En Route to Global Occupation .pdf - Equal Parenting-BC
En Route to Global Occupation .pdf - Equal Parenting-BC
En Route to Global Occupation .pdf - Equal Parenting-BC
Create successful ePaper yourself
Turn your PDF publications into a flip-book with our unique Google optimized e-Paper software.
36 <strong>En</strong> <strong>Route</strong> <strong>to</strong> <strong>Global</strong> <strong>Occupation</strong><br />
The .goal of the CFR, quite simply, was <strong>to</strong> influence all aspects<br />
of society m such a way that one day Americans would wake up and<br />
~d themselves in the midst of a one-world system whether they liked<br />
1t or not Their hope was <strong>to</strong> get Americans <strong>to</strong> the point where entering<br />
a world government would seem as natural and American as baseball<br />
and apple pie. This all sounds preposterous until one realizes how<br />
far the CFR's plans have already come.<br />
Using illuministic tactics and with backing from the major global<br />
foundations, the CFR has been able <strong>to</strong> advance its agenda rapidly<br />
and with relative ease. During the 1920s and 30s the organization<br />
made significant strides <strong>to</strong>ward gaining control of the Democratic<br />
party and by the 1940s had established a foothold in the Republican<br />
party as well.<br />
With the start of World War II the CFR, thanks <strong>to</strong> the help of<br />
Franklin Roosevelt, would gain control of the State Department and<br />
therefore, our foreign policy. Rene Wormser, of the Reece Commit:<br />
tee, explains how this happened.<br />
[The 1 organization became virtually an agency of the<br />
government when World War II broke out. The<br />
Rockefeller Foundation had started and financed certain<br />
studies known as The War and Peace Studies, manned<br />
largely by associates of the Council; the State Department,<br />
in due course, <strong>to</strong>ok these Studies over, retaining<br />
the major personnel which The Council on Foreign<br />
Relations had supplied.39<br />
The United Nations<br />
CFR control of the State Department would ensure U.S. membership<br />
in the United Nations following the war. In fact, the Council<br />
on ~oreign Relations would act through the State Departm nt <strong>to</strong> establish<br />
the U.N. These details were revealed in 1969 durin a debate<br />
be~een Lt. Col. Archibald Roberts and Congressman 'chard L.<br />
Ottinger, Direc<strong>to</strong>r, United States Committee on the Nations.<br />
During that debate, Colonel Roberts testified:<br />
... the United Nations was spawned two weeks after<br />
Pearl Harbor in the office of Secretary of State, Cordell<br />
Hull. In a letter <strong>to</strong> the President, Franklin D. Roosevelt,<br />
date 22 Dec. 1941, Secretary Hull, at the direction of his<br />
faceless sponsors ... recommended the founding of a<br />
Presidential Advisory Committee on Post War Foreign<br />
Policy. This Post War Foreign Policy CoOlJt!!ttee was in<br />
fact the planning commission for the Upited Nations and<br />
its Charter.~<br />
<strong>Global</strong> Politics 37<br />
Colonel Roberts went on <strong>to</strong> identify the people who made up<br />
the Committee, besides Secretary of State Hull. The list included various<br />
State Department advisors and staff members, CFR officials, and<br />
leaders in education, the media, and foreign policy research. 41<br />
These are the real founders of the United Nations. Al<strong>to</strong>gether,<br />
ten of the fourteen Committee members belonged <strong>to</strong> the CFR. As Roberts<br />
pointed out, "Each member of the Committee ... was without<br />
exception, a member of the Council on Foreign Relations, or under<br />
the control of the Council on Foreign Relations. "~ 2<br />
In 1945, at the U.N.'s founding conference, forty-seven members<br />
of the CPR were in the United States delegation. Included among<br />
these were Edward Stettinius, the new secretary of state; john Foster<br />
Dulles; Adlai Stevenson; Nelson Rockefeller; and Alger Hiss, who was<br />
the secretary general of the U.N.'s founding conference.43<br />
To make sure that the United States would not back out of joining<br />
the United Nations as it did with the League of Nations, the inter-<br />
. national body would this time be located on American soil. This gesture<br />
would make the American public less resistant <strong>to</strong> the move. The<br />
land for the United Nations building was "graciously" donated by John<br />
D. Rockefeller, Jr.~~<br />
By getting the United States <strong>to</strong> join the U.N., which represents<br />
a limited form of world government, the Council on Foreign Relations<br />
had accomplished its first major objective. Using its influence in public<br />
education and the media, the CFR would now proceed <strong>to</strong> cast a favorable<br />
image for the United Nations among the American public,<br />
eventually leading step-by-step <strong>to</strong> U.S. participation in a full.blown system<br />
of world government This, it was realized, would take some time.<br />
Had the CFR tried <strong>to</strong> bring the U.S. in<strong>to</strong> a world government<br />
all at once, the effort would have failed. The American people would<br />
have reacted full force against such an attempt The immediate purpose<br />
of the U.N. was therefore merely <strong>to</strong> warm Americans up <strong>to</strong> the<br />
idea of global government It was all part of the conditioning.<br />
Since the U.N. was founded in 1945, its leaders have been guilty<br />
of an array of outrageous actions. Alger Hiss, for example, was exposed<br />
as a Soviet spy. Secretary General U Thant praised Lenin as a<br />
leader whose "ideals of peace and peaceful coexistence among states<br />
have won widespread international acceptance and they are in line<br />
with the aims of the U.N. Charter." And Secretary General Kurt<br />
Waldheim was discovered <strong>to</strong> be a Nazi foot soldier during World War<br />
II.~s Yet, in spite of these revelations, most Americans <strong>to</strong>day view the<br />
United Nations as a "good organization." It is amazing what a little<br />
favorable publicity from the media can accomplish!