote a
long treatise on special relativity theory (it was actually called "On the
Electrodynamics of Moving Bodies", 1905a), without listing any references. Many
of the key ideas it presented were known to Lorentz (for example, the Lorentz
transformation) and Poincaré before Einstein wrote the famous 1905 paper.

As was typical of Einstein, he did not discover theories; he merely commandeered
them. He took an existing body of knowledge, picked and chose the ideas he
liked, then wove them into a tale about his contribution to special relativity.
This was done with the full knowledge and consent of many of his peers, such as
the editors at Annalen der Physik.

The most recognizable equation of all time is E = mc2.



It is attributed by convention to be the sole province of Albert Einstein
(1905).



However, the conversion of matter into energy and energy into matter was known
to Sir Isaac Newton ("Gross bodies and light are convertible into one
another...", 1704). The equation can be attributed to S. Tolver Preston (1875),
to Jules Henri Poincaré (1900; according to Brown, 1967) and to Olinto De Pretto
(1904) before Einstein. Since Einstein never correctly derived E = mc2 (Ives,
1952), there appears nothing to connect the equation with anything original by
Einstein.

Arthur Eddington's selective presentation of data from the 1919 Eclipse so that
it supposedly supported "Einstein's" general relativity theory is surely one of
the biggest scientific hoaxes of the 20th century. His lavish support of
Einstein corrupted the course of history. Eddington was less interested in
testing a theory than he was in crowning Einstein the king of science.

The physics community, unwittingly perhaps, has engaged in a kind of fraud and
silent conspiracy; this is the byproduct of simply being bystanders as the
hyperinflation of Einstein's record and reputation took place.



This silence benefited anyone supporting Einstein.






Introduction


Science, by its very nature, is insular. In general, chemists read and write
about chemistry, biologists read and write about biology, and physicists read
and write about physics.



But they may all be competing for the same research dollar (in its broadest
sense). Thus, if scientists wanted more money for themselves, they might decide
to compete unfairly. The way they can do this is convince the funding agencies
that they are more important than any other branch of science. If the funding
agencies agree, it could spell difficulty for the remaining sciences. One way to
get more money is to create a superhero - a superhero like Einstein.

Einstein's standing is the product of the physics community, his followers and
the media. Each group benefits enormously by elevating Einstein to icon status.
The physics community receives billions in research grants, Einstein's
supporters are handsomely rewarded, and media corporations like Time Magazine
get to sell millions of magazines by placing Einstein on the cover as "Person of
the Century".

When the scandal breaks, the physics community, Einstein's supporters and the
media will attempt to downplay the negative news and put a positive spin on it.



However, their efforts will be shown up when Einstein's paper, "On the
Electrodynamics of Moving Bodies", is seen for what it is: the consummate act of
plagiarism in the 20th century.





Special Relativity


Jules Henri Poincaré (1854 - 1912) was a great scientist who made a significant
contribution to special relativity theory. The Internet Encyclopedia of
Philosophy website says that Poincaré:

"sketched a preliminary version of the special theory of relativity"

"stated that the velocity of light is a limit velocity" (in his 1904 paper from
the Bull. of Sci. Math. 28, Poincaré indicated "a whole new mechanics, where the
inertia increasing with the velocity of light would become a limit and not be
exceeded")

suggested that "mass depends on speed"

("formulated the principle of relativity, according to which no mechanical or
electromagnetic experiment can discriminate between a state of uniform motion
and a state of rest"

"derived the Lorentz transformation"

It is evident how deeply involved with special relativity Poincaré was.



Even Keswani (1965) was prompted to say that,

"As far back as 1895, Poincaré, the innovator, had conjectured that it is
impossible to detect absolute motion", and that "In 1900, he introduced 'the
principle of relative motion' which he later called by the equivalent terms 'the
law of relativity' and 'the principle of relativity' in his book, Science and
Hypothesis, published in 1902".

Einstein acknowledged none of this preceding theoretical work when he wrote his
unreferenced 1905 paper.

In addition to having sketched the preliminary version of relativity, Poincaré
provided a critical part of the whole concept - namely, his treatment of local
time. He also originated the idea of clock synchronization, which is critical to
special relativity.

Charles Nordman was prompted to write,

"They will show that the credit for most of the things which are currently
attributed to Einstein is, in reality, due to Poincaré", and "...in the opinion
of the Relativists it is the measuring rods which create space, the clocks which
create time. All this was known by Poincaré and others long before the time of
Einstein, and one does injustice to truth in ascribing the discovery to him".

Other scientists have not been quite as impressed with "Einstein's" special
relativity theory as has the public.

"Another curious feature of the now famous paper, Einstein, 1905, is the absence
of any reference to Poincaré or anyone else," Max Born wrote in Physics in My
Generation.



"It gives you the impression of quite a new venture. But that is, of course, as
I have tried to explain, not true".

(Born, 1956)

G. Burniston Brown (1967) noted,

"It will be seen that, contrary to popular belief, Einstein played only a minor
part in the derivation of the useful formulae in the restricted or special
relativity theory, and Whittaker called it the relativity theory of Poincaré and
Lorentz!"

Due to the fact that Einstein's special relativity theory was known in some
circles as the relativity theory of Poincaré and Lorentz, one would think that
Poincaré and Lorentz might have had something to do with its creation. What is
disturbing about the Einstein paper is that even though Poincaré was the world's
leading expert on relativity, apparently Einstein had never heard of him or
thought he had done anything worth referencing!

Poincaré, in a public address delivered in September 1904, made some notable
comments on special relativity theory.

"From all these results, if they are confirmed, would arise an entirely new
mechanics - would be, above all, characterized by this fact that no velocity
could surpass that of light - because bodies would oppose an increasing inertia
to the causes, which would tend to accelerate their motion; and this inertia
would become infinite when one approached the velocity of light.



No more for an observer carried along himself in a translation, he did not
suspect any apparent velocity could surpass that of light: and this would be
then a contradiction, if we recall that this observer would not use the same
clocks as a fixed observer, but, indeed, clocks marking 'local time'."

(Poincaré, 1905)





Einstein, the Plagiarist


It is now time to speak directly to the issue of what Einstein was: he was first
and foremost a plagiarist. He had few qualms about stealing the work of others
and submitting it as his own. That this was deliberate seems obvious.

Take this passage from Ronald W. Clark, Einstein: The Life and Times (there are
no references to Poincaré here; just a few meaningless quotes).



This is how page 101 reads:

"'On the Electrodynamics of Moving Bodies'...is in many ways one of the most
remarkable scientific papers that had ever been written. Even in form and style
it was unusual, lacking the notes and references which give weight to most
serious expositions!!!".

Why would Einstein, with his training as a patent clerk, not recognize the need
to cite references in his article on special relativity? One would think that
Einstein, as a neophyte, would over-reference rather than under-reference.

Wouldn't one also expect somewhat higher standards from an editor when faced
with a long manuscript that had obviously not been credited? Apparently there
was no attempt at quality control when it was published in Annalen der Physik.
Most competent editors would have rejected the paper without even reading it. At
the barest minimum, one would expect the editor to research the literature to
determine whether Einstein's claim of primacy was correct.

Max Born stated,

"The striking point is that it contains not a single reference to previous
literature"

(Born, 1956)

He is clearly indicating that the absence of references is abnormal and that,
even by early 20th century standards, this is most peculiar, even
unprofessional.

Einstein twisted and turned to avoid plagiarism charges, but these were
transparent.

From Bjerknes (2002), we learn the following passage from James MacKaye:

"Einstein's explanation is a dimensional disguise for Lorentz's. Thus Einstein's
theory is not a denial of, nor an alternative for, that of Lorentz. It is only a
duplicate and disguise for it. Einstein continually maintains that the theory of
Lorentz is right, only he disagrees with his 'interpretation'.



Is it not clear, therefore, that in this [case], as in other cases, Einstein's
theory is merely a disguise for Lorentz's, the apparent disagreement about
'interpretation' being a matter of words only?"

Poincaré wrote 30 books and over 500 papers on philosophy, mathematics and
physics. Einstein wrote on mathematics, physics and philosophy, but claimed he'd
never read Poincaré's contributions to physics.

Yet many of Poincaré's ideas - for example, that the speed of light is a limit
and that mass increases with speed - wound up in Einstein's paper, "On the
Electrodynamics of Moving Bodies" without being credited.

Einstein's act of stealing almost the entire body of literature by Lorentz and
Poincaré to write his document raised the bar for plagiarism. In the information
age, this kind of plagiarism could never be perpetrated indefinitely, yet the
physics community has still not set the record straight.

In his 1907 paper, Einstein spelled out his views on plagiarism:

"It appears to me that it is the nature of the business that what follows has
already been partly solved by other authors. Despite that fact, since the issues
of concern are here addressed from a new point of view, I am entitled to leave
out a thoroughly pedantic survey of the literature..."

With this statement, Einstein declared that plagiarism, suitably packaged, is an
acceptable research tool.

Here is the definition of "to plagiarize" from an unimpeachable source,
Webster's New International Dictionary of the English Language, Second Edition,
Unabridged, 1947, p. 1,878:

"To steal or purloin and pass off as one's own (the ideas, words, artistic
productions, etc. of one another); to use without due credit the ideas,
expressions or productions of another. To commit plagiarism".

Isn't this exactly what Einstein did?

Giving due credit involves two aspects: timeliness and appropriateness. Telling
the world that Lorentz provided the basis for special relativity 30 years after
the fact is not timely (see below), is not appropriate and is not giving due
credit. Nothing Einstein wrote ex post facto with respect to Lorentz's
contributions alters the fundamental act of plagiarism.

The true nature of Einstein's plagiarism is set forth in his 1935 paper,
"Elementary Derivation of the Equivalence of Mass and Energy", where, in a
discussion on Maxwell, he wrote,

"The question as to the independence of those relations is a natural one because
the Lorentz transformation, the real basis of special relativity theory..."

So, Einstein even acknowledged that the Lorentz transformation was the real
basis of his 1905 paper.



Anyone who doubts that he was a plagiarist should ask one simple question:

"What did Einstein know and when did he know it?" Einstein got away with
premeditated plagiarism, not the incidental plagiarism that is ubiquitous.

(Moody, 2001)



The History of E = mc2


Who originated the concept of matter being transformed into energy and vice
versa? It dates back at least to Sir Isaac Newton (1704).



Brown (1967) made the following statement:

"Thus gradually arose the formula E = mc2, suggested without general proof by
Poincaré in 1900".

One thing we can say with certainty is that Einstein did not originate the
equation E = mc2.



Then the question becomes:

"Who did?"

Bjerknes (2002) suggested as a possible candidate S. Tolver Preston, who,

"formulated atomic energy, the atom bomb and superconductivity back in the
1870s, based on the formula E = mc2".

In addition to Preston, a major player in the history of E = mc2 who deserves a
lot of credit is Olinto De Pretto (1904).



What makes this timing so suspicious is that Einstein was fluent in Italian, he
was reviewing papers written by Italian physicists and his best friend was
Michele Besso, a Swiss Italian. Clearly, Einstein (1905b) would have had access
to the literature and the competence to read it. In "Einstein's E = mc2 'was
Italian's idea'" (Carroll, 1999), we see clear evidence that De Pretto was ahead
of Einstein in terms of the formula E = mc2.

In terms of his understanding the vast amount of energy that could be released
with a small amount of mass, Preston (1875) can be credited with knowing this
before Einstein was born. Clearly, Preston was using the E = mc2 formula in his
work, because the value he determined - e.g., that one grain could lift a
100,000 ton object up to a height of 1.9 miles - yields the equation E = mc2.

According to Ives (1952), the derivation Einstein attempted of the formula E =
mc2 was fatally flawed because Einstein set out to prove what he assumed. This
is similar to the careless handling of the equations for radioactive decay which
Einstein derived. It turns out that Einstein mixed kinematics and mechanics, and
out popped the neutrino. The neutrino may be a mythical particle accidentally
created by Einstein (Carezani, 1999).



We have two choices with respect to neutrinos: there are at least 40 different
types or there are zero types.



Occam's razor rules here.





The Eclipse of 1919


There can be no clearer definition of scientific fraud than what went on in the
Tropics on May 29, 1919.



What is particularly clear is that Eddington fudged the solar eclipse data to
make the results conform to "Einstein's" work on general relativity. Poor
(1930), Brown (1967), Clark (1984) and McCausland (2001) all address the issues
surrounding this eclipse.

What makes the expeditions to Sobral and Principe so suspect is Eddington's
zealous support of Einstein, as can be seen in his statement,

"By standing foremost in testing, and ultimately verifying the 'enemy' theory,
our national observatory kept alive the finest traditions of science..."

(Clark, 1984)

In this instance, apparently Eddington was not familiar with the basic tenets of
science. His job was to collect data - not verify Einstein's theories.

Further evidence for the fraud can be deduced from Eddington's own statements
and the introduction to them provided by Clark (ibid., p. 285):

"May 29 began with heavy rain, which stopped only about noon. Not until 1.30 pm
when the eclipse had already begun did the party get its first glimpse of the
sun: 'We had to carry out our programme of photographs on faith...'"

Eddington reveals his true prejudice: he was willing to do anything to see that
Einstein was proved right.



But Eddington was not to be deterred:

"It looked as though the effort, so far as the Principe expedition was
concerned, might have been abortive"; "We developed the photographs, two each
night for six nights after the eclipse. The cloudy weather upset my plans and I
had to treat the measures in a different way from what I intended; consequently
I have not been able to make any preliminary announcement of the result".

(Clark, ibid.)

Actually, Eddington's words speak volumes about the result. As soon as he found
one shred of evidence that was consistent with "Einstein's" general relativity
theory, he immediately proclaimed it as proof of the theory. Is this science?

Where were the astronomers when Eddington presented his findings? Did anyone
besides Eddington actually look at the photographic plates? Poor did, and he
completely repudiated the findings of Eddington. This should have given pause to
any ethical scientist.

Here are some quotes from Poor's summary:

"The mathematical formula, by which Einstein calculated his deflection of 1.75
seconds for light rays passing the edge of the sun, is a well known and simple
formula of physical optics"



"Not a single one of the fundamental concepts of varying time, or warped or
twisted space, of simultaneity, or of the relativity of motion is in any way
involved in Einstein's prediction of, or formulas for, the deflection of light"



"The many and elaborate eclipse expeditions have, therefore, been given a
fictitious importance. Their results can neither prove nor disprove the
relativity theory"

(Poor, 1930).

From Brown (1967), we learn that Eddington couldn't wait to get it out to the
world community that Einstein's theory was confirmed.



What Eddington based this on was a premature assessment of the photographic
plates. Initially, stars did "appear" to bend as they should, as required by
Einstein, but then, according to Brown, the unexpected happened: several stars
were then observed to bend in a direction transverse to the expected direction
and still others to bend in a direction opposite to that predicted by
relativity.

The absurdity of the data collected during the Eclipse of 1919 was demonstrated
by Poor (1930), who pointed out that 85% of the data were discarded from the
South American eclipse due to "accidental error", i.e., it contradicted
Einstein's scale constant. By a strange coincidence, the 15% of the "good" data
were consistent with Einstein's scale constant. Somehow, the stars that did not
conform to Einstein's theories conveniently got temporarily shelved - and the
myth began.

So, based on a handful of ambiguous data points, 200 years of theory,
experimentation and observation were cast aside to make room for Einstein. Yet
the discredited experiment by Eddington is still quoted as gospel by Stephen
Hawking (1999).



It is difficult to comprehend how Hawking could comment that,

"The new theory of curved space-time was called general relativity. It was
confirmed in spectacular fashion in 1919, when a British expedition to West
Africa observed a slight shift in the position of stars near the sun during an
eclipse. Their light, as Einstein had predicted, was bent as it passed the sun.
Here was direct evidence that space and time were warped".

Does Hawking honestly believe that a handful of data points, massaged more
thoroughly than a side of Kobe beef, constitutes the basis for overthrowing a
paradigm that had survived over two centuries of acid scrutiny?

The real question, though, is:

"Where was Einstein in all this?"

Surely, by the time he wrote his 1935 paper, he must have known of the work of
Poor:

"The actual stellar displacements, if real, do not show the slightest
resemblance to the predicted Einstein deflections: they do not agree in
direction, in size, or the rate of decrease with distance from the sun".

Why didn't he go on the record and address a paper that directly contradicted
his work? Why haven't the followers of Einstein tried to set the record straight
with respect to the bogus data of 1919?

What makes this so suspicious is that both the instruments and the physical
conditions were not conducive to making measurements of great precision. As
pointed out in a 2002 Internet article by the British Institute of Precise
Physics, the cap cameras used in the expeditions were accurate to only 1/25th of
a degree. This meant that just for the cap camera uncertainty alone, Eddington
was reading values over 200 times too precise.

McCausland (2001) quotes the former Editor of Nature, Sir John Maddox:

"They [Crommelin and Eddington] were bent on measuring the deflection of light"



"What is not so well documented is that the measurements in 1919 were not
particularly accurate"



"In spite of the fact that experimental evidence for relativity seems to have
been very flimsy in 1919, Einstein's enormous fame has remained intact and his
theory has ever since been held to be one of the highest achievements of human
thought"

It is clear that from the outset Eddington was in no way interested in testing
"Einstein's" theory; he was only interested in confirming it. One of the
motivating factors in Eddington's decision to promote Einstein was that both men
shared a similar political persuasion: pacifism.



To suggest that politics played no role in Eddington's glowing support of
Einstein, one need ask only one question:

"Would Eddington have been so quick to support Einstein if Einstein had been a
hawk?"

This is no idle observation. Eddington took his role as the great peacemaker
very seriously. He wanted to unite British and German scientists after World War
I. What better way than to elevate the "enemy" theorist Einstein to exalted
status? In his zeal to become peacemaker, Eddington lost the fundamental
objectivity that is the essential demeanor of any true scientist. Eddington
ceased to be a scientist and, instead, became an advocate for Einstein.

The obvious fudging of the data by Eddington and others is a blatant subversion
of scientific process and may have misdirected scientific research for the
better part of a century. It probably surpasses the Piltdown Man as the greatest
hoax of 20th century science.



The BIPP asked,

"Was this the hoax of the century?" and exclaimed, "Royal Society 1919 Eclipse
Relativity Report Duped World for 80 Years!"

McCausland stated that,

"In the author's opinion, the confident announcement of the decisive
confirmation of Einstein's general theory in November 1919 was not a triumph of
science, as it is often portrayed, but one of the most unfortunate incidents in
the history of 20th-century science".

It cannot be emphasized enough that the Eclipse of 1919 made Einstein, Einstein.
It propelled him to international fame overnight, despite the fact that the data
were fabricated and there was no support for general relativity whatsoever.



This perversion of history has been known about for over 80 years and is still
supported by people like Stephen Hawking and David Levy.





Summary and Conclusions


The general public tends to believe that scientists are the ultimate defenders
of ethics, that scientific rigor is the measure of truth. Little do people
realize how science is conducted in the presence of personality.

It seems that Einstein believed he was above scientific protocol. He thought he
could bend the rules to his own liking and get away with it; hang in there long
enough and his enemies would die off and his followers would win the day. In
science, the last follower standing wins - and gets to write history. In the
case of Einstein, his blatant and repeated dalliance with plagiarism is all but
forgotten and his followers have borrowed repeatedly from the discoveries of
other scientists and used them to adorn Einstein's halo.

Einstein's reputation is supported by a three-legged stool.

One leg is Einstein's alleged plagiarism. Was he a plagiarist?

The second leg is the physics community. What did they know about Einstein and
when did they know it?

The third leg is the media. Are they instruments of truth or deception when it
comes to Einstein?

Only time will tell.



The physics community is also supported by a three-legged stool.

The first leg is Einstein's physics

The second leg is cold fusion

The third leg is autodynamics

The overriding problem with a three-legged stool is that if only one leg is
sawed off, the stool collapses. There are at least three very serious
disciplines where it is predictable that physics may collapse.

Science is a multi-legged stool:

one leg is physics

a second leg is the earth sciences

a third, biology

a fourth, chemistry (e.g., cold fusion)

What will happen if, for the sake of argument, physics collapses? Will science
fall?





References:

Bjerknes, C.J. (2002), Albert Einstein: The Incorrigible Plagiarist, XTX Inc.,
Dowers Grove.

Born, M. (1956), Physics in My Generation, Pergamon Press, London, p. 193.

Brown, G. Burniston (1967), "What is wrong with relativity?", Bull. of the Inst.
of Physics and Physical Soc., pp. 71-77.

Carezani, R. (1999), Autodynamics: Fundamental Basis for a New Relativistic
Mechanics, SAA, Society for the Advancement of Autodynamics.

Carroll, R., "Einstein's E = mc2 'was Italian's idea'", The Guardian, November
11, 1999.

Clark, R.W. (1984), Einstein: The Life and Times, Avon Books, New York.

De Pretto, O. (1904), "Ipotesi dell'etere nella vita dell'universo", Reale
Istituto Veneto di Scienze, Lettere ed Arti, Feb. 1904, tomo LXIII, parte II,
pp. 439-500.

Einstein, A. (1905a), "Zur Elektrodynamik bewegter Körper" ("On the
Electrodynamics of Moving Bodies"), Annalen der Physik 17:37-65.

Einstein, A. (1905b), Does the Inertia of a Body Depend on its Energy Content?",
Annalen der Physik 18:639-641.

Einstein, A. (1907), "Über die vom Relativitätspringzip geforderte Trägheit der
Energie", Annalen der Physik 23(4):371-384 (quote on p. 373)

Einstein, A. (1935), "Elementary Derivation of the Equivalence of Mass and
Energy", Bull. Amer. Math. Soc. 61:223-230 (first delivered as The Eleventh
Josiah Willard Gibbs Lecture at a joint meeting of the American Physical Society
and Section A of the AAAS, Pittsburgh, December 28, 1934).

Hawking, S., "Person of the Century", Time Magazine, December 31, 1999.

Ives, H.E. (1952), "Derivation of the Mass-Energy Relation", J. Opt. Soc. Amer.
42:540-543.

Keswani, G.H. (1965), "Origin and Concept of Relativity", Brit. J. Phil. Soc.
15:286-306.

Mackaye, J. (1931), The Dynamic Universe, Charles Scribner's Sons, New York, pp.
42-43.

Maddox, J. (1995), "More Precise Solar-limb Light-bending", Nature 377:11.

Moody, R., Jr (2001), "Plagiarism Personified", Mensa Bull. 442(Feb):5.

Newton, Sir Isaac (1704), Opticks, Dover Publications, Inc., New York, p. cxv.

Nordman, C. (1921), Einstein et l'univers, translated by Joseph McCabe as
"Einstein and the Universe", Henry Holt and Co., New York, pp. 10-11, 16 (from
Bjerknes, 2002).

Poincaré, J.H. (1905), "The Principles of Mathematical Physics", The Monist,
vol. XV, no. 1, January 1905; from an address delivered before the International
Congress of Arts and Sciences, St Louis, September 1904.

Poor, C.L. (1930), "The Deflection of Light as Observed at Total Solar
Eclipses", J. Opt. Soc. Amer. 20:173-211.

The Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy, Jules Henri Poincaré
(1854&endash;1912), at http://www.utm.edu/research/iep/p/poincare.htm

Webster, N. (1947), Webster's New International Dictionary of the English
Language, Second Edition, Unabridged, p. 1878.






From: THEB!GBOWSSS <nshayaun@...
To: [email protected]
Sent: Saturday, May 5, 2012 11:08:42 PM
Subject: [JoyofSatan666] Was Bobby Fischer a Satanist? seems like it

  I feel bad for the guy, society labeled him as a lunatic and tarnished his reputation. For a bit of a cliffnoted version of a life, the guy had a recorded IQ 25 points higher than that of Einsteins (around 185). He undeniably established the greatest chess legacy ever to come about.

On his wiki page you could go read the anti-semetic portion of his life, and everything he does points to the fact that he might have known the truth. Found in his library was Mein Kampf and the Protocols of the Elder Zion,

The guy was a legend, really. The jews even tried pinning allegations on him that he was a kike, but like usual, fisher proved them wrong. Can anyone contact the guy, see how he's carrying himself about in Satan's plains? I hope he's doing fine, I see Hitler exalted here all the time, but never a mention for Bobby. May his soul carry on.

Hail Satan.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bobby_Fis ... migr.C3.A9



 

Al Jilwah: Chapter IV

"It is my desire that all my followers unite in a bond of unity, lest those who are without prevail against them." - Shaitan

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