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William Henry Danforth - C<br />

Weaton College<br />

Dale Rogers Marshall – C<br />

Carroll Quigley, Professor of History at Georgetown University, stated,<br />

"The Council of Foreign Relations is <strong>the</strong> American Branch of a society<br />

which originated in England and believes national boundaries should be<br />

obliterated and one-world rule established."<br />

The Council on Foreign Relations and <strong>the</strong> New<br />

World Order<br />

By Charles Overbeck<br />

The Council on Foreign Relations, housed in <strong>the</strong> Harold Pratt<br />

House on East 68th Street in New York City, was founded in<br />

1921. In 1922, it began publishing a journal called Foreign<br />

Affairs. According to Foreign Affairs' web page<br />

(http://www.foreignaffairs.org), <strong>the</strong> CFR was founded when<br />

"...several of <strong>the</strong> American participants in <strong>the</strong> Paris Peace<br />

Conference decided that it was time for more private American<br />

Citizens to become familiar with <strong>the</strong> increasing international<br />

responsibilities and obligations of <strong>the</strong> United States."<br />

The first question that comes to mind is, who gave <strong>the</strong>se people<br />

<strong>the</strong> authority to decide <strong>the</strong> responsibilities and obligations of <strong>the</strong><br />

United States, if that power was not granted to <strong>the</strong>m <strong>by</strong> <strong>the</strong><br />

Constitution. Fur<strong>the</strong>rmore, <strong>the</strong> CFR's web page doesn't publicize<br />

<strong>the</strong> fact that it was originally conceived as part of a much larger<br />

network of power.<br />

According to <strong>the</strong> CFR's Handbook of 1936, several leading<br />

members of <strong>the</strong> delegations to <strong>the</strong> Paris Peace Conference met at<br />

<strong>the</strong> Hotel Majestic in Paris on May 30, 1919, "to discuss setting up<br />

an international group which would advise <strong>the</strong>ir respective<br />

governments on international affairs."

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