Wednesday, February 15, 2012

The Invisible Hand of the New World Order


The New World Order is often ridiculed as fringe fantasy, but personalities none other than Adolph Hitler and George Bush heralded its arrival with all of its 1000 points of light last century. Although the wealthy are often accused of being its authors, the truth behind who guides its evolution forces a more sophisticated model, as an article by Will Banyan makes clear.

Let there be no doubt that wealth and power are required to impose the NWO on the world, but let us also understand that very powerful and controlling personalities animate that wealth towards its designated ends. These powerful men may be of much more modest means than the creators of the fortunes impressed into its service. One such individual was Raymond Fosdick (1883 – 1972), and to a less extent, his brother Harry Emerson Fosdick, the  famous early 20th century theologian.

It is also interesting that such people often feel, like Jamie Dimon, CEO of JP Morgan Chase, that they are doing God’s will – a trait they share with the Crusaders of the Middle Ages. Fosdick occasionally made reference to Christian motifs or justifications to foist a world government on the peoples of the earth, much as did his revered mentor Woodrow Wilson, echoing William McKinley’s 4 point justification for entering into the Spanish American War and assuming the colonies of Spain.

They are fond of employing such extreme arguments as world war, mass annihilation, and various cataclysmic disasters, much in the same way that the Red Menace and the War on Terror are used to cow people into accepting infringements on their liberties.

Fosdick became fanatically involved with the League of Nations when Wilson approached him to serve as a delegate to its functions after the first World War. Fosdick would spend a lifetime zealously advocating first the League and then the United Nations, serving for a time as one of its under secretaries between the two world wars prior to returning to his law practice.

Along the way he encountered John Rockefeller, Jr. who initially expressed misgivings about the proposed League of Nations. However, following his resignation from service in the LON in Europe, Fosdick returned to America where he had many occasions to meet Rockefeller and for whom he would serve as head of the Rockefeller Foundation.

Banyan documents, through correspondences between the two men, Rockefeller, Jr.’s evolution from an isolationist to an internationalist, with Fosdick’s perfervid pleas to his sponsor bordering on maniacal. Once he assumed the presidency of the Rockefeller Foundation and the General Education Board in 1935, Fosdick used his position to fund and promote his globalist agendas.

There were three major programmatic operations of the two organizations which sought to advance world government. The first was the Council on Foreign Relations which had been founded by the Rockefellers in 1921 and whose new goal was to shape elite opinion for the formation of world government, first through the League, and then through the United Nations. The second operation was channeled through the Institute of Pacific Relations and the Foreign Policy Association whose goal was to persuade popular opinion regarding the virtues of world government.

Fosdick also enthusiastically supported population control programs sponsored by the Bureau of Social Hygiene, a eugenics organization, whose objectives included the purification of the human race through sterilization of people and races deemed unfit for further propagation.

The third programmatic operation of the Fosdick cabal was support of social engineering, turning social science away from basic research toward research to facilitate State control of its populations. These goals were achieved through the Social Science Research Council (SSRC) whose major grant giving powers achieved the reorientation of research.

Banyan shows not just a modification of Rockefeller’s thinking about the use of wealth and the role of the United States, but he shows how that wealth was suborned into the ideas of another man, namely Raymond Fosdick, who in conjunction with his famous brother Harry Emerson Fosdick, provided the intellectual scaffolding for world government using the vast wealth of the Rockefellers, who were committed and willing disciples. Fosdick merely found the sponge to soak up his venomous ideas and to give them currency  - all by means of a conspiracy in plain sight.

Reference

The Invisible Man of the New World Order: Raymond B. Fosdick (1883-1972), Will Banyan


Copyright 2010-12 Tony Bonn. All rights reserved.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

"Doc, under the alias of William Levingston, homesteaded
160 acres of Government land in Dakota (park river N D)on October8, 1883. On Sept. 25, 1884, he assigned the receiptJohn D's sister, Laura E. Briggs (. . . of Cleveland,
Ohio); and gave her a quit claim deed in March 28, 1885.He again obtained title but under his right name, WilliamA. Rockefeller by a warranty deed on June 23, 1886, andin October 10, 1889, deeded it to his son-in-law and purchasingagent of Standard Oil, Pierson D. Briggs.The first clause in this deed is: 'I William Rockefeller,widower.' At this time he was living at Freeport, Ill.alias of Dr. Levingston with his Canadian wife whom he married in 1885,(1856?) and with whom he continued live as husband and wife until his death and burial fromtheir home in Freeport in 1906. His will bequeathed all his property to his widow Mrs. Margaret Alien Levingston.When he deserted the Rockefeller dynasty in 1854, hewas in fact 'keeping company' with his 19 year old Canadiansweetheart, Miss Alien, when the timely death ofhis alleged first legal wife (not John D's mother) left himfree to consummate his marriage to Miss Alien, Doc's desertionof John D's mother (eliza Davison Rockefeller).His Canadian wife, Margaret L. Alien of Norwich,Ontario, was misled by an alleged bigamous marriageand lived with him from 1855 for over 50 years beforeshe learned of his deceit as a result of an accident. OnJan. 25, 1904, old 'Doc' broke his arm. For weeks he wasnear death. In his delirium he often said to her, 'You arenot my wife, where is Eliza?' And when delirious momentscarried him back to New York and Ohio and the dayswhen he was Doc Rockefeller, he babbled the name of hiswife Eliza, and also John, William, Frank, Lucy and Mary,sons and daughters of the Rockefeller-Davison union.John D's mother died on March 28, 1889, at the residence of her son, William at 689 Fifth Avenue, New YorkCity, but was buried as a widow at Cleveland, thoughJohn D's father continued to live for a further 17 years asthe husband of Miss Alien under the alias of Levingston.newspaper issue of 1908, speaks ofMs Alien as his second wife, and refers to the second marriage as bigamous, assuming of course that his first wife was Eliza Davison, the mother of John D. whom he married in 1837 . . ." William Avery Rockefeller . . . died May 11,1906, at Freeport, Illinois, where he was buried in an unmarkedgrave as Dr. William Levingston, aged 96 years,5 months and 28 days. Dr." William A. Rockefeller, as he was listed in the Cleveland directory, was guiding the career of his son, withwhom he lived for a while at 35 Cedar Avenue and Rumored later he left he occassionally visit that Bill had visit Rockefeller family in Cleveland Rockefeller ran his many Superior and West Sixth Street. He had a home on Euclid Avenue's Millionaire's Row and an eastside estate, Forest Hills, in what is now East Cleveland and Cleveland Heights. Rockefeller married Laura Spelman, a native of Wadsworth, in 1864 and the couple had four daughters and one son.ebookJosephson