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were the two main things that kept him from being elected. However, in 1968, the responsibility<br />

of moving the country closer to socialism, and towards a one-world government, was put upon<br />

his shoulders. Former Secretary of the Navy, J. William Middendorf II, Finance Chairman of<br />

Nixon’s 1968 campaign, said that at 5:30 AM on the morning after Nixon’s election victory,<br />

Nelson Rockefeller and William Rogers went to Nixon’s room to help select his Cabinet.<br />

He appointed Mitchell, his campaign manager, to be his Attorney General. He appointed<br />

Henry Kissinger to be his Secretary of State, even though Kissinger’s views were the complete<br />

opposite of his own. In reality, the Kissinger appointment was urged by Nelson Rockefeller, so<br />

the Illuminati could control U.S. foreign policy. At the beginning of each of his terms, Nixon<br />

offered the post of Treasury Secretary to David Rockefeller, but he refused it. It was Nixon who<br />

chose George Bush, the former Texas Congressman, to be the Chairman of the Republican Party,<br />

after Bush lost the Senate race to Democrat Lloyd Bentsen in Texas; and later appointed him to<br />

be the Ambassador to the UN, the Ambassador to China, and the Director of the CIA.<br />

In his 1971 State of the Union Address, Nixon said: “We in Washington will at last be able to<br />

provide government that is truly for the people. I realize that what I am asking, is that not only<br />

the Executive Branch, but even the Congress will have to change by giving up some of its<br />

power.” Three days later, he announced that the country was being divided up into ten federal<br />

districts, and in February, 1972, he signed Executive Order #11647, which gave the government<br />

the power to accomplish that division. The Ten Regional Councils, a direct extension of the<br />

Executive Branch, since then, have been getting control of local, county, and state governmental<br />

functions, through federal loans.<br />

Nixon told ABC news correspondent Howard K. Smith, that he was “Keynesian in<br />

economics.” This was a reference to John Maynard Keynes, the English economist and Fabian<br />

socialist, who said he was promoting the “euthanasia of capitalism.” Even though his policies<br />

had already indicated it, Nixon was basically saying that he was a Socialist.<br />

Nixon had resigned from the CFR in 1962, when it became an issue in the California<br />

gubernatorial primary campaign, but later rejoined. In his book, Six Crises, he wrote: “Admitting<br />

Red China to the United Nations would be a mockery of the provision of the Charter which<br />

limits its membership to ‘peace-loving nations’...” Yet he wrote in the October, 1967 edition of<br />

Foreign Affairs about how he would have a new policy towards Red China. Even after a July 15,<br />

1971 statement on Radio Peking in China that called for the “people of the world, (to) unite and<br />

defeat the U.S. aggressors and all their running dogs,” Nixon accepted an invitation by Premier<br />

Chou En Lai to go to China, where the groundwork for trade relations was established.<br />

In the early 1970’s, things began to go sour for Nixon. It was the establishment newspapers,<br />

the Washington Post and the New York Times who forced a third-rate burglary onto the front<br />

pages, and turned Watergate into a major media event, which forced President Nixon to resign<br />

from office. As more and more facts came out, it was quite obvious that Watergate was a move<br />

by the Illuminati to get rid of an uncooperative President.<br />

Watergate can actually be traced back to 1956, when Nixon’s brother, Donald, received a<br />

secret loan from Howard Hughes. It proved to be embarrassing when it surfaced during the 1960<br />

Presidential election. Nixon vowed revenge against the Democrats, and later discovered that<br />

Democratic Party Chairman Lawrence F. O’Brien had been secretly retained by Hughes. Nixon<br />

sent a memo to Chief of Staff H. R. Haldeman, in January, 1971, to get his Special Counsel<br />

Charles Colson to get the proof so that they could expose him. It was believed that the second<br />

break-in at the Democratic National Committee on June 16-17, 1972, was to retrieve any<br />

derogatory information the Democrats had on the Republicans, but it was later revealed that the

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