Patrick Scrivener #conspiracy reformation.org
THE TOP SECRET BRITISH ROYAL FAMILY TWINS REVEALED AT LAST!!
In 1926, Twins were born to Elizabeth Bowes-Lyon which she named Elizabeth and Lilibet.
Elizabeth was mentally handicapped while Lilibet displayed "supernatural" intelligence!!
It is beyond belief but the British Empire has been ruled by Twin queens since 1953. In 2015, a report was issued by the BBC that the queen went to meet her Maker. That report was later denied, but if it is true, Lilibet has passed away:
LONDON. June 3, 2015 — A behind-the-scenes rehearsal of how the BBC will handle the death of Queen Elizabeth II ended with an apology Wednesday after one of its reporters mistakenly tweeted that the British monarch had passed away.
Ahmen Khawaja, a reporter working for the BBC's Urdu-language service, posted on Twitter that the 89-year-old had been taken to hospital. A second tweet announced: "Queen Elizabrth [sic] has died."
That is still a remarkably long life for someone who gave a lot of flattering titles to men and women:
Let me not, I pray you, accept any man's person, neither let me give flattering titles unto man. For I know not to give flattering titles; in so doing my maker would soon take me away. (Job 32:21-22, King James Version).
That verse is the reason why the U.S. Constitution prohibits flattering titles of nobility.
The Twins were born on April 21, 1926, at 17 Bruton Street in Mayfair.
The babies were delivered by Caesarian section, assisted by 3 of the top obstetric surgeons in the country.
By law, the Home Secretary was also present to prevent a repetition of the "Warming Pan Plot."
Ostensibly, Prince Albert, husband of Elizabeth Bowes-Lyon, was the father of the Twins. Prince Albert, later King George VI, had massive physical and psychological problems and was incapable of producing children.
The ostensible father of the Twins was Albert, Duke of York.
Albert was impotent and definitely not heir-conditioned.
The mother of the Twins was Elizabeth Bowes-Lyon.
The long-lived Elizabeth was "as strong as a horse" but the Twins were very reluctant to leave the safety of her womb and enter the British royal family.
James Stuart of Findhorn was actually a descendant of the "Old Pretender," and the Stuarts were always working indefatigably to replace the Hannover or Windsor dynasty.
Here is an excerpt from the autobiography of James Stewart about the first meeting of Elizabeth Bowes-Lyon and the Duke of York:
My career as a courtier was nearly over now, although I did not know it, but before I left the royal service one event of personal and historical interest took place. In the summer of 1921 the first Royal Air Force ball was held at the Ritz Hotel, and my master, the Duke of York, was the guest of honour, having joined the R.A.F. from the Navy during the war. He gave a small dinner party at the Berkeley and then we walked across to the Ritz. I was on duty, so I saw the party settled in, and then sought out my friends, Later in the evening H.R.H. came over to me and asked who was the girl with whom I had been dancing. I replied that her name was Lady Elizabeth Bowes-Lyon and he asked me if I would introduce him, which I did. (Stuart, Within the Fringe, p. 57).
That fateful meeting in the summer of 1921 actually changed history.
Elizabeth Bowes-Lyons had many suitors, and under normal circumstances, fellow Scot James Stuart was the man she was most likely to marry.
That never happened because James Stuart introduced Prince Albert to Elizabeth.
The Catholic Stuarts looked upon the House of Hannover/ Windsor with contempt and didn't even recognize marriages by the Church of England.
The birth of the Twins was attended by 2 of the most eminent medical men of that day, Dr. Walter Jagger (no relation to Mick) and Sir Henry Simson. They were joined later by another physician named Sir George Blacker:
Elizabeth was being tended by two of the eminent medical men of her day: Her obstetric miracle-worker Dr. Walter Jagger (1871–1929) and the obstetric surgeon Sir Henry Simson (1872–1939). When they realised that the baby was in the breech position, they called in Sir George Blacker (1865–1948), and obstetric specialist from University College Hospital, London. Following a consultation, the three doctors decided to move forward with the due date from the end of the month to the earliest feasible date (Campbell, The Queen Mother, p. 209).
In 1930, Elizabeth had another girl named Margaret, in Glamis Castle in Scotland, and that delivery was like a stroll in the moor.
3 highly qualified obstetric surgeons oversaw the delivery of the Twins.
They were: Dr. Walter Jagger, Sir Henry Simson, and Sir George Blacker.
As required by law, Home Secretary Sir William Joynson-Hicks was on hand to make sure that there was not a repetition of the Warming Pan Plot!!
Here is a report of the birth of the Twins from an authorized biography of the Queen Mother:
Labour was introduced on the 20th April, and the Home Secretary, an eminent solicitor by the name of Sir William Joynson-Hicks, Bt, (and later 1st Viscount Brentford), duly arrived to stand guard, as required by law when a child in direct line of succession to the throne was being born, to prevent substitution. When it became apparent that the baby could not be turned, Sir Henry made the Caesarian incision and Dr. Jagger pulled out the future Queen Elizabeth II at exactly 2:40 am on 21st April, 1926. (Campbell, The Queen Mother, p. 210).
In a Caesarian birth, there can be no firstborn, so those 3 doctors faced a major dilemma. It was solved for them later because one girl was supernaturally brilliant and the other girl was mentally challenged. It was ironic that the Twins almost shared a birthday with Adolf Hitler.