Final warning a history of the new world order
introduction Since the Persian Gulf War, the term 'New World Order' has become well known. However, there has never really been an explanation as to what the term actually meant, only that it represented a new spirit of cooperation among the nations of the world, in order to further the cause of peace. And peace is good, so therefore the New World Order is good and should be accepted. Not so fast. Like the old saying, you can't tell a book by its cover, there is more here than meets the eye. In regard to the term, William Safire wrote in the New York Times in February, 1991:
The term 'New World Order' was actually first used many years ago. In an address delivered to the Union League of Philadelphia on November 27, 1915, Nicholas Murray Butler said:
In a 1919 subscription letter for the magazine International Conciliation, M. C. Alexander, the Executive Secretary of the American Association for International Conciliation wrote:
In August, 1927, Dr. Augustus O. Thomas, President of the World Federation of Education Associations said:
Adolf Hitler said:
In the 1932 book The New World Order, author F. S. Marvin said that the League of Nations was the first attempt at a New World Order, and said that "nationality must rank below the claims of mankind as a whole." Edward VIII became King of England on January 20, 1936, but he was forced to abdicate the throne eleven months later, when he married a commoner. He became the Duke of Windsor, and in July, 1940, became the governor of the Bahamas. He is on record as saying:
In a New York Times article in October, 1940, called "New World Order Pledged to Jews," comes the following excerpt:
The "Declaration of the Federation of the World," written by the Congress on World Federation, which was adopted by the Legislatures of some states, including North Carolina (1941), New Jersey (1942), and Pennsylvania (1943), said:
From an article in a June, 1942 edition of the Philadelphia Inquirer:
According to a February, 1962 New York Times article called "Rockefeller Bids Free Lands Unite: Calls at Harvard for Drive to Build New World Order," New York Governor Nelson Rockefeller told an audience at Harvard University:
The Associated Press reported that on July 26, 1968, Governor Rockefeller said in a speech to the International Platform Association at the Sheraton Park Hotel in New York, that,
Richard Nixon wrote in the October, 1967 issue of the Council on Foreign Relation's (CFR) journal Foreign Affairs:
In 1972, while in China, in a toast to Chinese Premier Chou En-lai, Nixon expressed,
Richard Gardner, former Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for International Organizations under Kennedy and Johnson, and a member of the Trilateral Commission, wrote in the April, 1974 issue of Foreign Affairs (pg. 558):
Richard A. Falk, wrote in his article "Toward a New World Order: Modest Methods and Drastic Visions" (from the 1975 book On the Creation of a Just World Order):
In 1975, 32 Senators and 92 Representatives in Congress signed "A Declaration of Interdependence" (written by the historian Henry Steele Commager) which said that,
Congresswoman Marjorie Holt, who refused to sign it, said:
In an October, 1975 speech to the General Assembly of the United Nations, Henry Kissinger said:
During the 1976 Presidential campaign, Jimmy Carter said:
In a February 14, 1977 speech, Carter said:
Harvard professor Stanley Hoffman wrote in his book Primacy or World Order:
Conservative author George Weigel, director of the Ethics and Public Policy Center in Washington, D.C. said:
In a December, 1988 speech, Mikhail Gorbachev told the United Nations: "Further global progress is now possible only through a quest for universal consensus in the movement towards a new world order." The man who put the New World Order in the limelight, and did more than anyone to bring about its acceptance, was President George Bush. In a February, 1990 fundraiser in San Francisco, Bush said:
On Saturday, August 25, 1990, the United Nations Security Council voted unanimously to allow a joint military force to use whatever means necessary to enforce a UN blockade against the country of Iraq. That afternoon, Lt. Gen. Brent Scowcroft, a CFR member and former aide to Henry Kissinger, who was the National Security Advisor to Bush, was interviewed by Charles Bierbauer of the Cable News Network (CNN) and used the term "a New World Order." In August, 1990, (According to an article in the Washington Post in May, 1991) he said:
During a September, 1990 speech at the United Nations, he announced that "we are moving to a New World Order." Later, on the eve of the Gulf War, Scowcroft said:
In September, 1990, the Wall Street Journal quoted Rep. Richard Gephardt as saying:
In a September 11, 1990 televised address to a joint session of Congress, Bush said:
The September 17, 1990 issue of Time magazine said that,
In a September 25, 1990 address to the UN, Soviet Foreign Minister Eduard Shevardnadze described Iraq's invasion of Kuwait as "an act of terrorism (that) has been perpetrated against the emerging New World Order." In an October 1, 1990, UN address, President Bush talked about the,
On October 30, 1990, Bush suggested that the UN could help create "a New World Order and a long era of peace." Jeanne Kirkpatrick, former U.S. Ambassador to the UN, said that one of the purposes for the Desert Storm operation, was to show to the world how a "reinvigorated United Nations could serve as a global policeman in the New World Order." On December 31, 1990, Gorbachev said that the New World Order would be ushered in by the Gulf War. Prior to the Gulf War, on January 29, 1991, Bush told the nation in his State of the Union address:
He also said:
In a speech to the families of servicemen at Fort Gordon, Georgia on February 1, 1991, Bush said:
Following a February 6, 1991 speech to the Economic Club of New York City, Bush answered a reporter's question about what the New World Order was, by saying:
Bush said in a speech to the Congress on March 6, 1991:
On August 21, 1991, after the failed coup in the Soviet Union, CNN reporter Mary Tillotson said that the President's "New World Order is back on track, now stronger than ever." In an interview with CNN at the height of the Gulf War, Scowcroft said that he had doubts about the significance of Mid-East objectives regarding global policy. When asked if that meant he didn't believe in the New World Order, he replied:
On January 25, 1993, Clinton's Secretary of State, Warren Christopher, said in a CNN interview: "We must get the New World Order on track and bring the UN into its correct role in regards to the United States." In April, 1992, Sen. Joseph R. Biden Jr. wrote the article "How I Learned to Love the New World Order" for The Wall Street Journal. While campaigning for the passage of NAFTA, Kissinger said:
In a July 18, 1993 Los Angeles Times article about NAFTA, Kissinger is quoted as saying:
On May 4, 1994, Leslie Gelb, CFR President, said on "The Charlie Rose Show":
On September 14, 1994, while speaking at the Business Council for the United Nations, David Rockefeller said:
He said at another time:
In the July/August 1995 issue of Foreign Affairs, Arthur Schlesinger, Jr. wrote: "We are not going to achieve a New World Order without paying for it in blood as well as in words and money." Former West German Chancellor Willy Brandt said:
Somehow, the implications from these quotes, lends a sinister overtone to this New World Order. After 25 years of research, it is clear to me that this country has been infiltrated by conspirators, members of an organization who are dedicated to establishing a one-world socialist government - with them in control. It sounds unbelievable, like something out of a James Bond movie, yet, it is a fact. A fact that the media has refused to publicize, even attempting to cover it up, and deny its very existence. In the 1844 political novel Coningsby by Benjamin Disraeli, the British Prime Minister, a character known as Sidonia (which was based on Lord Rothschild, whose family he had become close friends with in the early 1840's) says:
On September 10, 1876, in Aylesbury, Disraeli said:
On October 1, 1877, Henry Edward Manning, Cardinal Archbishop of Westminster, said of the trouble in the Balkan States:
In 1902, Pope Leo XIII wrote of this power:
Walter Rathenau, head of German General Electric, said in 1909:
President Woodrow Wilson said in 1913:
John F. Hylan, mayor of New York City (1918-25), said in a March 26, 1922 speech:
In the December, 1922 edition of Foreign Affairs, Philip Kerr wrote:
In a letter dated November 21, 1933, Franklin D. Roosevelt wrote to confidant Colonel Edward House:
In her novel, Captains and the Kings, Taylor Caldwell wrote of the "plot against the people," and says that it wasn't,
Some heads of foreign governments refer to this group as "The Magicians," Stalin called them "The Dark Forces," and President Eisenhower described them as "the military-industrial complex." In the July 26, 1936 issue of the New York Times, Joseph Kennedy, patriarch of the Kennedy family, was quoted as saying:
In 1952, U.S. Supreme Court Justice Felix Frankfurter, said:
According to the California State Investigating Committee on Education (1953):
This purpose of this book is to show the connection between the Illuminati, and what would become known as the New World Order. Through the years, the term 'Illuminati' has developed an anti-Semitic connotation, because some researchers have insisted that the move toward a one world government has been engineered as part of a Jewish conspiracy. This is not true. One of the documents that provided evidence concerning this has been proven to be a complete fabrication. Although some of the International Bankers which actually control this group are Jewish, there is no basis for indicting the entire Jewish race. In 1966, Dr. Carroll Quigley, a professor of history at the Foreign Service School of Georgetown University, published a 1311-page book called Tragedy and Hope: A History of the World in Our Time. On page 950 he says: "There does exist, and has existed for a generation, an international Anglophile network which operates, to some extent, in the way the radical Right believes the Communists act. In fact, this network, which we may identify as the Round Table Groups, has no aversion to cooperating with the Communists, or any other groups, and frequently does so.
I know of the operations of this network because I have studied it for twenty years and was permitted for two years, in the early 1960's, to examine its papers and secret records.
I have no aversion to it or to most of its aims and have, for much of my life, been close to it and to many of its instruments... my chief difference of opinion is that it wishes to remain unknown, and I believe its role in history is significant enough to be known... because the American branch of this organization (sometimes called the 'Eastern Establishment') has played a very significant role in the history of the United States in the last generation." On page 324, he elaborates even further by saying: "In addition to these pragmatic goals, the powers of financial capitalism had another far-reaching aim, nothing less than to create a world system of financial control in private hands able to dominate the political system of each country and the economy of the world as a whole.
This system was to be controlled in a feudalist fashion by the central banks of the world acting in concert, by secret agreements, arrived at in frequent private meetings and conferences. The apex of the system was the Bank for International Settlements in Basle, Switzerland, a private bank owned and controlled by the worlds' central banks which were themselves private corporations.
The growth of financial capitalism made possible a centralization of world economic control and use of this power for the direct benefit of financiers and indirect injury of all other economic groups." Bill Clinton, during his acceptance speech at the Democratic Convention, said:
This is where Clinton received his indoctrination as an internationalist favoring one-world government. In the mid-1970's, Dr. Tom Berry, who was pastor of the Baptist Bible Church in Elkton, Maryland, said: "At most, there are only 5,000 people in the whole world who have a significant understanding of the plan." Professor Arnold Toynbee (a founding member of the Round Table) said in a June, 1931 speech to the Institute of International Affairs in Copenhagen:
H. G. Wells, a member of the Fabian Society, wrote in his 1933 book The Shape of Things to Come:
Major General John Frederick Charles Fuller, a British military historian, said in 1941:
On June 28, 1945, President Harry Truman said in a speech:
On October 24, 1945, Senator Glen Taylor (D-Idaho) introduced Senate Resolution No. 183, which called for the Senate to go on record as advocating the establishment of a world republic, including an international police force. In 1947, the American Education Fellowship (formerly known as the Progressive Education Association) called for the "establishment of a genuine world order, an order in which national sovereignty is subordinate to world authority…" Brock Chisholm, the first director of the UN World Health Organization said:
On February 9, 1950, a Senate Foreign Relations subcommittee introduced Concurrent Resolution 66 which began:
James Warburg, a member of the Council on Foreign Relations, told the Senate Foreign Relations Committee on February 17, 1950:
Sen. William Jenner said in a February 23, 1954 speech: "Today the path to total dictatorship in the United States can be laid by strictly legal means, unseen and unheard by the Congress, the President, or the people...
Outwardly we have a constitutional government. We have operating within our government and political system, another body representing another form of government, a bureaucratic elite which believes our Constitution is outmoded and is sure that it is the winning side...
All the strange developments in foreign policy agreements may be traced to this group who are going to make us over to suit their pleasure... This political action group has its own local political support organizations, its own pressure groups, its own vested interests, its foothold within our government." In September, 1960, Elmo Roper, in an address called "The Goal is Government of All the World" said:
In a 1963 symposium (sponsored by the leftist Fund for the Republic, of the Ford Foundation) called
Senator J. William Fulbright, the Chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee said:
Sen. Russell Long of Louisiana, who for 18 years was the Chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, said that our,
He also said:
Congressman Larry P. McDonald, who, in 1983 was killed in the Korean Airlines flight 007 that had been shot down by the Soviets said:
Zbigniew Brzezinski, who was President Carter's National Security Advisor, said:
Norman Cousins, the honorary Chairman of Planetary Citizens for the World We Chose (as well as the President of the World Federalist Association) is quoted in the magazine Human Events as saying:
During the 1991 Bilderberger Conference held in Evians, France, Dr. Henry Kissinger said: "Today, America would be outraged if UN troops entered Los Angeles to restore order (referring to the riot caused by the Rodney King incident). Tomorrow they will be grateful!
This is especially true if they were told that there were an outside threat from beyond, whether real or promulgated, that threatened our very existence. It is then that all peoples of the world will plead to deliver them from this evil. The one thing every man fears is the unknown.
When presented with this scenario, individual rights will be willingly relinquished for the guarantee of their well-being granted to them by the World Government." On October 29, 1991, David Funderburk, a former U.S. Ambassador to Romania (1981-85), told a group in North Carolina:
Time magazine on July 20, 1992, in an article called "The Birth of the Global Nation," Strobe Talbott, an Editor (later Clinton's Deputy Secretary of State) wrote:
In 1993 he received the Norman Cousins Global Governance Award for the article and for what he has accomplished "for the cause of global governance." Pope John Paul II said:
Haven't you wondered why things are the way they are. That even though a new President is elected and a new Administration takes over, executive policy does not change, nor does the State of the Nation - which continues to get worse. Is there some sort of group that has infiltrated both political parties, our government, and many other governments, which has for years been creating and controlling world events, and is only now being officially identified, because it is too late to stop this juggernaut? Yes, I believe there is. That is the purpose of this book, to trace the origin and growth of the group which has come to be known as the New World Order, and why there is such a massive campaign to accept it. President Bill Clinton said in his first inaugural address:
You need to know just exactly what these changes are, and how they will affect the lives and you and your family. Abraham Lincoln's pledge of "government of the people, by the people, for the people," has become a joke. After reading this book, you will know why things are the way they are; and when you hear that 'They' are responsible for something, you will know who 'They' are.
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