A small cabal of men (no women allowed) controls most of our planet.
My philosophy is: Don’t hate the player, hate the game.
Adano Ley (Swami Nitty-Gritty) often talked about the 400 families that ruled the world, but his philosophy did mine one better: Don’t hate the player or the game.
If someone mentioned the word “evil” in his presence, he countered with, “Can you show me an ounce of evil?”
The cabal was probably considerably smaller a century ago.
A newspaper reporter asked one of the Jekyll Island conspirators, “Is it true that only several hundred men control the entire world?’
“Nonsense!” was his reply. “Three or four men control the world!”
Yes, No, Maybe?
Today perhaps 700,000 “experts” (1 percent of 1 percent) are directly responsible for making the cogs of our mechanistic world go round and round and round.
That’s close to the 701,475 people living in Detroit, Michigan, the eighteenth largest city in the U.S.
I’ve read hundreds of conspiracy books, but the most authentic information comes from the writings of the conspirators themselves, including Professor Carroll Quigley, books published by the Trilateral Commission, and journals like International Affairs (published by the Royal Institute of International Affairs), etc.
Many people reference the RIIA’s International Affairs, but how many of them have actually read this journal to see for themselves?
I’ve also learned to read between the lines of Forbes, Fortune, Business Week, Barron’s, Worth, Time, Newsweek, U.S. News & World Report, International Business Times, the Wall Street Journal, the New York Times, the (London) Times, the Maritime Journal, etc.
Few Zionists or Catholics are allowed in this Inner Circle of secularists, Anglicans, Episcopalians, Unitarians, Congregationalists, and Northern Baptists.
'The Matrix & the One World Order' have 6 comments
March 16, 2014 @ 3:35 pm atomb
Check out my e-books (e.g., Frankenscience * Farmageddon * Pharmapocalypse) at …
solarman111.com
March 16, 2014 @ 3:47 pm atomb
Don’t Blame the Player, Blame the Game.
John Taylor Gatto wrote …
“Drawing an analogy between Rockefeller and the czar of Russia, [Walter] Lippmann wrote that nobody believed the czar himself performed the many despotic acts he was accused of; everyone knew a bureaucracy did so in his name. But most failed to push that knowledge to its inevitable conclusion: If the czar tried to change what was customary he would be undermined by his subordinates. He had no defense against this happening because it was in the best interests of all the divisions of the bureaucracy, including the army, that it – not the czar – continue to be in charge of things. The czar was a prisoner of his own subjects.”
March 16, 2014 @ 6:35 pm Phil
Excellent point, thank you for sharing.
March 18, 2014 @ 3:46 pm atomb
Thanks, Phil! :)
March 16, 2014 @ 8:42 pm Michael Gebhardt
keep the downloads coming my friend…greatly appericate your perspective,,,,
March 18, 2014 @ 3:48 pm atomb
Thanks, Gebi! :)