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that was originally drafted on June 12, 1776 (and fully ratified by 1781), was no longer able to<br />

meet the needs of a growing nation. The delegates of Virginia, New York, Delaware, New<br />

Jersey, and Pennsylvania, meeting in Annapolis were charged with the task of amending the<br />

Articles of Confederation, and were to meet in Philadelphia “for the sole and express purpose of<br />

revising” them. The need for a stronger central government was expressed, one that didn’t limit<br />

States rights. However, upon meeting in Philadelphia in May, 1787, they locked all the doors,<br />

and posted armed guards; and even closed all the windows, so they could deliberate in secret<br />

while they actually set up a new national government. Neither the Congress or the people could<br />

stop them. Their work was finished on September 17, 1787 (and was fully ratified on May 29,<br />

1790), and the Constitution of the United States was born, and is still in existence today.<br />

Many people were worried about this Conference of States, because nobody was really sure<br />

what could happen. Charles Duke, the Republican state senator from Colorado, said that the COS<br />

would be the “edge of the sword that knocks the head off the Constitution.”<br />

Case law mandates that members of a constitutional convention must be directly elected by<br />

the people, so they can act as their representatives to exercise the sovereign power of the state.<br />

Each state delegation to the COS would consist of the governor, and two leaders from each party<br />

in the state legislature (plus two alternates, one from each party), and therefore could be<br />

empowered with the necessary legal status as representatives of the people, should the decision<br />

be made to turn the meeting into a constitutional convention.<br />

Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich (R-GA), and 33rd Degree Mason Bob Dole (R-KS)<br />

openly supported the COS, and on March 24, 1995, Republican senators Hank Brown (CO) and<br />

Jesse Helms (NC) sponsored a Senate Resolution which would give Congressional authorization<br />

to transform the COS into a bonafide Constitutional Convention. They maintained that without<br />

this Congressional approval, it would be in conflict with Article 1, Section 10 of the<br />

Constitution, which does not allow any agreements between States.<br />

Ultimately, because only 14 state legislatures passed resolutions calling for their participation<br />

in the COS, which was short of the 26 needed, their organizational meeting scheduled for July,<br />

1995 was canceled. However, the same forces behind this movement planned to have a<br />

“federalism summit” in Cincinnati on October 22 with the support of the Council of State<br />

Governments, National Governors Association and the National Conference of State Legislators.<br />

It is obvious that the Illuminati had taken a two-prong approach to regional government.<br />

They have been working within the confines of the Executive Branch to get various Executive<br />

Orders passed; and they have also used their various finger organizations to study our existing<br />

constitution, and recommend changes. All of their efforts may eventually culminate in a call for<br />

a Constitutional Convention that will spell the end of democracy as we know it in this country.<br />

CREATING A CRISIS<br />

Certain questions raised during the 1973 Oil Embargo, seem to point to the fact that the crisis<br />

was created by the Illuminati, as a test, to see what it would be like without gasoline for<br />

automobiles, and fuel for heating homes.<br />

During the Embargo, Maine’s Governor, Democrat Kenneth M. Curtis, accused the Nixon<br />

Administration of “creating a managed oil shortage to force support of its energy programs.” A<br />

1973 study by Philadelphia Inquirer reporters Donald Bartlett and James B. Steele, revealed,<br />

that while American oil companies were telling the U.S. to curtail oil consumption, through a

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