6. THE AGENTS OF THE REVOLUTION: FREEMASONRY AND OTHER SECRET FORCES
Since
we are studying the driving forces of the Revolution, we must say a word about
its agents.
We do
not believe that the mere dynamism of the passions and errors of men could coordinate
such diverse means to achieve a single end, namely, the victory of the
Revolution.
The
production of a process as consistent and continuous as that of the Revolution
amid the thousand vicissitudes of centuries fraught with surprises of every
kind seems impossible to us without the action of successive generations of
extraordinarily intelligent and powerful conspirators. To think that the
Revolution could have reached its present state in the absence of such
conspirators is like believing that hundreds of letters thrown out a window
could arrange themselves on the ground to spell out a literary piece,
Carducci's “Ode to Satan,” for instance.
Heretofore, the driving forces of the Revolution have been manipulated by most
sagacious agents, who have used them as means for carrying out the
revolutionary process.
Generally speaking, one can classify as agents of the Revolution all the sects
-- whatever their nature – engendered by it, from its origin to our days, to
disseminate its thought or to concatenate its plots. The master sect, however,
around which all the others are organized as mere auxiliaries -- sometimes
consciously and other times not -- is Freemasonry, as clearly follows from the
pontifical documents, especially Leo XIII's encyclical Humanum genus, of
April 20, 1884.
The
success of these conspirators, and particularly Freemasonry, is due not only to
their indisputable capacity to organize and conspire, but also to their clear understanding
of the Revolution's profound essence and of the use of natural laws-the laws of
politics, sociology, psychology, art, economics, and so forth-to advance the
attaining of their goals.
In
this way, the agents of chaos and subversion are like a scientist who, instead
of merely relying on his own strength, studies and activates natural forces a
thousand times more powerful than he.
Besides largely explaining the success of the Revolution, this provides an
important indication for the soldiers of the Counter-Revolution.
|