WHO WERE THE ANTI-MASONS

Talk No.12

Peter Taylor is a Past Master of Lodge Albert No.448 and Discovery No.1789


First delivered by Peter at Lodge Albert Lochee 448 on the 22nd May 2008

Anti-masons (antis) is a term most usually found on the Internet and it is applied to the people who make fanciful and malicious claims about the activities and purpose of Freemasonry. These claims range from the simply unbelievable such as alien intervention on Earth and The New World Order (controlling governments and economies) to the mundane and more believable such as getting off from speeding fines or job preferment. However, they all have a common link, in that by being a Freemason you are part of a conspiracy, somewhere.

Who Are They

Antis are in reality, a sub-category of the people known collectively as conspiracy theorists. In my opinion antis can be generally grouped thus:

What Tactics Do They Use

The claims made by antis usually fall short (but not always) of true slander in that they rarely accuse living individuals but rather employ the “guilt by association” approach combined with an appeal to the lack of knowledge of their audience. In reality their claims are generally just “malicious gossip”, unfortunately despite this, they seem real enough to members of Group A.

Some examples:

What To Watch For

Coincidence tends to play a big part in the claims of individuals in Group A. They will often recite very mundane events whilst attempting to make them appear almost mystical as well as asserting that they are the fault of their chosen target. The behavioural scientist, BF Skinner found during his laboratory experiments that “the Human mind often seeks relationships between events and often finds them even when they are not there”. Bold statements and/or rumours do not equal reality, however if they are passed on and not disproved enough they will and do gain the status of “urban legends”. Many people believe in urban legends because, to coin a phrase “there’s no smoke without fire”.

Antis in Groups C and D often rely on their audience’s lack of knowledge to make their claims appear truthful. Emotive words and false analogies as well as metaphors are all commonly used to provoke emotion in the anti’s audience in order to prevent the intervention of reason. These and the “fallacy of negation” often appear in the same attacks, the anti will try to discredit what a Freemason says in the hope that the audience will be led to believe their point of view. These as well as “after the fact” reasoning are common tactics amongst Group C antis. After the fact means taking old elements of the history of their target and use it to try to prove their modern day theory.
Antis rarely seem to understand that they bear the “burden of proof” for their claim and that the target of their claim is not actually required to disprove it. Antis also tend to display problem-solving difficulties in that they will form their theory and seek only information that proves it. If you supply information that clearly disproves it they will just not accept it.

Note:

General Albert Pike

American lawyer, author and soldier. After the American Civil War he devoted his life to advancing the cause of the Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite. From 1859 he was Sovereign Grand Commander (33°) of the AASR Southern Jurisdiction, USA. He wrote a book “Morals and Dogma of the Ancient and Accepted Rite of Freemasonry” in 1871 for distribution to all 32° masons within the Southern Jurisdiction. This book is still misquoted by anti-masons today as the basis of their theories. Unfortunately, they are unaware and are unwilling to accept that the majority of Freemasons outside of that jurisdiction have never heard of him.

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Peter Taylor 2008

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