Well, I've gone over the Illuminati site posing as an official site. It's still impossible to determine if this is new world order propaganda or not, but I've been through this top to bottom.
First we'll go over the information that makes it look real. Right after we'll go over the information that makes it look fake. This is what a true "truther" and analyzer should do. It keeps us level, and from going over the top in any direction. We don't want to write off something used by the enemy, and we don't want to look like we're going out to lunch on the shape-shifting lizard's space craft either.
Pros
* The propaganda videos are extremely well done. Video editing of that nature takes a lot of practice and knowledge into video editing software. These videos are the work of someone with a degree, or amazing skills at at least a basic professional level. The voice is professional in the first video, so this too is the work of a professional voice over artist. The message is on par with what
an Illuminati style secret society propaganda message would be, especially coming from a theosophical view point. The blue man in the video, the avatar, is right there with a theosophical God figure, an idol, that would turn out to be the anti-Christ. If it's fake, someone still hit the nail on the head with this kind of video.
*The messages in the tweets are pretty consistent. The twitter account is following some pretty high level men. Following such people in the name of their own personage is bold for a fake, but still not impossible for someone to do. These guys are followed by some pretty devote people willing to praise the light, throw up devil horns, and treat the Illuminati like Gods... Still... people are foolish, and would worship a rock if it would suit them.
* There's an appearance of a high expectation for membership. Need a annual income of 1 million, black centurion credit card [invite only credit card with near 2G annual fee], artistry contract over a million, high level of government influence and so on.
*The physical design of the site is pretty good.
Cons
* I took a peak under the hood of the site and checked the source code. There's a few broken bits of HTML. Nothing major, but something I think professionals would care about. This is something even novice coders aren't willing to let slide at times and often seek help in forums to solve. It's not that the code hurts the site, but code to a coder is like a baby. Most coders are purists, if it's broken, fix it, even if it's just for appeal in place no one may ever look... This is the life of a good coder. Still, the code isn't weak by any means. They're using professional CSS, JavaScript, and have well structured HTML.
* In one of the images
they've posted on the twitter account there's three guys wearing an Illuminati pendant. One of the guys has a small box t.v, which is not too elite looking.
* Their endorsements from their twitter following doesn't contain anything from anyone I would call elite or famous. It's mostly young people and wayward looking sheep teens willing to praise anything.
*Even though the site says it's invite only and requires a lot there's a loophole in the requirement of a verified Twitter badge [restrictions apply]. Unless the restrictions are being famous and rich, or a good pawn, this is a pretty weak loop hole.
*The Egyptian hieroglyphs on the site don't look like anything major. They Look like something a chick drew.
*They mention people have been trying to smudge their name throughout the centuries using internet, videos, images, books, letters, and other means... Well, I don't think the elite are so dumb they don't know that half that stuff hasn't been around 60 years let alone centuries.
* It would seem their pendant is for sale for $11. This isn't a big deal, even churches have crosses and products, but it does make the thing look more like a get rich scheme using the Illuminati than actual Illuminati doings.
The Conspiracy
There's a conspiracy going around by a YouTuber named Lyn, and some others, but don't fall for it. These people don't have a clue what they're doing. I commend Lyn for being a Christian, but she's on the extreme conspiracy side. Don't get me wrong, there's a conspiracy, there's satanism, and I wouldn't surprised if it includes sacrifice and blood drinking somewhere, although it can't be proven. Still, this doesn't mean you can just run with whatever you want. Everything should be proven, and understood, before it's said. This chick Lyn loves to run wild with her tangents, but she does it recklessly and inserts it as truth.
They say they got the IP from a WhoIs search. They say they traced it back to a high level Vatican Jesuit, through a secondary site owned by the same poster. There's only one problem. The IP address that you get from one of those services is usually for the computer it's hosted on. This means the IP they got was for a GoDaddy machine, believe me, I looked. The person's personal information is hidden by a service, lets say "privacy service inc.". I have no idea how they landed on a secondary site run by a high level Jesuit catholic. I saw a secondary site, but different than what they saw. I'm wondering if it's not because the Illuminati site is hosted using shared hosting and we're not getting random secondary sites based on whatever is being served up by the hosting company on the same machine.
I will give this to Lyn, IF, she is being honest. This method does claim to serve up secondary sites owned by the same person, but I'm unsure if this is based on IP. If it is, we run into the hosting computer again... Still... IF she is being honest, and really ran into a Jesuit run high level church site owned by the same person... This has been cleverly realized, fixed, and switched out by a pathetic looking ukulele salesman site.
This entirely depends on her honesty, findings at the time, and what's really being served up by the host on this IP address, and who owns what's being given.
Check out her video below.
Proof that I've looked up the IP myself and found different results.
http://whois.domaintools.com/illuminatiofficial.org
There are other sites that I found a secondary site, but like I said, had nothing to do with the Vatican, but rather a CSSless ukelele store. It might not even be related. Hard to say.
Final Message
There's only a few things this entire website could be.
Fake - someone doing a really professional job at riding the Illuminati wave to sell an $11 dollar pendant and whatever future merchandise they come up with.
Propaganda - Some clever tool actually used by the conspiracy agenda to spread propaganda and look half dumb while doing it.
Only time will tell.
http://www.illuminatiofficial.org