http://www.eagleforumu.info/courses/global-governance-101/lecture-4
See also.
Could it be..... A CONSPIRACY OF "THE LEFT" |
"The presence of paranoia does not prove the absence of plots and plans. Remember--it's not paranoia if they really are out to get you." Henry Kissenger "It is in politics and economics that will to power becomes really dangerous...that the rights of the collectivity take precedence over...the rights of man..." "Here is one optimist's reason for believing unity will prevail... I'll bet that within the next hundred years, nationhood as we know it will be obsolete; all states will recognize a single, global authority. A phrase briefly fashionable in the mid-20th century -- 'citizen of the world' -- will have assumed real meaning by the end of the 21st ..." -- U.S. Deputy Secretary of State Strobe Talbot, TIME magazine column, July 20, 1992.] "They are slaves who fear to speak For the fallen and the weak... They are slaves who dare not be In the right with two or three." James Russell Lowell (Stanzas on Freedom -1843) |
The information presented here is also available in the Free Book: Global Governance The University of Texas at Austin, Murchison Chair of Free Enterprise, Petroleum/CTE 3.168, Austin, Texas, 78712. Order your copy now. The purpose here is to show the interrelationships of the many prominent forces determining public policy today. Could it be...a Left Wing Conspiracy? | ||
Organizations | Individuals | Publications |
Club of Rome | Maurice Strong (frequent speaker at the Cathedral of St. John the Divine, Secretary General of the first Earth Summit in 1972, first Director of the United Nations Environment Programme, Secretary General of Earth Summit II in Rio, 1992, founder of Earth Council, Chair of the Business Council for Sustainable Development, co-chair of the World Economic Forum, member of UN's Brundtland Commission on Environment and Development, member of Commission on Global Governance) Rockefellers Saburo Okita | "Limits to Growth" (1972) predicted the impending end of life as we know it due to population grown and depletion of resources; calls for international action of "unprecedented scale and scope". "We believe in fact that the need will quickly become evident for social innovation to match technical change, for radical reform of the institutions and political process at all levels, including the highest, that of world polity. And since intellectual enlightenment is without effect if it is not also political, THE CLUB OF ROME also will encourage the creation of a world forum where statesmen, policy-makers, and scientists can discuss the dangers and hopes for the future global system without the constraints of formal intergovernmental negotiation." En Route to Global Occupation Gary Kah |
The "Stuff" of Global Governance
By Henry Lamb
http://www.eco.freedom.org/el/20000601/ggstuff.shtml
http://www.eco.freedom.org/el/20000601/ngoforum.shtml
Millennium Forum meets in New York
eco-logic report
Carnegie Foundation (National Center for Education and Economy--NCEE) . | David Hornbeck Hillary Clinton Ira Magaziner | Human Capital "create a sense of crisis" and then "use courts" to achieve social goals |
United Nations | Maurice Strong (Canadian, Under-secretary of UN) Shridath Ramphal of Guyana (secretary general of the Commonwealth of Nations, comprised mainly of developing nations) Brian Urquhart, scholar in residence for the Ford Foundation--once under secretary to the U.N. | Our Common Future: The Report of the World Commission on Environment and Development , also called the Brundtland report Our Global Neighborhood; The Report of the Commission on Global Governance |
UN Convention on the Law of the Sea | Treaty contains principles of the New International Economic Order (NIEO) --created a UN taxing authority (a legal mechanism for the redistribution of wealth from developed to developing nations. No seabed activity, mining, salvaging, and so forth, can occur without a permit from the ISA). President Clinton signed into law in 1994 | |
CARING COMMUNITIES FOR THE 21ST CENTURY: |
Convention on the Rights of Child | adopted by the UN General Assembly Nov. 20, 1989 Communist Party platform under Lenin called for "establishment of nurseries for infants and children in all shops, factories and other enterprises that employ women" | Article 12.1 Grants children the right to express their own views freely in all matters Article 13.1 Grants children the right to seek, receive and impart information and ideas of all kinds Article 14:1 Grants children the right to freedom of thought, conscience and religion Article 15:1 Grants children the right to freedom of association and peaceful assembly 16:1 Grants children the right to privacy in the family, home, or correspondence strips authority for child-rearing from parents and gives it to the government |
October 2, 1994 column by Arnold Beichman, Washington Times: "Weeds In the Child's Garden of Rights." "From Canada a warning voice is heard against ratification of a UN covenant which could 'advance a radical agenda' focused on parental authority and the normal historic family of Western society." |
Stockholm Initiative | Willie Brandt Madam Brundtland Butros Butros-Ghali President Carter Ingvar Carlsson, Prime Minister of Sweden Shridath Ramphal Jan Pronk Saburo Okita Maurice Strong | Meeting called mainly by the group listed which endorsed calling for a Commission on Global Governance. |
Socialist International | Federal Republic of Germany's former chancellor Willy Brandt Madame Gro Harlan Brundtland (Prime Minister of Norway) | North-South: A Program for Survival (1980) dealt with distribution of wealth and political power Stockholm Initiative: a call for the commission on Global Governance |
Commission on Global Governance | Shridath Ramphal of Guyana Adele Simmons, president of the MacArthur Foundation--U.N. appointee to the High-Level Advisory Board on Sustainable Development Brian Urquhart, scholar in residence for the Ford Foundation Abdlatif Al-Hamad, director-general and chairman of the Arab Fund | Commission For Global Governance - UN affiliated commission. Outlines of plans for global governance by year 2000. |
Quotes from Our Global Neighborhood: The Report of the Commission on Global Governance, published by Oxford Press. · "The Commission has been established to contribute to the emergence of a global order...," · "the United Nations must play a central role..." · "...regimes empowered to enforce compliance..." · "...a new era that responds to the collective will..." · "..old notions of...independence lose some of their meaning..." · "...cherished notions of ...citizenship, sovereignty and self-determination are being challenged..." · "...sovereignty must be exercised collectively...particularly...the global commons..." · "...fundamentally important that governance be underpinned...by...enforceable law..." · "...equity requires that all societies practice sustainable development..." · "...sustainability requires restraint on consumption at the global level..." · "The task of governance is...to help those less privileged and needing comfort..." · "Major changes in economic practices will have to occur..." · "The essence of governance is the capacity of the international community to ensure compliance..." Also calls for: · Expansion of the Security Council to shift power to the developing nations · Elimination of the Security Council veto · Elimination of permanent Council seats for the United States and others · Empowering the Council to intervene in any national activity it fines to be a threat to security--economic, social, political, military, or environmental · compulsory jurisdiction of, and binding decisions by, the World Court in matters of U.N. concern · Giving certain non-governmental organizations (NGOs) both the standing and power to initiate actions leading to U.N. intervention |
Carter Administration | President Jimmy Carter Gus Speth (father of America's environmental lobby/founded National Resources Defense Council and World Resources Institute/Clinton-Gore transition--appt. to direct U.N.'s Development Program) | Global 2000 Report called for vigorous determined new initiatives...unprecedented global cooperation and commitment...sustainable economic development |
Natural Resources Defense Council | Gus Speth (founder) | |
World Resources Institute | Gus Speth (founder) | |
International Union for the Conservation of Nature | Shridath Ramphal of Guyana (secretary general of the Commonwealth of Nations, comprised mainly of developing nations) Jay Hair (former chief executive of the National Wildlife Federation) | World Conservation Strategy: Living resource Conservation for Sustainable Development Government management of resource production/Government management of resource use/Government management of associated risks/ And a share in government power in such matters for what American politics calls public interest groups (NGOs) |
World Wildlife Fund (offshoot of International Union for Conservation of Nature) These share the same office building in Gland, Switzerland. | Saburo Okita (chair Japan) Julian Huxley Max Nicholson Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburg | |
World Conference on Environment and Development (Rio, 1992) | Maurice Strong (chair) | |
Earth Council Findings sent to UN | Maurice Strong Gus Speth and World Resources Institute International Council of Scientific Unions World Conservation Union (International Union for the Conservation of Nature) Center for Our Common Future | Reports to UN: monitor all world's activity and pointing out "breaches of responsible conduct" |
Brundtland Commission (23 members: 3 Soviet Bloc/7 industrial democracies/13 developing nations) | Madame Gro Harlan Brundtland (Prime Minister of Norway) Maurice Strong (chaired 1st world Conference on Environment and Development, 1972) Saburo Okita Shridath Ramphal of Guyana | Report: (1987) Recommended: World Conference on Environment and Development "The United Nations should clearly be the locus of new institutional initiatives of a global character." Financial support: Government of Norway, Netherlands, Sweden, Federal Republic of Germany, Japan, Ford and MacArthur Foundations of the U.S. · apportion resources · manage technology and its uses · change economic and social organization of societies · manage social organization of nations Consumption limits/Taxation for environmental objectives/high energy taxes and prices/creation of "market instruments" to keep the economic decisions of free individuals from interfering with government policies |
Henry Lamb writes on the rise of the UN and global governance through Environmentalism: http://www.eco.freedom.org
Big Six of the world's environmental intellectual and organizational leadership: The Sierra Club/The Natural 'Resources Defense Council/The Audubon Society/The Wilderness Society? The Nature Conservancy/ and the National Wildlife Federation | Thomas Berry (officer of the Temple of Understanding) Dave Foreman (co-founded Earth First/chairman of the Cenozoic Society, Chairman of the Wilderness Project/ Board of Directors of the Sierra Club) Al Gore Jacques Cousteau | "Techniques of making the beliefs of a few seem like a spontaneous rising of opinions from an army of many" Richard L. Lawson "The most difficult transition to make is from an anthropocentric to a biocentric norm of progress. The solution is simply for us as humans to join the earth community as participating members, to foster the progress and prosperity of the bioregional communities to which we belong. A bioregion is an identifiable geographical area of interacting life systems that is relatively self-sustaining in the ever-renewing processes of nature. Such a bioregion is a self-propagating, self-nourishing, self-educating, self-governing, self-healing, and self-fulfilling community. For humans to assume rights to occupy land by excluding other lifeforms from their needed habitat is to offend the community in its deepest structure. Further, it is even to declare a state of warfare, which humans cannot win..." Bioregions: The Context for Reinhabiting the Earth Thomas Berry |
The National Religious Partnership for the Environment | Al Gore James P. Morton, Dean of the Cathedral of St. John the Divine Chancellor Ismar Schorsch of the Jewish Theological Seminary of America Bishop James Malone of Youngstown, Ohio Reverend W. Franklyn Richardson, general secretary of the National Baptist Convention Representatives from the National Association of Evangelicals, World Vision, Sojourners, the Intervarsity Christian fellowship, the AuSable Institute Carl Sagan | Al Gore: "...will trigger the beginning of grassroots activity in tens of thousands of religious congregations across the country." Carl Sagan "...separately, neither science nor religion could solve the problem of redeeming the environment from the shortsidedness of the last few decades." |
Wilderness Society | Howard Zahniser Avowed Socialists who organized the society in 1930s Robert Marshall Benton MacKaye Aldo Leopold | People's Forests "Public ownership is the only basis on which we can hope to protect the incalculable values of the forests for wood resources, for soil and water conservation, and for recreation....Regardless of whether it might be desirable, it is impossible under our existing form of government to confiscate the private forests into public ownership. We cannot afford to delay their nationalization until the form of government changes.' Wilderness Act 1964/"Earth Day" 1970/ Clean Water Act 1972/ Endangered Species Act of 1973 |
Council on Foreign Relations | Alger Hiss These also formed the Federal Reserve Bank: J.P. Morgan Bernard Baruch Otto Kahn Jacob Shiff Paul Warburg ("We shall have world government whether or not you like it--by conquest or consent." Senate Foreign Relations Committee testimony, 1967)John D. Rockefeller The membership includes the elite in politics and the media. | Foreign Affairs "Like FDR and every President since, JFK filled his State Department and surrounded himself with individuals who were, perhaps coincidentally, members of the Council on Foreign Relations. |
UNESCO (United Nations Educational Scientific, and Cultural Organization) | Julian Huxley (Britain's Population Investigation Commission, VP Eugenics Society) Robert Muller (Secretary-General of the UN's Economic and Social Council, founder of Robert Muller School of Ageless Wisdom in Arlington,Texas, helped establish the University of Peace in Costa Rica, from which came the International Educational Goals founded on the teachings of Alice Bailey, the curriculum from the School of Ageless Wisdom--the foundation of Goals 2000) | UNESCO: Its Purpose and its Philosophy: "Thus even though it is quite true that any radical eugenic problem is examined with the greatest care, and that the public mind is informed of the issues at stake so that much that is unthinkable may at least become thinkable." Julian Huxley Charter: "Since wars begin in the minds of men, it is in the minds of men that the defenses of peace must be constructed." "The Impact of Science on Society," UNESCO Journal: "Every government that has been in control of education for a generation will be able to control its subjects securely without the need of armies or policemen..." Huxley ""As long as the child breathes the poisoned air of nationalism, education in world-mindedness can produce only precarious results. As we have pointed out, it is frequently the family that infects the child with extreme nationalism. The school should therefore use the means described earlier to combat family attitudes that favor jingoism...We shall presently recognize in nationalism the major obstacle to development of world-mindedness. We are at the beginning of a long process of breaking down the wallf of national sovereignty. UNESCO must be the pioneer." |
Resource Manual p. 49. WEB Sites: |
"I had written an essay which was circulated by UNESCO, and which earned me the title of "Father of Global Education.' I was educated badly in France I've come to the conclusion that the only correct education that I have received in my life was from the United Nations. We should replace the word politics by planetics. We need planetary management, planetary caretakers. We need global sciences. We need a science of a global psychology, a global sociology, a global anthropology. Then I made my proposal for a World Core Curriculum." Speech delivered at the University of Denver in 1995 (The World Core Curriculum has received the Department of Education's stamp of approval through the National Diffusion Network for use in public schools.) Robert Muller's School of Ageless Wisdom is fully certified by the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) He is also Chancellor of the University of Peace in Costa Rica and one of the major promoters of peace education initiatives through the United Nations. "Assisting the child in becoming an integrated individual who can deal with personal experience while seeing himself as a part of the `greater whole.' In other words, promote growth of the group idea, so that the group good, group understand, group interrelations and group goodwill replace all limited, self-centered objectives, leading to group consciousness." Trojan Horse, Brenda Scott and Samantha Smith The following is from the Preface to "The Robert Muller School; World Core Curriculum Manual" "The underlying philosophy upon which the Robert Muller School will be found in the teachings set forth in the books of Alice A. Bailey, by the Tibetan teacher, Djwhal Khul (published by Lucis Publishing Company, 113 University Place, 11th floor, New York NY 10083) and the teachings of M. Morya as given in the Agni Yoga Series books (published by Agni Yoga Society, Inc., 319 West 107th Street, New York, NY 10025). Webmaster: I was unsure whether this School of Ageless Wisdom actually existed. It does. I visited it in Arlington, Texas. No one answered my knock but there was a car in the driveway with a Clinton Gore bumper sticker. |
Dear Friends,
For the past 3 months I have been working on researching my local school district's proposal to convert to a charter district (via California Senate Bill 1705). Because this district (Capistrano Unified) has a track record of implementing all aspects of the federal education laws (Goals 2000/School to Work/Outcome Based Education, etc), I have much spent time trying to reveal the motives behind the charter district proposal.
In my recent research on this local issue, I needed to access the local county STW plan, which is called Vision 2020 (which was put into place in 1997). Usually I am more shrewd than this, but I must admit that I have been under the impression since '97 that "Vision 2020" was just the name
given to our local STW plan. WRONG!
While doing an Internet search to locate the website for the Orange County Dept of Education's Vision 2020 link, I was appalled to see literally hundreds of Vision 2020 websites. After clicking around on them, it became
clear that Vision 2020 is the name being given to ALL cities/county
level/international level/university level/corporate level/ even churches'
Vision 2020 plans.
Let me explain. What you will find as you surf through the various Vision
2020 sites, is that it is no coincidence that they are all named Vision
2020. At first glance I thought, well maybe alot of these sites have to do
with optometry or something. NOT! What you will see is that they all have
to do with community planning and development, global governance goals,
sustained development, food distribution systems, transportation systems,
global economy, workforce training systems (STW), ENVIRONMENTALISM, planned
economies, human resource development, etc.
I could not fathom what it was I was uncovering as I pursued this web search. It is sickening when it hits you that this IS the global agenda, Vision 2020. I am sure it originates at the UN, but still need to do more research. I wanted to give you all the heads up on my discoveries and include here various links to just a few of the participants--so you will
see the diversity of participants. Most disturbing is the number of churches involved in Vision 2020 (which I believe is part of the global
spirituality component of the plan). So far I have found links for two Presbyterian churches, a Methodist church, and a Baptist church--and that was just on one search engine through the first 50 hits for Vision 2020. I will continue to update as I do this research. It appears that all the church Vision 2020 sites are geared to raising money to increase church
membership, but no real explanation for the name Vision 2020 is stated at any of these websites.
I have found a Vision 2020 link for Yellowstone National Park (but it
references the entire park system as involved in it), the US Space Command
site (where it speaks of global engagement and global partnerships), the US
Chemical Industry, several universities and a zillion local Vision 2020
plans in most states. I found a key site for Vision 2020 in Malaysia, one
for India, and two for Canada.
I will give you a glimpse of the Vision 2020 site for Ireland's University
of Limerick because it is so absolutely frightening... please do read
this!
I hope you too will see this as an urgent issue and help pass this
information around to other activists. The various links will appear at
the end of this excerpt from Ireland.
Thanks and God bless you,
Eileen Spatz
2.2 The detailed Vision 2020 process (outlined in 2.1) was used because:
(i) it was felt that the future of the University of Limerick should be
charted on the basis of the views and opinions of those who would be an
essential part of the organisation in the time ahead.
(ii) the potential and possibilities for future development are such as
would benefit from in-depth and rigorous analysis over a very broad canvas.
While the period of development of the University from 1970 to 1995 could
be construed as having to do mainly with establishing and developing a
national reputation and extending this to the international domain, the
next 25 years can hardly avoid focusing on the creation and sustaining of a
strong international reputation. The serious consolidation of the
University of Limerick in the international sphere raises many exciting and
far reaching issues and visions which span a very broad area. For instance,
the external environment, within which the University will need to chart
its development, can be expected to contain the following characteristics:
Increasing intensification of the process of globalisation under the
impetus of technological advance and geopolitical trade block
consolidation; and this globalisation will take place in the context of a
multi-polar trading and development world which is replacing the old
bi-polar world;
The all-pervasive growth of informatics and consolidation of the
"Information Age". The resulting information society will generate
societal, economic, cultural and organisational issues which simply did not
manifest themselves during the last 25 years. Studies show that the
information society, for instance, will:
- impact in a fundamental way on the economy and on employment;
- lead to far-reaching change in basic social and democratic values in the
"Virtual Community";
- influence the nature, organisation and delivery of public services;
- put new pressures on and influence the cultural dimension of life and
shape the future of communications, particularly the media;
- redefine the parameters for sustainable growth, technology and
infrastructural development.
New forms of entrepreneurship and enterprise operating successfully in a
global and information society context;
Environmental concerns, of a different nature and more intensely
expressed than in the past;
Societal values taking on different emphases than in the past;
The growth and development of a more aesthetic value system and leisure
culture putting a sharp focus on, for instance, music and the arts,
literature and tourism - and by extension the potential for development
enshrined in the Irish Diaspora;
New forms of quality, qualitative concerns and automation coming to bear
on the future manufacturing process across all sectors;
Well-focused strategic alliances between organisations and corporations
throughout the world since the potential for and scale of development will
be such as will be beyond the scope of any one organisation.
SECTION 3
SUMMARY OF THE FINDINGS WHICH EMANATE FROM EACH OF THE WORKING TEAM REPORTS
ON:
THE UNIVERSITY & SOCIETY
THE LEARNING ENVIRONMENT
EDUCATING THE WHOLE PERSON
TEACHING AND PROGRAMMES
RESEARCH
EXTERNAL AND NETWORKS
QUALITY
PEOPLE
RESOURCING VISION 2020
3.1 THE UNIVERSITY & SOCIETY
3.1.1 The broad thrust of the report:
The team adopted as its guiding principle: "Embodying the Creation of
Knowledge in a Global Village".
Traditionally, universities have concerned themselves with the creation
of bodies of knowledge and the creation of knowledgeable bodies. In a
period of rapid population growth, the University of Limerick achieved
particular success in fostering the expansion of the Irish high-tech sector.
This function is under threat from a number of interacting social,
demographic and technological change forces. But change brings with it new
opportunities as well as threats.
The report outlines how these changes will affect the environment of the
University of Limerick, and suggests how the University might transform
itself to pursue relevant economic and social goals in a rapidly evolving
and competitive market situation.
It concludes that a future based on multidisciplinarity and, in later
years specialisation, within a small set of strategically chosen areas,
will best serve the institution and Irish society at large.
A concentration of effort, starting in the very near future, will be
needed to realise this vision, and the effort will require fundamental
changes in attitudes, operations and structures.
3.1.2 Structure of report:
The report is organised in five main sections:
What is a university?
What are the five most significant elements of our external environment?
What will constitute a university and society in 25 years?
Charting a future for the University of Limerick.
New directions.
The report also includes, as appendices, a number of position papers which
were reviewed by the Working Team in the course of its deliberations.
3.1.3 Facets of a University:
In attempting to answer the question "what is a university?", the report
highlights the multifaceted nature of a university. Different universities
at different junctures emphasise different facets:
An inventory (both physical and human) of knowledge about the world;
A community of scholars concerned with the discovery, integration,
application, and dissemination of knowledge;
An oligopolistic supplier of (professional) qualifications and networks
which simplify labour market access;
A social space where young people have formative experiences;
A regionally monopsonistic employer;
An engine for social and/or economic development.
Each of these facets is reviewed and discussed in turn. The report
concludes that the extent to which any university is perceived as "good"
will depend on which of a series of personal viewpoints and values holds
sway in a broad social arena, and that perhaps a pragmatic long-term
strategy is necessary which involves striking a delicate balance between
opposing views.
The approach adopted in the report is one based on choice - a university
can choose to emphasise particular facets and if it succeeds in emphasising
the correct ones, it succeeds.
3.1.4 Five Elements of our Environment/Scenarios for 2020:
The report then proceeds to attempt to identify some of the elemental
forces that may shape universities over the next two decades. Five elements
are identified, and each is explored in turn:
Society
Demography
Technology
Economic Development
New Sites of Scholarship
In the case of "Society", the possibility that Ireland's traditional
commitment to the social may solidify in the face of an increasingly
individualistic (and potentially fragmented) external world is raised. This
would result in:
Greater emphasis on social stability and cohesion;
A desire to escape from an entirely materialistic society;
A sense of pride in a country that emphasises equity.
> On the other hand, individualism may come to the fore, in an increasingly
materialistic and uncaring world.
The existence of an intricate network of social institutions is relatively
recent and fragile (cf. events in Eastern Europe). Fragmentation of social
institutions has implications for university education.
The review of "demography" concludes that, on certain assumptions derived
from a HEA study, the University of Limerick can look forward to healthy
growth in total enrolment (by about 34%) in the period to 2015. However,
even accepting these assumptions (which require further analysis), there
may well be a fundamental shift in the composition of society, with a
consequent impact on the quantitative demand for educational services.
Issues concerning admission standards, a possible pecking order among
institutions, and the educational demands of an ageing population will
arise.
As a result of emerging trends in "technology", the simultaneous liberation
of space, the elimination of human intermediaries, and the creation of work
from home, produces a series of revolutionary threats and opportunities.
These technical changes are difficult to comprehend and to project; they
are occurring rapidly, and changes in one sphere are reflected in and
generate changes in other spheres.
The advent of the new age of work (with the home being used increasingly as
the location for both part-time and full-time working careers) will pose
new and different issues for education:
A requirement for continuous retraining and updating of competencies;
An emphasis on communication skills, creativity, and multicultural
appreciation.
The key challenge facing universities is to remain relevant to the new
emergent growth sectors, and to prepare society for the new world of work.
Under "Economic Development", the report reviews recent Irish industrial
development policy, and draws the conclusions (inter alia) that:
The strategy which was based on Ireland's role as a gateway for US
high-tech firms seeking a European toe-hold remains valid;
Indigenous firms should be resourced and encouraged to exploit the
opportunities opened up by the combination of modern technologies and the
information age with developments in Irish art and culture.
The report also examines the inter-relation of economic development and
social issues, and predicts that the University of Limerick has the
opportunity to be a pioneer in genuinely improving access to education, and
thereby contributing to social development and greater social harmony in
our local and national community.
In discussing the "Shifting Sites of Scholarship" the report notes that:
Whereas fifty years ago universities had localised monopolies of
scholarly activity, there is now a proliferation of institutions and other
educational bodies resulting in greater competition in traditional markets,
with the university just one of many players;
Equally, there is a polarisation in labour markets, with new information
technologies giving rise to opportunities for both highly specialised
professionals and generalists.
All of this is a natural consequence of knowledge as the central economic
resource in late modern society - its very centrality making it unlikely
that it will be left exclusively in the hands of collegially organised
institutions. If knowledge has become power then ownership of knowledge
becomes contested.
The conclusions from the analysis of these five elements are brought to
bear in the section of the report headed "Charting the University of
Limerick's Future".
Before that, however, the report develops a number of scenarios for 2020.
The purpose of the scenarios is to integrate themes already identified in
the report, in order to demonstrate the potency of these forces taken
together.
A number of possible scenarios for society are developed, basically a
series of alternative stories representing and reflecting areas of
uncertainty about the future:
The subject - Individual (I) Vs. Community (We).
Society - Coherence Vs. Fragmentation.
The scenarios are described under four dimensions:
"I will - The world fragments into a working pandemonium of individuals,
organised by jobs rather than geography".
"Consumer Land - The world is populated by consumers rather than
citizens."
"Ecotopia - The world slows the growth of development in reaction to early decades of high crime and chaos."
"New Civics - The world settles into small powerful city states."
*note: for this website (University of Limerick (Ireland) click here:
http://www.ul.ie/~2020/final.html
.......................................
Other Vision 2020 websites (just a small sampling):
http://www.ocde.k12.ca.us/vision2020/welcome.html (I will start with this
local Orange County, CA Vision 2020 link (county))
http://www.globalvision2020.com (from Canada)
http://www.csbf.qc.ca/vision2020/principal.htm (also from Canada)
http://www.senate.gov/~thomas/np/plan.html (U.S. National Parks plan)
http://www.wf2020.org/keys_to_training/index.html (Orlando, FL local plan)
http://www.cpe.state.ky.us/issues/2020visn.htm (University of Kentucky)
http://www.tamu.edu/new/vision/index2.html (Texas A & M)
http://iastate.edu/~vision2020/ (Iowa State University)
*note: I found several college and university Vision 2020 websites in the
U.S.)
http://www.cgiar.org/IFPRI/2020/books/v14.htm (Intenational Institute for
Christian Studies)
http://www.ntcumc.org/Listvisn.html (Methodist church Vision 2020)
http://www.oakridge.london.on.ca/vision.htm (Presbyterian church in
Cananda-Vision 2020)
http://www.ccrhq.org/vision/ (US Chemical Industry)
http://www.spacecom.af.mil/usspace/visionbk.htm (US Space Command--space
industry's Vision 2020)
http://www.hamilton2020.com/ (Hamilton, OH local Vision 2020 plan )
http://www.maplevalley.com/vision/index.htm (Maple Valley, WA local Vision
2020)
*note: found local Vision 2020 sites for literally dozens of US cities
http://www.andhrapradesh.com/cm/cm23rd.htm (India's Vision 2020)
http://www.mdc.com.my/ (Malaysia's Vision 2020 site--a must see)
invite you to do an Internet search on ANY search engine and compile your
own list of Vision 2020 websites to add to these.
Thanks,
Eileen
For those of you who think that stopping UNESCO and our government's Presidential involvement in that organization does NOT have a direct bearing on Education, I suggest you go to the UNESCO site and read their agenda for Education world wide at the UNESCO site for their "Second International Congress Technical and Vocational Education" at: Thanks to Lois |
Theosophical Society | Helena Petrovna Blavatsky (founder) Alice Bailey (assumed leadership after death of Blavatsky) Robert McNamara Henry Kissinger David Rockefeller Paul Volker George Schultz | Bailey founded the Lucifer Publishing Company renamed Lucis Press in 1924.Published 20 books written by Bailey as "chaneling" agent for for the disembodied Djwhal Khul. The Lucis Trust was one of the first NGOs to be granted "consultative" status with the UN.(Global Government , a special report by the Murchison Chair of Free Enterprise University of Texas at Austin) |
Excerpted from: New Age Roots Dark Foundations of the New World Order Steve Bonta The New American, March 1, 1999 Although the Theosophical Society remains a force in the occult/New Age camp, its influence today seems to be confined to the education (or re-education) of those seeking alternatives to Western religion. The Society at Adyar parted ways with European and American power elites back in the 1920s, with the expulsion from the Society in America of Alice Bailey and her husband Foster Bailey. The Baileys inaugurated the Lucis Trust, a New York-based organization responsible for giving the New Age movement most of its modem organization and political trappings. Like Helena Blavatsky, Alice Bailey claimed to have been overshadowed on various occasions by an "Ascended Master" (named Djwhal Khul), and to have penned many volumes of occult writing under his influence. The Lucis Trust, like the Theosophical Society, claims as one of its purposes the advancement of interest in occult and arcane religion. It runs a number of non-profit "arcane schools" designed to teach various occult doctrines and practices. The Lucis Trust is also aggressively involved in promoting a globalist ideology, which it refers to as "goodwill." Its World Goodwill organization is closely connected to international elitist circles. Authors and participants in its various conferences read like a Who's Who of the globalist insiders. Featured on its website, for example, is the Universal Declaration of Human Responsibilities, put forth in April 1998 as a companion document to the notorious UN Universal Declaration on Human Rights. Signatories to the World Goodwill document include: Helmut Schmidt, former chancellor of West Germany; Malcolm Fraser, former Australian prime minister; Oscar Arias Sanchez, former prime minister of Costa Rica; Shimon Peres; Robert McNamara; Paul Volcker; and Jimmy Carter. Indeed, the Lucis Trust enjoys consultant status at the United Nations and, judging from the political writings appearing in its publications, it is as much a political organization as an occult religious one. The following links are posted on the website of the Lucis Trust support group, the New Group of World Servers, one of four legs of the Lucis Trust, established up by Alice Bailey. http://www.ngws.org/ http://www.ngws.org/service/groups.htm The groups comprise the real working legs of the new age movement, taking world civilization where Bailey had envisioned through her mediumistic writings, first published under the name Lucifer Publishing company. Their real aims are to establish a one-world governance/civilization, through collective love and "good will" and human service as a paradigm-shift process to usher in a new world order as described in Bailey's demonic books. Not everyone who is referenced below is necessarily a new ager, but it does reflect the inclusive drift of their larger working agenda. Education - http://www.ngws.org/service/educ.htm Arcane School Arcana Workshops Esoteric Sciences & Creative Education Foundation Findhorn Foundation Institute for Noetic Sciences Institute for Visionary Leadership Krotona Institute School Office of the Caduceator New Quint College New Sancta Sophia Seminary School for Esoteric Studies Sirius Community The Character Education Partnership The Blavatsky Study Center New The Mikel Institute and Center The Radiance Technique International Association, Inc. University of Seven Rays White Mountain Education Association Other California Institute of Integral Studies New Common Boundary Human Service Alliance New The Rocky Mountain Institute VWIS (Voluntary Work Information Service) New WorldTeach New Childrens Education Association Montessori Internationale Atrium Society Balanced Beginnings CityKids Foundation Global Elementary Model United Nations International Education and Resource Network - iEarn Institute for Visionary Leadership Kids Peace Net Legacy International One Day Foundation Robert Muller Schools International Coordinating Center Steiner Waldorf Schools Environmental (Human Services) - http://www.ngws.org/service/human.htm 1% Connecting the Community New CARE International New Food Relief International Habitat for Humanity International New Human Kindness Foundation New Human Services Alliance OneWorld Online New Points of Light Foundation UNICEF New United Nations Development Programme (Ecological Services) - http://www.ngws.org/service/eco.htm Abundant Life Seed Foundation New Context Institute New Coral Cay Conservation New Earth Dream Alliance EarthLight Magazine New EcoNet Envirolink Gaiamind Greenpeace Mana Foundation New Manitou Foundation Manitou Institute National Audubon Society National Wildlife Federation Rocky Mountain Institute Rural Advancement Foundation International New Seeds of Change New Sierra Club Sirius Community The Amazing Environmental Organization WebDirectory The Commons New The Earth Council The Institute for Earth Education The Simple Living Network Trees For Life Union of Concerned Scientists New United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) Worldwatch Institute Esoteric / Metaphysical - http://www.ngws.org/service/esoteric.htm The Agni Yoga Society A.Priori Arcana Workshops The Arizona Agni Yoga Rainbow Group Atmanet Auckland Goodwill Unit of Service New Blavatsky Net Foundation New Bristol Goodwill C.I.E. [Centro Iniciatico Europeo] Center for World Servers The Center for Planetary Goodwill The Center for Visionary Leadership CreatePeace.com EarthLight Magazine New EnHumanity Esoteric Sciences & Creative Education Foundation Esoteric World Service Farmington Community Church and Wisdom Center Findhorn Foundation Forum Foundation New Friends of Peace Pilgrim Fundacion Desarrollo Nuevo Pensamiento IPS--The Institute for Planetary Synthesis Institute of Noetic Sciences (see Educational Groups) Institute for Visionary Leadership Krotona Institute of Theosophy Kripalu Center Los Angeles Heart Project New Los Angeles InterGroup Lucis Trust and Lucis Publishing Master in the Heart Services New Manitou Foundation Manitou Institute Meditation Groups Inc. Nicholas Roerich Museum Ojai Foundation Other Dimensions Services OPA--Operation Planet Love Quebec Association for Goodwill Association [qu颩coise de la Bonne Volont靼/font> Rosicrucian Order AMORC Sancta Sophia Seminary Sirius Community School for Esoteric Studies South African Goodwill Association New Southern Lights Goodwill StarHouse Sundail House Sydney Goodwill Unit of Service Terra New Tetrada The Hermetic Observatory - THOTh Theosophical Society in America New The Upper Triad Triangles of Light Newsletter New Unity And Diversity World Council Universal World Harmony through Service (UWHTS) White Mountain Education Association World Goodwill World Service Intergroup World Service Meditation Group World Service Network World Unity and Service Trust Political - http://www.ngws.org/service/fin_bus.htm Bat Shalom Center for Living Democracy Center For Visionary Leadership EcoPlan International Friends of Peace Pilgrim Heartland Institute Peacemaker Community The Carter Center Volunteers For Peace International Workcamps United Nations Foundation New United Nations Financial - http://www.ngws.org/service/financial.htm Coalition for Environmentally Responsible Economies Greenmoney Online Guide New Investor Responsibility Research Center Lifebridge Foundation Social Investment Forum Responsible Wealth - United For A Fair Economy Business - http://www.ngws.org/service/business.htm Business for Social Responsibility Computer Professionals for Social Responsibility New Conservatree Co-op America Earth Tones New Green Pages International Ethical Business Registry New Provender Alliance Health and Medicine - http://www.ngws.org/service/healthmed.htm American Red Cross Burmese Refugee Care Project New Citizens for Health Creative Health Network Human Services Alliance New Interfaith Health Program Psychologists for Social Responsibility World Health Organization WHO Political - http://www.ngws.org/service/politic.htm Bat Shalom Center for Living Democracy Center For Visionary Leadership EcoPlan International Friends of Peace Pilgrim Heartland Institute Peacemaker Community The Carter Center Volunteers For Peace International Workcamps United Nations Foundation New United Nations Religious - http://www.ngws.org/service/religious.htm Center For Global Ethics Drepung Loseling Monastery Global Dialogue Institute Haidakhandi Universal Ashram New Institute for World Spirituality International Network for Interfaith Health Practices International Interfaith Centre IRFWP Islam Intellectual Forum Manitou Foundation New Manitou Institute New Pluralism Project The Religious Freedom Home Page The Jewish Reconstuctionist Federation Travel - http://www.ngws.org/service/travel.htm Council Travel New Conservation International Earthwise Journeys New Eco-Source New Ecotourism Explorer Hostelling International Partners in Responsible Tourism Arts - http://www.ngws.org/service/arts.htm Blue Apple Players Global Visions Directory KPFK - Pacifica Radio New Network Productions, Inc. New Dimensions Radio Nicholas Roerich Museum Northwest Delta Choral and Arts Council RAIN Community Internet New Stuart Pimsler Dance and Theatre The Foundry Theatre Turtles, Inc. ______________________________________________________ |
Correction: I had given Maurice Strong credit for Earth Day. I appreciate Mr. McConnell setting me straight. Sent: Thursday, May 04, 2000 12:22 PM I did go to Mr. McConnell's web site (http://www.earthdayone.org/charta.htm#Prelude) and responded by e-mail... Dear Mr. McConnell, November, 2003 note on Earth Charter: |
he Gaia Institute Lindisfarne Association | James Lovelock Lyn Margulis (ex-wife of Carl Sagan) Maurice Strong Robert Muller (Officer of Temple of Understanding) VP Al Gore is a frequent speaker here. | G-A-I-A, A WAY OF KNOWING: POLITICAL IMPLICATIONS OF THE NEW BIOLOGY "On Earth, she (gaia) is the source of life, everlasting and is alive now, she gave birth to humankind and we are a part of her." James Lovelock at Global Forum of Spiritual and Parliamentary Leaders for Human Survival sponsored by the UNDP's Global Committee of Parliamentarians on Population and Development and the Temple of Understanding (NGO accredited to the UN) As the result of this forum "education and action kits" were produced. "We are required by our religious principles to look for the links between equity and ecology. The fundamental emphasis is on issues of environmental justice, including air pollution and global warming; water, food, and agriculture; population and consumption; hunger, trade and industrial policy; community economic development; toxic pollution and hazardhous waste; and corporate responsibility."Amy Elizabeth Fox |
Al Gore, Earth in the Balance "I have come to believe that we must take bold and unequivocal action: we must make the rescue of the environment the central organizing principle for civilization. Adopting a central organizing principle--one agreed to voluntarily--means embarking on an all-out effort to use every policy and program, every law and institution, every treaty and alliance, every tactic and strategy, every plan and course of action--to use, in short, every means to halt the destruction of the environment and to preserve and nurture our ecological system. Minor shifts in policy, marginal adjustments in ongoing programs, mode-rate improvements in laws and regulations, rhetoric offered in lieu of genuine change--these are all forms of appeasement, designed to satisfy the public's desire to believe that sacrifice, struggle, and wrenching transformation of society will not be necessary." Calls for tax on fossil fuels. And "global program to accomplish the strategic goal of completely eliminating the internal combustion engine over say, a twenty-five year period." Organized "prayer breakfasts" for James Parks Morton, Dean of the Cathedral of St. John the Divine and officer of the Temple of Understanding, to promote the National Religious Partnership for the Environment. Led Senate to approve the Montreal Protocol which banned refrigerants. |
Temple of Understanding (founded in 1960) | Juliet Hollister/Maurice Strong/HH. the XIV Dalai Lama/Jawaharlal Nehru/HH. Pope John XXIII/Eleanor Roosevelt/Anwar el-Sadat/Dr. Albert Schweitzer/UN Secretary-General U Thant/Dr. Robert Muller/James Lovelock/Javier Perez de Cuellar/Paul Gorman/Robert Muller/Thomas Berry | "I saw children lying in the laps of large dogs and a boy bringing his stuffed animals to be blessed. I saw the not yet famous elephant and camel march up the aisle; a lawyer who scoops the poop and enjoys being closn-for-a-day; a priest who finds himself covered with wriggling ferrets' a man and woman who meet when their leashes become enmeshed; a volunteer gardener marching to the altar with a bowl full of compost and worms; a sermon by Al Gore, in which he called on the congregants to recognize that `God is not separate from the Earth." William Bryant Logan, editor of the Cathedral of St. John the Divine's newsletter. |
Castro's Strong
http://www.worldnetdaily.com/bluesky_westerman_news/20000525_xnwes_castros_st.shtml
Speaking with Castro and a number of top Cuban officials on a wide variety of topics, including cooperation between Cuban universities and the U.N. University of Peace, Strong also spoke about the upcoming U.N. Millennium Summit in New York, the purpose of which is to discuss the role of the United Nations in the 21st century. Both Strong and Castro have voiced similar views on socialism and the future of humanity. Strong, despite having made a fortune in oil and utilities, is a self-described socialist and has earlier stated that for humanity to survive, it may be necessary "for industrial civilization to collapse." Castro recently made a similar declaration while addressing a conference of underdeveloped nations in Havana in mid-April. Castro stated that the world's leading industrial nations control a "cruel, unjust, inhuman, and racist" economic system that is "incapable of preserving the human race." Strong has close connections with numerous influential leaders in business and government around the world -- including the United States -- and is considered a possibility to fill the post of secretary general of the U.N. when the position again becomes open. In addition to his leftist political views, Strong is reputed to be an avid devotee of Gaia, the earth goddess, and is closely involved with the Temple of Understanding in New York. Strong's close working relationship with Castro stands in stark contrast to the recent condemnation of Cuba by another United Nations agency -- the U.N. Human Rights Commission, which has found Cuba guilty of continuing serious human rights abuses. Along with Strong, there are those who disagree with characterizations of Cuba as abusive. "Americans have been very propagandized against communism," said Lisa Valanti, president of the U.S.-Cuban Sister Cities Association, "against certain words that we use toward Cuba (such as) 'communist dictator,' 'anti-democratic' -- all these things which are in fact not real in Cuban life." U.S. citizens "know nothing about the reality of Cuban life," Valanti said. During an interview with Radio Havana, Valanti stated that the organization exists to "bring the people of one community into contact with people of another community," desiring to make "visible in the U.S. the realities of Cuban life." One hundred delegates from the year-old U.S.-Cuban Sister Cities Association began their conference in Havana just as Strong concluded his business and left the island. The U.S.-Cuban Sister Cities Association was founded in Pittsburgh in 1999 with three members: Mobile, Ala., Madison, Wis., and Pittsburgh, Pa. All three participating cities had made previous exchange arrangements with Cuba. Another 30 to 40 cities have expressed interest in the program. Students, religious leaders and business personnel are involved in the exchange programs. Participants in the organization's exchange programs are "seeds" whose ultimate goal is to put their view of Cuba "into political action," and to "impact legislatively," according to Valanti. Critics of the Castro regime, however, are not welcome to participate in the organization's activities, Valanti added. |
SYSTEMS THINKING AND GAIA (by Lynn Stuter) Systems thinking grew out the writings of Alfred North Whitehead. The science of systems thinking is accredited to a man by the name of Ludwig von Bertalanffy and his associates (one of whom is Ervin Laszlo, currently working with the United Nations). The generic term for systems thinking is general systems theory. A bit on Bertalanffy before I go on. Bertalanffy came to the United States from Germany on a Rockefeller grant. He returned to German-occupied Vienna, Austria in 1938. His biology textbooks were used by Hitler. He returned to the United States following WWII. General systems theory states, simply, that the world is a system of subsystems (also called systems) all interconnected and interdependent to form a wholistic or holistic system; that within any system is an infrastructure that is analogous across systems, irrespective of physical appearance. Stated a bit differently, but to the same effect, is the Gaia hypothesis: the world is a living breathing organisim, irreducible to its parts; that what affects one part, affects all parts; that in the name of saving space-ship Earth, we must change our society. The Gaia hypothesis adds a spiritual dimension to systems thinking. Systems thinking sees everything as wholistic, with all parts interconnected, interdependent. In the words of Senge, 1990, (The Fifth Discipline; the Art and Practice of a Learning Organization), systems thinking "is the fifth discipline because it is the conceptual cornerstone that underlies all of the five learning disciplines of this book." This discipline is the foundation upon which the other four disciplines function: personal mastery, mental models, shared vision, team learning. Recognize the terms? The systems thinking model, because of its wholistic nature, is cyclical--a circle or a spiral. The beginning is the end. You start at point A and your destination is point A. Thus it is that mankind can be said to be "creating the future." At point A "you" decide what "you" want the world to look like in x number of years. This is your goal or outcome. Example: the exit outcomes for the school, state, federal: what the child should know and be able to do as a result of his/her educational experience; what the child should look like. Now you align everything you do to achieve point A, the outcome. In this endeavor you align the curriculum, instruction and teaching methodologies to the outcome to ensure that it is reached; the measure of which is the assessment. I call this designing down, aligning back. It is also known as backmapping. The technical term is a syllogism: a process used by behavioral scientists to bring about planned change. At this point, I shall digress to the philosophy behind systems thinking as it is important to understanding the semantics of systems thinking. Systems thinking sees everything as a system, analogous to all other systems irrespective of physical appearance. All things are equal, whether it be the ecosystem, or mankind--man is no better than animal or nature. The underlying philosophy here is humanism that maintains that man is devoid of spirituality or self-determinism. It therefore follows that man must be conditioned (the process) to his environment (the outcome or goals), whatever it is decided that environment will be (creating the future). As stated in the Humanist Manifesto II, "…we can discover no divine purpose or providence for the human species. While there is much that we do not know, humans are responsible for what we are or will become. No deity will save us; we must save ourselves." All the exit outcomes from all the school districts, states, and Goals 2000 are what man must be conditioned to to achieve the perceived environment. That perceived environment is based on "future trends" which, again, is cyclical, deciding what we want the world to look like (in the 21st Century), then back mapping. In this same vein, outcome based education is education based on outcomes--starting at the end and back mapping, ensuring the outcome. In researching "future trends" it becomes very obvious that they are based, not on fact, but on the doomsday prophesies of rabid environmental groups whose religious philosophy is very much humanistic/New Age. More on this later. Systems thinking, to repeat, sees everything as wholes. It is in this context that appear whole language; the wholistic education system incorporating all services to deal with the whole child--mentally, physically, emotionally; life-role or real-life (wholistic) education; constructivist (hands on) learning (the child reinventing the wheel); integrated curriculum deleting the lines of disciplines; thematic units addressing social or life related issues (wholistic); conflict resolution in pursuit of the collectivist (wholistic) society; peer tutoring; the child centered classroom; individual learning plans; …. Everything done is to achieve the whole, with all systems (everything done to produce the child who will look like the exit outcomes) interconnected and interdependent. Humanism is a religion that sees everything as wholistic, the basis of collectivist thought and action; it is the foundation upon which Marx built his philosophy (Marx saw Christianity as a religion of self-alienation, something to be stamped out at all cost). Marx believed the individual mind to be part of the universal mind (the wholistic mind), the collective. He saw the Hegelian dialectic as a process for achieving wholes, of Oneness of Mind through a process of thesis (an idea or proposition), antithesis (the opposite idea or proposition) and synthesis (the bringing together of thesis and antithesis). Synthesis then becomes the new thesis, and through a continuing process, Oneness of Mind theoretically occurs. If you look consensus up in the dictionary, you will discover that it means "solidarity of belief"; continual evolution to oneness of mind. To achieve consensus (wholism), one must give up his/her individual beliefs and conform to the group beliefs--again, oneness of mind. Left to its own devices, however, consensus is uncontrollable. Thus, to control the process, and insure the outcome, facilitators are trained in group dyanmics (how groups function) to ensure the outcome. Again we start at point A and return to point A. In the process, all participants hold the outcome instead of just the facilitator. In the words of one participant, the job of the facilitator is to make everyone in the group think its their idea. Because of mulitple parties being involved in consensus, it cannot be rigid except in outcome. In each instance thesis and antithesis come into play, with synthesis as the outcome whether achieved incrementally or in one cycle. Thus it is that there is no right or wrong answer, everything is relative, situational. (This is the why and wherefore, also, of no right answer in the classroom.) Everything is thesis and antithesis, ever evolving in a spiral, whether individual thought or collective thought to the next higher plain. This is, incidentally, the process of attaining "higher order thinking." This is the reason for the teacher as facilitator, the "guide on the side; not the sage on the stage." The facilitatiave process is not one that appeals to the cognitive domain; it appeals to the affective domain--how people feel. In achieving consensus, it is not what one knows about a subject that matters, it is how one feels that is important. As so adequately demonstrated by the final evaluation on the Schools for the 21st Century in Washington state, content is "excellence in terms of the change agenda," process is the "destination," the "product," and "what learning is about;" emotionality and affectivity are the means by which content and process will be achieved. If you want to change someones belief system, you do not appeal to what they know, you appeal to what they believe, how they feel about a subject. In a consensus circle, the facilitator sets the stage by appealing to the affective domain of the participants--emotionality is imperative. If they have learned nothing else from sex ed programs and the resulting rise in teen pregnancies, they have learned that appealing to emotionality sets the stage if the intent is for people to compromise their principles. Once the stage has been set, affective is brought into conflict with cognitive, and the individual pushed to conform to the group belief system. Once that has occurred, and individual principles have been compromised, it is very hard for the individual to reclaim his individuality. To do so requires breaking away emotionally from the new "family" and again thinking for oneself The social acceptance within the circle makes this very hard for most people to do--a facet that is counted on. What people learn about each other, intimately, within the circle "of trust" also becomes a coercive factor against anyone who might attempt to break away. In the classroom, systems thinking plays out in the focus of the classroom. No longer is the focus knowledge. Now the focus is "real-life" or "life-role" education. Everything is set in the context of children "experiencing" real life situations. Thus it is that the focus in the classroom is social or life-related issues taught in the context of unit themes or thematic units, whether it is gender, prejudice, discrimination, the environment, homosexuality, life styles, etc. The primary focus, however, is upon environmentalism, which is why parents are finding a lot of it in the classroom. This environmentalism, is not, in most cases, based on scientifically validated facts, but rather, on the doomsday prophesies of rabid environmentalists with a self-serving agenda--an agenda that plays itself out in such events as the Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro in 1992 and similar more recent events such as that in Japan. The fraudulent claim of global warming is a good example. Future trends harkens back to a man by the name of Jay W Forester and Massachusetts Institute of Technology. (Forester was Peter Senge's mentor for 20 years according to Senge.) In 1972 Forester established a world simulation model known as World 3 for the Club of Rome (one worlders). This was a computer simulation model that, according to inputs, predicted future scenarios. A book was written over the twenty scenarios predicted by the simulation model, called "Limits to Growth" by Donnella Meadows. None of the predictions have come true, but that's beside the point. It is the doomsday prophesies that "we must change our ways if we are to save spaceship Earth" that dominates the scene. This is also what comes across in the classroom. The purpose is to turn children into political activists for the cause. The same is true for addressing other social or life related issues. This is what Washinton SPI Bergeson meant, in her state of education speech, when she said, "Education beats out fighting crime, holding the line on taxes, creating new jobs, improving access to health care, or protecting the environment. And, by the way, when we achieve our educational goals, all of these problems will be addressed in new and better ways." In his book, "A Strategy for the Future, the Systems Approach to World Order," Laszlo predicted that a more accurate and concise model of World 3 would be forthcoming by the mid-1980's. This, or something similar, is undoubtedly where the predictions of what the world will look like in the 21st Century are coming from. The point that needs to be made here, is that in predicting the future, the future can also be created, starting at point A and return to it. In other words, whatever the "we" want it to look like. What "we" want it to look like is manifesting itself now in the classrooms across America under Goals 2000, STW and the plethora of bills building the system. In creating the future, one of the first steps, is to analyze "where we are now" against "where we want to be". This is called a gap analysis. Undoubtedly most have heard this term. The gap analysis become the foundation of the change strategy--what "we" need to do to move people from "where they are now" to where "we want them to be"--from "here" to "there". The facilitative process then becomes the bridge between "here" and "there" whether in the classroom or in the community. This is why facilitators are used in the whole of the process, whether in the classroom or in establishing the mission and vision statements and the exit outcomes. Once the cyclical process is put in motion, theoretically it will envelope the whole community at some point--except for holdouts like me. The success of systems thinking, however, is contigent on it encompassing everyone--all. Because not everyone can be so controlled, the necessity comes eventually, in the interests of the system, to invoke tyrannical means of achieving and maintaining compliance. This is why, in the USSR, dissidents were labeled "mentally ill" and incarcerated. What is being achieved in America today is known as transformational Marxism, meaning that whereas it was achieved through revolution in Russia, and attempted in Germany under Hitler and Italy under Mussolini, it is being achieved through gradualism in the United States. This is where the term transformational comes into play, especially in the third stage of OBE known as transformational outcome based education wherein social and life related issues become the primary focus of the classroom with knowledge only incorporated as it is used and applied. Systems thinking is the method of achieving and maintaining a planned economy, in which every facet is carefully monitored and carefully controlled, including the human factor. Accountability, under systems thinking, is the gathering and analysis of statistically data to measure evolution to outcomes. Thus the establishment of huge data banks housing personally identifiable information on every man, woman, and child. Coercion becomes a definite factor in achieving the desired outcome--whether it is determined that the parent, teacher or child is the problem. This is not in Global Governance, but Lynn helps put the entire process into perspective. I am truly grateful for those who share their understanding with the rest of us.Remember who to thank in your community for bringing you into conformity with these goals. |
Gorbachev Foundation | Gorbachev (now resides in the U.S. at our former Naval Base, the Presidio) | Gorbachev to Politburo in November, 1987: "Gentlemen, comrades, do not be concerned about all you hear about Glasnost and Prestroika and democracy in the coming years. They are primarily for outward consumption. There will be no significant internal changes in the Soviet Union, other than for cosmetic purposes. Our purpose is to disarm the Americans and let them fall asleep." eco-logic "In Their Own Words" |
Maurice Strong Owns 63,000 acre Colorado ranch called Baca Grande which is home to Disciples of the XVI Gyalwa Karmapa (Tibetan Buddhism). Disciples of Babaji, and Indian Gury, celebrate Hindu rituals in a $174,00 solar powered, gold domed, adobe temple with an alabaster statue of Murti, the Divine Mother, built by the Lindisfarne Fellowship. A Temple for Surfis. A Temple for Taoists. Strong and wife Hanne see Baca Grande as the "Vatican City" of the new world order. Wanted to build a 46 story pink granite pyramid in compliance with instructions received from an intergalactic leader named Commander Kuthumi who was channeling from the planet Arturus. eco-logic, November/December, 1995 Frequent speaker at the Cathedral of St. John the Divine/Secretary General of the first Earth Summit in 1972/first Director of the UNEnvironment Programme/Secretary-General of the Earth Summit II in Rio in 1992/founder of the Earth Council/Chair of the Business Council for Sustainable Development/ co-chair of the World Economic Forum/ member of the UN's Brundtland Commission on Environment and Development/UN funded Committee on Global Governance/Lindisfarne Felowship/Socialist Party of Canada/ NATIONAL RELIGIOUS PARTNERSHIP FOR THE ENVIRONMENT Maurice Strong is on the front of National Review's September, 1997, edition. |
NEA | Joy Elmer Morgan | "...certain world agencies of administration such as: a police force; a board of education..." (1942) In 1943 the Conference of Allied Ministers of Education called for a United Nations Bureau of Education. UNESCO became the Board of Education for the World. |
The Aspen Institute | The Esalen Institute | |
Senator Timothy Wirth (Senator, 1990, now Under Secretary of State for Global Affairs: "We've got to ride the global warming issue. Even if the theory of global warming is wrong, we will be doing the right thing, in terms of economic policy and environmental policy." Richard Benedick, an employee for the State Department: "A global climate treaty must be implemented even if there is no scientific evidence to back the green house effect." Dr. Stephen Schneider: "We have to offer up scary scenarios, make simplified dramatic statements, and make little mention of any doubts we may have. Each of us has to decide what the right balance is between being effective and being honest." |
OTHER CONVENTIONS OF IMPORTANCE Convention on Biological Diversity :seeks to convert half of North America to core wilderness areas off limits to human beings President's Council on Sustainable Development- sets forth a Plan of Action to transform cities and towns into "sustainable communities in conformance with the UN Conference on Human Settlements (Habitat II) UN's Vienna Convention on Ozone Depleting Susbstances/Montreal Protocol- banned CFC's in America UN's Framework Convention on Climate Change: increase cost and reduce availability of electricity, gasoline, and all fossil-fuel-generated energy UN Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women--grants the "right to housing" to all women in the world UN Food and Agriculture Organization--would grant the "right to a full stomach to every citizen on earth. Developed nations are expected to pay the costs of feeding people in developing nations. |
WORLD TRADE ORGANIZATION GIVES THE UNITED NATIONS THE ENFORCEMENT MECHANISM NECESSARY TO ENFORCE THESE TREATIES AND AGREEMENTS. RATIFIED BY THE 103RD CONGRESS. |
Key Players Control World Money Supply By John M. Berry Washington Post Staff Writer Sunday, June 28, 1998; Page H01 BASEL, Switzerland - Ten times a year, the financial barons who control the world's supply of money gather here on the bank of the Rhine River for drinks and dinner - and secret conversations that can shape the course of the global economy. The 13 members of this economic cabal meet on the glass-walled 18th floor of the round headquarters tower of an obscure institution known as the Bank for International Settlements. From their seats at the conference table, they can look across the city and the river to Germany's Black Forest or farther west to French Alps on the horizon. As they arrive and greet one another by their first names, waiters hover with drinks - they know each one's favorite. For privacy and candor, no staff members are present, only the principals and occasionally a guest, such as Michel Camdessus, managing director of the International Monetary Fund. The members of this secretive group are the governors of the central banks of the Group of 10 industrial nations, plus Switzerland. The most powerful voice in the room is the U.S. representative - Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan or, if he can't attend, Vice Chairman Alice M. Rivlin. As befits its power, the United States alone has a second seat at the table, occupied by William J. McDonough, president of the New York Federal Reserve Bank. The 13th participant is the BIS's general manager, Andrew Crockett, a former Bank of England official. This is how global finance does its most sensitive business, in these quiet Sunday-night meetings. The central bankers talk informally - with no agenda other than what is on their minds. The financial intelligence that emerges from these meetings - and perhaps more important, the personal trust - helps keep the international banking system steady in turbulent times, such as the financial crisis that has swept Asia over the past year. Roots in a War But what, exactly, is the strangely named organization that hosts this secret conclave? The BIS was established in 1930 to assist in the payments of reparations owed by Germany and other losers in World War I to the victors. Over the years it has become a central bank for central banks. It has also emerged as a clearinghouse for regulators - helping them supervise commercial banks, oversee foreign exchange markets and protect the world financial system. Topic A on recent Sunday nights, of course, has been the financial crisis in Japan and other Asian nations. The 13 participants have discussed how to ease the Asian crisis and limit its impact on the rest of the world. The group has focused, in particular, on ensuring that the crisis doesn't threaten the world's intricate system of settling international transactions. A collapse of that payments system, as it's known, is a central banker's ultimate nightmare. Partly in response to the Asian crisis and partly to broaden its role beyond its European base, the BIS will open a satellite office in Hong Kong on July 10. The following day, the central bank governors will hold a regular monthly dinner outside Basel for the first time - in Tokyo. If the meeting room in Basel could speak, it would tell a history of global monetary policy. It was at one of the dinners in 1982 that then-Fed chairman Paul A. Volcker twisted arms - one source said "browbeat" -the other governors to come up with money and other actions to help limit the economic damage from that year's default by Mexico and later by other Latin America nations on their governments' debt owed to foreign banks. Mexico was the topic once again in late 1994 when the United States led a $50 billion bailout that involved money from the IMF, the United States and other countries and, as a backup, $10 billion from the BIS. That was an unusually contentious meeting because European central bank governors, including the powerful head of Germany's Bundesbank, Hans Tietmeyer, opposed the bailout on the grounds that it was unnecessary and a bad precedent. At one critical dinner, recalls former Fed vice chairman Alan Blinder, "we took a lot of heat about Mexico. We were lucky that Camdessus was there. He was a lightning rod. The others were mad at the United States, but more so at the IMF." In the end, the United States got its way. "By central bank standards, the talk is amazingly frank because there is no audience," said Blinder, now an economics professor at Princeton University. "There is this old clich銠 about 'full and frank' discussions among diplomats. That means they were stiff and didn't say anything. In this case, it really is frank. There is no gallery to play to. . . .You know, central bankers cooperate across national borders better than governments do, and I think this is one of the reasons." Another glimpse of the secretive group comes from E. Gerald Corrigan, a managing director at Goldman Sachs & Co. As president at the New York Fed from 1984 to 1993, Corrigan attended 115 consecutive monthly meetings at the BIS. With everyone at one table and "no staff, no agenda, no records and no communiqu頮 . . marvelous personal relationships developed," Corrigan recalls. "The consequence of that was that when something went wrong, working with these people was just so easy because of the trust developed by the frequency and the intimacy of the dinners. To me, that's the genius of the organization." During Corrigan's time, plenty did go wrong - particularly with the world's banks. The Japanese bubble was expanding toward the bursting point, which eventually sent Japanese banks into a downward spiral from which they still haven't recovered. The U.S. stock market crashed in October 1987, sending shock waves around the world. Foreign exchange crises were so frequent they are now barely remembered. Adding to the disarray was the view of the leading U.S. banker, Citicorp Chairman Walter Wriston, that large banks with diversified portfolios didn't need much capital. During those raucous years, financial institutions around the world were disregarding what Corrigan calls "prudential standards." The banks were lending like crazy, often in other countries where the bankers didn't understand the risks, and national bank regulators were not cracking down. With Volcker taking the lead, the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision, a BIS group, began trying to draft a new set of international standards for bank capital - that is, the amount of reserves institutions must have relative to the amount of loans they have on the books. Corrigan recalls that the Basel Committee wasn't getting anywhere until the Fed and the Bank of England found that they had separately come up with similar approaches. When the details were announced in January 1986, "instead of everybody getting mad at us, it became a rallying point," Corrigan said. "The next big obstacle was getting the Japanese on board. The big issue there was to what extent the standards would allow the Japanese banks to count their unrealized capital gains on stocks as part of the capital." An allowance was duly made for the Japanese, and Corrigan said, "I thought at the time it would come back to haunt them." As indeed it has. What analysts describe as the current "death spiral" of Japanese banks stems partly from the fact that every time the Japanese stock market falls, it reduces the amount of bank capital. That, in turn, makes it harder for Japanese banks to make new loans, which in turn limits economic growth - plunging the country deeper into economic crisis. Central bank staffers, too, use the BIS for bonding. As a result of their regular meetings here, senior members of the governors' staffs have developed a network of their own that can be activated in a crisis. Edwin M. "Ted" Truman, director of the Fed's international finance division, used that network last December, when there was a high risk that major South Korean banks would default on repayment of short-term debt owed to banks in Europe, Japan, Australia and the United States. Truman set up daily conference calls with his counterparts in all the home countries of the lending banks. In the daily calls, Truman and the other central bank staffers shared information about their lending banks' situations. The exposure of the banks varied greatly, and it was proving difficult to get an agreement that the banks would roll over the loans and extend their maturity. The conversations helped move the negotiations forward, and the rollovers took place in January. "This is a small illustration of the process," Truman said. "It's a sort of club, I guess . . . dealing with people we know." The BIS also has some formal committees handling arcane banking matters. Its Committee on Payment and Settlement Systems has been promoting better risk management by banks, better ways to settle transactions involving multiple currencies and better domestic payment systems. The Euro-Currency Standing Committee is studying how to reduce the vulnerability of the world financial system in the wake of the Asian crisis. And the Gold and Foreign Exchange Committee oversees world currency markets and is the only source of data on the size and transactions in that huge market. Of course, the G-10 governors don't have to come to the BIS to have dinner together. In fact, most years when the IMF and World Bank annual meetings are in Washington in September, there is no monthly meeting here, and Greenspan plays host at the Fed. A Bigger Board Historically, the BIS has been essentially a European institution with U.S. participation. In July 1994, however, the governors of the central banks of Canada and Japan were added to its board. More recently, nine additional nations outside Europe - Brazil, Mexico, Russia, China, Hong Kong, Korea, Singapore, India and Saudi Arabia - became members, bringing the total to 41. Almost 100 nations had representatives at the BIS annual meeting earlier this month, including central bankers from member nations and from those that do business with the bank. Similarly, at the monthly meetings, there is a well-attended session Monday afternoon on central banking topics, which is open to any central banker. Rivlin, the Fed vice chairman, says those wider afternoon sessions are valuable. "They are interesting," she said, "and I learn a lot." During the annual meeting this month, Julian Francis, the governor of the central bank of the Bahamas, said his institution - like many others from smaller nations - relies on the BIS for technical assistance in banking supervision, payments and settlements, and banking technology. The BIS has also helped in training some of his bank's employees. "We find it very useful," Francis said. As a bank, the BIS has deposits of about $112 billion, some of which is in gold. The funds are invested with commercial banks and in securities, but central bank depositors can withdraw them at any time. Smaller central banks use the BIS both as a convenient way to invest their reserves and to keep secret the way in which they are managing the money. Even the Fed has some reserves on deposit here. Last year the BIS made roughly $500 million on its banking activities. In some cases, BIS officials take great pains to make sure that orders to pay money out of the accounts of central banks in countries run by corrupt governments are related to the central bank's activities, rather than just the needs of some powerful official moving cash into his own secret account. All but 16 percent of the BIS shares are owned by its member central banks. The remainder are in private hands, as the result of the United States's failure in 1930 to pay for its shares; they were instead acquired by a group of American banks, which later sold them, mostly to individuals in Europe. Some of the French and Belgian shares went the same way. Even though the United States was included in the BIS from the beginning, the Fed's two seats on the board weren't filled until four years ago. Initially the United States objected to the BIS mission of facilitating payment of German reparations. At the peace conference that followed World War I, the United States had opposed such payments. At various points between 1930 and 1994, U.S. officials considered taking the board seats but a number of problems arose - such as the BIS membership of some communist nations in Eastern Europe - though not Russia, which has never been a member - and South Africa. With the end of the Cold War and of apartheid in South Africa, those barriers were gone. "The BIS . . . is now too valuable to the Federal Reserve in carrying out its statutory responsibilities for the [Fed] not to be a full participant in BIS institutional deliberations," Greenspan told Congress in explaining why the United States was finally joining the BIS board. Two Big Issues For the BIS staff, two big technical issues lie ahead: The first is how to deal with the advent of the European Central Bank, which will open its doors this week as part of the creation of the Euro to replace the currencies of 11 European countries. The ECB will take over virtually all of the monetary policy responsibilities of the Bank of France, the Bundesbank and their counterparts, though not those of the Bank of England, which is not adopting the Euro immediately. Obviously, the head of the ECB, Willem F. Duisenberg, former head of the Dutch central bank, will be added to the Sunday dinner list. But what of the others, whose power will have been greatly diminished? The second issue is whether to keep expanding BIS membership by including such nations as Malaysia, Argentina, Indonesia and Thailand - and in the process expand the bank's role in developing nations. Meanwhile, BIS chief Crockett hopes to make this city on the Rhine the center of information, advice and cooperation on international financial supervision. The secretariat of the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision is here, as is the headquarters of the International Association of Insurance Supervisors. Crockett is hoping to persuade the organization of investment bank supervisors, which is located in Montreal, to move as well. The BIS set up shop in Basel originally in 1930 because it was about a day's train ride for the European central bankers. Now the institution has to decide just how far it will travel from its Swiss home to fulfill it: role as guardian of global finance. A9 Copyright 1998 The Washington Post Company President Abraham Lincoln warned us of these dangerous International bankers when he said "The money power preys upon the nation in times of peace & conspires against it in times of war. It is more despotic than monarchy, more insolent than autocracy, more selfish than bureaucracy. It denounces, as public enemies, all who even question its methods or throw light upon its crimes. I have two great enemies, the Southern Army in front of me & the financial institutions at the rear, the latter is my greatest foe." President James A. Madison warned "History shows that the money changers have used every form of abuse, intrigue, deceit and violent means possible to maintain control over governments by controlling the money and the issuance of it." President Thomas Jefferson once said "I sincerely believe that banking establishments are more dangerous than standing armies; and that the principle of spending money to be paid posterity under the name of funding, is but swindling futurity on a large scale" and "The Central Bank is an institution of the most deadly hostility existing against the principles and form of our Constitution. I am an enemy to all banks, discounting bills or notes for anything but coin. If the American people allow private banks to control the issuance of their currency, first by inflation and then by deflation, the banks and corporations that will grow up around them will deprive the people of all their property until their children will wake up homeless on the continent that their fathers conquered." Thomas Jefferson was prophetic when he spoke these words. America is now mortgaged to the hilt and when it all collapses, the International Bankers will end up owning everything. They gave us paper "money" and we gave them everything, our labor, our inventions, our land and our possessions. If we do not stop this crime from continuing we will end up very much like serfs from the middle ages who had to rent land from the Land-Lords. |
The following list was provided by Beth Ann. Check out the source for accuracy. SUBJECT: Membership lists of "American Citizens" (rather loosely) who are members of the organizations known as CFR (Council on Foreign Relations) and Trilateral Commission. A few of them may also be permanent members of the Bilderberg Group out of Europe. 1. The following groups were created (going by memory on this one) in about: Council on Foreign Relations 1930 Bilderberg Group 1952 |
Bilderberg - 'summit' opens in Sintra under massive security SAMPAIO ATTENDS SINTRA SUMMIT A massive security operation was launched in Sintra on Wednesday, in preparation for the The Bilderberg wall of silence suffered substantial damage this week. The Edinburgh based The Scottish Sunday Herald published the story (May 30) and the internationally-respected The Sunday Herald said in its article: "Every year the international media competes to be the Pblico refers to a "Lusa News Agency alert" quoting a newspaper, 'The News'. The BBC Worldwide Monitoring Service this week printed a text of a report by the Yugoslav Vojska said that a thorough investigation conducted by independent US journalists had Under the plan, drawn up at a session chaired by Lord Carrington, the first move was to be to However, developments prevented the idea from being translated into practice, which required All indications are that a group is now going back to the original variant, the outcome of which According to the same scenario, Greece, Albania, Bulgaria, Macedonia, Russia and Turkey In yet another 'extraordinary coincidence' one of the items on the Bilderberg agenda for this Stop press: As we went to press on Thursday we received the official press release from the "What is unique about the about Bilderberg as a forum is the broad cross-section of leading "Bilderberg's only activity is its annual Conference. At the meetings, no resolutions are proposed, "There usually are about 120 participants of whom about two-thirds come from Europe and the "Participants have agreed not to give interviews to the press during the meeting. In contacts with From the Front Page, Portugal's Weekend newspaper in English, June 6, 1999 |
Bilderberg meetings Current List of Participants, Hotel Caesar Park Penha Longa, Sintra, Portugal June 3-6, 1999 Honorary Secretary General - Honorary Chairman, Halberstadt Victor - Davignon, Etienne, Professor of Economics, Leiden University, Chairman, Soci鴩 G鮩rale de Belgique. I - Agnelli, Umberto - Chairman, IFIL - Fianziaria di Partecipazioni S.p.A. E - Aguirre y Gil de Biedma, Esperanza - President of the Spanish Senate USA - Allaire, Paul A. - Chairman, Xerox Corporation. P - Amaral, Joaquim Freitas do Amaral - Member of Parliament. S - Aslund, Anders - Senior Associate, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. P - Balsem㯬 Francisco Pinto - Professor os Communication Science, New University; Chairman, Impresa, S.G.P.S. S - Barnevik, Percy -Chairman, Investo AB. USA - Bayh, Evan - Senator (D. Indiana). I - Bernab順ranco - Managing Director and CEO, Telecom Italia. S - Bildt, Carl - Member of Parliament. CDN - Black, Conrad M. Chairman, Telegraph Group Limited. F - Boucher, Eric Le - Chief Editor, International, Le Monde. USA - Boyd, Charles G. - Executive Director, National Security Study Group. CDN - Chastelain, John A.D. de - Chairman, Independent International Commission on Decommissioning. GB - Clarke, Kenneth - Member of Parliament. N - Clemet, Kristin - Deputy Director General, Confederation of Business and Industry. F - Collom, Bertrand - Chairman and CEO, Lafarge. USA - Corzine, Jon S. - retired Senior Partner, Goldman Sachs & Co. P - Cravinho, Jo㯠Cardona G. - Minister for Infrastructure, Planning and Territorial Administration. GR - David, George A. - Chairman of the Board, Hellenic Bottling Company S.A. USA - Dodd, Chistopher J. - Senator (D. Connecticut). USA - Donilon, Thomas E. - Attorney-at-Law, O'Melveney & Meyers. TR - Er祬, Gazi - Governor, Central Bank of Turkey. TR - Ergin, Sedat - Ankara Bureau Chief, Hrriyet. USA - Feldstein, Martin S. - President and CEO, National Bureau of Economic Research. INT - Fischer, Stanley - First Deputy Managing Director, International Monetary Fund. I - Fresco, Paolo - Chairman, Fiat S.p.A. I - Giavazzi, Francesco - Professor of Economics, Bocconi University, Milan. CDN - Godsoe, Peter C. - Chairman and CEO, Bank of Nova Scotia. USA - Graham, Donald E. - Publisher, The Washington Post. NL - Grave, Frank H.G. de - Minister of Defense. P - Grilo, Eduardo C. Mar硬 - Miniter of Education. USA - Hagel, Chuck - Senator (R. Nebraska) S - Hedelius, Tom C. - Chairman, Svenska Handelsbanken. Status 3 June 1999 N - Hegge, Per Egil - Editor, Aftenposten. CDN - Herrndorf, Peter A. - Former Chairman and CEO, TV Ontario; Senior Visiting Fellow, University of Toronto. USA - Hoagland, Jim - Associate Editor, The Washington Post. N - H��, Westye - Chairman of the Board, Leif H�� & Co. SAS; Former President, Norwegian Shipowners' Association. USA - Holbrooke, Richard C. - Ambassador to the UN designate. B - Huyghebaert, Jan - Chairman, Almanij N.V. D - Ischinger, Wolfgand - State Secretary, Ministry of Foreign Affairs. INT - Issing, Otmar - Member of the Executive Board, European Central Bank. USA - Jordan, Jr., Vernon E. - Senior Partner, Akin, Gump, Strauss, Hauer & Feld, LLP (Attorneys-at-Law). BG - Kamov, Nikolai - Member of Parliament. TR - Kira笠Suna - Vice-Chairman of the Board, Ko砈olding A.S. USA - Kissinger, Henry A. - Chairman, Kissinger Associates, Inc. D - Kopper, Hilmar - Chairman of the Supervisory Board, Deutsche Bank A.G. GR - Kranidiotis, Yannos . Alternate Minister for Foreign Affairs. USA - Kravis, Marie-Jos饠- Senior Fellow, Hudson Institute, Inc. USA - Leschly, Jan - CEO, Smith Kline Beecham p.l.c. INT - Liikanen, Erkki - Member of the EC. CDN - MacLaren, Roy - High Commissioner for Canada in Britain. CDN - MacMillan, Margaret O. - Editor, International Journal. GB - Mandelson, Peter - Member of Parliament. USA - Mathews Jessica T. - President, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. USA - McDonough, William J. - President Federal Reserve Bank of New York. USA - McGinn, Richard A. - Chairman and CEO, Lucent Technologies. P - Mello, Vasco de - Vice Chairman and CEO, Grupo Jos頤e Mello. F - Mestrallet, G鲡rd - Chairman of the Executive Board and CEO, Suez Lyonnaise des Eaux UKR - Mityukov, Ihor - Minister of Finance. F - Moﳩ, Dominique - Deputy Director, IFRI. INT - Monti, Mario - Commissioner of the EC. P - Nabo, Francisco Murteira - President and CEO, Portugal Telecom. D - Nass, Mathias - Deputy Editor, Die Zeit. NL - Netherlands, Her Majesty the Queen of the. ICE - Oddsson, David - Prime Minister. PL - Olechowski, Andrzej - Chairman Central Europe Trust. FIN - Ollila, Jorma - Chairman of the Board and CEO, Nokia Corporation. INT - Padoa-Schioppa, Tommaso - Member of the Executive Board, European Central Bank. D - Perger, Werner A. - Political Correspondent, Die Zeit. GB - Porrit, Jonathon - Programme Director, Forum for the Future. I - Profumo, Alessandro - CEO, Credito Italiano. CH - Pury, David de - Chairman, de Pury Pictet Turretini & Co. Ltd. A - Randa, Gerhard - CEO and Chairman, Bank Austria AG. USA - Rattner, Steven - Deputy Executive, Lazard Freres & Co., LLC USA - Richardson, Bill - Secretary of Energy. USA - Rockefeller, David - Chairman, Chase Manhattan Bank International Advisory Committee. E - Rodriguez Inciarte, Matias - Executive Vice Chairman, BSCH. S - Rojas, Mauricio - Associate Professor of Economic History, Lund University; Director of Timbro's Centre for Welfare Reform. Status 3 June 1999 GB - Roll, Eric - Senior Adviser, Warburg Dillon Read. S - Rosengren, Bj��- Minister for Industry, Employment and Communication. P - Salgado, Ricardo E.S. - President and CEO, Grupo Esp�to Santo. P - Sampaio, Jorge - President of Portugal. P - Santos, Nicolau - Editor-in-Chief, Expresso. D - Scharping, Rudolf - Minister of Defence NL - Scheepbouwer, Ad J. - Chairman and CEO, TNT Post Group. A - Schenz, Richard - CEO and Chairman of the Board, OMV AG A - Scholten, Rudolf - Member of the Board of Executive Directors, Oesterreichische Kontrollbank AG. D - Schrempp, Jurgen E. - Chairman of the Board of Management, Daimler Chrysler AG. DK - Seidenfaden, Toger - Editor-in-Chief, Politiken USA - Shapiro, Robert B. - Chairman and CEO, Monsanto Company. RUS - Shevtsova, Lilia - Carnegie Moscow Center. P - Silva, Artur Santos - President and CEO, BPI Group. E - Solbes Mira, Pedro - Member of Parliament, Socialist Party. H - Sur᮹i, Gy+orgy - President, National Bank of Hungary. GB - Taylor, J. Martin - Formerly Chief Executive, Barclays PLC. USA - Thoman, G. Richard - President and CEO, Xerox Corporation. USA - Thornton, John L. - President and co-COO, Goldman Sachs Group, Inc. RUS - Trenin, Dmitri V. - Deputy Director, Carnegie Moscow Center. F - Trichet, Jean-Claude - Governor, Banque de France. USA - Tyson, Laura d'Andrea - Dean, Haas School of Business, University of California at Berkeley. FIN - Vanhala, Matti - Chairman of the Board, Bank of Finland. FIN - Vartia, Pentti - Managing Director, Research Institute of the Finnish Economy (ETLA). CH - Vasella, Daniel L. - Chairman and CEO, Novartis AG. GR - Veremis, Thanos M. - Professor of Political History, University of Athens; President of Eliamep. A - Vranitzky, Franz - Former Federal Chancellor. NL - Waal, Lodewjk J. de - Chairman, Dutch Confederation of Trade Unions (FNV). GB - Wolf, Martin - Associate Editor and Economics Commentator, The Finantial Times. INT/US - Wolfensohn, James D. - President, The World Bank. D - Wolff von Amerongen, Otto - Chairmand and CEO of Otto Wolff GmbH. TR - Ycaoglu, Erkut - Chairman, Tusiad. CZ - Zantovsky, Michael - Chairman of the Committee on Foreign Affairs, Defense and Secutiry, Czech Senate. A - Zimmermann, Norbert - Chairman, Berndorf AG. Rapporteurs GB - Micklethwait, R. John - Business Editor, The Economist. |
Trilateral Commission 1972 David Rockefeller is at the top of the pyramid for all groups. William J. Clinton also has the distinction of being involoved with all three elite groups. Both David Rockefeller and the Clintons are avowed NWO/Socialists. David Rockefeller was instrumental in setting up the UN on property the Rockefeller's donated in New York. 2. Here is the current list of "special persons" who can "help guide our nation's destiny and the world". Uhumm.... Roster of Prominent CFR/Trilateral Commission Members Members of the Council on Foreign Relations and the Trilateral Commission dominate key positions in America's government, military, industries, media outlets and educational foundations and institutions. The following is a partial list of current CFR members and the positions of influence they hold in society. The CFR's membership is limited to 3,000, and there are only 325 Trilateral Commission members. This list was supplied by F.R.E.E. (Fund to Restore an Educated Electorate) and is non-copyrighted educational material. It may be reprinted and reproduced in newspapers, newsletters, books and magazines. Bulk quantities may be obtained from F.R.E.E. 100 copies shipped postpaid for a contribution of $25.00 50 copies for $15 Fund To Restore An Educated Electorate P.O. Box 33339 Kerrville, Tx. 78029 Key: CFR = Member of the Council on Foreign Relations TC = Member of the Trilateral Commission BB = Member of the Elite Bilderbergs TOP OF THE PYRAMID: David Rockefeller, Chairman Emeritus Peter G. Peterson, Chairman of the Council on Foreign Relations 58 E. 68th St. New York, NY 10021 Phone (212) 734-0400 Fax (212) 861-1789 Paul Volker, North American Chairman of the Trilateral Commission 345 E. 46 St. New York, NY 10017 Phone (212) 661-1180 President of the United States of America William Clinton -- CFR, TC, BB Asst. Sec. for Administration, United Nations Dick Thornburgh -- CFR National Security Advisor Anthony Lake -- CFR Vice President of the United States of America Albert Gore, Jr. -- CFR Secretary Of State Warren Christopher -- CFR Secretary Of Defense Lee Aspin -- CFR Chairman Joint Chiefs Of Staff Colin L. Powell -- CFR Director Central Intelligence Agency James Woolsey -- CFR Chairman, Council of Economics Advisors Laura Tyson -- CFR Treasury Secretary Lloyd Bentsen -- Former CFR, BB Secretary of Interior Bruce Babbitt -- CFR Secretary of Housing and Urban Development Henry Cisneros -- CFR Secretary of Health & Human Services Donna Shalala -- CFR, TC JUDICIARY: Sandra Day O'Connor, Assoc. Justice, U.S. Supreme Court -- CFR Steve G. Breyer, Chief Judge, U.S. Court of Appeals, First Circuit, Boston -- CFR Ruth B. Ginsburg, U.S. Court Of Appeals, Wash., DC Circuit -- CFR Laurence H. Silberman, U.S. Court of Appeals, Wash., DC Circuit -- CFR U.S. INSTITUTE FOR PEACE: John Norton Moore, Chairman -- CFR Elspeth Davies Rostow, Vice Chairman -- CFR Samuel W. Lewis, President -- CFR John Richardson, Counselor -- CFR David Little, Senior Scholar -- CFR William R. Kintner, Director -- CFR W. Scott Thompson, Director -- CFR OFFICE OF U.S. TRADE REPRESENTATIVE: Gary R. Edson, Chief of Staff & Counselor -- CFR Joshua Bolten, General Counsel -- CFR Daniel M. Price, Dep. General Counsel -- CFR TREASURY DEPARTMENT: Roger Altman, Deputy Sec. -- CFR Robert R. Glauber, Under Sec., Finance -- CFR David C. Mulford, Under Sec., Intntl Affairs -- CFR Robert M. Bestani, Dep Asst Sec., Intntl. Monetary Affairs -- CFR J. French Hill, Dep. Asst. Sec., Corp Finance -- CFR John M. Niehuss, Dep. Asst. Sec., Intntl. Monetary Affairs -- CFR OFFICE OF TECHNOLOGY ASSESSMENT: Joshua Lederberg, V. Chmn Adv. Counc. -- CFR John H. Gibbons, Director -- CFR Lewis M. Branscomb, Adv. Council -- CFR ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY: James M. Strock, Asst. Adm., Enforcement And Compliance -- CFR AFRICAN DEVELOPMENT FOUNDATION: Leonard H. Robinson, Jr., President -- CFR WHITE HOUSE STAFF: George Stephanopoulos, Director, Communications -- CFR Willian J. Crowe, Chief Foreign Intelligence Advisory Bd. -- CFR Nancy Soderberg, Staff Director, National Secuity Council -- CFR Samuel R. Berger, Deputy Advisor, National Security -- CFR W. Bowman Cutter, Deputy Assistant, National Economic Council -- CFR OFFICE OF MANAGEMENT & BUDGET: Alice Rivlin, Deputy Director -- CFR EXPORT-IMPORT BANK: John D. Macomber, President & Chairman -- CFR Eugene K. Lawson, 1st VP & Vice Chairman -- CFR Rita M. Rodriguez, Director -- CFR Hart Fessenden, General Council -- CFR OFFICE OF SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY: William R. Graham, Jr., Science Advisor to President & Director -- CFR LIBRARY OF CONGRESS: James H. Billington, Librarian, Chmn. Trust Fund Board -- CFR Ruth Ann Stewart, Asst. Librarian National Programs -- CFR NATIONAL SCIENCE FOUNDATION: Frank H. T. Rhodes, Bd. Of Directors -- CFR James B. Holderman, Bd. Of Directors -- CFR D. Allen Bromley, Bd. Of Directors -- CFR U.S. ARMS CONTROL & DISARMAMENT AGENCY: Thomas Graham, Jr., General Council -- CFR William Schneier, Chmn., General Advisory Council -- CFR Richard Burt, Negotiator On Strategic Defense Arms -- CFR David Smith, Negotiator, Defense & Space -- CFR FEDERAL JUDICIAL CENTER: William W. Schwarzer, Director -- CFR DEPARTMENT OF STATE: Madeleine Albright, UN Amabassador -- CFR Clifton Wharton, Jr., Deputy Sec. -- CFR Lynn Davis, Under Sec. for International Security Affairs -- CFR, TC Brandon H. Grove, Dir. of Foreign Service Institute -- CFR H. Allen Holms, Asst. Sec., Bureau Of Politico-Military Affairs -- CFR John H. Kelly, Asst. Sec., Near East-South Asian Affairs -- CFR Alexander F. Watson, Deputy Rep., United Nations -- CFR Jonathan Moore, UN Mission -- CFR Joseph Verner Reed, Chief of Protocol -- CFR Dennis B. Ross, Director, Policy Planning Staff -- CFR Edward Perkins, Dir. of Personnel -- CFR Abraham David Sofaer, Legal Advisor -- CFR Peter Tanoff, Under Sec. for Political Affairs -- CFR, TC Brian Atwood, Under Sec. For Management -- CFR Joan E. Spero, Under Sec. Eco. & Ag. Affairs -- CFR George E. Moose, Asst. Sec. African Affairs -- CFR Winston Lord, Asst. Sec., East Asian & Pacific Affairs -- CFR, TC Stephen A. Oxman, Asst. Sec., European Affairs -- CFR Timothy E. Wirth, Counselor -- CFR DEPARTMENT OF STATE -- AMBASSADORS: Strobe Talbott (Special Advisor For CIS) -- CFR Thomas R. Pickering (Russia) -- CFR Morton I. Abramowitz (Turkey) -- CFR Michael H. Armacost (Japan) -- CFR Shirly Temple Black (Czechoslovakia) -- CFR Julia Chang Bloch (Nepal) -- CFR Henry E. Catto, Jr. (Great Britain) -- CFR Frances Cook (Camaroon) -- CFR Edward P. Djerejian (Syria) -- CFR Geoge E. Moose (Senegal) -- CFR John D. Negroponte (Mexico) -- CFR Edward N. Ney (Canada) -- CFR Robert B. Oakley (Pakistan) -- CFR Robert H. Pelletreau, Jr. (Tunisia) -- CFR Christopher H. Phillips (Brunei) -- CFR Nicholas Platt (Phillipines) -- CFR James W. Spain (Maldives & Sri Lanka) -- CFR Terence A. Todman (Argentina) -- CFR Frank G. Wisner II (Egypt) -- CFR Warren Zimmerman (Yugoslavia) -- CFR UNITED STATES CONGRESS -- SENATORS: David L. Boren (D-OK) -- CFR William Bradley (D-NJ) -- CFR John H. Chafee (R-RI) -- CFR, TC William S. Cohen (R-ME) -- CFR, TC Christopher J. Dodd (D-CT) -- CFR Dianne Feinstein (D-CA) -- TC Bob Graham (D-FL) -- CFR Joseph I. Lieberman (D-CT) -- CFR George J. Mitchell (D-ME) -- CFR Claiborne Pell (D-RI) -- CFR Larry Pressler (R-SD) -- CFR Charles S. Robb (D-VA) -- CFR, TC John D. Rockefeller, IV (D-WV) -- CFR, TC William Roth, Jr. (R-DE) -- CFR, TC UNITED STATES CONGRESS -- REPRESENTATIVES: Howard L. Berman (D-CA) -- CFR Thomas S. Foley (D-WA) -- CFR Sam Gejdenson (D-CT) -- CFR Richard A. Gephardt (D-MO) -- CFR Newton L. Gingrich (R-GA) -- CFR Lee H. Hamilton (D-IN) -- TC Amory Houghton, Jr. (R-NY) -- CFR Nancy Lee Johnson (R-CT) -- CFR Jim Leach (R-IA) -- TC John Lewis (D-GA) -- CFR Robert T. Matsui (D-CA) -- CFR Dave K. Mccurdy (D-OK) -- CFR Eleanor Homes Norton (D-DC) -- CFR Thomas El Petri (R-WI) -- CFR Charles B. Rangel (D-NY) -- TC Carlos A. Romero-Barcelo (D-PR) -- CFR Patricia Schroeder (D-CO) -- CFR Peter Smith (R-VT) -- CFR Olympia J. Snow (R-ME) -- CFR John M. Spratt (D-SC) -- CFR Louis Stokes (D-OH) -- CFR FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM: (PAST & PRESENT - PARTIAL LIST): Alan Greenspan, Chairman -- CFR, TC E. Gerald Corrigan, V. Chmn./Pres. NY Fed. Res. Bank -- CFR Richard N. Cooper, Chmn. Boston Fed. Res. Bank -- CFR Sam Y. Cross, Manager, Foreign Open Market Acct. -- CFR Robert F. Erburu, Chmn. San Francisco Fed. Res. Bank -- CFR Robert P. Forrestal, Pres. Atlanta Fed. Res. Bank -- CFR Bobby R. Inman, Chmn., Dallas Fed. Res. Bank -- CFR, TC Robert H. Knight, Esq. -- CFR Steven Muller -- CFR John R. Opel -- CFR Anthony M. Solomon -- CFR, TC Edwin M. Truman, Staff Dir. International Finance -- CFR Cyrus R. Vance -- CFR Paul Volcker -- CFR, TC BANKING INSTITUTIONS: Chase Manhattan Corp.: Thomas G. Labrecque, Chairman & CEO -- CFR, TC Robert R. Douglass, Vice Chairman -- CFR Willard C. Butcher, Dir. -- CFR Richard W. Lyman, Dir. -- CFR Joan Ganz Cooney, Dir. -- CFR David T. Mclaughlin, Dir. -- CFR Edmund T. Pratt, Jr., Dir. -- CFR Henry B. Schacht, Dir. -- CFR Chemical Bank: Walter V. Shipley, Chairman -- CFR Robert J. Callander, President -- CFR William C. Pierce, Executive Officer -- CFR Randolph W. Bromery, Dir. -- CFR Charles W. Duncan, Jr., Dir. -- CFR George V. Grune, Dir. -- CFR Helen L. Kaplan, Dir. -- CFR Lawrence G. Rawl, Dir. -- CFR Michael I. Sovern, Dir. -- CFR Richard D. Wood, Dir. -- CFR Citicorp: John S. Reed. Chairman -- CFR William R. Rhodes, Vice Chairman -- CFR Richard S. Braddock, President -- CFR John M. Deutch, Dir. -- CFR Clifton C. Garvin, Jr., Dir -- CFR C. Peter Mccolough, Dir. -- CFR Rozanne L. Ridgeway, Dir. -- CFR Franklin A. Thomas, Dir. -- CFR First City Bancorp, Texas: A. Robert Abboud, CEO -- CFR Morgan Guaranty: Lewis T. Preston, Chairman -- CFR Bankers Trust New York Corporation: Charles S. Stanford, Jr., Chairman -- CFR Alfred Brittain III, Dir. -- CFR Vernon E. Jordan, Jr., Dir -- CFR Richard L. Gelb, Dir. -- CFR Patricia Carry Stewart, Dir. -- CFR First National Bank of Chicago: Barry F. Sullivan -- TC Manufacturers Hanover Directors: Cyrus Vance -- CFR G. Robert Durham -- CFR George B. Munroe -- CFR Marina V. N. Whitman -- CFR, TC Charles J. Pilliod, Jr. -- CFR Bank America: Andrew F. Brimmer, Dir. -- CFR Ignazio E. Lozano, Jr., Dir. -- CFR Ruben F. Mettler, Dir. -- CFR Securities & Exchange Commission: Michael D. Mann, Dir. International Affairs -- CFR LABOR UNION LEADERS: Jay Mazur, International Ladies' Garment Workers Union -- CFR, TC Jack Sheinkman, Amalgamated Clothing & Textile Workers Union -- CFR Albert Shanker, Pres., American Federation Of Teachers -- CFR, TC Glen E. Watts, Communication Of Workers Of America -- CFR, TC U.S. MILITARY: Department Of Defense: Les Aspin, Secretary of Defense -- CFR Frank G. Wisnerll, Under Secretary for Policy -- CFR Henry S. Rowen, Asst. Sec., International Security Affairs -- CFR Judy Ann Miller, Dep. Asst. Sec. Nuclear Forces & Arms Control -- CFR W. Bruce Weinrod, Dep. Asst. Sec., Europe & NATO -- CFR Adm. Seymour Weiss, Chairman, Defense Policy Board -- CFR Charles M. Herzfeld, Dir. Defense Research & Engineering -- CFR Andrew W. Marshall, Dir., Net Assessment -- CFR Michael P. W. Stone, Secretary of the Army -- CFR Donald B. Rice, Secretary of the Air Force -- CFR Franklin C. Miller, Dep. Asst. Sec. Nuclear Forces & Arms Control -- CFR Allied Supreme Commanders: 1949-52 Eisenhower -- CFR 1952-53 Ridgeway -- CFR 1953-56 Gruenther -- CFR 1956-63 Norstad -- CFR 1963-69 Lemnitzer -- CFR 1969-74 Goodpaster -- CFR 1974-79 Haig -- CFR 1979-87 Rogers -- CFR, TC Superintendents of the U.S. Military Academy at West Point: 1960-63 Westmoreland -- CFR 1963-66 Lampert -- CFR 1966-68 Bennett -- CFR 1970-74 Knowlton -- CFR 1974-77 Berry -- CFR 1977-81 Goodpaster -- CFR CFR Military Fellows, 1991: Col. William M. Drennan, Jr., USAF -- CFR Col. Wallace C. Gregson, USMC -- CFR Col. Jack B. Wood, USA -- CFR CFR Military Fellows, 1992: Col. David M. Mize, USMC -- CFR Col. John P. Rose, USA -- CFR Joint Chiefs of Staff: Gen. Colin L. Powell, Chairman -- CFR Gen. Carl E. Vuono, Army -- CFR Gen. John T. Chain, Co Sac -- CFR Gen. Merril A. Mcpeak, Co Pac AF -- CFR Lt. Gen. George L. Butler, Dir. Strategic Plans & Policy -- CFR Lt. Gen. Charles T. Boyd, Com. Air Univ. -- CFR Lt. Gen. Bradley C. Hosmer, AF Inspector General -- CFR Secretaries of Defense: 1957-59 Mcelroy -- CFR 1959-61 Gates -- CFR 1961-68 McNamara -- CFR, TC 1969-73 Laird -- CFR 1973-75 Richardson -- CFR, TC 1975-77 Rumsfeld -- CFR 1977-80 Brown -- CFR, TC 1980-88 Weinberger --CFR, TC 1988- Carlucci -- CFR 1988- Cheney -- CFR Additional Military: Mg R.C. Bowman -- CFR Bg F. Brown -- CFR Lt Col W. Clark -- CFR Adm Wm. Crowe -- CFR Col P. M. Dawkins -- CFR V. Adm. Thor Hanson -- CFR Col W. Hauser -- CFR Maj R. Kimmitt -- CFR Gen W. Knowlton -- CFR V. Adm J. Lee -- CFR Col D. Mead -- CFR Mg Jack Merritt -- CFR Gen E. Meyer -- CFR Col Wm. E. Odom -- CFR Col L. Olvey -- CFR Col Geo. K. Osborn -- CFR Mg J. Pustay -- CFR Lg E.L. Rowny -- CFR Capt Gary Sick -- CFR Mg De Witt Smith -- CFR Bg Perry Smith -- CFR Ltg Wm. Y. Smith -- CFR Col W. Taylor -- CFR Adm S. Turner -- CFR Mg J. Welch -- CFR Gen J. Wickham -- CFR MEDIA: CBS: Laurence A. Tisch, CEO -- CFR Roswell Gilpatric -- CFR James Houghton -- CFR, TC Henry Schacht -- CFR, TC Dan Rather -- CFR Richard Hottelet -- CFR Frank Stanton -- CFR NBC/RCA: John F. Welch, CEO -- CFR Jane Pfeiffer -- CFR Lester Crystal -- CFR, TC R.W. Sonnenfeidt -- CFR, TC John Petty -- CFR Tom Brokaw -- CFR David Brinkley -- CFR John Chancellor -- CFR Marvin Kalb -- CFR Irving R. Levine -- CFR Herbert Schlosser -- CFR Peter G. Peterson -- CFR John Sawhill -- CFR ABC: Thomas S. Murphy, CEO -- CFR Barbara Walters -- CFR John Connor -- CFR Diane Sawyer -- CFR John Scall -- CFR Public Broadcast Service: Robert Mcneil -- CFR Jim Lehrer -- CFR C. Hunter-Gault -- CFR Hodding Carter III -- CFR Daniel Schorr -- CFR Associated Press: Stanley Swinton -- CFR Harold Anderson -- CFR Katharine Graham -- CFR, TC Reuters: Michael Posner -- CFR Baltimore Sun: Henry Trewhitt -- CFR Washington Times: Arnaud De Borchgrave -- CFR Children's TV Workshop (Sesame Street): Joan Ganz Cooney, Pres. -- CFR Cable News Network: W. Thomas Johnson, Pres. -- TC Daniel Schorr -- CFR U.S. News & World Report: David Gergen -- TC New York Times Co.: Richard Gelb -- CFR William Scranton -- CFR, TC John F. Akers, Dir. -- CFR Louis V. Gerstner, Jr., Dir. -- CFR George B. Munroe, Dir. -- CFR Donald M. Stewart, Dir. -- CFR Cyrus R. Vance, Dir. -- CFR A.M. Rosenthal -- CFR Seymour Topping -- CFR James Greenfield -- CFR Max Frankel -- CFR Jack Rosenthal -- CFR John Oakes -- CFR Harrison Salisbury -- CFR H.L. Smith -- CFR Steven Rattner -- CFR Richard Burt -- CFR Flora Lewis -- CFR Time, Inc.: Ralph Davidson -- CFR Donal M. Wilson -- CFR Henry Grunwald -- CFR Alexander Heard -- CFR Sol Linowitz -- CFR Thomas Watson, Jr. -- CFR Strobe Talbott -- CFR Newsweek/Washington Post: Katharine Graham -- CFR N. Deb. Katzenbach -- CFR Robert Christopher -- CFR Osborne Elliot -- CFR Phillip Geyelin -- CFR Murry Marder -- CFR Maynard Parker -- CFR George Will -- CFR, TC Robert Kaiser -- CFR Meg Greenfield -- CFR Walter Pincus -- CFR Murray Gart -- CFR Peter Osnos -- CFR Don Oberdorfer -- CFR Dow Jones & Co (Wall Street Journal): Richard Wood -- CFR Robert Bartley -- CFR, TC Karen House -- CFR National Review: Wm. F. Buckley, Jr. -- CFR Readers Digest: George V. Grune, CEO -- CFR William G. Bowen, Dir. -- CFR Syndicated Columnists Geogia Anne Geyer -- CFR Ben J. Wattenberg -- CFR ENERGY COMPANIES: Exxon Corporation: Lawrence G. Rawl, Chairman -- CFR Lee R. Raymond, President -- CFR, TC Jack G. Clarke, Sr., Vice President -- CFR Randolph W. Bromery, Dir. -- CFR D. Wayne Calloway, Dir. -- CFR Texaco: Alfred C. Decrane,Jr., Chairman -- CFR John Brademas, Dir. -- CFR, TC Willard C. Butcher, Dir. -- CFR William J. Crowe, Jr., Dir. -- CFR, TC John K. Mckinley, Dir. -- CFR Thomas S. Murphy, Dir. -- CFR Atlantic Richfield-Arco: Hannah H. Gray, Dir. -- CFR Donal M. Kendall,Dir. -- CFR, TC Henry Wendt, Dir. -- TC Shell Oil Co.: Frank H. Richardson, CEO -- CFR Rand V. Araskog, Dir. -- CFR, TC Mobil Corp.: Allan E. Murray, Chairman & President -- CFR, TC Lewis M. Branscomb, Dir. -- CFR Samuel C. Johnson, Dir. -- TC Helene L. Kaplan, Dir. -- CFR Charles S. Sanford, Jr., Dir. -- CFR Tenneco, Inc.: James L. Ketelsen, Chairman -- CFR W. Michael Blumenthal, Dir. -- CFR Joseph J. Sisco, Dir. -- CFR INDUSTRY: General Motors Corp.: Marina V.N. Whitman, VP -- CFR, TC Anne L. Armstrong, Dir. -- CFR Marvin L. Goldberger, Dir. -- CFR Edmund T. Pratt, Jr., Dir. -- CFR Dennis Weatherstone, Dir. -- CFR Leon H. Sullivan, Dir. -- CFR Thomas H. Wyman, Dir. -- CFR Ford Motor Company: Clifton R. Wharton, Dir. -- CFR Roberto C. Goizueta, Dir. -- CFR GE/NBC Corp.: John F. Welch, Jr. Chairman -- CFR David C. Jones -- CFR Lewis T. Preston -- CFR Frank H.T. Rhodes -- CFR Walter B. Wriston -- CFR Deere & Co: Hans W. Becherer, Chairman/CEO -- CFR IBM: John F. Akers, Chairman -- CFR C. Michael Armstrong, Sr. VP -- CFR Amtrak: William S. Norman, Executive VP -- CFR AT&T: Robert E. Allen, Chairman & CEO -- CFR Randall L. Tobias, Vice Chairman -- CFR Louis V. Gerstner, Dir. -- CFR Juanita M. Kreps, Dir. -- CFR Donald F. Mchenry, Dir. -- CFR Henry B. Schacht, Dir. -- CFR Michael I. Sovern, Dir. -- CFR Franklin A. Thamas, Dir. -- CFR Rawleigh Warner, Jr., Dir. -- CFR Thomas H. Wyman, Dir. -- CFR Chrysler Corp.: Joseph A. Califano, Jr., Dir. -- CFR Peter A. Magowan, Dir. -- CFR American Express Co.: James D. Robinson,Ceo -- CFR Joan Edelman Spero -- TC Anne L. Armstrong -- CFR William G. Bowen -- CFR Charles W. Duncan, Jr. -- CFR Richard M. Furlaud -- CFR Vernon E. Jordan, Jr. -- CFR, TC Henry A. Kissinger -- CFR, TC Frank P. Popoff -- CFR Robert V. Roosa -- CFR Joseph H. Williams -- CFR BUSINESS & INDUSTRY LEADERS: Richard D. Wood, CEO, Eli Lily & Co -- CFR Richard M. Furlaud, CEO, Bristol-Myers Squibb Co -- CFR Frank Peter Popoff, CEO, Dow Chemical Co. -- CFR Charles Peter McColough, Chmn Ex. Comm, Xerox -- CFR Rozanne L. Ridgewar, Dir., 3M, RJR Nabisco, Union Carbide -- CFR Ruben F. Mettler, Former CEO, TRW, Inc. -- CFR Henry B. Schacht, CEO, Cummins Engines -- CFR Edmund T. Pratt, Jr., CEO, Pfizer, Inc. -- CFR Rand V. Araskog, CEO, ITT Corp. -- CFR, TC W. Michael Blumenthal, Chairman, Unisys Corp. -- CFR Joseph John Sisco, Dir., Geico, Raytheon, Gillette -- CFR J.Fred Bucy, Former Pres, CEO, Texas Instruments -- CFR Paul A. Allaire, Chairman, CEO, Xerox Corp. -- TC Dwayne O. Andreas, Chairman, CEO, Archer Midland Daniels -- TC James E. Burke, Chairman, CEO Em., Johnson & Johnson -- TC D. Wayne Calloway, Chairman, CEO, Pepsico -- TC Frank C. Carlucci, Vice Chmn., The Carlyle Group -- TC Lynn E. Davis, VP, Dir., Rand Corp -- TC Stephen Friedman, Sr., VP, Co-Chairman, Goldman, Sachs -- TC Louis V. Gerstner, Jr., Chairman, CEO, RJR Nabisco -- TC Joseph T. Gorman, Chairman, Pres, CEO, TRW Inc. -- TC Maurice R. Greenberg, Chairman, CEO, American International Group -- TC Robert D. Hass, Chairman, CEO, Levi Strauss -- TC David J. Hennigar, Chairman, Crownx, Vice Chairman, Crown Life -- TC Robert D. Hormats, Vice Chairman, Goldman Sachs Int. -- TC James R. Houghton, Chairman, CEO, Corning Inc. -- TC Donald R. Keough, President, CEO, The Coca Cola Co. -- TC Henry A. Kissinger, Chairman, Kissinger Assoc. -- TC Whitney Macmillan, Chairman, CEO, Cargill, Inc. -- TC Robert S. McNamara, Former President, The World Bank -- TC William D. Ruckershaus, Chairman, CEO, Browning-Ferris Ind. -- TC David Stockman, Gen Partner, The Blackstone Group -- CFR Henry Wendt, Chmn, Smith Kline Beecham -- TC Education: University Professors: Graham Allison, Prof. Of Gov., Harvard Univ. -- TC Zbigniew Brzezinski, Prof., Johns Hopkins -- TC Gerald L. Curtis, Prof. Poli Sci, Columbia Univ. -- TC Martin S. Feldstein, Prof. Econ, Harvard Univ. -- TC Richard N. Gardner, Prof. Law, Columbia Univ. -- TC Joseph S. Nye, Jr., Prof. Int'l Affairs, Harvard Univ. -- TC Robert D. Putnam, Prof. Politics, Havard Univ. -- TC Henry Rosovsky, Prof. Harvard Univ. -- TC Geoge P. Shultz, Hon. Fellow, Stanford Univ. -- TC Lester C. Thorow, Dean, Sloan School if Mgmt., MIT -- TC Paul Volcker, Prof. Int'l Econ., Princeton Univ -- TC College & University Presidents: Robert H. Edwards, Bowdoin College -- CFR Vartan Gregorian, Brown University -- CFR Hanna Holbom Gray, University of Chicago -- CFR Joseph S. Murphy, City Univ. of NY -- CFR Michael I. Sovern, Columbia Univ. -- CFR Frank H.T. Rhodes, Cornell University -- CFR James T. Laney, Emory University -- CFR Rev. Joseph A. O'Hare, Fordham Univ. -- CFR Thomas Ehrlich, Indiana Univ. -- CFR Steven Muller, Johns Hopkins Univ. -- CFR Alice S. Iichman, Sarah Lawrence College -- CFR Edward T. Foote, II, University Of Miami -- CFR S. Frederick Starr, Oberlin College -- CFR, TC Joseph Duffey, Chans., Univ. Of Mass. -- CFR John M. Deutch, Institute Professor, MIT -- CFR, TC Lester C. Thurow, Dean, Sloan Sch., MIT -- CFR Bernard Harleston, City College of NY -- CFR John Brademus, New York University -- CFR, TC Wesley W. Posvar, University of Pittsburg -- CFR Harold T. Shapiro, Princeton University -- CFR Charles W. Duncan, Jr., Chmn, Rice University -- CFR Dennis O'Brien, Univ. Of Rochester -- CFR David Baltimore, Rockefeller University -- CFR Donald Dennedy, Stanford University -- CFR Richard Wall Lyman, Pres. Em., Stanford -- CFR Hans M. Mark, Chancellor, Univ. of Texas -- CFR Robert H. Donaldson, Univ. of Tulsa -- CFR Stephen J. Trachtenberg, George Washington Univ. -- CFR William H. Danforth, Washington University, St. Louis -- CFR John D. Wilson, Washington & Lee University -- CFR Nannerl O. Keohane, Wellesley University -- CFR |
Concerned Women of America Family Voice July 1998 By Pamela Pearson Wong We cannot let an empowered United Nations seize our citizenship People-covered blankets form a patchwork quilt around the U.S. Capitol. As the sun sets, music of the National Symphony Orchestra rises to Tschaikowsky’s "1812 Overture." Cannons wait across the reflecting pool, poised for the signal. Then, at the precise moment, they blast in unison with the symphony---and fireworks explode over the Washington Monument. Independence Day--the Fourth of July--binds us as a nation. In rural villages and massive cities, in countrysides and on urban streets, Americans gather for picnics and fireworks. They celebrate the freedoms, the history, the privileges America affords. Globalism is Gaining A growing shadow looms over American nationalism--a creeping movement toward global citizenship. Instead of a world made of independent nations, globalism requires an international system to govern and unite "nation-states." World federalism would unite all countries under a common government--a greatly empowered United Nations. And we would no longer look to Washington, D.C., as the center of our government. "World federal government is not only possible, it is inevitable." says Sir Peter Ustinov, President of the World Federalist Movement, "and when it comes, it will appeal to the patriotism of men who love their national heritages so deeply that they wish to preserve them in safety for the common good". (emphasis added. This agenda is neither new nor covert. The World Federalist Association has been working toward this goal for nearly 50 years. Some have suspected a conspiracy to bring the world under one power--global governance. Now efforts seem to be accelerating for the year 2000. Mother Earth The motivation for global governance is the lust for power illustrated in the age-old lie, "Man is his own god." This 90s-style religion elevates Earth to an object of worship (FV, April 1997),. Man controls his destiny. Man is the savior-not God. Preserving the planet becomes the act of worship, and Christians the enemy. Western culture, say U. N. environmentalists, has desecrated Earth. Vice President Al Gore has supported this theory for years. In 1990 he introduced legislation that established the annual "Earth Day." Influence Peddler Another leading advocate of Mother Earth is Canadian Maurice Strong, possibly the chief influence peddler within globalism. His U.N.-related resume includes former Deputy Secretary- General and Secretary-General of the 1992 U.N. Conference on Environment and Development. Some point to him as an upcoming U. N. Secretary-General. Strong has referred to Our Common Future, resulting from the U.N.’s World Commission on Environment and Development, as "an extension of the Bible." The book deals with how "humankind must preserve Earth. Strong artfully chastises "those who call ourselves Christian" for starting the Industrial Revolution--the source of Earth’s problems. "The oneness of the Earth has been shattered within these nations by artificial boundaries dividing the open land into segments of private property, and destroying Mother Earth and indigenous peoples," he said at a "theology of the Earth" event in New York City. "God has placed the fate of the Earth in our hands . . . We can secure our own salvation of life itself on Earth," he said. How? Through global governance by the U.N. And wherever the U.N. is, the sovereignty of the United States -- and our identity as American citizens -- is jeopardized. U. N. Charter Little did U.N. founders dream of its future power. In 1918, President Woodrow Wilson designed the Fourteen Points, a document calling for the League of Nations. This world body was to secure international peace and, thereby, domestic security. Congress, however, refused to ratify the League of Nations--seeing it as a threat to our national sovereignty. But later, demoralized by two world wars within 50 years, the U.S. changed its position. In 1944, our national leaders met with Russia, China and Great Britain, forming the United Nations to promote and maintain world peace. These superpowers ratified the U.N. Charter the next year. That Charter gives the U.N. Security Council power to: Recommend judges for election to the International Court. Maintain international peace and security. Investigate and arbitrate disputes. Use economic and military actions against aggressors. Recommend new members. Recommend appointment of the Secretary General. >From this rather limited beginning, the U.N. now equates peace with globalization--and ultimately, a world government. Global Governance The Commission for Global Governance (CGG) gives us a birdseye view of the process. Founded in 1992, the Commission has the full endorsement of former U.N. Secretary-General Dr. Boutros Boutros-Ghali. Although not an official U.N. organization, its 28 members all have U.N. related resumes. The Commission published its 357 page report Our Global Neighborhood, in 1995. Its recommendations include: Governmental agreement to changes "in the international system" Strong leadership "that reaches beyond country, race, religion, culture, language, lifestyle" "Global governance) must embrace . . . a sense of responsibility to the global neighborhood..." The report further states. "The impulse to possess turf is a powerful one for all species; yet it is one that people must overcome." The U.N. is to play a pivotal role. "It is our firm conclusion that the United Nations must continue to play a central role in global governance," it says. Moreover, the CGG proposes expanding the U.N.’s current power. U. N. Expansion Through Taxes: The CGG recommends fees on international activities, including foreign currency transactions. The greatest income, however, would come from taxes on all fossil fuels. Economist James Tobin states in National Review that "a 0.5 percent tax on foreign-exchange transactions would raise $1.5 trillion annually---nearly equivalent to the U. S. federal budget." No More Veto: Another power grab comes from the CGG’s recommendation that the U. N. Security County, the organization’s most power entity eliminate the veto power held by the five permanent members--the U. S., France, the United Kingdom, the Russian Federation and China. Currently, nine Council members must agree before a measure can pass, including all five permanent members. This veto power offers needed protection to the U.S. However, CGG recommends elimination of the veto in a two-stage process, because "the Commission knew," reported the National Review, "that the current permanent members of the Security Council, including the U.S., would not easily surrender their vetoes." First, five new permanent members would join the Security Council--without veto privilege. Then three countries would be added as non-permanent members. The second stage poses the real threat to our sovereignty. Although the U.S. would not have ratified the U.N. Charter in 1945 without the veto provision, the CGG wants it phased out. According to Our Global Neighborhood, the original five permanent members would retain the veto to use "only in extreme cases." By the year 2005, "today’s permanent members will have become accustomed to participation in global governance without the veto." These plans are progressing. The State Department has already agreed to add five new members to the Security Council, but has not commended on the veto. "Without veto power, the U.S. would be subject to the decisions of other countries--even if we violently disagree with them," says Laurel MacLeod, CWA’s Director of :Legislation and Public Policy. Where’s the Voter? Fueling global government and U.N. expansion is the mindset that our world’s survival demands a new system. Though globalists might not admit it, they see the Founding Fathers’ vision as archaic. "Where are the voters?" asks Laurel MacLeod. "The CGG’s plan ignores Congress, state legislatures and the system of checks and balances so carefully crafted for our Republic. Instead, the globalist vision gives power to non-elected elites who would control out government from behind the scenes." We already see this trend progressing throughout our culture. Expanding Through Land Use--Using the model of the U.N. regulations, our own executive agencies have created biosphere reserves--and subverted private property rights in the process. For example, in 1976 the U.N. designated Yellowstone National Park as a biosphere reserve--set aside for conservation and scientific study. Yet the U.N. regulations that control buffer zones (areas around the core biosphere reserve) only allow limited human activities and dwelling. Individuals who own property within buffer zones may not keep animals, grow crops, or develop land. Core and buffer zones are places where "the collective needs of non-human species must take precedence over the needs and desires of humans," says environmentalist Dr. Reed F. Noss. "It is important to protect and preserve environment," says Laurel MacLeod. "But laws must recognize the democratic process and not be imposed upon people outside their Constitutional rights. The United States’ national sovereignty--is becoming subservient to U.N. wishes." Expanding Through the Military--The United States Constitution empowers Congress to declare war and the President to act as Commander-in-Chief. However, our military has increasingly come under U.N. control. In 1990, President George Bush obtained U.N. authority to send U. S. troops to Iraq--an unprecedented action. Some 54 members of Congress unsuccessfully attempted to force the President to obtain congressional authority. In 1992 President Bush again approached the U.N.--to send American soldiers to Somalia. For the first time in our history, American troops served under direct command of a United Nations foreign commander. But not all American soldiers agree with this growing change of command. In 1996, Specialist Michael New, an Army medic, underwent court martial for refusing to serve under foreign command as an international peacekeeper (FV, May 1996). "I swore allegiance to my country, not the U.N.," Spc. New declared. (He received a dishonorable discharge.) Now, the move toward a U.N. standing army indicates further control. The Washington Times reports that Choi Young-Jin, the U.N. assistance secretary- general for peacekeeping operations, hopes to establish "a standing army system" I would consist of 100,000 standby troops from 70 countries. He called the standby system "an interim measure" resulting from opposition to a U.N. standing army from the U.S. and other "core countries." Sen. Rod Grans (R-MN), chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations subcommittee on international operations said that Congress should be very concerned. "They keep saying that there will be no U.N. standing army, but this is proof that there is a lot of planning going on to make this a reality," Sen. Grans told the Washington Times. Expanding Through the Family Unit--Even the God-ordained institution of family is experiencing U.N. intervention. In 1989, the U.N. General Assembly adopted the Convention on the Rights of the Child. Our ambassador to the U.N. signed the Convention in 1995. It went to the Senate--where it remains today in committee. President Clinton and Hillary Rodham Clinton strongly endorse this treaty. Still the President has said he will attach "reservations" to it--to allay citizen fears and state the Administration’s differences--before sending it to the full Senate. If the Senate passes the Convention in committee, it will go to the full Senate for a final ratification vote of two-thirds, instead of a simple majority. If ratified, this intrusive treaty would--according to modern Supreme Court interpretation of the Constitution--supersede all state and federal laws. The U.N. treaty would charge Congress with seeing "the best interests of the child" (article 3), thus usurping the family’s role. American traditionally believe that minor children need parental protection But the treaty purports that children have the rights to make their own decisions--in all areas. It would conceivable give them even freer access to sexual activity, contraception and abortion, pornography, and cultic and occult "religions." "God designed the family to nurture and guide children gradually increasing their autonomy until they become independent," says Dr. Beverly LaHaye, CWA Founder and Chairman. "This plan isn’t oppressive, but loving." Allan Carlson of The Center on the Family in America, a conservative think tank, agrees. "(The U.N. Convention on the Rights of the Child) undermines the one institution in which children are least likely to be abused least likely to be poor, least likely to be promiscuous, most likely to be healthy, and most likely to be well educated: the traditional two-parent family." I Pledge Allegiance The U.S. Constitution laid out our system of government by the people. A balance of power, checks and balances, a bill of rights--and national sovereignty--are its hallmarks. Independence Day, the American flag, the pledge of allegiance--are all its symbols. Our country began as a magnificent experiment, and still exists as a paragon of freedom for the entire world. We must not let the United Nations rob us of our right to celebrate as American---not global citizens. |
(From The Congressional Record, Jan. 10, 1963) 1. U.S. acceptance of coexistence as the only alternative to atomic war. 2. U.S. willingness to capitulate in preference to engaging in atomic war. 3. Develop the illusion that total disarmament by the United States would be a demonstration of moral strength. 4. Permit free trade between all nations regardless of Communist affiliation and regardless of whether or not items could be used for war. 5. Extension of long-term loans to Russia and Soviet satellites. 6. Provide American aid to all nations regardless of Communist domination. 7. Grant recognition of Red China. Admission of Red China to the U.N. 8. Allow all Soviet satellites individual representation in the U.N. 9. Promote the U.N. as the only hope for mankind. If its charter is rewritten, demand that it be set up as a one-world government with its own independent armed forces. 10. Use technical decisions of the courts to weaken basic American institutions by claiming their activities violate civil rights. 11. Get control of the schools. Use them as transmission belts for socialism and current Communist propaganda. Soften the curriculum. Get control of teachers' associations. Put the party line in textbooks. 12. Gain control of all student newspapers. 13. Use student riots to ferment public protests against programs or organizations which are under Communist attack. 14. Infiltrate the Press. 15. Gain control of key positions in radio, T.V., and motion pictures. 16. Continue discrediting American culture by degrading all forms of artistic expression. An American Communist cell was told to "eliminate" all good sculpture from parks and buildings, substitute shapeless, awkward and meaningless forms. 17. Control art critics and directors of art museums. "Our plan is to promote ugliness, repulsive, meaningless art." 18. Eliminate all laws governing obscenity by calling them "censorship" and a violation of free speech and free press. 19. Break down culture standards of morality by promoting pornography and obscenity in books, magazines, motion pictures, radio, and T.V. 20. Present homosexuality, degeneracy, and promiscuity, as "normal, natural, healthy." 21. Infiltrate the churches and replace revealed religion with "social" religion. Discredit the Bible and emphasize the need for intellectual maturity which does not need a "religious crutch." 22. Eliminate prayer or any phase of religious expression in the schools on the ground that it violates the principle of "separation of church and state." 23. Discredit the American Constitution by calling it inadequate, old-fashioned, out of step with modern needs, a hindrance to cooperation between nations on a worldwide basis. 24. Discredit the American Founding Fathers. Present them as selfish aristocrats who had no concern for the "common man." 25. Support any socialist movement to give centralized control over any part of the cultural education, social agencies, welfare programs, mental health clinics, etc. 26. Transfer some of the powers of arrest from the police to social agencies. Treat all behavioral problems as psychiatric disorders which no one but psychiatrist can understand or treat. 27. Dominate the psychiatric profession and use mental health laws as a means of gaining coercive control over those who oppose Communist goals. 28. Discredit the family as an institution. Encourage promiscuity and easy divorce. (Hen. A.S. Herlong, Jr. of Florida in H.R., Congressional Record-Appendix, Jan. 10, 1963, pp. a34-35) Look through the above list again and count the number of goals which have been accomplished in this nation since 1963. ------------------------------------- COMMUNIST GOALS (from The Communist Manifesto written by Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels in 1848.) "The theory of the Communists may be summed up in the single phrase: Abolition of private property." (page 82) "In bourgeois society, therefore, the past dominates the present; in communist society, the present dominates the past. In bourgeois society capital is independent and has individuality, while the living person is dependent and has no individuality. "And the abolition of this state of things is called by the bourgeoisie, abolition of individuality and freedom! And rightly so. The abolition of bourgeois individuality, bourgeois independence, and bourgeois freedom is undoubtedly aimed at." (page 84) "You reproach us with intending to do away with your property. Precisely so; that is just what we intend." (page 85) ". . . the middle-class owner of property. This person must, indeed, be swept out of the way, and made impossible." (pages 85-86) "Abolition of the family!" (page 87) "The Communists are further reproached with desiring to abolish countries and nationality." (page 90) "Communism abolishes eternal truths, it abolishes all religion, and all morality."(page 92) "Communists everywhere support every revolutionary movement against the existing social and political order of things " (page 116) Goals of Communism (page 94) 1. Abolition of property in land and application of all rents of land to public purposes. 2. A heavy progressive or graduated income tax. 3. Abolition of all right of inheritance. 4. Confiscation of the property of all emigrants and rebels. 5. Centralization of credit in the hands of the state, by means of a national bank with state capital and an exclusive monopoly. 6. Centralization of the means of communication and transport in the hands of the state. 7. Extension of factories and instruments of production owned by the state; the bringing into cultivation of wastelands, and the improvement of the soil generally in accordance with a common plan. 8. Equal liability of all to labor. Establishment of industrial armies, especially for agriculture. 9. Combination of agriculture with manufacturing industries; gradual abolition of the distinction between town and country, by a more equable distribution of the population over the country. 10. Free education for all children in public schools. Abolition of children's factory labor in its present form. Combination of education with industrial production, etc., etc. (Note: the above pages reflect the paperback version, 14th printing, April 1976) |
This EO requires all federal state and local governments to comply immediately with a ll UN Treaties, whether or For Immediate Release December 10, 1998 |
David Hornbeck edited Human Capital, one manifesto for this agenda. In it he cited the need to "create a sense of crisis" and then to use the courts to achieve the goal. Ira Magaziner wrote an interesting letter gloating of their win in the election and what it meant toward achieving their goals of social engineering (Marc Tucker 17 page Letter to Hillary Clinton advising on Education and Training http://www.eurekanet.com/~cpr/tucklett.html).
This list makes poor Richard Mellon Scaife, the American Spectator and the Rutherford Institute look mighty puny. But they are not our strength and our salvation. Fortunately those "Right Wing Radicals" who dare to object know the One Who is really in control and they look to Jesus Christ as Lord of all. Many good people have been deceived by the Newspeak of those promoting this agenda. I had often wondered how the Anti-Christ could come out of the Church as Revelations predicts. The skillful manipulation of language has made many believe they are supporting something the facts do not bear out. We must remember "there is nothing new under the sun." This may be the final act of the Battle of the Ages. Do not despair or be dismayed, our God will never leave us or forsake us. Let us be constantly in prayer for those whom He is using on the frontlines of this "War" as James Carville calls it. Let us pray that the shackles will fall from the eyes of those deceived. Like the Virgins in the parable, keep the oil in the lamps and be prepared.
And they accuse us of "having an agenda"?
Berit Kjos Site. Excellent resource for United Nations involvement in our government, education, children and general society. http://www.beritkjos.com
The information presented here is also available in the Free Book: Global Governance The University of Texas at Austin, Murchison Chair of Free Enterprise, Petroleum/CTE 3.168, Austin, Texas, 78712. Order your copy now.
Let me suggest that you read Malachi Martin's Windswept House.
From Wanderer Interview:
"Since the publication of Malachi Martin's WINDSWEPT HOUSE (Doubleday) early this summer, everyone who has read it is asking the same question: Is it all true?
The brilliantly conceived and elegantly written novel presents Vatican City as a nest of intrigue, where the Holy Father is cautiously temporizing as disloyal cardinals subvert his Papacy and scheme with government and business elites in London and Brussels to advance the New World Order.
Believing that the Church must be a key player in the New World Order - primarily for financial reasons - and that Catholic doctrine on key issues must be "moderated," "transformed," or simply dropped in order for the Church to be accepted as a player in the new power structure, the Pope's unfaithful cardinals plot to isolate John Paul II."
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