There are many pseudo-Templar groups that figuratively perform psychic interventions of some kind. Some folks claim the Templars are aliens, or agents of one world government and the anti-Christ. I am not a group. I have acted alone in the last sixteen years. I have never had an ally. I did get engaged to be married two days ago, which I will post on soon.
In the last week I have stuck my neck out by being a Hawk when it comes to Syria. That was the way to go, and is now reaping dividends. In theory, I have put on standby the Rougemont Templar Knights who wore a badge on their tunic. It was a spindle like the one we see outside the Temple of Fontenotte. Here is the Red Thread of the Norns.
Jon Presco
https://rosamondpress.wordpress.com/2013/09/07/eric-the-reds-daughter/
A family coat-of-arms was registered in Basle about 1537
when the first Hans became a resident there. A reproduction of this
coat-of-arms in the writer’s possession shows a weaver’s crook
conspicuously, and it will be remembered that in Ireland our people
were linen weavers and farmers, and that Edward, the elder, was a
weaver in this country.
https://rosamondpress.wordpress.com/2013/07/11/clue-of-the-rose-thread/
http://gilles.maillet.free.fr/histoire/famille_bourgogne/famille_rougemont_faucogney.htm
https://rosamondpress.wordpress.com/2013/02/17/knights-templar-arise/
http://www.petit-patrimoine.com/fiche-petit-patrimoine.php?id_pp=21231_3

France to Seek Resolution at U.N. on Syria’s Chemical Arms
By ALAN COWELL
Published: September 10, 2013
LONDON — As the diplomatic pace quickened around Russia’s plan for Syria to relinquish control of its chemical weapons, France said on Tuesday it would propose a United Nations Security Council resolution enshrining the idea while Moscow said it was working with the authorities in Damascus on a “workable, precise and concrete plan” to carry the proposal forward.
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“We are hoping to present this plan in the near future,” Sergey V. Lavrov, the Russian foreign minister, said. “We will be ready to work through this plan and improve it with the participation of the U.N. general secretary, with chemical weapons control organizations and with the members of the Security Council.”
The Russian blueprint also won backing from China, which has resisted Western calls for military action against Syria, which said on Tuesday that it welcomed and supported Moscow’s avowed effort to avert an American strike following last month’s poison gas attacks outside Damascus.
But, amid lingering and deep-rooted Western skepticism over the motives behind the Russian gambit, rebels battling to overthrow the government of President Bashar al-Assad denounced the plan as a political maneuver, reflecting a belief that Russia was seeking to shield its Middle East ally.
In Paris, Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius said the French approach to the Security Council would be made under Chapter 7 of the United Nations Charter, which provides for an array of action, including military, to restore peace, and would urge the Syrians to accept that their chemical stockpiles would be dismantled. President Bashar al-Assad’s government would face “extremely serious” consequences for reneging on the deal, he said.
France, which has emerged as the Obama administrations’s leading European ally after the British Parliament voted against involvement in military action in Syria, said the Russian proposal represented an about-face by Moscow that showed the impact of French and American diplomacy. “We welcome the Russian proposal with interest and caution,” Mr. Fabius told a radio interviewer in Paris. “Our decisiveness has paid off.”
The rapid-fire developments came as a leading rights group supported conclusions by Western governments that only the government of Mr. Assad could have launched the attack that killed hundreds of people, many of them children.
While Mr. Assad has denied that his forces used toxic agents in the attacks on the morning of Aug. 21, Human Rights Watch in New York said evidence concerning the type of rockets and launchers involved in the strike “suggests that these are weapon systems known and documented to be only in the possession of, and used by, Syrian government armed forces.”
“Rocket debris and symptoms of the victims from the Aug. 21 attacks on Ghouta provide telltale evidence about the weapon systems used,” said Peter Bouckaert, the emergencies director at Human Rights Watch and the author of the 22-page report. “This evidence strongly suggests that Syrian government troops launched rockets carrying chemical warheads into the Damascus suburbs that terrible morning.”
The report identified the delivery systems used on Aug. 21 as a Soviet-era 140 mm rocket “designed to carry and deliver” about five pounds of sarin, and a 330 mm rocket capable of carrying “a large payload of liquid chemical agent.”
On Monday, President Obama tentatively embraced the Russian diplomatic proposal to have international monitors take control of the Syrian government’s chemical weapons. The move added new uncertainty to Mr. Obama’s push to win support among allies, the American public and members of Congress for a limited attack.
But the proposals seems freighted with uncertainties relating as much to the tactical considerations behind it as to the practical issues involved in enforcing it at the height of a bloody civil war that has claimed more than 100,000 lives since March 2011.
In London on Monday, Prime Minister David Cameron offered a qualified welcome to the Russian plan.

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