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mass mobilization, but through pressure on select arenas of world power and appeals to a small,<br />

attentive public of elite world decision makers.”<br />

The Commission had suggested that Iran, Saudi Arabia, Brazil, and Mexico (did become a<br />

member in 1994) be brought into the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development<br />

(OECD), an association of 24 (now 30) rich industrial nations (including all 15 countries of the<br />

European Community) founded in 1961 to encourage world trade, economic progress, and to aid<br />

underdeveloped nations. The move was considered by one Brazilian diplomat, as “an attempt to<br />

buy us out,” and not an “attempt to build new understanding.”<br />

Their long range goals had included joint policy making in regard to economic and political<br />

relations with the Third World and the former communist bloc countries. Their policy for<br />

maintaining peace, involved the decrease of military forces, and nuclear disarmament; and to<br />

avoid confrontation at all costs, even if it means knuckling under to their threats, by abandoning<br />

allies (as had been done with Taiwan), and reducing America to a second-rate power. The<br />

Commission has pushed for the restructuring of the International Monetary Fund, so that they<br />

would be able to create new money, and restrict its use, by issuing a form of currency that had<br />

been initially called Bancor (or SDR, Special Drawing Rights), which would replace our dollar,<br />

gold, silver, and all other forms of currency– even Travelers Checks.<br />

Winston Lord, U.S. Ambassador to China during the Reagan Administration and Assistant<br />

Secretary of State for Asian and Pacific Affairs under Clinton– a CFR member, is reported to<br />

have said: “The Trilateral Commission doesn’t run the world, the Council on Foreign Relations<br />

does that!”<br />

REGIONAL GOVERNMENT<br />

On April 21, 1935, the New York Times magazine published a plan in which the states would<br />

merge into new units called Federal Regions that would be controlled from Washington, DC. In<br />

1959, Nelson Rockefeller called for an Advisory Commission on Intergovernmental Relations<br />

(ACIR), which became a federally-funded Rockefeller think-tank within Congress to prepare a<br />

working formula for the concept. The ACIR analyzed information produced by the Public<br />

Administration Clearing House (also known as the “1313”) and translated it into legislation to<br />

develop regional government, which would usurp the power of the local government. The<br />

Clearing House, located at the Rockefeller-controlled University of Chicago, represented a group<br />

of 26 private organizations which had been infiltrating local government agencies to usurp their<br />

power and authority. Some of these organizations are: National Association of Counties,<br />

National League of Cities, U.S. Conference of Mayors, American Public Works Association,<br />

Public Personnel Association, National Association of Attorney Generals, and the National<br />

Governors Conference. Their purpose was to train and place a “new administrative class” in<br />

every level of government, which would replace elected officials.<br />

On March 27, 1969, as published in the Federal Register, under the direction of his<br />

Illuminati advisers, President Nixon announced the “Restructuring of Government Service<br />

Systems,” which called for the merging of states into eight federally-controlled regions.<br />

An Executive Order, when decreed by the President, is printed in the Federal Register, and<br />

then becomes law 15 days later. After Bill Clinton signed Executive Order #13083, Presidential<br />

Aide Paul Begala was overheard saying: “Stroke of a pen, law of the land. Kinda cool.”<br />

Executive Order #11647 was signed by Nixon on February 10, 1972, establishing Federal

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