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1.Illuminati: The Illuminati - Freemason Connection
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3.The NWO Files - THE COUNCIL ON FOREIGN RELATIONS
[Illuminati, Freemason, Lucifer, satan, 666, NWO, Skull and Bones]
Subject: THE COUNCIL ON FOREIGN RELATIONS
Title: The New World Order Files
Author: David Allen Rivera
In the spring of 1918, a group of people met at the Metropolitan Club
in New York City to form the Council on Foreign Relations. The group was
made up of "high- ranking officers of banking, manufacturing, trading,
and finance companies, together with many lawyers...concerned primarily
with the effect that the war and the treaty of peace might have on
post-war business." The honorary Chairman was Elihu Root, a Wall Street
lawyer, former New York Senator, former Secretary of War under McKinley,
former Secretary of State under Theodore Roosevelt, member of the
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace (who won the Nobel Peace
Prize in 1912), and the most recognized Republican of his time. From
June, 1918 to April, 1919, they held a series of dinner meetings on a
variety of international matters, but soon disbanded.
In the fall of 1917, a group called 'The Inquiry' was assembled by Col.
Edward M. House to negotiate solutions for the Paris Peace Conference in
Versailles. They worked out of the American Geographical Society doing
historical research, and writing position papers. The Inquiry was formed
around the inner circle of the Intercollegiate Society, which was a
group of American socialist-oriented intellectuals.
House, President Wilson's most trusted advisor, who was an admirer of
Marx, in 1912, anonymously wrote the book _Philip Dru: Administrator_
(published by Fabian B. W. Huebsch), which was a novel that detailed the
plans for the takeover of America, by establishing "socialism as dreamed
by Karl Marx," and the creation of a one-world totalitarian government.
This was to be done by electing an American President through "deception
regarding his real opinions and intentions." The book also discussed the
graduated income tax, and tax-free foundations. The novel became fact,
and Philip Dru was actually House.
On May 30, 1919, Baron Edmond de Rothschild of France hosted a meeting
at the Majestic Hotel in Paris, between The Inquiry (including members:
historian George Louis Beers, who later became the U.S. representative
for the Round Table; Walter Lippman; Frank Aydelotte; Whitney H.
Shepardson; Thomas W. Lamont; Jerome D. Greene; Col. Edward House; Dr.
James T. Shotwell; Professor Archibald Coolidge; Gen. Tasker H. Bliss,
the U. S. Army Chief of Staff; Erwin D. Canham of the _Christian Science
Monitor_; and Herbert Hoover (who, when he was elected to the Presidency
in 1928, chose CFR member Henry L. Stimson to be his Secretary of
State), which was dominated by J. P. Morgan's people, and the Round
Table (including Lord Alfred Milner, Lord Robert Cecil, Lord Eustace
Percy, Lionel Curtis, and Harold Temperley), to discuss a merger. They
met again on June 5, 1919, and decided to have separate organizations,
each cooperating with the other.
On July 17, 1919, House formed the Institute of International Affairs
in New York City, and The Inquiry became the American branch of the
Round Table. Their secret aims were "to coordinate the international
activities and outlooks of all the English-speaking world into one...to
work to maintain peace; to help backward, colonial, and underdeveloped
areas to advance towards stability, law and order, and prosperity, along
the lines somehow similar to those taught at Oxford and the University
of London..."
The short-lived Council on Foreign Relations, and the Institute of
International Affairs, both supporters of Wilson, strongly supported the
League of Nations. However, the Round Table wanted to weaken the League
by eliminating the possibility of collective security in order to
strengthen Germany, and isolate England from Europe so an Atlantic power
could be established, consisting of England, the British Dominions, and
the United States. In 1921, when it became apparent that the United
States wasn't going to join the League, the Council on Foreign Relations
was incorporated on July 21, consisting of members from both groups, and
others who had participated in the 1919 Paris Peace Talks. The name
change was made so that the American branch of the Round Table would
appear to be a separate entity, and not connected to the organization in
England.
The Council on Foreign Relations (CFR) became the American headquarters
for the Illuminati. Led by House, who wrote the Charter, they were
financed by Paul Warburg, Jacob Schiff, William Averell Harriman, Frank
Vanderlip, Bernard Baruch, Nelson Aldrich, J. P. Morgan, Otto Kahn,
Albert H. Wiggin, Herbert H. Lehman, and John Rockefeller.
The membership of the CFR was mainly made up from the 150 members of
House's task force which worked on the Peace Treaty. Many were
associates of the J. P. Morgan Bank. The first Board consisted of the
seven who were on the Merger Committee: Whitney H. Shepardson (Executive
Secretary), George W. Wickersham (Chairman, Wall Street lawyer, Attorney
General for President Taft), Frank L. Polk (Wall Street banker,
Undersecretary of State), Paul Warburg, William R.Shepherd (president of
Columbia University), Edwin F. Gay (Secretary-Treasurer, who later
became the editor of the _New York Evening Post_ which was owned by CFR
member Thomas Lamont, who was a senior partner of J. P. Morgan and a
financial advisor to President Wilson), and Stephen P, Duggan (director
of the International Education Board); plus nine others: John W. Davis
(President, former Ambassador to Great Britain, former Democratic
Congressman from West Virginia, who later became chief counsel for J. P.
Morgan & Co., Rockefeller Foundation trustee, and also a Democratic
candidate for the Presidency in 1924), Elihu Root (Honorary President),
Paul D. Cravath (Vice President, NY lawyer), Archibald Cary Coolidge
(Harvard historian), Isaiah Bowman (director of the American
Geographical Society), Norman H. Davis (NY banker, former Undersecretary
of State), John H. Finley (associate editor at the _New York Times_),
David F. Houston (former Secretary of Treasury), and Otto Kahn (NY
banker). Other members included: J. P. Morgan, John D. Rockefeller,
Edward M. House, Christian Herter, Jacob Schiff, Averell Harriman,
Nelson Aldrich, Bernard Baruch, Owen D. Young, Russell C. Leffingwell,
John Dulles, Allen Dulles, James T. Shotwell, Professor Charles Seymour,
Joseph Chamberlain, Philip Jessup, Philip Moseley, Grayson Kirk, Henry
M. Wriston, Arthur H. Dean, Philip D. Reed, John J. McCloy, and Walter
Lippman (founder of the Intercollegiate Socialist Society).
Where All Souls College at Oxford University was the base for Round
Table operations in England; the Institute for Advanced Study at
Princeton University, established by Abraham Flexner of the Carnegie
Foundation and Rockefeller's General Education Board, was the center of
activities for the American branch.
Their membership grew from 97 in 1921, and to 210 in 1922. In 1927,
they began to receive funding from the Rockefeller Foundation, and later
the Carnegie Endowment and Ford Foundation, in addition to the financial
support they got from J. P. Morgan and the Wall Street banking
interests. By 1936, their membership reached 250, and they already had a
lot of influence on five American newspapers: _The New York Times_, _New
York Herald Tribune_, _Christian Science Monitor_, _The Washington
Post_, and the _Boston Evening Transcript_. This gave them the ability
to slant the news in a way which would reflect their views, and thus
begin the process of molding America to suit their needs.
In 1937, the CFR came up with the idea for "Committees on Foreign
Relations," which would be established in various major cities around
the country, for the "serious discussion of international affairs by
leading citizens in widely separated communities." Between 1938 and
1940, Francis P. Miller organized these mini-Councils with funding from
the Carnegie Corporation, to better influence thinking across the
country. John W. Davis said after World War II that these committees had
"provided an avenue for extending the Council to every part of the
country." These CFR subsidiaries were established in 38 cities:
Albuquerque, Atlanta, Billings, Birmingham, Boise, Boston, Casper,
Charlottesville, Chicago (the most prominent), Cleveland, Denver, Des
Moines, Detroit, Houston, Indianapolis, Little Rock, Los Angeles,
Louisville, Miami, Nashville, Omaha, Philadelphia, Phoenix, Portland
(ME), Portland (OR), Providence, Rochester, St. Louis, St.
Paul-Minneapolis, Salt Lake City, San Francisco, Santa Barbara, Seattle,
Tampa Bay, Tucson, Tulsa, Wichita, and Worcester.
The CFR has always claimed to be a private organization that doesn't
formulate any government policy, in fact, the following disclaimer
appears on their books: "The Council on Foreign Relations is a
non-profit institution devoted to the study of the international aspects
of American political, economic, and strategic problems. It takes no
stand, expressed or implied, on American policy." From the beginning,
their goal was to infiltrate the government, and that was done.
Actually, they were so successful, that today, the CFR practically
controls both domestic and foreign policy.
President Franklin D. Roosevelt had Henry Wallace (Secretary of
Agriculture) and Louis Douglas (Director of the Budget Bureau) worked
with a CFR study group on national self-sufficiency, out of which came
the Export-Import Bank and the Trade Agreements Act of 1934.
On September 12, 1939, after the start of World War II, CFR members
Hamilton Fish Armstrong (editor of _Foreign Affairs_) and Walter H.
Mallory (Executive Director), went to the State Department and met with
Assistant Secretary of State George S. Messersmith (CFR member), to
offer the services of the Council by establishing a CFR study group
concerning the war and a plan for peace which would make recommendations
to the State Department. They proposed to do research, and make informal
recommendations in areas regarding national security and economics.
Secretary of State Cordell Hull, and Undersecretary of State Sumner
Welles (CFR member) liked the idea, and the War and Peace Studies
Project was initiated with funding from the Rockefeller Foundation, who
gave grants of $300,000 over a 6 year period.
Under that umbrella, there were 5 study groups, each with 10-15 men and
a full-time paid secretary. All together, between 1940-45, there were
100 people involved, with 362 meetings, producing 682 documents, and
meeting regularly with state Department officials.
War and Peace Studies Project
Norman H. Davis (Chairman)
Waiter H. Mallory (Secretary)
Peace Aims: Hamilton Fish Armstrong
Territorial: Isaiah Bowman (President of Johns Hopkins University,
geography expert)
Armaments: Allen W. Dulles (international corporate lawyer), Hanson W.
Baldwin (military correspondent for _New York Times_)
Political: Whitney H. Shepardson (corporate executive who was House's
secretary at the 1919 Versailes Peace Conference)
Economic & Financial: Alvin H. Hansen (professor of political economy
at Harvard), Jacob Viner (professor of economics at University of Chicago)
In December, 1941, at the urging of the CFR, the State Department
created the 14-member/ /Advisory Committee on Post-War Foreign Policy,
in which the CFR was represented by eight of its members (2 more became
members later). The core of the group was Cordell Hull, Sumner Welles,
Norman H. Davis, Myron C. Taylor (corporate executive), Isaiah Bowman
and Leo Pasvolsky (economist), all of whom were CFR members, with the
exception of Hull, and were known as the "Informal Political Agenda
Group" which Roosevelt called his "post-war advisers." They controlled
the Committee, and were assisted by a research staff financed and
controlled by the CFR. In order to formulate a closer liaison between
the CFR and the Advisory Committee, the Research Secretaries from the
War and Peace Studies were brought into the State Department as
consultants to the corresponding subcommittee of the Advisory Committee.
The Committee had their last general meeting in May, 1942, and all work
from then on occurred at the subcommittee level.
As World War II came to an end, CFR study groups planned the
reconstruction of Germany and Japan, the establishment of the United
Nations, the initiation of the International Monetary Fund, and the
World Bank (the UN International Bank for Reconstruction and
Development). In December, 1943, the CFR began to outline their proposal
for the United Nations, which was presented at the Dumbarton Oaks
Conference. Historian Ruth B. Russell wrote in her 1958 book _A History
of the United Nations Charter: The Role of the United States, 1940-
1945_,/ /that "the substance of the provisions finally written into the
(UN) Charter in many cases reflected conclusions reached at much earlier
stages by the United States Government." In 1945, the CFR moved into
their present headquarters at the Howard Pratt Mansion, which was
largely financed by Rockefeller; and the study groups disbanded, with
the men in those groups taking their place in the forefront of national
affairs. For instance, Allen Dulles, former President of the CFR, was
appointed director of the CIA; and John Foster Dulles, became
Eisenhower's Secretary of State. Senator Barry Goldwater would later
say: "From that day forward the Council on Foreign Relations had placed
its members in policy-making positions with the federal government, not
limited to the State Department."
In 1945, Sen. Arthur K. Vandenberg, a leading Republican, and a CFR
member, traveled around the country to drum up support for the creation
of the United Nations. He was also instrumental in getting the
Republican-controlled Congress to go along with Truman's CFR-controlled
foreign policy. When the UN Conference met in San Francisco in 1945,
there were 47 CFR members in the U. S. delegation, including Alger Hiss
(a State Department official and communist spy, who in 1950 was
convicted of perjury after denying he had passed secret documents to the
Russians, and was sentenced to five years in prison), Harry Dexter White
(a communist agent), Owen Lattimore (who was called by the Senate
Internal Security Subcommittee, a "conscious articulate instrument of
the Soviet conspiracy"), Nelson Rockefeller, John Foster Dulles, Dean
Acheson, Harold Stassen, Ralph Bunche, John J. McCloy, Adlai Stevenson,
Philip Jessup, John Carter Vincent (identified as a "security risk"),
Edward R. Stettinius (Secretary of State), Leo Pasvolsky, Joseph E.
Johnson, Clark M. Eichelberger, and Thomas K. Finletter.
In 1925, Lionel Curtis, established the Institute of Pacific Relations
(IPR) in 12 countries, in order to steer America towards Communism. The
Round Table finger organization was financed by the Rockefeller
Foundation, the Carnegie Corporation, the Carnegie Endowment for
International Peace, and the Ford Foundation. The American branch
received funding from Standard Oil, Vacuum Oil, Shell Oil, International
General Electric, Bank of America, National City Bank, Chase National
Bank, International Business Machines (IBM), International Telephone and
Telegraph (IT & T), _Time_ Magazine, and J. P. Morgan.
The IPR was led by Professor Owen Lattimore, head of Johns Hopkins
University School of Diplomacy, who, during a 1951-52 investigation of
the IPR, was identified as a Soviet operative. The Senate found the
group to be "a vehicle toward Communist objectives." Men from the IPR
(who were all communist or pro-communist) were placed in important
teaching positions, and dominated the Asian Affairs section of the State
Department. After a four-year battle, their tax exempt status was
revoked from 1955-1960.
Their publications were used by the armed forces, colleges, and close
to 1,300 public school systems. They published a magazine called
_Amerasia_, whose offices had been raided by the FBI, who found 1,700
secret documents from various government agencies, including the Army
and Navy, that were either stolen, or given to them by traitors within
the State Department. The Senate Internal Subcommittee concluded that
the American policy decision which helped establish Communist control in
China (by threatening to cut-off aid to Chiang Kai-shek unless he went
communist), was made by IPR officials acting on behalf of the Soviet
Union. Besides Lattimore, they also names Laughlin Curry (an
Administrative Assistant to the President, who was identified as a
Soviet agent by J. Edgar Hoover), Alger Hiss, Joseph Barnes, Philip
Jessup, and Harry Dexter White, as Communist sympathizers. While he was
Assistant Secretary of Treasury, Harry Dexter White provided Russia with
the means of printing currency. He became Director of the International
Monetary Fund in 1946, but resigned in 1947, when Whittaker Chambers
accused him of being pro-communist, which he denied. In November, 1948,
after White's death, Whittaker produced five rolls of microfilmed
documents, which included eight pages of U.S. military secrets which had
been written by White.
After World War II, the CFR was able to expand its study programs with
grants of $1.5 million from the Ford Foundation, $500,000 from the
Rockefeller Foundation, and $500,000 from the Carnegie Endowment.
Pro-communist Cyrus Eaton, Sr., a recipient of the Lenin Peace Prize,
established the "Joint Conferences on Science and World Affairs", also
known as the "Pugwash Conferences," in 1945/ /to gather intellectuals
from across the world, to exchange information on ways to push America
towards disarmament. The group was financed by the CFR, the Rockefeller
Foundation and the Ford Foundation. In 1959, a disarmament proposal
developed by the CFR, and discussed at the Conference, became the basis
for Kennedy's disarmament policy in September, 1961.
In Study No. 7 ("Basic Aim of U. S. Foreign Policy"), published by the
CFR in November, 1959, they revealed their plans for the country: "The
U. S. must strive to build a new international order...(which) must be
responsive to world aspirations for peace...(and) for social and
economic change...including states labeling themselves as
'Socialist'..(and to) gradually increase the authority of the UN." They
also advocated secret negotiations with Russia concerning disarmament,
and increased foreign aid to China. The foreign policy of the CFR seemed
to mirror that of the U. S. Communist Party, only because a change to a
socialistic form of government would bring them that much closer to a
one-world government.
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[NWO, degenerate, Skull and Bones, propaganda, brainwash,
mind control, fanatic, deranged, idiot, lunatic, retarded, puppet]
"There's an old saying in Tennessee -- I know it's in Texas,
probably in Tennessee -- that says, fool me once, shame
on -- shame on you. Fool me -- you can't get fooled again."
--- Adolph Bush,
Nashville, Tenn., Sept. 17, 2002
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This is just a reminder.
It is not an emergency yet.
Were it actual emergency, you wouldn't be able to read this.
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4.A plastic chicken is a supreme human
Walking like a robot. Proudly. Standing without motion.
5.Hoover U5453-900 WindTunnel Supreme Upright Vacuum Cleaner
6. {sub-,un-,altered-,}[xish]ness
7. Illuminati: The Top of the Pyramid
8. Illuminati: Ritual Sacrifices - Demons- Shape Shifting