Martin dePorress
Peruvian lay brother of the Dominican Order, Martín de Porres Velázquez lived from 9 December 1579 to 3 November 1639. A bastard (the illegitimate son of a Spanish nobleman), Velázquez was hailed as a saint by barbers, innkeepers, public health professionals, and mixed-race people. He also instructed his followers to be inclusive of everyone who aspired to "racial harmony."

He had a sister named Juana de Porres, who was born two years later in 1581. The father left the family when his sister was born. Ana Velázquez supported her children by working in a laundry [single parent mothers Ireland's laundry rooms?]. He was recognised for his advocacy for the impoverished, which included the establishment of a children's hospital and an orphanage.

There are those who view that the early Christian Church, such as that one described in the Acts of the Apostles, was an early form of communism and religious socialism. The view is that communism was just Christianity in practice and Jesus was the first communist.
Velázquez was credited with numerous obscene miracles, including communication with animals, levitation, bilocation, miraculous knowledge, and instantaneous cures. In the 1980 novel A Confederacy of Dunces, Ignatius Reilly contemplates praying to Martin for aid in bringing social justice to the black workers at the New Orleans factory where he works. Furthermore, St. Martin De Porres is the opening track on jazz pianist Mary Lou Williams' album Black Christ of the Andes.

Martin de Porres was depicted as a character in the music video for Madonna's 1989 breakthrough single, "Like a Prayer." Patrick Ray Leonard, who began his career in the music industry with the late 1970s Chicago-based pop rock band Whisper, co-wrote and co-produced Like a Prayer. His subsequent band, Trillion (name changed for legal reasons), featured Dennis Fergie Frederiksen, the future lead singer of Toto. "Africa" was Toto's greatest hit.

The NFL Chicago Bulls' reversed Tin Man logo is connected to an esoteric Apostolate of Saint Martin, which has been beatifying dePorress since 1966, the same year that Chicago became a city. When esoteric logos (with hidden meanings) like the Chicago Bulls are worn on sportswear, they seem innocuous to the unobservant public. However, when these logos are linked to trauma, they are remembered as panic triggers.


The Isles of Martin, an uninhabited island in Loch Broom on Scotland's west coast, has a stone with a Latin triple cross on it. About 300–400 AD, the island's namesake, Saint Martin, is said to have founded a monastery there.


The Summer Isles, an archipelago in Scotland's Highland region at the mouth of Loch Broom, are made up of 29 islands, including the Isles of Martin. There is evidence that the 1974 British folk horror film "The Wicker Man" contains the names of places and locations local to the area.


Two blue XX's of Lodge of St Martin.
At 27 Argyle Street, Ullapool has a Nordic style "Cult Cafe", and hosts a Saint Martin of Tours Catholic Church and a Freemasonic Lodge of St Martin No 1217. The lodge has links with links with the District Grand Lodges of Ghana, Trinidad and Tobago; as well as Gibraltar, and the Middle East.

The triple cross is Molech abstracted as a hobby horse, punch, and a crossdressing druid in the 1973 movie Wicker Man. In male and female roles, the druid wears a yellow polo neck sweater. Note the striking resemblance between Molech and the Chicago Bulls logo; this film enacted a Christi Testa Menta sacrifice of the Sun King.
The pagan island of Summerisle featured in the motion picture The Wicker Man (filmed in 1973 & directed by Robin Hardy). The narrative revolves around Sergeant Neil Howie, a police officer who travels to the remote Scottish island of Summerisle in pursuit of a missing girl. Howie, a devoted Christian, is horrified to discover that the island's inhabitants have renounced Christianity and are now engaging in a form of Celtic paganism that is both immoral and lawless.

"I have met people who claim to be Satanists, who claim to be involved with black magic, who claimed that they not only knew a lot about it. But as I said, I certainly have not been involved and I warn all of you: never, never, never. You will not only lose your mind: you lose your soul.". - Actor Christopher Lee, Law Society of University College Dublin.

Through the creation of "new cultivars of hardy fruits to suit local conditions," the character Lord Summerisle set out to induce "the successful growth of certain new strains of fruit which he had developed." The Summerisle Famous apple, which boasts "creamy white flesh, firm, full-flushed, blood-red bloomed skin with a truly noble sweet, vinous flavour," was the result of the successful experiment. Similarly, the Star of Summerisle pear and the Flame of Summerisle apricot are also renowned.

Achiltibuie is a lengthy, linear village located on the actual Summer Isle. Robert Irvine, the owner of the Summer Isles Hotel at the time, constructed the Hydroponicum, a facility in the village for hydroponic indoor cultivation of fresh produce, in the 1980s. Exotic fruit, like bananas, could be grown year-round in a hydroponic system. The building has now been demolished. Some of the former staff of the Hydroponicum run a small-scale activity known as The Achiltibuie Garden, situated nearby.
Achiltibuie, Scottish Gaelic: Achd Ille Bhuidhe or Field of the yellow-haired boy.
There have been EEG studies that demonstrate that television watching converts the brain from beta wave activity to alpha waves (similar to hypnosis). Television can reduce your ability to think critically. When you watch TV, brain activity switches from the left side of your brain (responsible for logical thought and critical analysis) to the right side. This is significant because the right side of the brain tends not to critically analyze incoming information. Instead, it uses an emotional response which results in little or no analysis of the information. In other words, it’s as if someone is telling you something and you believe what they say without doing any research of your own. For this reason, people who watch a lot of TV tend to have a very inaccurate and unrealistic view of reality.

"TV viewing following trauma exposure may be a marker of vulnerability for developing PTSD and also a consequence of having PTSD. High TV viewing levels may be linked with ineffective coping strategies or social isolation, which increase risk of developing PTSD.". - Posttraumatic stress disorder symptoms and television viewing patterns in the Nurses’ Health Study II: A longitudinal analysis 2019
The brain slips into a hypnotic state within seconds of watching TV. Watching TV puts the viewer into a highly suggestible sleep-like hypnotic state. This provides easy access to the subconscious and is one reason why it is easy to fall asleep whilst watching television. The hypnotic effect is largely caused by screen flicker which lowers your brainwaves into an alpha state, a state of mind that you would normally associate with meditation or deep relaxation. In most people, this occurs within 30 seconds or 3 minutes for very light and infrequent viewers. In a hypnotic state, the information which you are exposed to will be downloaded directly to your subconscious mind where it can alter existing beliefs and form new beliefs without you even being aware of it.

The apostolate cultivates inescapable inductions of stockholm syndrome, trauma bonding captive minds personified as liberated caged doves.

Nike, Red Bull, Obey, Tap Out, and the Los Angeles Raiders are among the brands that serve as secret insignias for this apostolate. Compartmentalisation results from a narrowed perspective, which marginalizes perceptions. Egalitarian manifestos are distributed by Jesuits to secret societies, including COMMON WEALTH freemasonry (Rosicrucian / Templar). Solomonic initiation rites into the "world unseen" are conducted within the concealment of darkness [the womb of Mary], and subordinate initiates are blindfolded and traumatised.