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DRUGS 41


Chapter 5

5-1 The absolute core

We now come to the absolute core, and we have already talked about it in the end of the previous chapter; 
the role of famous people and their unnatural death as result. We have now gone through pretty much 
everything, and we know where and how it goes in the drug and its world. But so far, we have not discussed 
the absolute top.

 First we start with Diana, Princess of Wales who has experienced too much but also has seen too much. 
Through this channel we get to the real core that, from the Jewish community and their freemason club, 
provides a link to these “houses” which seem to show no mercy when it comes to money and the related 
drugs. But before going more deeply, here they are, the players starting with Diana, Princess of Wales, 
Queen Elizabeth II and then Dutch royal house, where Alexander and Friso have huge interests in the drug 
world, protected by mom Beatrix.



5-2 Talk too much, death

There are various famous people who have left this earth in a “strange” way. But every time before these 
people had left, there were statements of them which constantly were the same, and pointed to a certain 
group in the world. One called it the “illuminati” the other the “royal house”, with the most powerful world, 
namely bankers who are all “by chance” of Jewish descent. It is striking and you see constantly that one 
becomes a famous person if made through one of these people, or one is placed on a certain post by 
the elite class. But apart from that, you have also lost your freedom and right to speak. You are a slave 
to the elite and must act as they stipulate.

From ALL murders of many famous people, speeches or interviews are found that they have given 
shortly before their death. JF Kennedy, John Lennon, Michael Jackson, Martin Luther King, Pim Fortuyn, 
and so the list is a book itself, relatively short before their death have made public what is really going 
on and where they are forced to, by a particular club. Just one simple example. We know that the Rolling 
Stones band (the oldest band) has 4 heavy drug addicts who are still on the stage and do some spouting. 
Everyone knows that this band hangs together of drugs, alcohol and abuse. A simple question; why this 
band is not named and shamed, and prosecuted? Amy Houston, also a person who was heavily affected. 
They saved her and she could do what she wanted like her colleagues are still doing. The day she 
divulged too much, namely how dirty the artist world was, she allegedly took an overdose. Ditto the story 
Elvis Presley, Michael Jackson, Freddie Mercury, and so on. First they dragged you through the mud, if 
that does not work, they kill you. For, what do we see now among others Bill Cosby and in the past 
Michael Jackson, not to forget John F. Kennedy and Martin Luther King? They will search for anything 
so to abort their world and if those people divulged too much, the elite protection will be withdrawn.

But let’s pull out a case that is close and into the source, and then we come to Lady Diana.



5-3 Lady Diana

Diana, Princess of Wales

The Princess of Wales in 1995
Born 	1 July 1961
Park House, Sandringham, Norfolk, England
Died 	31 August 1997 (aged 36)
Pitié-Salpêtrière Hospital, Paris, France
Burial 	6 September 1997
Althorp, Northamptonshire, England
Spouse Charles, Prince of Wales (m. 1981; div. 1996)
Issue 	
Prince William, Duke of Cambridge
Prince Henry of Wales

Full name
Diana Frances
House 	
Spencer (by birth)
Windsor (by marriage)

Father 	John Spencer, 8th Earl Spencer
Mother Frances Shand Kydd
Religion Church of England



5-3a Signature 	

Diana, Princess of Wales (Diana Frances; née Spencer; 1 July 1961 – 31 August 1997), was the 
first wife of Charles, Prince of Wales, who is the eldest child and heir apparent of Queen Elizabeth II.

Diana was born into a family of British nobility with royal ancestry as The Honourable Diana Spencer. 
She was the fourth child and third daughter of John Spencer, Viscount Althorp and the Honourable 
Frances Roche. She grew up in Park House, situated on the Sandringham estate, and was educated 
in England and Switzerland. In 1975, after her father inherited the title of Earl Spencer, she became 
Lady Diana Spencer.

Her wedding to the Prince of Wales on 29 July 1981, held at St Paul’s Cathedral, reached a global 
television audience of over 750 million people. While married, Diana bore the titles Princess of Wales, 
Duchess of Cornwall, Duchess of Rothesay, Countess of Chester, and Baroness of Renfrew. 
The marriage produced two sons, the princes William and Harry, who were then respectively second 
and third in the line of succession to the British throne. As Princess of Wales, Diana undertook royal 
duties on behalf of the Queen and represented her at functions overseas. She was celebrated for her 
charity work and for her support of the International Campaign to Ban Landmines. She was involved 
with dozens of charities including London’s Great Ormond Street Hospital for children, of which she 
was president from 1989.

Diana remained the object of worldwide media scrutiny during and after her marriage, which ended in 
divorce on 28 August 1996. Media attention and public mourning were extensive after her death in a car 
crash in Paris on 31 August 1997 and subsequent televised funeral.



5-3b Early life

Diana was born on 1 July 1961, in Park House, Sandringham, Norfolk. She was the fourth of five children 
of John Spencer, Viscount Althorp (1924–1992), and his first wife, Frances (née Roche; 1936–2004). 
The Spencer family has been closely allied with the British Royal Family for several generations. Both of 
Diana’s grandmothers had served as ladies in waiting to Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother. 
The Spencers were hoping for a boy to carry on the family line, and no name was chosen for a week, until 
they settled on Diana Frances, after her mother and Diana Russell, Duchess of Bedford, her distant relative 
who was also known as “Lady Diana Spencer” before marriage and was a prospective Princess of Wales. 
Diana was baptised at St. Mary Magdalene Church, Sandringham. Diana had three siblings: Sarah, Jane, 
and Charles. Her infant brother, John, died shortly after his birth one year before Diana was born. The desire 
for an heir added strain to the Spencers’ marriage, and Lady Althorp was reportedly sent to Harley Street 
clinics in London to determine the cause of the “problem”. The experience was described as “humiliating” 
by Diana’s younger brother, Charles: “It was a dreadful time for my parents and probably the root of their 
divorce because I don’t think they ever got over it.”Diana grew up in Park House, situated on the 
Sandringham estate. The Spencers leased the house from its owner, Queen Elizabeth II. The Royal Family 
frequently holidayed at the neighbouring Sandringham House, and Diana played with Princes Andrew and 
Edward as a child.

Diana was seven years old when her parents divorced. Her mother later had an affair with Peter Shand 
Kydd and married him in 1969. Diana lived with her mother in London during her parents’ separation in 1967, 
but during that year’s Christmas holidays, Lord Althorp refused to let Diana return to London with Lady Althorp. 
Shortly afterwards he won custody of Diana with support from his former mother-in-law, Ruth Roche, Baroness 
Fermoy. In 1972, Lord Althorp began a relationship with Raine, Countess of Dartmouth, the only daughter of 
Alexander McCorquodale and Dame Barbara Cartland. They married at Caxton Hall, London in 1976. 
Diana became known as Lady Diana after her father later inherited the title of Earl Spencer in 1975, at which 
point her father moved the entire family from Park House to Althorp, the Spencer seat in Northampton.









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