Uh, I found a quote with opinion and imagination on it. Its not nice...
From Controversy of Zion:
From Controversy of Zion:
The following extract shows a group of recognizable 20th Century characters, to which any attentive student of our times could fit
names, yet it was written in 1813:
"As the principal force of the [Illuminati] lies in the power of opinions, they have set themselves out
from the beginning to make proselytes amongst the men who through their profession exercise a direct
influence on minds, such as literateurs, savants and above all professors. The latter in their chairs, the former
in their writings, propagate the principles of the sect by disguising the poison that they circulate under a
thousand different forms. These germs, often imperceptible to the eyes of the vulgar, are afterwards
developed by the adepts of the Societies they frequent, and the most obscure wording is thus brought to the
understanding of the least discerning. It is above all in the universities that Illuminism has always found and always will
find numerous recruits; Those professors who belong to the Association set out from the first to study the character of their pupils.
If a student gives evidence of a vigorous mind, an ardent imagination, the sectaries at once get hold of him;
they sound in his ears the words Despotism, Tyranny, Rights of the People, etc., etc. Before he can even
attach any meaning to these words, as he advances in age, reading works chosen for him, conversations
skilfully arranged, develop the germ deposited in his youthful brain. Soon, his imagination ferments . . . At
last, when he has been completely captivated, when several years of testing guarantee to the society inviolable
secrecy and absolute devotion, it is made known to him that millions of individuals distributed in all the
States of Europe share his sentiments and his hopes, that a secret link binds firmly all the scattered members
of this immense family, and that the reforms he desires so ardently must sooner or later come about. This
propaganda is rendered the easier by the existing associations of students, who meet together for the study of
literature, for fencing, gaming or even mere debauchery. The [Illuminati] insinuate themselves into all these
circles and turn them into hotbeds for the propagation of their principles. Such then is the Association's
continual mode of progression from its origins until the present moment; it is by convening from childhood
the germ of poison into the highest classes of society, in feeding the minds of students on ideas diametrically
opposed to that order of things under which they have to live, in breaking the ties that bind them to
sovereigns, that Illuminism has recruited the largest number of adepts . . ." page 119.