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The BIRCH BARK BBS
414-242-5070
The Insiders
by John F. McManus
The John Birch Society Appleton,
Wisconsin 54913-8040 First printing, August 1992 .....25,000 copies Second
printing, November 1992 ..25,000 copies Copyright (c) 1992 by The John Birch
Society All rights reserved Published by The John Birch Society Post Office Box
8040 Appleton, Wisconsin 54913 414-749-3780
Printed in the United States of America Library of Congress Catalog Card Number:
92-73378 ISBN: 1-881919-00-5
About the Author
John F. McManus joined the staff of the John Birch Society as a Field
Coordinator in New England in 1966. He was promoted to the headquarters staff in
1968. In 1973, he was named the organization's Public Relations Director and
worked very closely with the Society's founder, Robert Welch, until his death in
1985.
In conjunction with his public relations duties, Mr. McManus became the
organization's chief spokesman. He has appeared on many hundreds of radio and
television programs and given an equal number of interviews to representatives
of the press. He has traveled the nation extensively and has conducted Society
business in every one of the 50 states.
A native of Brooklyn, New York, Mr. McManus earned a Bachelor of Science degree
from Holy Cross College in Massachusetts, served as an officer in the U.S.
Marine Corps, and was employed in the early 1960s as an electronics engineer.
Married in 1957, he and his wife are the parents of four.
He is a writer, film and television producer, editor, speaker, and newspaper
columnist. His weekly Birch Log columns have provided valuable insight about the
affairs of our nation since 1973. His first book, An Overview of Our World
(1971), analyzed the great conspiracy against mankind and its harmful effects on
contemporary civilization.
In 1991, he was named President of the John Birch Society.
Preface
In addition to previously published surveys of Insider control over the
administration led by President Jimmy Carter and Ronald Reagan, this edition of
The Insiders contains a new Part III, a survey of the control exercised by the
Insiders over the administration headed by President George Bush.
A key to understanding the dominance of the Insiders over contemporary America
is an understanding of the history and purpose of such organizations as the Council
on Foreign Relations and the Trilateral commission. Much of this
history appears in Part I and is not repeated in Parts II and III. The
definition of the term Insiders, as it was first given by John Birch Society
founder Robert Welch, and as it has been employed by the John Birch Society, is
provided toward the end of Part I.
Readers familiar with the author's critiques of the Carter and Reagan
Administrations are encouraged to turn immediately to the survey of the Bush
Administration beginning on page 47. Others who are new to the type of analysis
given here would do well to skip over nothing, for the administrations led by
Mr. Carter and Mr. Reagan were dominated by the Insiders, and the pattern of
this dominance over America's affairs is itself an important part of the story
told in this book.
We hope that this glimpse of the increasing growth
of Insider control over the U.S. government will stimulate many readers to
become involved in the fight to turn the Insiders out - out from their control
of our nation's government and numerous other vital sectors of American life.
Each portion of this book closes with an invitation to all to join the John
Birch Society. We repeat that earnestly-given invitation as we begin the Third
Edition of this carefully researched book.
THE JOHN BIRCH SOCIETY JULY 1992
Introduction
If a member of your family were suddenly felled by a strange malady, you would
quickly run to the family physician. So, too, would you hasten to a doctor's
office when a more familiar disease struck, or when an accident caused a broken
bone or torn flesh.
Once in the presence of the doctor, you would hardly waste his time or your own
by demanding of him some assurance that he favors good health. You know he
already does. And you know he opposes fever, earaches, broken legs, etc.
We mention this because the John Birch Society has often been accused of
promoting only negativism, or of merely finding fault. Yet any honest survey of
our literature demonstrates that such a charge is baseless. The doctor who wants
healthy bodies doesn't take time to explain that he wants good health Nor do we
always explain that our first and foremost goal is a strong nation and a healthy
civilization.
The Insiders explains much of what has gone wrong in America and
who is causing her ills. We doubt that we will be accused of presuming too
greatly in believing that most Americans know something
is eating away at the foundations of this great nation. Unemployment, national
and personal indebtedness, economic slowdown, loss of faith, declining national
stature, a vaguely defined "new world order", broken families, and
much more have stimulated worries from coast to coast and from all sectors of
our social and economic strata.
The John Birch Society believes in America-in her magnificent Constitution, her
glorious traditions, and her wonderful people. Where America is strong, we seek
to preserve; where she has been weakened, we seek to rebuild. Sadly, we witness
the presence of powerful forces working to destroy the marvelous foundations
given us by far-seeing and noble men 200 years ago.
The information and analysis given in this book will undoubtedly upset, even
anger, some readers. But if the history contained in these pages is disturbing
to both the reader and ourselves, we urge that the
blame be directed toward those who made it, not those who published it.
Doctors can't treat patients until they identify the causes of ailments.
Similarly, no citizen can act to help his nation until he or she understands
what constitutes good national health and what is ravishing it. It is our hope
that the information presented in these pages will assist a great many more
Americans to identify our nation's diseases - and those who spread them - and
then take action to speed her back to the robust health she once enjoyed.
The "Insiders"
Part I - 1979
Immediately after World War II, the
American people were subjected to a massive propaganda barrage which favored the
Chinese communists and frowned on the Chinese Nationalists. Newspapers, books,
magazines, and experts in government did their best to convince Americans that
the Red Chinese were not communists at all, but were merely "agrarian
reformers" seeking fair play for the Chinese people. (1)
In the midst of this propaganda blitz, our government completely turned its back
on the Nationalist Chinese in 1947, refusing even to sell them arms. By 1949,
the communist forces under Mao Tse-tung had seized all of mainland China. After
the communist takeover, serious students of the situation lost no time in
declaring that China had been lost in Washington, not in Peking or Shanghai. And
they were correct. (2)
Eventually, the full truth about the Chinese communists became widely known. A
U.S. Senate subcommittee report, (3) published in 1971, contains gruesome
statistics which show that the Chinese communists have murdered as many as 64
million of their countrymen. Despite current propaganda to the contrary,
Communist China continues to this day to be one of the most brutal tyrannies in
the history of mankind. And the Chinese Reds have exported revolution and terror
to every continent.
The American people were misled thirty years ago. If
the truth about China had been widely known, our government would never have
intervened in the Chinese struggle as it did. China would not have fallen into
communist hands; there would never have been a Korean War in the 1950s; and
there would never have been a Vietnam War in the 1960s and 70s.
The course of history would have taken a far different path-if only the American
people had not been misled about the Chinese communists.
In the late 1950s, the American people were again misled. We were told that
Fidel Castro was the "Robin Hood of the Sierra Maestra Mountains," and
that he was the "George Washington of Cuba." Some Americans knew
better and tried to spread the alarm. But, in spite of their efforts, our
government repeated the process it had followed in China and Castro eventually
seized control of Cuba. (4)
Again, the American people had been misled. If the
truth about Castro had been widely known, our press and our government would
never have aided him, and he would never have succeeded in capturing Cuba
and in spreading communist subversion throughout Latin America-and now even into
Africa.
The question we must ask ourselves today is: Are
there any other important but similarly erroneous attitudes that have been
planted in the minds of the American people? The answer is that there certainly
are.
One dangerously wrong attitude held by many Americans is that all prominent
businessmen in America-the American capitalist as they are called-are by
definition the archenemies of communism.
In fact, the mere suggestion that a prominent capitalist, like David
Rockefeller, if in league with communists invites scorn or ridicule. The notion
appears to many to be totally absurd because a man like David Rockefeller, it
seems, would have so much to lose if the communists should ever triumph.
But, in the last few years, David Rockefeller's Chase Manhattan Bank has been
favored by the Reds as the first American bank to open an office in Moscow, and
also the first to do so in Peking. And this same Chase Manhattan Bank has
bankrolled the building of the largest truck factory in the history of mankind,
at a place called the Kama River in the Soviet Union. It is totally inaccurate
to consider David Rockefeller an enemy of communism.
It is also inaccurate to believe that all prominent businessmen in our nation
are conservatives who are always the most determined opponents of socialistic
government controls. We agree that businessmen should be anti-communists, and
that they should be advocates of limited government, as given us by our Founding
Fathers. But many are not.
As communism continues to advance toward total world domination, as America's
place in the world slips from undisputed leadership to second-rate status, and
as our own federal government's control over all of us grows with each passing
day, many Americans are looking for an explanation of what they see happening.
We believe that the first step toward learning what
is really going on in our country is the realization that some so-called
capitalists are neither conservative nor anti-communist. Instead,
they are power-seekers who are using their great wealth and influence to achieve
political control. What follows will take a hard look at what we
perceive as an on-going drive for power. Not only the kind of power that flows
from great wealth, but absolute power, the kind that can only be achieved
politically. We are going to take a look behind the headlines at the men who
really run our country, the men whom Jimmy Carter called "The
Insiders."
Who Is Running America?
One of President Jimmy Carter's favorite themes during his campaign for the
Presidency in 1976 was that, if he were elected, he would bring new faces and
new ideas to Washington. He repeatedly told campaign audiences that he was not
part of the federal government and not beholden to the Washington-and-New
York-based Establishment that had been running things for so long.
Perhaps the clearest example of his campaign oratory against what he called the
Insiders was given at a Carter-for-President Rally in Boston on February
17,1976. What he said on that occasion showed up in a widely distributed
paperback I'll Never Lie To You - Jimmy Carter In His Own Words.
(5) On page 48, Mr. Carter's statement at that Boston Rally is given as follows:
The people of this country know from bitter experience that we are not going to get these changes merely by shifting around the same groups of insiders.... The insiders have had their chance and they have not delivered.
The message undoubtedly persuaded a
good many Americans to cast their ballots for Jimmy Carter, for the existence of
such an inside group running things is both widely suspected and widely
resented. And yet, while the former governor of Georgia played up to this
resentment throughout the campaign, he carefully avoided naming any names or
discussing any of the organizational ties of the easily identifiable Insiders.
This, we intend to do. For we agree with Mr. Carter's campaign oratory, that for
several decades, America has been run by a group of Establishment Insiders. We
also intend to show that, despite his strong pledge to the contrary, Jimmy
Carter has literally filled his Administration with these same individuals.
Since Jimmy Carter moved into Washington, it has been business as usual for the
Insiders who are running the United States.
The man popularly credited with devising the strategy that landed Jimmy Carter
in the White House is Hamilton Jordan. A few weeks prior to the November 1976
election, he stated:
If, after the inauguration, you find a Cy Vance as Secretary of State and Zbigniew Brzezinski as head of National Security, then I would say we failed. And I would quit. You're going to see new faces and new ideas. (6)
After the election, Mr. Carter
promptly named Cyrus Vance to be his Secretary of State and Zbigniew Brzezinski
to be the head of National Security, exactly what Mr. Jordan had said would
never happen. But the real question is: What is it about Mr. Vance and Mr.
Brzezinski that prompted Jordan to make such a statement? And the answer is that
these two men are pillars of the very Establishment that candidate Carter so
often attacked.
When Jimmy Carter appointed him to be Secretary of State, Cyrus Vance was a Wall
Street lawyer, the Chairman of the Board of the Rockefeller Foundation, and a
veteran of service in the Kennedy, Johnson and Nixon Administrations.
Zbigniew Brzezinski had taught at Harvard and Columbia Universities, served in
the State Department during the Johnson Administration, and authored numerous
books and articles for various Establishment publishers and periodicals.
But, beyond all of these Establishment credentials, at
the time of their appointment by Jimmy Carter, both Vance and Brzezinski were
members of the Board of Directors of a little-known organization called the
Council on Foreign Relations. Also, each was a member of the very exclusive
Trilateral Commission. Most Americans have never heard of these
two organizations. But knowing something about them is essential to
understanding what has been going on in America for several decades. So, let us
examine, first, the Council on Foreign Relations and then, later on, the
Trilateral Commission.
The House Blueprint
The Council on Foreign Relations (7) was incorporated in 1921. It is a private
group which is headquartered at the corner of Park Avenue and 68th Street in New
York City, in a building given to the organization in 1929.
The CFR's founder, Edward Mandell House, had been the chief adviser of President
Woodrow Wilson. House was not only Wilson's most prominent aide, he actually
dominated the President. Woodrow Wilson referred to House as "my alter
ego" (my other self), and it is totally accurate to say that House, not
Wilson, was the most powerful individual in our nation during the Wilson
Administration, from 1913 until 1921.
Unfortunately for America, it is also true that Edward
Mandell House was a Marxist whose
goal was to socialize the United States. In 1912 House wrote the
book, Philip Dru: Administrator; (8) In it, he said he was working
for "Socialism as dreamed of by Karl Marx." The original edition of
the book did not name House as its author, but he made it clear in numerous ways
that he indeed was its creator.
In Philip Dru: Administrator, Edward Mandell House laid out a
fictionalized plan for the conquest of America. He told of a
"conspiracy" (the word is his) which would gain control of both the
Democratic and Republican parties, and use them as instruments in the creation
of a socialistic world government.
The book called for passage of a graduated income
tax and for the establishment of a state-controlled central bank as steps toward
the ultimate goal. Both of these proposals are planks in The Communist
Manifesto. (9) And both became law in 1913, during the very first
year of the House-dominated Wilson Administration.
The House plan called for the United States to give up its sovereignty to the
League of Nations at the close of World War I. But when the U.S. Senate refused
to ratify America's entry into the League, Edward Mandell House's drive toward
world government was slowed down. Disappointed, but not beaten, House
and his friends then formed the Council on Foreign Relations, whose purpose
right from its inception was to destroy the freedom and independence of the
United States and lead our nation into a world government - if
not through the League of Nations, then through another world organization that
would be started after another world war. The control of that world government,
of course, was to be in the hands of House and like-minded individuals.
From its beginning in 1921, the CFR began to attract men of power and influence.
In the late 1920s, important financing for the CFR
came from the Rockefeller Foundation and the Carnegie Foundation.
In 1940, at the
invitation of President Roosevelt, members of the
CFR gained domination over the State Department, and they have maintained that
domination ever since.
The Making of Presidents
By 1944, Edward Mandell House was deceased but his plan for taking control of
our nation's major political parties began to be realized. In 1944 and in 1948,
the Republican candidate for President, Thomas Dewey, was a CFR member. In later
years, the CFR could boast that Republicans Eisenhower and Nixon were members,
as were Democrats Stevenson, Kennedy, Humphrey, and McGovern. The American
people were told they had a choice when they voted for President. But with
precious few exceptions, Presidential candidates for
decades have been CFR members.
But the CFR's influence had also spread to other vital areas of American life.
Its members have run, or are running, NBC and CBS, the New York Times, the
Washington Post, the Des Moines Register, and many other important newspapers.
The leaders of Time, Life, Newsweek, Fortune, Business Week, and numerous other
publications are CFR members. The organization's members also dominate the
academic world, top corporations, the huge tax-exempt foundations, labor unions,
the military, and just about every segment of American life. (10)
Let's look at the Council's Annual Report published in 1978. The organization's
membership list names 1,878 members, and the list reads like a Who's Who in
America. Eleven CFR members are U.S. senators; (11)
even more congressmen belong to the organization. Sitting on top of this
immensely powerful pyramid, as Chairman of the Board, is David Rockefeller.
As can be seen in that CFR Annual Report, 284 of its members are U.S. government
officials. Any organization which can boast that 284 of its members are U.S.
government officials should be well-known. Yet most Americans have never even
heard of the Council on Foreign Relations.
One reason why this is so is that 171 journalists,
correspondents and communications executives are also CFR members, and they
don't write about the organization. In fact, CFR members rarely
talk about the organization inasmuch as it is an express condition of membership
that any disclosure of what goes on at CFR meetings shall be regarded as grounds
for termination of membership. (12)
Carter and CFR Clout
And so, very few Americans knew that something was wrong when Jimmy Carter
packed his Administration with the same crowd that has been running things for
decades. When he won the Democratic Party's nomination, Jimmy Carter chose CFR
member Walter Mondale to be his running mate. After the election, Mr. Carter
chose CFR members Cyrus Vance, Harold Brown, and W. Michael Blumenthal to be the
Secretaries of State, Defense and Treasury-the top three cabinet
positions.
Other top Carter appointees who are CFR member include Joseph Califano,
Secretary of HEW; Patricia Roberts Harris, Secretary of HUD; Stansfield Turner,
CIA Director; Zbigniew Brzezinski, National Security Advisor; and Andrew Young,
Ambassador to the United Nations. The names of scores of Assistant Secretaries,
Undersecretaries, Ambassadors and other appointees can also be found on the CFR
membership roster. As we have already noted, a total of 284 CFR members hold
positions in the Carter Administration.
To put it mildly, the Council on Foreign Relations has a great deal of clout. In
our opinion, however, not every member of the CFR is
fully committed to carrying out Edward Mandell House's conspiratorial plan.
Many have been flattered by an invitation to join a study group, which is what
the CFR calls itself. Others go along because of personal benefits such as a
nice job and a new importance. But all are used to
promote the destruction of U.S. sovereignty. Over the years, only
a few members have ever had the courage and the awareness to speak out about the
Council on Foreign Relations. These few are now ex-members who have always been
ignored by the press. (13)
Toward World Government
The CFR publishes a very informative quarterly journal called Foreign Affairs.
More often than not, important new shifts in U.S. policy or highly indicative
attitudes of political figures have been telegraphed in its pages. When he was
preparing to run for the Presidency in 1967, for instance Richard Nixon made
himself acceptable to the Insiders of the Establishment with an article in the
October 1967 issue of Foreign Affairs. (14) In it, he called for a new policy of
openness toward Red China, a policy which he himself later initiated in 1972.
The April 1974 issue of Foreign Affairs carried a very explicit recommendation
for carrying out the world-government scheme of CFR founder Edward Mandell
House. Authored by State Department veteran and Columbia University Professor
Richard N. Gardner (himself a CFR member), "The Hard Road to World
Order" admits that a single leap into world government via an
organization like the United Nations is unrealistic. (15)
Instead, Gardner urged the continued piecemeal delivery of our nation's
sovereignty to a variety of international organizations He called for an end run
around national sovereignty, eroding it piece by piece." That means an end
to our nation's sovereignty.
And he named as organizations to accomplish his goal the International Monetary
Fund, the World Bank, the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade, the Law of the
Sea Conference, the World Food Conference, the World Population Conference,
disarmament programs, and a United Nations military force. This approach,
Gardner said, "can produce some remarkable concessions of sovereignty that
could not be achieved on an across-the-board basis."
Richard Gardner's preference for destroying the freedom and independence of the
United States in favor of the CFR's goal of world government thoroughly
dominates top circles in our nation today. The men who would scrap our nation's
Constitution are praised as "progressives" and "far-sighted
thinkers." The only question that remains among these powerful Insiders is
which method to use to carry out their treasonous plan.
The Trilateral Angle
Unfortunately, the Council on Foreign Relations is not the only group proposing
an end to the sovereignty of the United States. In 1973, another organization
which now thoroughly dominates the Carter Administration first saw the light of
day. Also based in New York City, this one is called the Trilateral
Commission.
The Trilateral Commission's roots stem from the book Between Two Ages
(16) written by Zbigniew Brzezinski in 1970. The following quotations from that
book show how closely Brzezinski's thinking parallels that of CFR founder Edward
Mandell House.
On page 72, Brzezinski writes: "Marxism is
simultaneously a victory of the external, active man over the inner, passive man
and a victory of reason over belief."
On page 83, he states: "Marxism, disseminated
on the popular level in the form of Communism, represented a major advance in
man's ability to conceptualize his relationship to his world."
And on page 123, we find: "Marxism supplied the
best available insight into contemporary reality."
Nowhere does Mr. Brzezinski tell his readers that the Marxism "in the form
of Communism," which he praises, has been responsible for the murder of
approximately 100 million human beings in the Twentieth Century, has brought
about the enslavement of over a billion more, and has caused want, privation and
despair for all but the few criminals who run the communist-dominated nations.
On page 198, after discussing America's shortcomings, Brzezinski writes:
"America is undergoing a new revolution" which "unmasks its
obsolescence." We disagree; America is not becoming obsolete.
On page 260, he proposes "Deliberate management of the American
future...with the...planner as the key social legislator and manipulator."
The central planning he wants for our country is a cardinal underpinning of
communism and the opposite of the way things are done in a free country.
On page 296, Mr. Brzezinski suggests piecemeal "Movement toward a larger
community of the developed nations...through a variety of indirect ties and
already developing limitations on national sovereignty." Here, we have the
same proposal that has been offered by Richard Gardner in the CFR publication
Foreign Affairs.
Brzezinski then calls for the forging of community links among the United
States, Western Europe, and Japan; and the extension of these links to more
advanced communist countries. Finally, on page 308 of his 309-page hook, he lets
us know that what he really wants is "the goal of world government".
A Meeting of Minds
Zbigniew Brzezinski's Between Two Ages was published in 1970 while
he was a professor in New York City. What happened, quite simply, is that David
Rockefeller read the book. And, in 1973, Mr. Rockefeller launched the new Trilateral
Commission whose purposes include linking North America, Western Europe, and
Japan "in their economic relations, their political and defense relations,
their relations with developing countries, and their relations with communist
countries." (17)
The original literature of the Trilateral Commission also states, exactly as
Brzezinski's book had proposed, that the more advanced communist states could
become partners in the alliance leading to world government. In short, David
Rockefeller implemented Brzezinski's proposal. The only change was the addition
of Canada, so that the Trilateral Commission presently includes members from
North America, Western Europe, and Japan, not just the United States, Western
Europe, and Japan.
Then, David Rockefeller hired Zbigniew Brzezinski away from Columbia University
and appointed him to be the Director of the Trilateral Commission. Later, in
1973, the little known former Governor of Georgia, Jimmy Carter, was invited to
become a founding member of the Trilateral Commission. When asked about this
relationship, Mr. Carter stated:
Membership on this Commission has provided me with a splendid learning opportunity, and many of the members have helped me in my study of foreign affairs (18)
We don't doubt that for a minute!
Carter's Trilateral Team
When Jimmy Carter won the nomination of the Democratic Party, he chose CFR
member and Trilateralist Walter Mondale to be his running mate. Then, the man
who told America that he would clean the Insiders out chose Cyrus Vance, W.
Michael Blumenthal, and Harold Brown for the top three cabinet posts, and each
of these men is a Trilateralist, as well as a CFR member. Other Trilateralists
appointed by Mr. Carter include Zbigniew Brzezinski as National Security
Advisor; Andrew Young as Ambassador to the United Nations; Richard N. Gardner as
Ambassador to Italy; and several others as top government officials.
The membership list of the Trilateral Commission now notes seventeen
"Former Members in Public Service" including Carter, Mondale, Vance,
etc. Their places on the Commission have been taken by other influential
Americans so that approximately eighty Americans, along with ten Canadians,
ninety Western Europeans, and seventy-five Japanese are members today. Among the
current Trilateralists can be found six Senators; four Congressmen; two
Governors; Hedley Donovan, the Editor-in-Chief of Time Incorporated; Winston
Lord, President of the Council on Foreign Relations; William E. Brock, Chairman
of the Republican National Committee; and Dr. Henry Kissinger. (19)
As with the CFR, we do not believe that every member of the Trilateral
Commission is fully committed to the destruction of the United States. Some of
these men actually believe that the world would be a better place if the United
States would give up its independence in the interests of world government.
Others go along for the ride, a ride which means a ticket to fame, comfortable
living, and constant flattery. Some, of course, really do run things and really
do want to scrap our nation's independence.
On March 21, 1978, the New York Times featured an article about Zbigniew
Brzezinski's close relationship with the President. (20) In part, it reads:
The two men met for the first time four years ago when Mr. Brzezinski was executive director of the Trilateral Commission...and had the foresight to ask the then obscure former Governor of Georgia to join its distinguished ranks. Their initial teacher-student relationship blossomed during the campaign and appears to have grown closer still.
The teacher in this relationship
praises Marxism, thinks the United States is becoming obsolete, and is the
brains behind a scheme to end the sovereignty of the United States for the
purpose of building a world government. And the student is the President of the
United States.
What It All Means
Let's summarize the situation we have been describing in three short statements.
1. President Carter, who was a member of the Insider-controlled
Trilateral Commission as early as 1973, repeatedly told the nation during the
1976 political campaign that he was going to get rid of the Establishment
Insiders if he became President. But when he took office, he promptly filled his
Administration with members of the Council on Foreign Relations and the
Trilateral Commission, the most prominent Insider organizations in America.
2. The Council on Foreign Relations was conceived by a Marxist, Edward
Mandell House, for the purpose of creating a one-world government by destroying
the freedom and independence of all nations, especially including our own. Its
Chairman of the Board is David Rockefeller. And its members have immense control
over our government and much of American life.
3. The Trilateral Commission was conceived by Zbigniew Brzezinski, who
praises Marxism, who thinks the United States is becoming obsolete, and who also
wants to create a one-world government. Its founder and driving force is also
David Rockefeller. And it, too, exercises extraordinary control over the
government of the United States.
The effect of the Council on Foreign Relations and
the Trilateral Commission on the affairs of our nation is easy to see. Our own
government no longer acts in its own interest; we no longer win any wars we
fight; and we constantly tie ourselves to international agreements, pacts and
conventions. And, our leaders have developed blatant preferences for Communist
USSR, Communist Cuba, and Communist China, while they continue to work for world
government, which has always been the goal of communism.
The Insider domination of our government is why America's leaders now give the
backs of their hands to anti-communist nations such as South Korea, Rhodesia,
Chile and our loyal allies in Taiwan. These few nations do not want to join with
communists in a world government. and therefore, they are being suppressed. In
short, our government has become pro-communist.
More Observations
The Carter Administration, unfortunately, is only the current manifestation of
this problem that has infected our nation for decades. Previous administrations,
however, have carefully pretended to be anti-communist and pro-American. But
there is very little pretense in an Administration which arranges to give the
Panama Canal to a communist-dominated government in Panama, and paid the Reds
$400 million to take it. Or, when our President turns his back on America's
allies in China and diplomatically recognizes the Red Chinese, who run the most
brutal tyranny on earth. Or, when our President continues to disarm and weaken
the United States, even as he presses for more aid and trade with Red China and
Red Russia.
The foreign policy of the Carter Administration, which is totally dominated by
CFR and Trilateral Commission members, could hardly be worse. But the domestic
policies of our government also fit into the scheme to weaken the United States
and destroy the freedom of our people. Government
caused inflation continues to weaken the dollar and destroy the economy of our
nation. Federal controls continue to hamstring America's productive might. And
the Carter energy policy can be summed up very simply as a program to deny
America the use of its own energy resources and to bring this nation to its
knees through shortages and dependence on foreign suppliers.
The real goal of our own government's leaders is to
make the United States into a carbon copy of a communist state, and then to
merge all nations into a one-world system run by a powerful few. And in 1953,
one of the individuals committed to exactly that goal said as much in a very
explicit way.
That individual was H. Rowan Gaither, a CFR member who was the president of the
very powerful Ford Foundation. It was during the preliminary stages of a
Congressional investigation into the activities of the huge tax-exempt
foundations that Mr. Gaither invited Norman Dodd, the Director of Research for
the Congressional Committee, to Ford Foundation headquarters in New York City.
The purpose of the meeting was to discuss the reasons why Congress wanted to
investigate the foundations. At the meeting, Rowan
Gaither brazenly told Norman Dodd that he and others who had worked for the
State Department, the United Nations, and other federal agencies had for years
...operated under directives issued by the White House, the substance of which
was that we should make every effort to so alter life in the United States as to
make possible a comfortable merger with the Soviet Union.
Then he added, "We are continuing to be guided by just such
directives."
When the thoroughly shocked Norman Dodd asked Rowan Gaither if he would repeat
that statement to the full House Committee so that the American people would
know exactly what such powerful individuals were trying to accomplish, Gaither
said: "This we would not think of doing. (21)
As further proof of just how powerful these subversive influences already were
in the early 1950s, the Committee, headed by Congressman Carroll Reece of
Tennessee, never did get to the bottom of its investigation of the tax-exempt
foundations, (22) and it was soon disbanded. A summary of what was learned
appears in Rene Wormser's book, Foundations, Their Power And Influence,
(23)
"World Order" Nightmare
But the drive toward a merger of the United States with communism continues. The
final goal, as we have already stated, is a world government ruled by a powerful
few. And lest anyone think that such a development will be beneficial to the
world or agreeable to himself, let us list four certain consequences of world
government.
One: Rather than improve the standard of living for other nations, world
government will mean a forced redistribution of all wealth and a sharp reduction
in the standard of living for Americans.
Two: Strict regimentation will become commonplace, and there will no
longer be any freedom of movement, freedom of worship, private property rights,
free speech, or the right to publish.
Three: World government will mean that this once glorious land of
opportunity will become another socialistic nightmare where no amount of effort
will produce a just reward.
Four: World order will be enforced by agents of the world government in
the same way that agents of the Kremlin enforce their rule throughout Soviet
Russia today.
That is not the kind of world that anyone should have to tolerate. And it is
surely not the kind of an existence that a parent should leave for a child. Yet,
that is what is on our near horizon right now, unless enough Americans stop it.
Or a Better World
The John Birch Society was organized in part to stop the drive toward world
government. In 1966, Robert Welch, the founder and leader of the John Birch
Society, delivered a speech which he called The Truth In Time. (24)
One of the most important sections in this valuable survey is Robert Welch's
discussion of the individuals who are carrying out the Conspiracy's goals, but
who have never been communists. Mr. Welch coined a word to describe these
powerful men. He called them the Insiders.
Strangely enough, we have seen that Jimmy Carter attacked what he, too, called
Insiders during his campaign for the office of President. We are, however,
making no inference that Mr. Carter used the word because Robert Welch had. The
amazing aspect of this coincidence is that, in using the word
"Insiders," both Jimmy Carter and Robert Welch were referring to the
same individuals, and to the same force. But Jimmy Carter had obviously thrown
in his lot with them, and was dishonestly seeking votes by condemning them.
Robert Welch, on the other hand, has condemned the Insiders, named the Insiders,
and formed the John Birch Society to stop what they are doing to our country and
to the world.
The Insiders must be stopped. The control they have over our government must be
broken. And the disastrous policies of our leaders must be changed. The way to
accomplish these urgent tasks is to expose the Insiders and their conspiracy.
The American people must be made aware of what is happening to our country and
who is doing it. If sufficient awareness can be created in time, the Insiders
and their whole sinister plan will be stopped. This is the goal of the John
Birch Society. Education is our strategy and truth is our weapon. (25) But more
hands are needed to do the job. More hands are needed to wake the town and tell
the people.
You don't have to be political scientist, or an economist, or a Ph.D. in world
history to be a member of the John Birch Society. The most important single
requirement has always been a sense of right and wrong, and a preference for
what is right. If you want to do your part to save your country, and to stop the
Insider-controlled drive toward a communist-style world government, then you
ought to join the Society now.
The John Birch Society has the organization, the experience, the tools, and the
determination to get the job done. God help us all if, for want of willing
hands, we fail!
Footnotes
1. John T. Flynn, While You Slept (New York: Devin-Adair, 1951,
and Boston: Western Islands, 1965).
2. Robert Welch, May God Forgive Us (Chicago: Regnery, 1952) and Again
May God Forgive Us (Boston, Belmont Publishing Co., 1963).
3. Human Cost Of Communism In China, Report issued by Senate
Subcommittee to Investigate the Administration of the Internal Security Act and
Other Internal Security Laws, Ninety-Second Congress, 1971.
4. Nathaniel Weyl, Red Star Over Cuba (New York: Devin-Adair,
1960).
5. Richard L. Turner, "I'll Never Lie To You" - Jimmy Carter In
His Own Words (New York: Ballantine Books, 1976).
6. Sam Smith, Carter's Crimson Tide, Boston Globe. January 29,
1978.
7. Dan Smoot, The Invisible Government (Boston: Western Islands,
1977).
8. Philip Dru: Administrator (New York, 1912).
9. Karl Marx, The Communist Manifesto (Boston: American Opinion,
1974).
10. Dan Smoot, The Invisible Government.
11. The eleven United States Senators listed as members of the Council on
Foreign Relations in 1978 are:
Howard H. Baker; John C. Culver;
Daniel P. Moynihan; Claiborne Pell; Jacob K. Javits; Charles McC. Mathias, Jr.;
George McGovern; Abraham Ribicoff; William V. Roth, Jr.; Paul S. Sarbanes; and
Adlai E. Stevenson III. See Annual Report 1977-1978, Council on Foreign
Relations, Inc., New York.
12. June 1978 By-Laws of the Council on Foreign Relations, Article II: "It
is an express condition of membership in the Council, to which condition every
member accedes by virtue of his membership, that members will observe such rules
and regulations as may be prescribed from time to time by the Board of Directors
concerning the conduct of Council meetings or the attribution of statements made
therein, and that any disclosure, publication, or other action by a member in
contravention thereof may be regarded by the Board of Directors in its sole
discretion as ground for termination or suspension of membership pursuant to
Article I of the By-Laws." Annual Report 1977-1978.
13. Examples of former CFR members who did what they could to expose the
purposes of the organization are former Assistant Secretary of State Spruille
Braden (see Dan Smoot, The Invisible Government) and retired Rear
Admiral Chester Ward (see Phyllis Schlafly and Chester Ward, Kissinger On
The Couch, New York: Arlington House, 1975).
14. Richard Nixon, "Asia After Vietnam," Foreign
Affairs, October, 1967.
15. Richard N. Gardner, "The Hard Road to World Order,"
Foreign Affairs, April 1974.
16. Zbigniew Brzezinski, Between Two Ages (New York: Viking Press,
1970, and New York: Penguin Books, 1976).
17. Report of Purposes and Objectives, by Trilateral Commission March 15, 1973.
18. Jimmy Carter, Why Not The Best? (Nashville: Broadman Press,
1975).
19. Membership list of the Trilateral Commission, January 31, 1978.
20. Terence Smith, "Brzezinski, Foreign Policy Advisor, Sees Role as
Stiffening U.S. Position" New York Times, March 21, 1978.
21. Norman Dodd in letter to Howard E. Kershner, December 29, 1962.
22. Tax-Exempt Foundations, Report of the Special House Committee to Investigate
Tax-Exempt Foundations (Reece Committee), Eighty-Third Congress, 1954.
23. Rene A. Wormser, Foundations, Their Power And Influence (New
York: Devin-Adair, 1958).
24. Robert Welch, The Truth In Time (Boston: American Opinion,
1966).
25. Robert Welch, The Blue Book of The John Birch Society (Boston:
Western Islands, 1959).
Part II - 1983
The John Birch Society's survey
entitled The Insiders was released early in 1979. Over twelve
hundred copies were purchased and put into use by members in a matter of months.
Several hundred thousand copies of the printed text, in booklet form, were also
purchased and distributed throughout the nation. In addition, reprint permission
was granted to several other publishers, and their efforts undoubtedly doubled
the readership of this analysis of the powerful few who dictate American policy.
It is impossible to know how many Americans saw or read The Insiders
or one of the many similar treatises which paralleled it or were stimulated by
it. Millions, for sure. Tens of millions, most likely.
By early 1980, the accumulated exposure of the Trilateral Commission and the
Council on Foreign Relations, the two most identifiable Insider organizations,
had begun to produce some dramatic effects. For one, these organizations became
well enough known to be "hot topics" on the campaign circuit. Informed
voters from coast to coast, especially those who were disenchanted with the
Carter Administration, began to seek candidates who were not tied to either of
these groups.
In New Hampshire, for instance, where the first presidential primary is held
every fourth February, most of the candidates for the Republican nomination were
happily responding to voters that they were "not now and never have
been" members of Davld Rockefeller's Trilateral Commission or his Council
on Foreign Relations. But Republican candidates George Bush and John Anderson
could not join in such a response because each had connections to both of these
elitist organizations.
This issue was not confined solely to New Hampshire either. It was a nationwide
phenomenon. Witness a February 8, 1980 article in the New York Times. (26)
Reporting on a Ronald Reagan campaign trip through the South during the first
week of February, the article stated that Mr. Reagan had attacked President
Carter's foreign policy because he had found that "19 key members of the
Administration are or have been members of the Trilateral Commission." It
also noted that when Mr. Reagan was pressed to back up his charge, an aide
listed the names of President Carter, Vice President Mondale, Secretary of State
Vance, Secretary of Defense Brown, and fifteen other Carter officials.
The report further stated that Reagan advisor Edwin Meese told the reporters:
"...all of these people come out of an international economic-industrial
organization with a pattern of thinking on world affairs." He made the very
interesting comment that their influence led to a "softening" of our
nation's defense capability. Both he and Mr. Reagan could have added that
practically all of these Carter Administration officials were also members of
the Council on Foreign Relations. But neither chose to do so.
Anti-Elitist Reversals
The history of that period shows that Ronald Reagan exploited this issue very
capably. On February 26th, in New Hampshire where the matter had become the
deciding issue in the primary, voters gave him a lopsided victory. His strong
showing and the correspondingly weak showing by George Bush delighted the
nation's conservatives and set a pattern for future victories that carried Mr.
Reagan all the way to the White House.
But something else happened on February 26, 1980 that should have raised many
more eyebrows than it did. On the very day that Ronald Reagan convincingly won
the nation's first primary, he replaced his campaign manager with longtime
Council on Foreign Relations member William J. Casey. Mr. Casey served as the
Reagan campaign manager for the balance of the campaign, and was later rewarded
with an appointment as Director of the Central Intelligence Agency.
The selection of William J. Casey in the strategically important position of
campaign manager was highly significant. He is a New York lawyer who served the
Nixon Administration in several positions including Under Secretary of State for
Economic Affairs and Chairman of the Export-Import Bank. In those two posts
especially, he gained a reputation as a crusader for U.S. taxpayer-financed aid
and trade with communist nations.
During this same period, while serving as an official of the State Department,
Casey declared in a public speech given in Garden City, New York, that he
favored U.S. policies leading to interdependence among nations and to the
sacrificing of our nation's independence. (27) These attitudes are thoroughly in
agreement with the long-term objectives of the Insiders, but are not at all
consistent with the public positions taken by Mr. Reagan. But very few made note
of the Casey appointment because very few knew anything about Mr. Casey.
With CFR member William J. Casey on the team, the Reagan campaign was still able
to focus attention on the Trilateral Commission and on fellow Republican George
Bush's ties to it. But nothing was said about the older, larger, and more
dangerously influential Council on Foreign Relations.
Rockefeller Ties
In April 1980, Mr. Reagan told an interviewer from the Christian Science Monitor
(28) that he would shun the directions of David Rockefeller's Trilateral
Commission. But George Bush, who had recently resigned both from the Trilateral
Commission and from the Board of Directors of the Council on Foreign Relations,
could not shake the stigma of his Insider connection.
In Florida, understanding about the Trilateral Commission led to widespread use
of a political advertisement which claimed, "The same people who gave you
Jimmy Carter want now to give you George Bush." (29) An identical ad
appeared in Texas. The Reagan bandwagon, propelled in part by its attack on the
Insiders, began to score one primary victory after another.
Eventually, Ronald Reagan convincingly won the Republican nomination.
Conservatives across the nation were delighted That is, they were delighted
until he shocked his supporters by selecting George Bush as his running mate.
George Bush was the very epitome of the Insider Establishment type that had made
so many of these people strong Reagan backers in the first place. That night, at
the Republican convention, the word "betrayal" was in common usage.
Ronald Reagan had repeatedly and publicly promised that he would pick a running
mate who shared his well-known conservative views. But, of all the Republicans
available, he picked the man who was the darling of the Rockefellers. Nor was
the Rockefeller-Bush relationship any secret.
Campaign finance information had already revealed that prior to December
31,1979, the Bush for President campaign had received individual $1,000
contributions (the highest amount allowed by law) from David Rockefeller, Edwin
Rockefeller, Helen Rockefeller, Laurance Rockefeller, Mary Rockefeller, Godfrey
Rockefeller, and several other Rockefeller relatives and employees.
Staunch Reagan supporters frantically tried to stop the Bush nomination. But
political considerations quickly forced them to go along. One after another,
they began to state that their man was still at the top of the ticket. "It
was Reagan-Bush, not Bush-Reagan," they said. But all had to admit that the
issue of Trilateral domination of the Carter Administration could hardly be used
with a Trilateralist veteran like Bush on the ticket.
From the time William Casey joined the Reagan team in February, the issue of CFR
domination of America could not be used. And when George Bush was tapped as the
Reagan running mate, the Trilateral issue was also dead. Only a very few
realized that when those two issues were lost, the hope that future President
Reagan would keep Insiders from key positions in government was also lost.
As the summer of 1980 faded into fall, Insiders were showing up in every
conceivable part of the Reagan campaign. In September. a casual "Prelude to
Victory" party was given by the Reagans at their rented East Coast home in
Middleburg, Virginia. A photo taken at the party shows that the place of honor,
at Mr. Reagan's immediate right, was given to none other than David Rockefeller,
the leader of the CFR and the Trilateral Commission. Guests at this party
included Dr. Henry Kissinger and other CFR and Trilateral members. (30)
Two weeks before the election, the front page of the New York Times carried a
photo showing the future President campaigning in Cincinnati. Alongside him as
his foreign policy advisors who the President said would answer questions for
him, were Senator Howard Baker, former Ambassador Anne Armstrong, and former
Secretaries of State William P. Rogers and Henry Kissinger. All were members of
either the CFR or the Trilateral Commission or both. (31)
Stacking the Cabinet
Election Day 1980 produced a Reagan landslide. Caught up in misguided euphoria,
conservatives began talking about the return of fiscal and diplomatic sanity to
the federal government. But the shock they felt when their man had chosen George
Bush as his running mate returned when President-elect Reagan announced his
selections for the new cabinet.
For Secretary of State, he chose Alexander Haig, a member of the Council on
Foreign Relations. For Secretary of the Treasury, Donald Regan, and for
Secretary of Commerce, Malcolm Baldrige - both members of the Council on Foreign
Relations. Back in February, Edwin Meese had told reporters that Mr. Reagan
opposed the Trilateral Commission because the organization's influence led to a
"softening of defense." Yet, he chose for his Secretary of Defense,
Caspar Weinberger, a member of the Trilateral Commission. Men from the same
Insider team were still in power!
Five months after Mr. Reagan had been sworn in as President, the Council on
Foreign Relations noted in its Annual Report that 257 of its members were
serving as U.S. government officials As in previous administrations, these
individuals filled many of the important Assistant Secretary and Deputy
Secretary posts at the State Department, Defense Department, Treasury
Department, and so on.
For the critically important post of
White House Chief of Staff, Mr. Reagan named James Baker III. The White House
Chief of Staff determines who gets to see the President, what reading material
will appear on his desk, and what his policy options might be on any given
situation. But James Baker had fought against Ronald Reagan as the campaign
manager for George Bush in 1980, and as a campaign staffer for Gerald Ford in
1976. He is a confirmed liberal who was an opponent of the philosophy enunciated
by Mr. Reagan during the 1980 campaign. In his White House post, he leads a team
of like-minded men who have virtually isolated the President from the many
conservatives who supported his election bid.
Policy Reversals
As President, Mr. Reagan has been given the image of a tough anti-communist and
a frugal budget-cutter. But the images do not hold up under close scrutiny. Only
one year after taking office, he acquiesced in the taxpayer-funded bailout of
Poland's indebtedness to large international banks. Even worse, he skirted the
law which mandates that any nation in such financial difficulty must be formally
declared in default before the U.S. government could assume its debts. What made
this action doubly revealing was that it occurred at the very time that
thousands of Polish citizens had been incarcerated in a typical communist
crackdown against even a slight semblance of freedom.
During 1981 and 1982, Ronald Reagan personally signed authorizations for the
U.S. Export-Import Bank to finance nuclear steam turbines for communist Rumania
and power generation equipment and a steel plant for communist China. (32) Tens
of millions of U.S. taxpayers' dollars are being provided for the
industrialization of these Red tyrannies.
Also, Reagan Administration officials announced plans to sell arms to Red China;
they told anti-communist businessmen in El Salvador that the U.S. would oppose
efforts by any anti-communist Salvadorans to gain control of their country; and
these same Administration officials refused to honor a pledge to supply Free
Chinese on Taiwan with the fighter planes deemed necessary by the Chinese for
defense.
When the President authorized a joint Peking-Washington communiqué which stated
that military support for the Free Chinese is no longer our nation's "long
term policy," even CFR member Dan Rather of CBS News called the document a
startling reversal of frequently stated Reagan rhetoric.
On the domestic front, the record of reversals is just as dramatic. When Mr.
Reagan campaigned against Jimmy Carter, he said he would cut two percent ($13
billion) from the fiscal 1981 budget which he would inherit if elected.33 He did
nothing about that budget. Instead, he went to work immediately on the budget
for the following year.
On February 18, 1981, in one of his first speeches to the nation as President,
he delivered his own budget proposals. In that address, he stated: "It is
important to note that we are reducing the rate of increase in taxing and
spending. We are not attempting to cut either spending or taxing to a level
below that which we presently have." Yet, America was inundated with
propaganda which had practically everyone believing that the Reagan economic
package contained a substantial reduction in federal spending. Supposed budget
cuts were labeled "massive," "drastic,"
"historic," and "cruel." But simple arithmetic showed that
what President Reagan proposed for fiscal 1982 was $40 billion more spending
than could be found in the 1981 budget. By the end of fiscal 1982, instead of
being reduced as candidate Reagan had promised, that figure had grown to a $70
billion increase over spending from 1981. And the deficit associated with it
soared to $110 billion.
But the Reagan reputation, which had been gained by his campaign oratory and by
erroneous descriptions of his economic program, continued to delight
conservatives and anger liberals. At a press conference one year later on March
31, 1982, a reporter asked the President to respond to the accusation that he
cared little for the nation's poor. Part of his lengthy response included the
following statement: "Maybe this is the time, with all the talk that's
going around, to expose once and for all the fairy tale, the myth, that we
somehow are, overall, cutting government spending.... We're not gutting the
programs for the needy." He then heatedly boasted that federal spending for
student loans, welfare, meals, rents, job training, and social security was
higher than it had been under Jimmy Carter's last budget.
It was the Reagan-led conservative philosophy that won a decisive victory in the
1980 elections. Promises to get tough with the communists, to cut spending, to
balance the budget, and to abolish the Departments of Education and Energy
appealed to millions. But there has been no change in the government's
direction. America continues to help communists and to harm our nation's
anticommunist friends. Federal spending continues to grow, and deficits are
skyrocketing. And the bureaucrats at the Departments of Education and Energy are
still in place.
More Reagan Duplicity
At the halfway point of the Reagan four-year Presidential term, the Director of
the Congressional Budget Office forecast budget deficits in the $150 billion
range for the Reagan-directed fiscal years 1982, 1984 and 1985.34 Others
insisted that the deficits would be even higher. The largest deficit in the
nation's history, prior to the Reagan Administration, was $66 billion during the
Ford years. Budget deficits, of course, translate into inflation, high interest
rates, business slowdown, higher taxes, and unemployment. If federal spending
were no more than federal revenue, if we had the benefit of a balanced budget in
other words, some of these problems would be far less severe.
Shortly after he took office, Mr. Reagan twisted the arms of conservative
senators and congressmen to get them to raise the ceiling on the national debt.
Had he insisted on no further increases, the spiraling growth of government
could have been checked. But instead, he used his influence to authorize more
debt. Then he did the very same thing again eight months later, and again in
1982. As a result, interest on the debt alone grew to $117 billion for fiscal
1982.
In his State of the Union address on January 26, 1982, President Reagan again
appealed to conservative Americans when he stated:
Raising taxes won't balance the budget. It will encourage more government spending and less private investment. Raising taxes will slow economic growth, reduce production and destroy future jobs.... So, I will not ask you to try to balance the budget on the backs of the American taxpayers. I will seek no tax increases this year.
But, in
August 1982, his actions again failed to parallel his rhetoric,
and he used all the muscle he could muster to get
Congress to pass the largest tax increase in our nation's history - $227 billion
over five years. Opponents of this huge tax increase were the
principled conservatives who had supported his election bid. The President's
allies on the tax increases included big spending liberals like Senator Edward
Kennedy and Speaker of the House "Tip" O'Neill.
One result of the failure of the Reagan Administration to stand by the
philosophy which brought the President to the White House is that conservatives
everywhere have been blamed for the nation's woes. The congressional elections
of 1982 amounted to a significant setback for the entire conservative movement.
It seemed to many voters that the conservative program had been tried and found
wanting. The truth is that the conservative program has yet to be tried. And the
reason why it has not been tried is that the Insiders who surround Ronald Reagan
are still in control.
The President himself supplied dramatic evidence of the existence of this
control in comments he made about the $5.5 billion increase in gasoline taxes he
signed into law on January 5,1983.
At his press conference on September 28,1982, he was asked: "Knowing of
your great distaste for taxes and tax increases, can you assure the American
people now that you will flatly rule out any tax increases, revenue enhancers or
specifically an increase in the gasoline tax?"
Mr. Reagan responded: "Unless there's a palace coup and I'm overtaken or
overthrown, no, I don't see the necessity for that. I see the necessity for more
economies, more reductions in government spending...."
Less than three months later, he was vigorously promoting that increase in the
gasoline tax. Call it a "palace coup" or whatever, the chain of events
certainly suggests that someone other than the President is in control.
CFR Lineage
When CFR member Alexander Haig resigned as Secretary
of State, CFR board member George P. Shultz was immediately named to replace
him. During confirmation hearings, several senators and a number of political
writers worried openly about what became known as "the Bechtel
Connection." It seemed almost sinister to them to have Mr. Shultz join
another former Bechtel Corporation executive, Defense Secretary Caspar
Weinberger, in the Reagan Cabinet's inner circle. But the
senators and the supposedly hard-nosed, prying reporters were assured that there
was no cause for alarm, and the matter died.
If a common corporate lineage of these two cabinet
officials stirs concern, however, why is there no concern whatsoever over the
fact that both are current members of the Council on Foreign Relations? And why
not even a bare mention of the fact that Mr. Shultz would be the tenth Secretary
of State in a row to hold CFR membership before or immediately after his tenure?
That the CFR owns the State Department can hardly be
denied. But it can be ignored, which is precisely what has been going on in
America for decades. The result? Most Americans remain totally unaware that the
same powerful Insiders still control our government.
The Council on Foreign Relations rarely receives any press
coverage. When confronted by adversaries, spokesmen for the organization
repeatedly insist that it is merely a glorified study group which takes no
positions and has no stated policy on foreign or domestic affairs. Rather, they
insist, the CFR merely offers the diverse thinking given by important students
of world affairs.
Yet, in an unusually frank article about the Council appearing in the New York
Times for October 30, 1982, author Richard Bernstein obviously reflected the
attitude of the CFR executives with whom he had spoken when he wrote: "It
[the Council] numbers among its achievements much of the country's post World
War II planning, the basic ideas for reconciliation with China and the framework
for an end to military involvement in Indochina." (35)
If an organization takes no positions and has no
stated policies, how can it list as "achievements" the shaping of some
of our government's most important decisions over the past forty years? And what
"achievements" these have been!
Post World War II planning has seen the United States descend from undisputed
world leadership and the admiration of virtually all nations to being militarily
threatened by the USSR and being despised by almost everyone else. Post World
War II planning, for which the CFR claims credit, has seen the United States
bumble its way from a defeat here to a setback there to an error in judgment
somewhere else, while freedom has retreated everywhere and the world
increasingly falls under communist control.
Reconciliation with China, rather than being an achievement, puts our nation in
bed with the world's most brutal tyranny and is making us adversaries of the
friendly, productive, free and honorable Chinese on Taiwan.
Nor is the disgraceful conclusion to our military involvement in Indochina
anything of which to be proud. The end saw three nations-Laos, Cambodia and
South Vietnam-fall to typically brutal communist tyranny. The toll in human
slaughter which had followed in the wake of our nation's pullout from Southeast
Asia is indescribable. And those who said that these nations would not fall like
dominoes are now strangely silent.
It is highly significant to see this corroboration of our long-held belief that
the CFR helps to shape our nation's policies. The policies noted in Bernstein's
New York Times article have produced communist victories in every case. It is,
therefore, even more significant to have this admission of the remarkable
dovetailing of CFR and communist goals.
Double Jeopardy Elitism
The Trilateral Commission also attempts to convey the impression that it exists
simply as a high-level discussion group which merely fosters economic and
political cooperation. In 1982, the Commission released East-West Trade At A
Crossroads which it quickly claimed contained only the views of its authors.
(36)
This study recommends an increase in the trade with communist nations that fuels
their military capabilities. Even after noting that
the communist bloc nations are already heavily in debt to the West, and that
previous trade had "produced no significant change in the foreign policy of
the Soviet Union," the study also recommends supplying even more credit to
stimulate greater trade. That credit, of course, is to be supplied by America's
taxpayers. Nor is this any departure from previously held
positions published by the Commission, or enunciated by its members.
What is most significant is that the recommendations given by this Trilateral
Commission report are wholly in tune with the policies both of the U.S.
government and the governments of the communist bloc nations. The American
people do supply the communist nations with equipment, technology and credit,
even while communist troops crush Poland and ravage Afghanistan, and while
Soviet missiles are menacing the United States. What this Trilateral Commission
publication recommends is no less consistent with Soviet desires than have been
the so-called achievements of the Council on Foreign Relations.
The Insiders of the Council on Foreign Relations and the newer Trilateral
Commission have been controlling U.S. policy for decades. Unfortunately, these
same individuals are still running things, despite the fact that the nomination
and election of Ronald Reagan can be substantially attributed to a growing
national revulsion at years of Insider control of this nation.
The Reagan Enigma
How then can one explain Ronald Reagan, the man on whom so many Americans placed
such great hope? All we can say is that there are several theories to choose
from, all of which fall in the realm of speculation.
One theory holds that he is a good man with fine instincts and excellent
intentions, but is such a hater of confrontation that he has effectively been
steamrolled by the non-conservatives who surround him.
Another theory holds that he was never a real conservative in the first place,
but is a very capable orator who can read a good speech and produce a convincing
image. The United Republicans of California published such a view in 1975, after
having experienced all of the years that Ronald Reagan governed their state.(37)
One individual who shares the view that Mr. Reagan's political effect has never
been conservative is Thomas Gale Moore of Stanford University's Hoover
Institution. In a syndicated column appearing in May 1981, (38) he discussed the
much-publicized Reagan plans to cut spending and reduce bureaucratic regulation.
But Mr. Moore then cautioned:
Skeptics find President Reagan's record as governor, often alluded to during the campaign, far from reassuring, especially since he used much the same rhetoric during his gubernatorial campaigns as appeared later during his campaign for the presidency.
While in Sacramento, he converted the state income tax into one of the most progressive in the nation, introduced withholding taxes, raised sales taxes, and sharply increased taxes on business.
While he was in office, California government expenditures increased faster than was typical of other states. Notwithstanding his campaign rhetoric, welfare expenditures alone escalated 61 percent in real terms during his two terms as governor.
That is hardly a record that should merit the label "conservative."
A third theory would excuse the
President by holding that government is out of control in the fiscal sense, and
that previously arranged international entanglements are so binding that not
even a President can reverse runaway spending or call a halt to the increasingly
obvious pro-communist stance taken by Washington. Happily, there are not too
many who believe that this theory has any validity.
Finally, another theory, which is not inconsistent with certain aspects of the
first two given above, is that, while Ronald Reagan is indeed the President, he
is not the boss. Nor have a number of his predecessors really been in charge.
Instead, the Insiders who really run America select a man whom they then permit
to occupy the White House. But it is they who still run the government through
like-minded individuals with whom they surround the President.
When Ronald Reagan announced that CFR member Donald Regan was to be his
Secretary of the Treasury, an aide pointed out that Mr. Regan had donated
$1,000, the maximum personal contribution allowed by law, to Jimmy Carter's
reelection campaign. And that, in 1980, Donald Regan had also contributed to and
raised money for left-wing congressmen who were engaged in tight races with
conservative, Reagan-backed challengers. When an aide asked then President-elect
Reagan why he would choose a man with such a background, Mr. Reagan is reported
to have said: "Why didn't anyone tell me?"
(39)
Why indeed did Ronald Reagan place Donald Regan in his cabinet? We suggest that
he did not make the selection, but that the Insiders made it and have made many
others, and that such a practice has been the rule rather than the exception for
years.
In late 1960, when John Kennedy formed his cabinet, his selections included
Robert McNamara for Secretary of Defense. At a gathering prior to their taking
office, Mr. Kennedy had to be introduced to Mr. McNamara. Could he logically
have picked a man to be Secretary of Defense whom he had never met? Or is it not
more reasonable to assume that the selection had been made for him? As Secretary
of Defense, Robert McNamara did a great deal to destroy our nation's
then-unchallenged military advantage.
Time magazine reported that Richard Nixon selected Henry Kissinger for the White
House post of Director of National Security based on having once met him at a
cocktail party, and having read one of his books. Yet, CFR member Henry
Kissinger was widely reported to have wept publicly when his patron Nelson
Rockefeller lost the 1968 Republican nomination to Richard Nixon. Did Nixon
choose Kissinger? Or, were the reports in U.S. News & World Report and
elsewhere correct when they openly stated the Rockefellers placed Kissinger in
the Nixon Administration's inner circle?
Routing the Insiders
There is, of course, nothing wrong with any President relying on the advice of
others in selecting his top assistants. What is vitally important is whose
advice is being followed, what type of individuals are named to the positions,
and what they do with the power given to them.
It is our view, as we implied earlier, that a tightly knit and very powerful
group has run America far more than has any recent President. Its effect on our
nation has been horrible. We call this group The Insiders and we dare to label
their activity a conspiracy-a conspiracy that must be exposed and routed if the
disastrous national policies of the past several decades are to be reversed.
The route that must be followed in order to accomplish this reversal must begin
by placing the mass of evidence about this conspiracy before the American
people. A well-informed public will then work to see that it is represented by
men and women at the congressional level who will not be intimidated or
corrupted by Insider influence in government, the press, the academic world, the
big labor unions, or anywhere else. The Insiders may indeed have working control
of the presidency and the mechanisms for choosing a president, but their clout
at the congressional and senatorial levels is a great deal less and exists
largely through bluff. In time, a sufficiently aware public can even break the
Insiders' grip on the White House itself.
Will America continue on a path which amounts to fiscal suicide? Will our
government continue to build and support communism everywhere, while it works
simultaneously to destroy the few remaining anti-communist nations? The John
Birch Society wants to put an end to Insider control of the policies of this
nation. If we are to succeed, the active help of many more Americans is needed
in a massive educational crusade. Whether or not you decide to help will count
heavily toward whether the future for this nation will be enslavement or
freedom.
The Insiders are hoping that you will do nothing. But true Americans everywhere
are asking for and counting on your help. The best kind of help you can give is
active support for and membership in the John Birch Society.
Footnotes
26. "Reagan Steps Up Attack on Carter's Foreign Policy," New York
Times, February 8, 1980.
27. "The Reshaping of the World Economy," an address by Acting
Secretary of State William J. Casey at Adelphi University, March 3,1974.
28. "The Strange Tale of How Ronald Reagan Sold 0ut to the
Trilateralist-tinged Republican Establishment," Kevin Phillips, Los Angeles
Herald-Examiner, August 4, 1980.
29. Newsweek, March 24, 1980.
30. W Magazine, September 26, 1980.
31. "A Day With Reagan," James Reston, New York Times, October
27,1980; also, New York Times, October 21, 1980.
32. Federal Register, May 29, 1981, Page 28833; Federal Register, September 9,
1982, Page 39655.
33. Televised address of October 24,1980.
34. The Review Of The News, August 11,1982.
35. "An Elite Group On U.S. Policy Is Diversifying," Richard
Bernstein, New York Times, October 30, 1982.
36. East-West Trade At A Crossroads, Robert V. Roosa, Armin Gutowski, and
Michaya Matsukawa, Trilateral Commission, 1982.
37. Oppose Candidacy of Reagan, United Republicans of California, San Gabriel,
California, May 4, 1975. The UROC Resolution said of Ronald Reagan that his
"deeds have served the liberals"; he "doubled the State Budget
and raised taxes"; he "promoted regional government contrary to his
expressed philosophy of local government"; and he "betrayed
conservative principles in the areas of property rights, income tax withholding,
gun control, medicine, mental health, welfare reform, crime control, etc."
38.
38. "Did Liberal Hearts Beat Under GOP Conservative Clothing?" Thomas
Gale Moore, Boston Herald-American, May 12, 1981. Mr. Moore also showed that,
after World War II, government always grew at a faster pace while Republicans
occupied the White House (Eisenhower, Nixon and Ford) than it grew while
Democrats held the Presidency (Truman, Kennedy and Johnson). He wrote, "In
fact, the evidence suggests that a voter who wants a liberal policy should vote
Republican; if he yearns for a conservative policy, he should cast his ballot
for a Democrat."
39. Regan At Treasury, Gary Allen, American Opinion, February, 1981.
Part III - 1992
The grip on the reins of the U.S.
government possessed by the Insiders grew dramatically when George Bush entered
the White House. Far from being an opponent of the powerful few who dictate
America's policies, Mr. Bush is a long-standing member of the Insider clique,
sometimes known simply as "the Establishment."
Staff reporter Sidney Blumenthal could write in the February 10, 1988 issue of
the Insider-led Washington Post: "George Bush, in fact, has been a
dues-paying member of the Establishment, if it is succinctly defined as the
Council on Foreign Relations and the Trilateral Commission." In his
article, Blumenthal noted that Mr. Bush severed his formal ties with both
organizations in 1979. But the Post reporter sought comments about Mr. Bush's
twin resignations from David Rockefeller, the powerful Insider who had been
chairman of both organizations when the future President began his quest for the
White House. Mr. Rockefeller told Blumenthal in 1988:
Bush has the knowledge and has the background and has had the posts. If he were President, he would be in a better position than anyone else to pull together the people in the country who believe that we are in fact living in one world and have to act that way.... I don't know what I would have done [about certain criticism for holding memberships in both the CFR and the TC]. I don't think he really accomplished what he hoped. It was still used against him. He has since spoken to the Council and the Trilateral and has been fully supportive of their activities. Even though he has resigned, he hasn't walked away from them.
Clearly, George Bush may have
resigned formal memberships in the CFR and TC in 1979, but his heart was still
with both organizations. On March 29,1981, only nine weeks after he took the
oath of office as Vice President, he addressed a Trilateral Commission meeting
held in Washington. The next day was to have been the occasion of a meeting of
Trilateral officials with President Reagan in the Oval Office. But it had to be
canceled because of John Hinckley's attempt on the President's life that very
morning. (40)
Early in the 1980 campaign, Mr. Bush distributed a statement about his
affiliation with the Trilateral Commission. Given on "George Bush For
President" stationery, it said: "I personally severed my association
with the Trilateral Commission as well as with many other groups I had been
involved with because I didn't have time to attend the endless
conferences." Once an elected Vice President, however, he managed to find
enough time even to deliver a speech at one of those "endless"
Trilateral conferences.
The Bush Path to the White House
There wasn't much doubt that George Bush would receive the Republican nomination
for President in 1988. For eight years, he had dutifully followed the lead set
by President Ronald Reagan and all of the CFR-member appointees dominating that
administration. How many CFR members were part of
the Reagan-Bush team? CFR Annual Reports for 1981 and 1988 show
that in the early months of the Reagan Presidency, 257 CFR members held posts as
U.S. government officials. By mid-1988, however, the number had risen to 313.
Ronald Reagan was ultimately responsible for this growing CFR dominance, but
George Bush was surely not complaining about it.
As Vice Presidents are expected to do, Mr. Bush stayed out of the limelight. He
spent those years representing the United States at scores of foreign funerals,
making appearances at Republican fundraising events, sitting behind Mr. Reagan
in full view of the television cameras during each of the State of the Union
addresses, and nodding in approval at whatever the President was saying or
doing. It wasn't difficult for him because, even
though Mr. Reagan had at times uttered some conservative sounding sentiments and
seemed like an opponent of the Insider Establishment, the President's actions
were very much in keeping with the agenda of the Insiders. The
Reagan performance rarely matched the Reagan rhetoric, and it continuously
indicated that the President didn't really mean what he was saying.
Good Republican soldier George Bush was even willing to suppress his stinging
characterization of candidate Reagan's 1980 economic plans as "voodoo
economics." The Reagan program called for increased defense spending and
decreased taxation, all of which the former California governor claimed could be
accomplished while still producing a balanced budget.
Spend more, take in less, and balance the budget? While George Bush was still
contesting for the 1980 Republican nomination, he was on the attack, and his
choice of the word "voodoo" to describe the Reagan plan was both
reasonable and colorful. When the economic reality dawned (the $110 billion
deficit for fiscal 1982, the first full year of the Reagan Administration, was
the highest in U.S. history), one wag suggested that Reaganomics was giving
voodoo a bad name.
But, as a stalwart Insider even more than as a member of the Reagan team, George
Bush dutifully bit his tongue and supported the piling up of huge deficits for
the next generation to shoulder - even as they grew larger and more threatening.
How bad did it get? The average annual deficit for the eight years of the Reagan
Administration exceeded $200 billion. If the vaunted "Reagan
revolution" had promised anything, it had promised fiscal responsibility.
Yet, the Insiders whom Mr. Reagan placed in charge gave the nation exactly the
opposite.
The fiscal profligacy was there for anyone to see. When the Republicans took
office in January 1981, the accumulated national debt amassed over the 200-year
history of the United States stood at $935 billion. Then, on September 30, 1988
(four months before the end of the Reagan Presidency and the end of the last
full fiscal year of the Reagan era), that debt had just about tripled and stood
at $2,572 billion.
During those eight years, the United States went from being the world's largest
creditor nation to becoming its largest debtor. No more could we scoff at
Mexico, Argentina or Brazil. We were in worse shape. The future of the American
people and their nation was being mortgaged by the Insiders running the
Reagan-Bush team, but George Bush's political future dictated that he keep quiet
about it. And the Insider-dominated media, that should have repeatedly reminded
him of his "voodoo" remark, ignored the plunge into debt and gave the
impression that there wasn't anything anyone could or should do about it.
Why this conspiracy of silence? Because deficits leading to socialist control of
the American people were exactly what the Insiders wanted. Because no one knew
this better than the Vice President whose ties to the Insiders were both
numerous and unbroken. And because the media itself was Insider dominated.
The Loaded Resume
There has never been a Presidential
candidate who could produce a more impressive - and a more
Insider-connected-resume than the one George Bush offered in 1988. He had served
virtually everywhere. Other than his two terms as a Republican congressman from
Houston, however, he'd been appointed by Insiders to every position he ever
held. With connections orchestrated early in his career by his father, Prescott
Bush, a Wall Street international banking Insider who served as a liberal
Republican senator from Connecticut during the 1950s, George had access to many
of the "right" people.
And he had other early connections too, such as his membership in the very
prestigious yet downright spooky Skull & Bones Society at Yale. According to
a 1977 article in Esquire magazine, this little-known Society forces its members
to participate in arcane rituals, maintain deep secrecy, and swear unswerving
loyalty to the organization itself. (41) Each year at Yale, fifteen seniors are
welcomed into the group. The Skull & Bones roster lists some extremely
prominent and influential Americans, many of whom are distinguished for having
been lifelong internationalists. These include W. Averell Harriman, Henry
Stimson, Henry Luce, McGeorge Bundy, William Bundy, Winston Lord, and Robert
Lovett.
Questions to members about what goes on within Skull & Bones always go
unanswered, inviting the charge that something is indeed being hidden. The late
Gary Allen [Gary Allen wrote the landmark book: None Dare Call it
Conspiracy] believed the group to be a "recruiting ground for the
international banking clique, the CIA, and politics." It is hardly
surprising that Mr. Bush chose Supreme Court Justice Potter Stewart to
administer his oath of office as Vice President in January 1981. A 1937 graduate
of Yale, Justice Stewart was himself a Skull & Bones member. A presidential
candidate's membership in a secret society such as Skull & Bones ought to
evoke numerous questions from the mass media and the public. But because the
group is so little known, there is virtually no controversy about it or about
the President's affiliation with it.
In 1970, George Bush was soundly defeated in his bid for a U.S. Senate seat from
Texas. Council on Foreign Relations veteran Richard Nixon rescued him from
potential obscurity by naming him U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations. The new
appointee began his duties by recommending the seating of Red China alongside
Nationalist China. When the UN voted to seat only the Communist Chinese, and
their delegate used his maiden speech to condemn the United States, Mr. Bush
expressed mere "disappointment."
A better man would have walked out of that nest of anti-American tyrants, which
is exactly the response Mr. Bush once advocated. In 1964, he declared: "If
Red China should be admitted to the UN, then the UN is hopeless and we should
withdraw." (42) Rhetoric is one thing and, as this statement and what
followed surely proves, performance is frequently quite the opposite. What is
also true is that a better person than the man sitting in that UN post would
never have accepted appointment to it in the first place.
How seriously our nation was hated at the UN could
be gauged by the spectacle of delegates actually dancing in the aisles when the
General Assembly ousted Free China, gave China's seat to the communist regime
and delivered an intentional insult to the United States. Ambassador Bush
responded meekly and then proceeded to welcome the emissary of the Peking
tyranny to the Security Council seat from which the anticommunist Chinese had
just been expelled.
He then found no difficulty supporting Mr. Nixon's growing friendship with
Peking's murderous tyrants, and he helped to make the groveling 1972 Nixon
pilgrimage to the land of Mao Tse-tung and Chou En Lai a much-needed source of
legitimacy for the Red Chinese regime. During that highly publicized visit,
President Nixon's formal banquet toast to Chairman Mao and Premier Chou included
his revealing assurance that their history-making meeting was taking place
because of "the hope that each of us has to build a new world order."
(43) The use of the phrase was unsettling to Americans who knew that Insiders
had been employing it for generations. But it didn't upset George Bush. And
claims in 1991 by the White House that Mr. Bush and National Security Advisor
Scowcroft had dreamed it up themselves during a boat ride off Kennebunkport in
August 1990 were bald-faced lies. (44)
After Red China had been completely accepted at the United Nations, and after
the future President had spent a considerable amount of his time trying to
repair the UN's sagging reputation with the American people, George Bush
abandoned the UN post in early 1973 to accept "election" as National
Chairman of the Republican Party. (This was essentially another appointment even
though party regulars went through the formality of electing him.) Almost
immediately he found himself embroiled in the Watergate travails of his good
friend Richard Nixon. He managed to survive that curious episode in American
history although Nixon did not.
Then, given his choice of posts by President Gerald
Ford, whose Administration was in the hands of such highly placed Insiders as
Henry Kissinger, Mr. Bush opted in October 1974 to lead the U.S. Liaison Office
in Peking. The Senate Internal Security Subcommittee's 1971
report entitled Human Cost of Communism in China (45) had detailed the
systematic liquidation of tens of millions of Chinese by the forces controlled
by Mao and Chou. Mass murder and other forms of inhuman treatment of the Chinese
and Tibetan peoples were still going on. But none of that deterred Mr. Bush from
doing what he could to provide the murderers with much-needed legitimacy. It was
Insider policy to bring Mainland China into the community of nations.
President Ford then enabled Mr. Bush to add another item to his resume by
appointing him Director of the Central Intelligence Agency in December 1975. He
lasted only a year at CIA because his newest patron, Gerald Ford, lost to Jimmy
Carter in the 1976 Presidential race.
The final entry in the Bush resume, of course, focused on his eight years as
Vice President under Ronald Reagan. All in all, a stunningly impressive listing
of credentials: two terms in Congress; Ambassador to the UN; Chairman of the
Republican Party; chief of the U.S. Liaison office in Peking; CIA Director; and
Vice President of the United States. These were his open credentials, the ones
George Bush wanted everyone to be aware of.
Insider Credentials
But George Bush had other credentials that he kept
quiet-although he wanted them known within Insider circles. He
had accepted membership in the Council on Foreign Relations during 1971 (46) and
a place on the roster of the Trilateral Commission during 1977. (47) As all
members of these elite groups always do, he avoided publicity about his Insider
connections because a growing number of Americans had learned about their goals
and didn't want what each advocated.
Unlike the CFR that delights in listing its important members, the Trilateral
Commission has a policy of denying or suspending membership to holders of
national government posts. The group periodically publishes a list naming
"Former Members in Public Service" along with its fewer than 300
members (a third each from North America, Europe and Japan). As soon as their
government service is completed, however, these individuals are frequently
welcomed back into the organization. Had he not been serving in government
posts, Mr. Bush would likely have been tapped for Trilateral membership earlier
than 1977. The Commission, formed in 1973 by CFR leaders David Rockefeller and
Zbigniew Brzezinski to promote world government, was made to order for an
ambitious implementer of Insider objectives.
Out of government service early in 1977, Mr. Bush
immediately signed on with the Trilateral elite, and also accepted a post on the
25-member Board of Directors of the CFR. (48) Over the years,
many CFR members have sought to defend their own participation in this
world-government-promoting group by insisting that they were trying to bring a
more patriotic perspective into the group's proceedings. It is safe to say,
however, that no one trying to challenge the overall thrust of the CFR ended up
on its Board of Directors.
With duties surrounding his Board of Directors service in the CFR and his new
membership in the TC (the twin pillars of the Establishment, both led by David
Rockefeller), Mr. Bush was kept very busy. But he also began spending time in
Houston where he teamed up with James A. Baker III, the man who made a name for
himself during the 1976 Republican sweepstakes both with his strong support for
Establishment favorite Gerald Ford and his equally strong distaste for Ronald
Reagan's conservative pronouncements. The two began planning for a 1980 Bush run
at the White House.
Atlantic Council
Another credential Mr. Bush didn't publicize was his
mid-1970s membership on the Board of Directors of the Atlantic Council of the
United States (AC). Formed in the 1960s by former Secretary of
State Christian Herter, the AC's formal Policy Statement, approved on May 10,
1976, was endorsed by George Bush when he became an AC board member in 1978. It
claims that the changing world "can no longer be accommodated by political
forms and sovereignties developed in the eighteenth and nineteenth
centuries." (49)
What this means in the view of the Atlantic
Council's planners, of course, is that the independent United States of America
formed in the Eighteenth Century is an anachronism. The AC Policy Statement
boldly enunciated a desire to form institutions "to deal adequately with
problems with which no existing nation-state can cope successfully alone."
In other words, let's do away with nation-states, like the United States.
Atlantic Council founder Christian Herter was one of
the protégés of CFR founder Edward Mandell House, perhaps the
most prominent Insider within the U.S. in the Twentieth Century. Herter was with
his mentor at the 1919 meeting in Paris when the contingent of Americans led by
House and a group from Britain holding similar distaste for independent nations
formed America's Council on Foreign Relations and the British Royal Institute
for International Affairs. (60) It can truly be said of Herter and other
Insiders at the CFR's launching (John Foster Dulles and Allen Dulles were also
there) that they spent their lives seeking to cancel the Declaration of
Independence and the U.S. Constitution.
The Atlantic Council's 1975 report entitled Beyond Diplomacy gave proof of the
group's utter disdain for national sovereignty in passages such as:
"Interdependence, whether we like it or not, is the overriding
international fact of the last half of the 20th Century." Of the
anti-American UN, an AC publication entitled The Future of the United Nations
praised the idea of "global interdependence" and stated, "The UN
system...can and should perform the bulk of the global functions."
Other members of the Atlantic Council's Board who served alongside George Bush
included such prominent Insider CFR stalwarts as Henry Kissinger, Paul Nitze,
William J. Casey, Brent Scowcroft, Harlan Cleveland, and Eugene Rostow. The
organization's publication Issues and Opinions also noted that its Board of
Directors included "George S. Franklin Jr., Coordinator, The Trilateral
Commission" and "Winston Lord, President, Council on Foreign
Relations." Interlocking memberships and directorates in these Insider
organizations have always been common. Insider enthusiasm for one of their own
to occupy the President's office has been just as common.
An Insider in the White House
Mr. Bush won the 1988 race for the Presidency against Democratic candidate
Michael Dukakis by characterizing himself as a conservative and his
Massachusetts governor opponent as an archliberal. He was honest only about
Dukakis. Yet Dukakis was seeking Insider approval himself as indicated by his
appearance at CFR headquarters to give a speech about his views in December 22,
1987. CFR leaders thought favorably enough of him to include his photo in the
organization's 1988 Annual Report (page 40). Then, in the 1989 Annual Report,
who should be listed as a new member of the CFR but Michael Dukakis?
The exact date of the Dukakis entry into the rarified atmosphere of this Insider
nest has not been publicized. It did occur between June 30, 1988 and June 30,
1989. It is entirely possible, therefore, that during the heat of the 1988
presidential race, Michael Dukakis was already a CFR member. The Insiders knew
they could count on George Bush to carry their ball but they made sure their
influence would be present even if the Massachusetts Governor confounded the
experts and won the 1988 election. As usual in national politics, the CFR had
all the bases covered.
As President, Mr. Bush dutifully awarded the following key posts to
Insiders of the CFR:
Secretary of Defense went to Dick
Cheney (like Mr. Bush, Cheney had been a CFR board member),
Secretary of the Treasury was given to Nicholas Brady,
National Security Advisor to Brent Scowcroft (another CFR Board member),
Attorney General to Richard Thornburgh,
CIA Director to William Webster,
Deputy Secretary of State to Lawrence Eagleburger,
Office of Management of Budget Director to Richard Darman,
Federal Reserve Chairman to Alan Greenspan, and
Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman to General Colin Powell.
As of
February 4, 1991, the Trilateral Commission - hardly a disqualifying credential
for service on the Bush team - could proudly list as "Former Members in
Public Service": George Bush, Richard Darman, Lawrence Eagleburger, Alan
Greenspan, and Brent Scowcroft.
The absence of Secretary of State James A. Baker III's name from any CFR roster
breaks the string of ten Secretaries of State in a row (starting with Dean
Acheson in the Truman Administration) who held membership in the organization.
Why Baker has never been appointed, or why he has declined an invitation if one
were ever offered, is unknown. He is ideologically in tune with everything the
CFR wants for America and has himself chosen CFR members as his top advisors.
According to a lengthy article in the October 28, 1991 issue of the Insider-led
Washington Post, the Secretary of State's closest aides, both of whom are
credited with "a major role in many of the Bush "administration's
foreign policy triumphs and failures" and who are "Baker's two
principal idea men" are Dennis Ross and Robert B. Zoellick. (51) The Post
didn't tell readers but both are CFR members. With Ross and Zoellick right next
to Baker, and numerous other CFR members serving in the State Department as
Deputy Secretary and Assistant Secretaries, the State Department remains
CFR-occupied territory.
The Baker-led State Department shocked even its most
intense critics in late April 1990 with its invitation to Tim Wheeler to be the
featured speaker at a May Day luncheon in the department's plush reception
rooms. At the time, Wheeler was the veteran Washington correspondent for the
People's Daily World, the official newspaper of the Communist Party USA.
(52)
With CFR members dominating State, this invitation is not too surprising. It
calls to mind a revealing comment about Anatoly Dobrynin, Soviet Russia's valued
ambassador to the U.S. from 1962 until 1986. A very suave spokesman for his
tyrannical government, this ex officio head of the KGB in the United States had
actually befriended many American leaders during his long stay in Washington.
Writing about him in the May 13, 1984 New York Times Magazine, Madeline G. Kalb
noted his distaste for speeches and interviews but revealed that he had always
kept "in touch with influential journalists and top people at such
organizations as the Council on Foreign Relations." Communist officials
always found CFR leaders far more compatible than any anticommunist Americans.
What CFR Membership Means
Let us digress from the Bush record for a moment to repeat a long-standing
assessment of those who affiliate with the CFR. It is that a
CFR member is not necessarily a fully committed plotter dedicated to the
destruction of the United States. The
CFR frequently invites individuals to membership in order to influence them.
A new member who grabs hold of the thinking and direction of the organization's
leaders will likely be rewarded in his or her profession by other CFR members,
or might be invited to take a government position, or might even be named to the
group's Board of Directors. Names frequently
disappear from the CFR list. These persons probably never caught on to what is
expected of them or, if they did figure out what the CFR really intended, and
wanted nothing further to do with the organization, they were simply dropped.
Too many ambitious and unprincipled individuals, however, are delighted to join
groups like the CFR and TC. Their initial motivation usually stems from a desire
to advance their personal careers. They don't care about patriotism or national
independence, just self. They will follow the lead of whoever seems to be
winning and would even become hard-working patriots if doing so became the
way to move ahead. But others who affiliate with the Insiders are committed to
the world-government aspirations of CFR founder Edward Mandell House, and they
are unalterably committed to destroying the sovereignty of the United States. If
they hold a government post where an oath to support the U.S. Constitution is
required, they have perjured themselves.
According to the CFR's 1991 Annual Report, a
whopping 382 of its members were serving the Bush Administration as U.S.
government officials. The organization's total membership numbers
only 2,790, meaning that 14 percent of those who have joined this leading
Insider group hold high government positions. No other remotely similar
organization can claim such clout within the government. This startling
dominance over the nation's affairs ought to be a burning issue, but similar CFR
dominance of the mass media keeps most Americans totally unaware of who is
really running the U.S. government. The Insiders, of course, hope that they
remain unaware.
Iraq Invades Kuwait
On August 2,1990, Iraq's armed forces invaded neighboring Kuwait. The defining
moment of the Bush Administration's foreign policy had arrived. Far more than
the remarkable events occurring in Eastern Europe and the Soviet Union, it was
Iraq's warlike aggression that drew from the President words and deeds fully in
accord with the long-standing political goals of the Insiders.
A virtual green light given to Saddam Hussein in
Baghdad by U.S. Ambassador April Glaspie one week before the invasion convinced
the Iraqi dictator he had nothing to fear from any U.S. response. The transcript
of her face-to-face confrontation with Hussein just prior to the Iraqi assault
was actually released by Iraq. In it, Ms. Glaspie told the Iraqi dictator that
the U.S. had "no opinion on Arab-Arab conflicts like your border dispute
with Kuwait." (63)
Back in the United States, Ms. Glaspie immediately became "unavailable for
comment." Then, in March 1991, after all the shooting had ended, she was
brought before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee where she insisted that
the Iraqis had lied about her conversation with Hussein. In July, however, the
same Senate committee obtained copies of the secret cables she had sent from
Iraq summarizing the meeting. They showed her far more conciliatory toward
Hussein than she had described herself and also showed that the Iraqis had not
lied about her remarks to Hussein. Believing they had been "misled" by
the Ambassador, the senators voiced their displeasure to Secretary of State
Baker.
Then in September 1991, a subcommittee of the House Foreign Affairs Committee
conducted more hearings into the matter. Their effort showed that State
Department official Margaret Tutwiler had publicly stated essentially the same
message given by Glaspie a day prior to the Glaspie-Hussein meeting in Baghdad.
Also, Assistant Secretary of State for Near Eastern and Far Eastern Affairs John
H. Kelly (CFR) had repeated the identical "no commitment to defend
Kuwait" stance when questioned by House members two days before the
invasion. The New York Times reported about these congressional hearings with
such headlines as "Senators ... Misled," and "Before Invasion,
Soft Words for Iraq." (54)
It is hard to believe that April Glaspie was not relaying the attitude of the
Bush Administration when she gave Hussein what everyone later considered to be a
green light for his invasion. It is harder to believe that she was not also
following the Administration's line when she sought to deceive senators in March
- Why did she engage in deceit about what she said to Hussein? Why did the State
Department try to keep her from the press and the congressional committees?
Could the answer be that she was, wittingly or unwittingly, a player in an
unfolding plan to have hostilities break out in the Middle East so that the Bush
Administration could launch a war to promote the "new world order"?
The "New World Order"
President Bush reacted to the Iraqi attack by immediately sending U.S. military
forces to the Middle East. He furiously gathered support for a coalition-backed
effort to confront Saddam Hussein. He went to the United Nations where he
supported economic sanctions against Iraq, even as he was stepping up his own
anti-Hussein rhetoric and sending increasing numbers of U.S. troops into the
region. He turned to the United Nations, not the U.S. Constitution to which he'd
sworn a solemn oath, for authorization for his military moves. He then began to
state his goals - over and over again.
* September 11, 1990 televised address: "Out of these troubled times, our
fifth objective - a new world order - can emerge.... We are now
in sight of a United Nations that performs as envisioned by its founders."
* January 7, 1991 interview in U.S. News & World Report: "I
think that what's at stake here is the new world order. What's at
stake here is whether we can have disputes peacefully resolved in the future by
a reinvigorated United Nations."
* January 9, 1991 Press Conference: "[The Gulf
crisis] has to do with a new world order. And that new world
order is only going to be enhanced if this newly activated peacekeeping function
of the United Nations proves to be effective."
* January 16, 1991 televised address: "When we are successful, and we will
be, we have a real chance at this new world order,
an order in which a credible United Nations can use its peacekeeping role to
fulfill the promise and vision of the UN's founders."
* August 1991 National Security Strategy of the United States issued by the
White House and personally signed by George Bush: "In the Gulf, we saw the
United Nations playing the role dreamed of by it's founders.... I hope history
will record that the Gulf crisis was the crucible of
the new world order."
Two common themes are present in each of these pronouncements: 1. The President
is clearly committed to a "new world order"; and 2. his view of this
"new world order" includes his boosting of the prestige and power of
the United Nations.
What he didn't explain is that the phrase "new world order" has been
used for generations by individuals seeking to control the world. Those
employing it have sought socialism (economic control) and world government
(political control) over mankind. And, as we intend to demonstrate in what
follows, this goal has become Mr. Bush's exact agenda for our nation and for the
world.
Who are some of these advocates of centralized world control who have used the
phrase "new world order" during the past few generations? Some
prominent individuals who have called for a "new world order" by name
include Socialist H.G. Wells, National Socialist (Nazi) Adolph Hitler, Insider
Nelson Rockefeller, Communist Fidel Castro, CFR theoretician Richard N. Gardner,
Insider Henry Kissinger, and Communist/Socialist Mikhail Gorbachev - to name
just a few. (55)
In addition to advocating socialism - economic control of the people by
government via taxation, regulations and bureaucracy - each wanted world
government either by military conquest or through the route of a world political
organization such as the United Nations. Some early advocates of the "new
world order" sought world political control through the now-defunct League
of Nations. The successor to the League, formed in 1945 by Insiders of that era,
is the United Nations.
The War for a "Reinvigorated" UN
Mr. Bush's revealing statements called for a United Nations as envisioned by its
"founders." It becomes critically important, therefore, to know who
these founders were. A leading member of the U.S. delegation at the founding UN
conference in 1945 was Alger Hiss, later shown to have been a secret communist.
There were 15 other government officials working for the establishment of the UN
who were also later discovered to have been secret communists. (55) One of the
more important of these was Assistant Secretary of the Treasury Harry Dexter
White, the architect of the International Monetary Fund to which Mr. Bush
advocates giving huge amounts of U.S. taxpayers' money.
Added to the listing of communists busily working to create the UN were 43
current or future CFR members. Men of prominence in this group included CFR
founder House's protege John Foster Dulles. (67) Also, Nelson A. Rockefeller,
Adlai E. Stevenson, Edward R. Stettinius, Ralph Bunche, Philip C. Jesgup, and
future CFR Chairman John J. McCloy. (58)
There was, of course, a delegation from the USSR. It was led by Andrei Gromyko
who, along with all of his Soviet colleagues, was a communist. Other delegations
from the total of 50 nations participating in the founding were top-heavy with
socialists, communists, internationalists, one-worlders, and despisers of
national sovereignty. There were also a few starey-eyed dreamers who believed
they were participating in the founding of a totally benign peace-making
organization, not something designed by its many founders as an organization
meant to take control of the world.
The real "vision" of the UN founders
should hardly be a mystery to anyone. All communists who have ever walked the
earth have sought world government, an end to national sovereignty, the end of
personal freedom, and the domination of the many by the few. And every socialist
has always sought government control of everyone economically, a tactic that
leads more subtly to the same goals sought by communists. The UN was literally
made to order for totalitarians - which is exactly why those who seek political
or economic domination worked so hard to bring the organization into being.
Also, wouldn't it be quite ridiculous to suggest that the likes
of Alger Hiss, Harry Dexter White, Andrei Gromyko, John Foster Dulles, and John
J. McCloy were duped into supporting an organization that would thwart their
one-world designs? These men are prime examples of those who envisioned a world
run by the UN that they would control.
These UN founders, including the top Insiders of
their day, wanted the U.S. in the world body and they knew that the Declaration
of Independence and the U.S. Constitution would have to be scrapped along the
way. Therefore, Mr. Bush's determination to use the Gulf War to see the United
Nations "reinvigorated" according to the wishes of its
"founders" is both revealing and frightening. His hope that the war
would be the "crucible of the new world order" says it all.
Sad to say, the President's desires are being realized. An ill-informed American
public has applauded the boost in prestige Mr. Bush's actions have given the
world body. Publicity praising the UN as a "peace organization" is
everywhere. Few take the time to cut through the propaganda and realize that the
UN Charter itself (59) explicitly authorizes war, certainly including the kind
waged in the Middle East by U.S. forces with President Bush's hearty approval.
Is the UN a peace organization? Ask what's left of the civilian population of
Baghdad. These Iraqi civilians have undoubtedly figured out that UN-style peace
either means total submission to UN will or a UN-authorized force will bomb them
to kingdom come. It is worth noting that Mr. Bush stated very clearly in his
September 11, 1991 address to the nation. "Our enemy is Saddam Hussein, not
the Iraqi people." Yet, when the shooting stopped, Saddam Hussein was given
free reign to destroy his Shiite and Kurdish adversaries, which is exactly what
he proceeded to do. And the war left tens of thousands of Iraqi civilians dead.
Like "Read my lips, no new taxes," a complete turnaround of Mr. Bush's
statement naming his enemy would have revealed what was about to transpire.
During much of the 1980s, the U.S. government willingly cooperated in the use of
economic sanctions against friendly South Africa. But sanctions were never given
a chance against Saddam Hussein. Had sanctions been employed against the Iraqi
dictator , the United Nations would not have been "reinvigorated" as
it clearly has been in the aftermath of that strange war.
A War to Create World Government
Liberal Senator Paul Simon (D-IL) addressed his Senate colleagues on January 10,
1991, a few days before President Bush gave the go-ahead to unleash the U.S.
military. With war a virtual certainty, he criticized the President for
"giving up on the sanctions option." He said his concern was shared by
others including Senator George Mitchell (D-ME), who had earlier that same day
given his opinion that the being made prematurely. The two senators had toured
the Middle East and even visited U.S. bases only three weeks earlier.
Hoping to influence the President to
stick with sanctions and avoid bloodshed, Simon and Mitchell had gone
immediately to the White House upon returning from their December trip and were
dismayed to find Mr. Bush eager for war. Simon reported that during their
conversation, the President spelled out his reason for the course he intended to
pursue as follows: "If we use the military, we can make the United Nations
a really meaningful effective voice for peace and stability in the future."
(60)
According to the President himself, therefore, his overriding objective in
sending 500,000 U.S. troops into combat was to build the clout of the United
Nations. How many of the men and women wearing the uniform of this nation
understood that as they were sent into battle?
How many understand it today?
On February 27, 1991, during his address to the nation from the Oval Office in
the White House, Mr. Bush was basking in the glory of victory over the ragtag
Iraqi forces. In mid-speech, he again summed up the whole operation, saying
"This is a victory for the United Nations."
As Mr. Bush's private and public pronouncements frequently indicated, his goal
in the war he unleashed against Iraq had far less to do with liberating Kuwait
than it had to do with building the prestige and power of the United Nations.
History confirms that war has always been big government's best friend. In this
instance, war was used by the President of the United States to be world
government's best friend. Without question, the Insiders were delighted.
Similar instances of the exercise of such imperial power throughout history had
once prompted a young Abraham Lincoln to remind a law partner why the founding
fathers had so carefully assigned war-making power solely to Congress. In a
letter he wrote to William Hendon on February 15, 1848, Lincoln said:
Kings had always been involving and impoverishing their people in wars, pretending generally, if not always, that the good of the people was the object. This our Convention understood to be the most oppressive of all kingly oppressions; and they resolved so to frame the Constitution that no one man should hold the power of bringing this oppression upon us. (61)
Can there be a better summation
anywhere of the wrongness, even the unconstitutionality, of the way Mr. Bush
used our nation's military?
During the period leading up to the military assault against Iraqi forces, Mr.
Bush repeatedly maintained that he possessed full authority as
commander-in-chief to commit U.S. forces to action without the approval of
Congress. As commander-in-chief, the President has always had the power to
commit troops in order to defend U.S. property or personnel from any sudden
provocation. But there was nothing sudden about the operation being planned
here. The President had shifted the entire purpose of the troops from the
defensive mode to protect Saudi Arabia to an offensive force designed to attack
Iraq.
As early as October 17 and 18, 1990 (three months prior to the start of the
war), Secretary of State Baker emphatically rejected the idea that the
Administration was obliged to obtain approval from Congress before launching
offensive military operations against Saddam Hussein's forces. (62)
Congress finally got around to expressing its opinion about the coming war and
the President's highhandedness on January 12, 1991. With the House voting
250-183 and the Senate 52-47, both Houses approved a Congressional Joint
Resolution authorizing the President "to use U.S. Armed Forces pursuant to
UN Security Council Resolution 678." (63) In no way was this a declaration
of war as called for by the Constitution. Congress meekly authorized the
President to do what he intended to do anyway.
The transfer of authority here is immense. The new attitudes coming out of this
incident hold that Congress will pass a resolution supporting what the President
intends to do, and the President can seek authority to make war not from
Congress but from the United Nations.
An Ominous View From the President
Five times each year, the Council on Foreign Relations publishes its weighty
journal, Foreign Affairs. Early in 1991, in an unusual departure from its norm,
Volume 70, Number 1 led off on page one with an unsigned four-page editorial.
Headlined "The Road To War," its text began:
Never before in American history was there a period quite like it. For 48 days the United States moved inexorably toward war, acting on authority granted by an international organization. On November 29, 1990, in an unprecedented step, the United Nations Security Council authorized the use after January 15, 1991, of "all necessary means" to achieve the withdrawal of Iraqi forces from the territory of Kuwait. On January 12 the Congress of the United States authorized President Bush to use American armed forces to implement that resolution. This too was unprecedented. (64)
While only CFR members and
like-minded individuals could applaud such remarkable developments, who can
argue with this poignant assessment? The vote of the U.S. Congress authorizing
President Bush to use U.S. troops to implement a UN resolution was perhaps the
more chilling of the "unprecedented" steps described by Foreign
Affairs. Any search of the U.S. Constitution will produce no basis whatsoever
for either the President's action or the weak-kneed congressional sanction of
what he was determined to do - with or without congressional approval. With
President Bush's determined effort and the delight of both the UN and the
Insiders, America's military had become the policemen of the world.
A few months later, on September 23, l991, Mr. Bush went to UN headquarters in
New York to urge the formation of what he called a "Pax Universalis."
In his speech, he discussed the need for "collective settlement of
disputes," and he very clearly supported international action to settle
"nationalist passions" even within the borders of sovereign nations.
He applauded the continuation of UN sanctions against Iraq, and stated that he
wanted them kept in force for as long as Saddam Hussein "remains in
power."
With this speech, the President of the United States called for the use of
UN-created international sanctions against a targeted regime, not merely to roll
back its aggression against another nation but to dictate its internal political
makeup. He also put a stamp of approval on UN action to eliminate an unapproved
(by the Insiders) government of a sovereign state.
If the UN assumes the power Mr. Bush has endorsed,
aren't all nations threatened? Even our own? Hasn't the President sanctioned the
use of UN force to remove political leaders, restructure a nation's government,
even demand the alteration of its internal policies? He has opened the door for
UN force to settle internal problems existing within any nation's
borders, including problems here in the United States. Even veteran CFR member
Leslie H. Gelb writing in the New York Times was forced to comment: "What
could be more revolutionary, more threatening to the regimes that inhabit the
UN?" He went on to ask who would decide when and which states had violated
the standards named by Mr. Bush. "The UN? The U.S.? And who would intervene
to protect the oppressed, and how?" (65)
When a prominent CFR member describes Mr. Bush's proposals as
"revolutionary" and "threatening," everyone should take
notice. Can there be any doubt that this President is following a plan to
sacrifice national sovereignty and have the world run by the United Nations?
Even before he formally opposed Mr. Bush for the Republican nomination for
President, journalist Patrick Buchanan said what many Americans had been longing
to hear from a Presidential candidate. Attacking the President's policies only
weeks after the campaign against Saddam Hussein had begun, he wrote:
The Trilateralist-CFR, Wall Street-Big Business elite: the neo-conservative intellectuals who dominate the think tanks and op-ed pages; the Old Left, with its one-world, collective-security, UN uber alles dream: All have come together behind the "new world order." Everyone is on board, or so it seems. But out there, trying to break through is the old, authentic voice of American patriotism, of nationalism, of America First, saying hell, no, we won't go. (66)
He was clearly challenging both the Insiders' goals and their favored President who was busily promoting their cause. And he refused to back down in the face of angry and vicious attacks. On December 10, 1991, in his New Hampshire speech announcing his candidacy for the nomination, Buchanan said of the President:
He is a globalist and we are nationalists. He believes in some "Pax Universalis"; we believe in the Old Republic. He would put America's wealth and power at the service of some vague new world order; we will put America first.
Back in 1975, a former Judge
Advocate General of the U.S. Navy named Chester Ward had spoken out about the
CFR's purposes. After holding membership in the organization for 20 years, the
retired admiral stated in a book he co-authored that the CFR's goal was the
"submergence of U.S. sovereignty and national independence into an
all-powerful one-world government." And he added: "In the entire CFR
lexicon, there is no term of revulsion carrying a meaning as deep as 'America
First.'" (67)
Without naming them, Buchanan had attacked the Insiders at their core and their
favored President where he was most vulnerable. His use of the term
"America First" was certainly not overlooked by the Insiders. Quicker
than a wink, he was attacked for supposed "anti-Semitism,"
"jingoism," "nativism," "racism," and even
"fascism." But the attacks didn't come from certifiable liberals; they
came from individuals dubbed "conservatives" by the Establishment's
Insiders.
Of these Insider-connected journalists, most are "conservatives" who
threw the nasty adjectives at Buchanan. Yet, the following dozen who attacked
Buchanan are members of the Council on Foreign Relations: A.M. Rosenthal,
William F. Buckley, Jr., George Will, Charles Krauthammer, R. Emmett Tyrrell,
Paul A. Gigot, George Weigel, Gen. P.X. Kelley, Newt Gingrich, Irving Kristol,
Michael Novak, and Norman Podhoretz.
The Insiders, always anxious to have all the bases covered, have certainly
covered much of the conservative movement. When Buchanan offered a challenge to
their leadership, these toadies of the Insiders pounced on him like piranha. The
CFR to which they belong would have it no other way.
Dragging America Down
While world government is an ingredient of the "new world order," it
is only half of what the phrase means. The other half is socialism: economic
control of the people by government. Socialism doesn't require government
ownership of your property, but it certainly includes control. The hallmarks of
socialist domination are oppressive taxation, bureaucratic controls, numbing
regulations, and Big Brother-type government. Sound that this is precisely what
the Insiders are doing to them and their nation.
What will it mean if the trend is not reversed? In other nations where both
economic and political control has been established, the authorities slew over
100 million innocent victims. They were aided in the acquisition of total power
every step of the way by Insiders in our government who supplied them with aid,
trade, legitimacy, credit, equipment and technology during all of their years of
domination. Does anyone think for a minute that complete control of this nation
by the Insiders will somehow be benign? That all we have to worry about is
taxation and control? That we don't have to fear for our very lives? Make no
mistake about this: The goal of the Insiders is not the completion of some
academic exercise. They mean to rule and, if history is any guide, they mean to
rule with savage brutality.
The steps being taken to create socialism in the
United States and elsewhere are annoying, but the eventual use of the power
being accumulated can't help but lead to a repeat of the human slaughter
suffered by the peoples of Russia, Ukraine, Eastern Europe, China and wherever
total government took over. To think of the Insiders as anything else but a
power-hungry and totally ruthless clique of conspirators is to miss the point
entirely.
One of the more sinister tactics employed by
socialists to gain economic control of the people involves accumulating huge
national indebtedness. Paying interest on the debt then gives
government leaders the excuse to impose more and more taxation. Another
well-used tactic involves inviting - or forcing - massive numbers of citizens on
to welfare rolls where they become dependent upon government. And
still another calls for burdening the productive sector with costly, unnecessary
and downright production-inhibiting regulations. The Bush Administration is
guilty of all of these socialism-building tactics even as the President
dramatically boosts the world-government prospects of the United Nations.
Immediately after taking office in January 1989, President Bush unveiled a
federal budget containing economic forecasts, as required by law, for several
years into the future. On that occasion, the President's projections included
$1,249 billion in spending for fiscal year 1992 with a sharp decline in the
deficit to $30.6 billion. His forecast for fiscal 1993 estimated spending at
$1,284 billion with a surplus of $2.5 billion.
Three years later, in January 1992, the same President was forced to admit that
the deficit for fiscal year 1992 (ending September 30, 1992) would top out at
$399 billion, missing his earlier forecast by an astounding $368 billion! The
deficit alone now exceeds the total federal budget during the height of the
Vietnam War. He also announced that the 1991 fiscal year had been completed with
a deficit of $267 billion.
In addition, his January 1992 forecast included a spending level of $1,520
billion for fiscal 1993 (up $236 billion from his 1989 projection) with a
projected deficit of $352 billion instead of the modest surplus.
The President's defenders pointed to the costs of the Persian Gulf War as if it
was acceptable to spend huge amounts of money to build the power of the United
Nations. They also sidestepped the fact that some payments were made by many of
the "allies" during the conflict, and the further fact that military
spending has actually been reduced, both as a percentage of the entire federal
budget and in dollar amount.
They pleaded that the deficit was caused by the S&L bailout when that
government-inspired fiasco cost only 20 percent as much as the enormous increase
in domestic spending during the first three years of the Bush Administration.
Then, they blamed the recession on reductions in expected federal revenues. But
no Bush partisan wanted to talk about the huge deficits of the Reagan-Bush era
that had contributed to America's slowdown and had thereby diminished the
revenue collected by Uncle Sam.
The simple truth is that the huge increase in spending was due mainly to huge
increases in domestic spending for interest on debt and for an escalating number
of share-the-wealth schemes that are hallmarks of socialist takeover. And, as
history shows, a socialist takeover leads to consequences that are far more
damaging than empty wallets.
In addition, the huge increases in the deficit totals under George Bush-making
even Ronald Reagan's $200 billion per year average seem thrifty-have boosted the
annual payment for interest on the debt to a staggering $303 billion. With a
national population of 240 million, that's $1,260 for every man, woman and child
in America. But not all men, women and children pay taxes. Excluding children
and other non-earners, the average government take for interest alone is over
$3,000 per taxpayer.
This bill for interest on the national debt already exceeds the entire defense
budget and is rising rapidly. In July 1990, Budget Director Richard Darman (CFR
& TC) gave lip-service to the threatening situation he was helping to
arrange by warning: "Drastic consequences would occur if a way could not be
found to reduce the deficit." He was correct, and the deficits have indeed
grown larger as the nation slipped into the deepest recession since the 1930s.
One year after Darman's remark, conservative columnist Paul Craig Roberts, a
former Treasury Department official in the Reagan Administration, advised
readers in his syndicated column, "Get ready to sell your home to pay your
taxes!" (68)
If the productive sector has to come up with over $300 billion just for interest
on the national debt (20 percent of the federal budget!), and if it has to
provide more hundreds of billions for an increasing number of share-the-wealth
and control-the-productive-sector programs, is it any wonder that America has
slowed down? Blame Congress for going along with the President, but realize that
the President is fully backing the spending binge that is killing the U.S.
economy. The Insiders could hardly be more pleased.
"Read My Lips, No New Taxes!"
Most Americans remember the famous pledge given by candidate Bush in 1988.
"Read my lips, no new taxes!" was the catchiest campaign slogan the
nation had heard in many years. Yet, in October 1990, the President signed one
of the largest tax increases in American history, $164 billion over five years.
It was another body blow delivered to the nation's producers.
If any economic tinkering can help the nation out of a recession, it certainly
isn't a tax increase. Yet, in the midst of the most severe economic slowdown
since the great depression, the President cooperated in making it even worse by
supporting the huge tax increase. A freshman economics student would tell you
that you don't gobble up more consumer money with taxes when consumer spending
is needed to spur economic recovery.
As bad as the Bush deficit and taxation picture is, it is closely rivaled by the
President's support for the Insiders' goal of strangling business with
additional regulations and controls. He supported the Clean Air Act that
competent scientists say is completely unnecessary. It will add $40 billion of
regulatory requirements to business and industry. He burdened business with the
costly provisions of the Americans With Disabilities Act; he supported an
extension of unemployment taxes; and he backed the 25 percent boost in the
minimum wage. These and other burdens must be borne by productive Americans, and
each new burden reduces the number of those who are still able to produce and
provide jobs for others.
As early as December 1990, Newhouse News Service reporter Tom Baden wrote:
The federal government's regulatory watch dogs, muzzled in the Reagan administration, have been unleashed in the first two years of the Bush presidency.
The Transportation Department has issued tougher auto safety standards. The Occupational Safety and Health Administration has levied record fines on corporate violators. The Food and Drug Administration has devised strict rules for health claims on food labels. And 7,400 employees have been added to the 51 major regulatory agencies, according to one academic study. (69)
The President then signed the 1991
Civil Rights bill, saying it was a "compromise" measure that did not
contain racial hiring quotas. (Put the words "civil rights" in front
of any piece of legislation, no matter how costly or destructive of real rights
it is, and watch venal politicians line up to support it.) This particular bill
places the burden of proof regarding bigotry on the employer. The employer is
guilty as soon as he's accused, and he stays guilty until he can prove himself
innocent, often at great cost in time and legal fees.
If businessmen (or businesswomen) fail to demonstrate that their firm's hiring
practices are necessary, or if the racial composition of their employees does
not meet government "guidelines," they can see both their reputations
and their companies destroyed. Unscrupulous lawyers will have a field day with
this destructive and race-based legislation. Seeking out malcontents in order to
wage war against private citizens trying to engage in the business of America
will become the latest form of lawyer abuse directed against productive
Americans.
What can an employer be expected to do when faced with these threats other than
try to meet the "guidelines" before getting hauled into court? The
President said the bill didn't have any quotas. Senator Bob Smith (R-NH) bluntly
disagreed and stated, "This is a quota bill." Either meet the
"guidelines" or face the prospect of big trouble.
Also, this bill can't help but increase racial tensions while it solidifies an
already prevalent Marxist principle in the minds of millions of Americans. The
basic thinking it employs is that rights (such as the right to a job-which is no
right at all!) belong to a group, not to an individual. Karl Marx agreed that
individuals don't count, only the groups to which they belonged.
Only a few days after moving into the White House in 1989, Mr. Bush announced,
"I am an environmentalist." Later, he outlined plans to make the
Environmental Protection Agency a cabinet level department, a move that will
surely give it increased clout to wreak more havoc on productive America. It is
hardly surprising to note the name of EPA chief William Reilly on the CFR's
membership list. He is one of many Insiders championing environmental
legislation.
On January 3, 1990, the President gave a huge boost to the radical environmental
movement in America by proclaiming April 22nd as Earth Day. The
Insider-controlled press gave the project publicity that would ordinarily cost
billions. In remarks given while issuing that proclamation, he stated his desire
to "heighten public awareness of the need for active participation in the
protection of the environment and to promote the formation of an international
alliance that responds to global environmental concerns." Insiders
everywhere were delighted to hear his call for an "international
alliance."
Following Insider Guidelines
As recounted in Part I of this book. an Insider guru named Richard N. Gardner
authored "The Hard Road To World Order" for the Spring
1974 edition of the CFR journal Foreign Affairs. Boldly calling for world
government and piecemeal delivery of the U.S. into its clutches, he actually
advocated performing "an end run around national sovereignty, eroding it
piece by piece." To accomplish his twin goals, he urged the use of such
agencies as the International Monetary Fund, the World Bank, the General
Agreement on Tariffs and Trade, even a UN military force.
On January 19, 1988, the New York Times announced that President Reagan
"has opened the door to Soviet memberships in the World Bank, the
International Monetary Fund, and the General Agreement on Tariffs and
Trade." Reporter Clyde Farnsworth noted, "The new position contrasts
with the President's strongly stated opposition last year." It also
contrasted sharply with Mr. Reagan's earlier characterization of the Soviet
Union as an "evil empire." The Reagan turnaround made Gardner's
"hard road to world order" a great deal softer. Early in 1992,
President Bush announced that he would apply strong pressure to have Congress
approve a contribution of $12 billion more to the IMF for immediate transfer to
the former Soviet Union.
Currently a law professor at Columbia University in New York, Richard Gardner
has been a potent influence within the clique of Insiders no matter who occupies
the President's office. A protégé of Harlan B. Cleveland, he is a product of
Harvard University, Yale Law School, and the Rhodes Scholar program - Cleveland,
a member of the CFR from 1953, was appointed Assistant Secretary of State for
International Organization Affairs in 1961 by President John F. Kennedy.
Security evaluators at State ruled against granting him a security clearance,
however, because of his ties to communist-controlled organizations within
our nation.
Secretary of State Dean Rusk (CFR) promptly waived the security clearance and
Cleveland took the post. He immediately tapped Gardner as his Deputy Assistant
Secretary. Three years later, Gardner authored a full-length book entitled: In
Pursuit of World Order. (70) The book contains a glowing Foreword by
Cleveland calling for the building of a "decent world order...brick by
brick" and touting Gardner as a man who "understands the process of
international institution-building as clearly and as deeply" as anyone. And
Gardner notes in the Introduction to his own book that "the person
responsible for bringing me to Washington and the guiding force in the
development of the ideas contained in this book has been Harlan Cleveland."
The book was clearly written to promote the United Nations. In it, Gardner
writes, "Discussion of whether or not we should be in the United Nations is
about as useful as discussion of whether or not we should have a United States
Congress." And casting all modesty aside, he notes that he "has helped
to shape the policy of our government on most of the subjects discussed in this
book."
Figuring prominently in Gardner's 1964 opus is the matter of disarmament under
UN auspices. Though he doesn't say so explicitly, he surely had a hand in
crafting the infamous State Department disarmament proposal entitled Freedom
From War. (71) It calls for the succession of steps toward disarmament already
taken by our government and culminates in the complete turning over of national
military forces to the UN. The text actually states that, eventually "no
state would have the military power to challenge the progressively strengthened
U.N. Peace Force." A UN Peace Force has certainly been "progressively
strengthened" as a result of the war in the Persian Gulf. And disarmament
proceeds according to this truly subversive plan.
But Gardner has also laid out other paths for taking the United States and the
rest of mankind into the UN. The man is determined to see an end to an
independent United States. In its Spring 1988 issue, Foreign Affairs featured
"The Case For Practical Internationalism" written by this very busy
Insider. It urged continued use of the IMF, World Bank, and GATT to accomplish
the Insiders' internationalism. But it also urged taking advantage of
opportunities presented by five other challenges, each of which he discussed at
length: nuclear safety, AIDS, drug abuse, overpopulation and environmental
destruction.
Picking up where Gardner had left off, CFR member Jessica Tuchman Mathews, a
Vice President of World Resources Institute, stated in her own Foreign Affairs
article in the Spring 1989 issue, "Environmental strains that transcend
national borders are already beginning to break down the sacred boundaries of
national sovereignty...." In the July/August 1990 issue of this CFR
journal, she approvingly said that "environmental imperatives" are
leading to "economic interdependence; and diverse invasions of national
sovereignty."
Recall that shortly after he took office, Mr. Bush announced, "I am an
environmentalist." Both his statements and his actions confirm that his
self-description is correct. Richard Gardner ended his 1988 article in Foreign
Affairs with, "The next president will need to convince the American people
that strengthening international institutions...will serve a more stable and
cooperative world order." Mr. Bush could have added that he intends to be
that president.
Keeping Congress Liberal
President Bush customarily resorts to bashing Congress when he gets pinned down
about spending, the growth of government power, or the nation's economic woes.
He will insist that Congress is too heavily laden with liberal Democrats. If
liberal Democrats are to blame, one would expect the President to work extremely
hard to fill the Congress with Republicans-especially conservative Republicans.
One would also expect the President to propose reductions in federal spending
along with balanced budgets, neither of which has been forthcoming from Mr.
Bush.
But as the 1990 congressional elections drew to a close, Time magazine for
November 5, 1992 (72) published its assessment of Mr. Bush's counterproductive
efforts on behalf of Republican candidates. Half in jest, the Time article
concluded, "George Bush is a Democrat in Disguise."
Why? In June, the President gave away the Republican Party's best campaign issue
when he reversed himself on his pledge for "No new taxes!" and signed
one of the largest tax increases in the nation's history. Just before the
election, he arranged to have Ed Rollins, the co-chairman of the Republican
congressional campaign committee, fired from the staff. Charged with helping
Republican candidates win, Rollins had advised all of them, "Do not
hesitate to oppose either the President or proposals being advanced in
Congress." It was the kind of good advice a Republican should follow, but
it cost the man who gave it his job.
Incumbent Vermont Republican Peter Smith publicly differed with the President
during a breakfast meeting in Vermont while Mr. Bush was sitting alongside. Even
that didn't help as he lost to Socialist Bernie Sanders, the first avowed
socialist elected to Congress in 50 years. At a fund-raising luncheon in New
Hampshire for the earnestly conservative Bob Smith, who was trying to move from
the House to the Senate, the President was there but Smith managed to stay away.
Unwilling to be photographed with the increasingly unpopular President, he won.
Moving on to Connecticut, the President announced that he was
"confused." Time quoted Democratic National Committee staffer Paul
Tully as saying, "The President has been our best ally.... We're just
trying to stay out of his way."
Opposition to Insider plans for America has always
been more likely found in the Congress among Republicans than among Democrats.
Insiders, therefore, would obviously prefer that Republicans not gain a majority
in the House and Senate. President Bush's activity certainly helped to keep
Republicans as the minority party.
Communism Collapses Into Socialism
Recent remarkable changes in Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union have
been effusively described by the President as "the dawning of
freedom." He has repeatedly heaped great praise on his "good
friend" Mikhail Gorbachev, referred to the Soviet Union as "our
ally," and taken numerous steps to see that America's taxpayers foot the
bill for bailing out the failed socialist systems in Russia and elsewhere. The
Bush Administration claims that the American people must save the
"reformers" or the nasty old communists will return to power. The
truth is that the nasty old communists merely took off their communist faces and
are now presenting themselves to the entire world as socialist reformers.
Another important truth is that the U.S. government-guided by a succession of
Insiders-supplied the nasty communists with massive amounts of loans, credits,
equipment and technology. (73) It kept successive communist regimes afloat and
even enabled them to threaten the West with periodic bursts of nuclear saber
rattling.
The aid given to Moscow also had the result of persuading many Americans to
favor world government under the UN as a way to avoid the alternative to
Soviet-launched nuclear bombs. Corroboration about this important aspect of
Insider strategy came in 1962 with the release of a taxpayer-funded State
Department report entitled A World Effectively Controlled By the United
Nations. (74)
Authored by CFR member Lincoln P. Bloomfield, it placed great emphasis on Soviet
military might and noted "...if the communist dynamic were greatly abated,
the West might lose whatever incentive it has for world government."
Clearly, the Insider-directed policy of helping the communists acquire and
brandish their missiles had as its goal the acceptance of world government by
the American people. Even though the communists in what was once the Soviet
Union are now merely socialist reformers," the Insiders are still telling
Americans that we must fear a nuclear threat and want a UN-directed world
government because the communists might return to power. They would have
America's taxpayers send massive amounts of aid to leaders who only yesterday
decided to renounce communism. Not surprisingly, these new leaders are
determined supporters of the United Nations.
Understanding the charade being acted out here is enormously important. Everyone
should realize that a communist is and always has been a socialist. To be more
precise, a communist is a socialist who seeks speedy imposition of economic
control with brute force and terror. Communists don't work for years persuading
their victims to choose economic slavery; they force it on those they capture in
lightning quick steps. But the end result is the same whether it is achieved
slowly through the route of socialism or swiftly through communist conquest.
The full name of the former USSR was Union of Soviet Socialist Republics. So, if
communists decide to be mere socialists, why should our President proclaim
victory over the forces of totalitarianism? Socialists are totalitarians. And
why should he insist that our nation's best interests are served by taxing the
American people to keep socialists in power in Russia-or anywhere else?
The Insiders don't really care what route they follow in order to achieve total
control of the planet. They can gain economic control via socialism, fascism,
communism, syndicalism, monarchism or any one of numerous other isms. If
attempting to reach their goal through communist conquest hasn't worked out,
then why not shift gears slightly and travel down the road labeled socialism?
The end result is all that really matters, and the end result for the Insiders
is the acquisition of political and economic power-totalitarianism-over the rest
of mankind.
Anyone who concludes that threats to personal freedom no longer exist because
communism has faded away doesn't know what socialism really means. It is just as
destructive of basic rights as communism because it calls for the same goal as
communism. Socialists want control over the lives
and actions of the people, exactly what the U.S. government is rapidly acquiring
over Americans. Famed British playwright George Bernard Shaw
spent his entire adult life as a determined socialist. In 1928, his Intelligent
Woman's Guide To Socialism confirmed the tyrannical nature of socialism.
He wrote:
I also made it clear that Socialism means equality of income or nothing, and that under Socialism you would not be allowed to be poor. You would be forcibly fed, clothed, lodged, taught and employed whether you liked it or not. If it were discovered that you had not the character and industry enough to be worth all this trouble, you might possibly be executed in a kindly manner; but whilst you were permitted to live you would have to live well.
There is not now and never has been
any room for freedom under socialism. It means just what it has always meant:
power for a few with regimentation, prison-like equality, enforced conformity,
extermination of adversaries, and a low standard of living for everyone but
rulers. This is what Americans are currently facing
as socialism replaces freedom here. Along with socialism,
the drive toward making the United Nations the world's all-powerful political
force constitutes the second of the two prongs of the "new world
order." And George Bush is doing all that he can to see that both prongs
dig deeply into the American people.
Gorbachev, Perestroika and Yeltsin
The individual given most of the credit for the changes in the former Soviet
Union is Mikhail Gorbachev. His program for change is called
"perestroika," a Russian word for restructuring. If he were to seek a
restructuring that threw out all vestiges of socialism and allowed the people to
practice unfettered free enterprise, he wouldn't want or need help from the
West. But there are two reasons why he has never even tried to bring such a
change to his country. First, he remains a socialist and keeps reminding us that
he is. And second, discarding socialism does not fit into the plans of the
world's Insiders to create their "new world order." Were Gorbachev to
attempt something other than cooperating with the Insiders who intend to
establish economic control and world government, he'd likely develop a terminal
illness-maybe even stop a bullet.
But Gorbachev is a willing player in this sinister game. And he has been very
open about his intentions. Throughout his 1987 book, Perestroika,
he stated his unshakable preference for socialism. In one passage, he wrote:
To put an end to all the rumors and speculations that abound in the West about
this, I would like to point out once again that we are conducting all our
reforms in accordance with the socialist choice. We are looking within
socialism, rather than outside it, for the answers to all the questions that
arise. We assess our successes and errors alike by socialist standards. Those
who hope that we will move away from the socialist standard will be greatly
disappointed. (75)
President Bush had to be aware of Gorbachev's commitment to socialism when he
stated in his November 22, 1989 televised message to the American people that
"there is no greater advocate of perestroika than the President of the
United States." He continued to defend Gorbachev no matter what the Soviet
leader did, even when the Soviet leader consolidated power for himself in
December 1990. (76)
Then, in his 1991 book entitled The August Coup, Gorbachev reiterated his
socialist conviction, stating "I am a confirmed supporter of the idea of
socialism." In keeping with his turning away from force and turning to
persuasive-style socialism, he set himself apart from the communism his nation
has endured for 70 years. He even criticized the Soviet Union's past because it
featured "the forcible imposition of the Stalinist model of society."
Ever the socialist, he had departed from forcing it and now wanted socialism to
be chosen. (77)
Is Russia now free? Of course not. Yes, elections were held but all the
candidates were communists, former communists, or socialists, most of whom had
spent their entire adult lives as communist apparatchiks. The same can be said
of the elections in other former Soviet republics and in the nations that once
made up the Eastern European Soviet bloc.
President Proposes Aid for Russia
Boris Yeltsin is currently the fair-haired hero of America's Insiders. Welcomed
to New York City by David Rockefeller in September 1989, he was brought to CFR
headquarters (58 East 68th Street, New York NY 10021) for a closed-door session
presided over by the powerful former CFR Chairman. (78) The Russian leader went first
to CFR headquarters and then to
Washington to meet with President Bush. (79)
Eventually talking to reporters, Yeltsin lamented that "only one of the
five classical components of socialism has been implemented - the
nationalization of property." Yeltsin says he doesn't want a totally
state-controlled economy, just 85 to 90 percent control. Let the people own 10
to 15 percent, he argues. He, too, is a socialist through and through. (80)
But in June 1991, President Bush named Robert S. Strauss to be U.S. Ambassador
to the Soviet Union. Strauss is a lifelong Democrat who led his party from 1972
to 1977. He was the top Democrat working for the election of Jimmy Carter in
1976. Carter's opponent at the time, Gerald Ford, had a campaign manager named
James A. Baker III. Baker is now Strauss's boss as Secretary of State for George
Bush. The Insiders care little which political party anyone belongs to, only
whether a person is willing to promote Insider goals. They know that membership
in either political party is virtually meaningless.
Why did the Republican President and his Republican Secretary of State choose
Strauss? Two reasons. First, Strauss had enormous experience in setting up
business deals with Soviet Russia, and the Administration wants him in Moscow to
arrange for transactions that will help keep the new socialist regime in power.
Second, Strauss is a veteran member of the CFR who can be counted on to work for
the goals of the Insiders. His yearly salary earned as an Insider-connected
Washington lawyer totaled over $4 million per year. As ambassador, he will
receive $115,300. Chalk it up as another indication of loyalty to the cause of
the "new world order" from another Insider. (81)
The struggle for leadership in Russia between Mikhail Gorbachev and Boris
Yeltsin has been won - at least temporarily - by Yeltsin. But the fight between
these two has always been like the Insider-take-all struggles between George
Bush (TC and CFR) and Michael Dukakis (CFR), or between Gerald Ford (CFR) and
Jimmy Carter (TC), or between Richard Nixon (CFR) and Hubert Humphrey (CFR), or
between Dwight Eisenhower (CFR) and Adlai Stevenson (CFR). (82) Each of
these U.S. politicians willingly cooperated with the Insiders whose
organizations they were happy to join. So too do Gorbachev and Yeltsin cooperate
with the same Insiders.
Something about the leaders of Russia needs to be said here. Both Gorbachev and
Yeltsin are among the many former communists who share enormous guilt for the
murder, terror and denial of basic human rights for millions in the former USSR
and its captive nations. Both should be held accountable for their part in those
crimes and for the slaughter of 1.4 million Afghan civilians during the 1980s.
As members of the USSR's ruling Politburo during the incredibly cruel rape of
Afghanistan, they are and should be classified arch-criminals. And if they are
not, there is no such thing as an arch-criminal.
But President Bush - backed by the Insiders in government, the media, and
elsewhere - is doing everything within his power to sustain such monsters in
power. Promises of direct U.S. aid have been kept; commitments for more in the
future have been given; and pledges of indirect aid from the International
Monetary Fund have also been made. Early in 1992, Mr. Bush asked Congress to
boost the U.S. commitment to IMF by $12 billion so that this organization could
assist the socialists in Russia. He did so even while informing the nation that
the U.S. government would, in that same year, add $400 billion more to its red
ink totals.
Still Friendly With Red China
Supporting the socialists who le ad Russia and the other European nations
formerly labeled communist is a fixed policy of the Bush Administration. Just as
fixed is its support for China's socialists who still maintain their rule with
the communist iron fist.
In June 1989, Chinese tanks rolled into Tiananmen Square crushing the unarmed
students demonstrating for freedom. While most Americans can recall the horror
and brutality marking the event, few recall that
President Bush had actually encouraged the students to "fight for what you
believe in" two weeks before.
Yet, even after videotapes of elements of the crackdown had been shown on U.S.
television, the Bush response amounted to a few stern words and a handful of
slap-on-the-wrist sanctions. Former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger (CFR)
excused the Chinese brutality on U.S. television and in his syndicated newspaper
column. (83) Six months later. Deputy Secretary of State Lawrence Eagleburger
and National Security Advisor Brent Scowcroft - two CFR members who are also
protégés and former employees of Kissinger Associates - were in Beijing
arranging for removal of the minor sanctions. Upon their return, the President
canceled restrictions on Export-Import bank loans. (84)
While they were in China in December, word leaked out that Scowcroft and
Eagleburger had also been to Beijing in July, only one month after the Tiananmen
Square massacre. Confronted with the information about this betrayal of the
brave Chinese students, Secretary of State Baker initially lied about the July
trip, then admitted a few days later he had "misled" the public about
it. Former U.S. Ambassador to Romania David B. Funderburk has supplied valuable
details about the Kissinger-Eagleburger-Scowcroft relationship in his
hard-hitting book about President Bush's appeasement of communist dictators, Betrayal
of America. (86)
To make certain that the U.S. response to Chinese tanks rolling over unarmed
students in Beijing didn't jeopardize Insider plans, CFR member Winston Lord
took the first opportunity available to him to write in the Fall 1989 issue of
Foreign Affairs that "the administration has wisely chosen to suspend
rather than dismantle relationships." And he applauded the continued
existence of an "impressive web of legislation, umbrella agreements and
consultative mechanisms under which a broad range of visits and projects go
forward."
Winston Lord served as U.S. Ambassador to China from November 1985 until April
1989, two months prior to the bloody crackdown in Tiananmen Square. Prior to
that, he served under David Rockefeller as President of the Council on Foreign
Relations for eight years. He is another Insider's Insider whose policy
guidelines are closely monitored and acted upon by the administration in power.
On October 2, 1989, less than four months after the tanks rolled over the
students, Chinese Foreign Minister Qian Qichen showed up at CFR headquarters for
another of the organization's closed-to-the-press sessions. (86) While in New
York, Qian arrogantly refused to allow any discussion of the incident involving
the students, claiming that any criticism of his government's actions amounted
to "interference in China's internal affairs." A few months later, the
Bush Administration lifted opposition to World Bank loans for China.
During Mr. Bush's frantic gathering of support at the UN for his "new world
order" moves against Iraq, China did him a favor by abstaining on the
Security Council vote to authorize force. Had China voted against the
resolution, it could not have passed because China is one of only five nations
possessing veto power. On the day following what Foreign Affairs labeled the
"unprecedented" UN vote, the Chinese foreign minister met with
President Bush, the first contact China enjoyed with the President after the
Tiananmen Square murders. The price paid for China's willingness to go along
with President Bush's plans for a new world order even included American
abandonment of the cause of the Chinese students.
Business as usual then grew more dramatically with the totally unapologetic
murderers in Beijing. In May 1991, President Bush proposed a continuation of
Most Favored Nation status for China In January 1992, Chinese Prime Minister Li
Peng, the man who actually ordered the troops to crush the students, journeyed
to New York along with the leaders of 16 other nations for a session of the
United Nations Security Council.
Li told his UN audience China stands "opposed to interference in the
affairs of other countries, using human rights as an excuse." President
Bush then met privately with the Chinese tyrant. Six weeks later, the President
vetoed an attempt by Congress to impose trade restrictions on China in the wake
of China's continuing violations of human rights. (87)
There is virtually nothing a communist or socialist can do to earn meaningful
ostracism for himself or his nation from the Insiders. They want power and, if
any national leader gains power and is willing to follow the guidelines set down
by the Insiders, he gets help to stay in power. When Adolf Hitler, a socialist
who had come to power in his nation, attacked the USSR, he became the worldwide
target of the Insiders who have by numerous deeds over many decades shown little
opposition and plenty of favoritism for communists.
Nations not dominated by the type of socialism or communism favored by the
Insiders stand as obstructions to the plans for a "new world order."
It is these that earn sanctions and pressures designed to destroy them or force
them to change their internal policies. The treatment accorded South Africa is
an example of selective isolation strictly enforced sanctions and pressures
designed to destroy them or force them to change their internal policies. The
treatment accorded South Africa is an example of selective isolation, strictly
enforced sanctions, and international pressures of every conceivable type short
of military assault. South Africa was never part of the "new world
order," but is being made over for an admitted socialist like Nelson
Mandela so that it can be. If it means bloodshed and terror, so be it.
Proponents of the new world order never let the blood of tens of millions bother
them; and they won't be bothered one little bit by a river of bloodshed in South
Africa.
Stopping the Insiders a Must
In the CFR's Annual Report for 1989, Peter Tarnoff, the organization's
president, announced plans to create a larger office for the CFR in the nation's
capital. Once built, he explained, the organization "will be better able to
grow in Washington, and to attract many more Senate and House members and their
staffs to our programs." CFR intentions to increase Insider influence over
our nation's government were clearly enunciated.
On April 10, 1990, the Wall Street Journal published a small excerpt from a
speech given by veteran CFR member Paul H. Nitze. The occasion for his remarks
was the March 12th opening of that new Council on Foreign Relations office in
Washington. Nitze described the great influence held by the "enormously
important New York business and intellectual community," referring, of
course, to CFR members who continue to reside in the New York area.
But while noting that Washington's importance within the CFR had grown
dramatically, Nitze stated quite clearly exactly how the CFR had dominated U.S.
policy from New York for 70 years. Beginning with a description of the Council's
influence during the period of the 1920s and 1930s, he said:
The State Department and White House might conduct diplomacy in peace and raise
and command armies in war, but policy was made by serious people, men with a
longer view, i.e. the great men of finance and their advisers. New York was
where they were to be found.
Then, this veteran Insider from within the CFR, who has served in numerous
administrations, added:
In the postwar years, the Council has continued to represent an invaluable way
for many of us Washingtonians to tap the enormously important New York business
and intellectual community. (88)
In other words, national policy was set and continues to be set in New York, not
by the elected leaders of this nation, but by members of "the
Council." Over these years, national policy has included financing tyranny
and destroying liberty all over the globe. (89) And President Bush has placed
more CFR members in government posts than any predecessor. These Insiders, along
with dozens of CFR members in the House and Senate, (90) plus those in New York
who have not taken government posts but who retain great influence over national
affairs, are leading this nation into the long-desired, tyrannical new world
order."
No American worthy of the name wants a "new world order." The world
government it calls for would mean an end to the nation we inherited, and the
destruction of the greatest experiment in human liberty in the history of
mankind. It would also establish socialism in place of the free market system, a
certain route to conversion of this nation into another Third World dead-end.
And, even worse, it would mean that tyranny had replaced liberty, a kind of
tyranny that has been experienced by countless millions throughout the Twentieth
Century - a century of unparalleled barbarism created, sustained and favored by
the Insiders of the most powerful conspiracy in the history of mankind.
The Insiders have taken us far down the various paths toward their
satanically-inspired goal. And time is running out if we are to save our nation
and ourselves from their designs.
Real Americans who love their country and want to remain free don't have to lose
this struggle. It can be won if enough seize the opportunity to take the U.S.
government away from the Insiders and return it to individuals who believe in
national independence and individual liberty, and who are not working for the
"new world order." And there is still time to thwart the plans of the
Insiders and climb out of the tyrannical straight-jacket they have prepared for
us.
Understanding the domination of the Bush Administration by the Insiders is an
essential beginning step toward achieving victory over the whole rotten cabal.
The enemy faced by Americans is a conspiracy, an organized group of Insiders
seeking tyrannical control of this nation, and all nations. Its plans and its
agents can be exposed and routed by an opposing force firmly rooted in principle
and unwaveringly propelled by courage. The John Birch Society is such a force.
Diligent adherence to the program of the Society by enough determined Americans
is exactly what's needed to thwart the Insiders and to keep America free.
Your inquiry about how to get started on the climb back to full independence for
our nation and economic freedom for yourself will be most welcome. We invite you
to contact us without delay.
Footnotes:
40. Rowland Evans and Robert Novak, "Bush and the Trilateral
Commission," St. Petersburg Times, April 12, 1981.
41. Ron Rosenbaum, "The Last Secrets of Skull & Bones,"
Esquire, September 1977.
42. J. A. Engles, "U.N. Envoy Brash, Flexible,"
Rochester (NY) Times-Union, October 12, 1971.
43. United Press International dispatch from Peking, February 25, 1972.
44. Doyle McManus, "A New World Order: Bush's vision still fuzzy,"
Milwaukee Journal, February 24,1991.
45. Human Cost of Communism in China, 1971 Report issued by the Senate
Subcommittee to Investigate the Administration of the Internal Security Act and
Other Internal Security Laws.
46. Annual Report 1972, Council on Foreign Relations, 58 East 68th Street, New
York, NY 10021.
47. "Membership List as of July 26, 1977," issued by The Trilateral
Commission, 345 East 46th Street, New York, NY 10021.
48. Annual Report 1978, Council on Foreign Relations.
49. Issues and Opinions: The Work Program of the Atlantic Council of the United
States, 1978, Atlantic Council, 1616 H Street NW, Washington, DC 2006
50. Whitney H. Shepardson, Early History of the Council on Foreign
Relations, 1960. Overbrook Press, Stamford, CT. Shepardson was one of
the founding members of the CFR and served on its Board of Directors from 1921
to 1966.
51. David Hoffman, "Little-Known Aide Plays Major Role in Foreign
Policy," Washington Post, October 28,1991.
52. News item, Appleton (WI) Post-Crescent, April 22, 1990.
53. Jim Hoagland, "U.S. tempted Saddam to invade Kuwait," Boston
Herald, September 18, 1990.
54. Elaine Sciolino, "Envoy's Testimony on Iraq is Assailed, Senators Say
Glaspie Misled Them on Hussein Talks," New York Times July 13, 1991; and
Elaine Sciolino with Michael R. Gordon, "U.S. Gave Iraq Little Reason Not
to Mount Kuwait Assault," New York Times, September 23, 1991.
55. Dennis L. Cuddy, Ph.D., The New World Order, 1992, America's
Future Inc., Milford, PA 18337.
56. G. Edward Griffin, The Fearful Master, 1964, Western Islands,
Appleton, WI 54913.
57. Alan Stang, The Actor: The True Story of John Foster Dulles,
Secretary of State, 1953-1959, 1968, Western Islands, Appleton, WI 54913. Mr.
Stang's critical biography of John Foster Dulles supplies an excellent
introduction to the conspiratorial view of history.
58. Robert W. Lee, The United Nations Conspiracy, 1981, Western
Islands, Appleton, WI 54913.
59. United Nations Charter; See Articles 42-45. Article 42 states in part that
the Security Council may take such action by air, sea, or land forces as may be
necessary to maintain or restore international peace or security. Such action
may include demonstrations, blockade, and other operations by air, sea, or land
forces of Members of the United Nations."
60. Congressional Record, January 10, 1991, Pages S106-S107. Senator Simon
supplied constituents with copies of these pages of the CR containing his full
statement to fellow senators.
61. Lincoln On Democracy, Edited by Mario M. Cuomo and Harold
Holzer, 1990, HarperCollins.
62. George de Luna, "Baker blunt: Bush needs a free hand," Chicago
Tribune, October 18, 1990; George de Luna, "Baker rejects partial Iraq
pullout," Chicago Tribune, October 19,1990.
63. "U.S. Congress Authorizes Use of Force Against Iraq," Facts On
File, January 17, 1991, Page 32.
64. Foreign Affairs, "America and the World 1990-1991,"
65. Leslie H. Gelb, "Why the UN Dog Didn't Bark," New York Times,
September 25,1991.
66. Patrick J. Buchanan, "The Gulf Crisis Is the Last Hurrah of the
Globalists," Union Leader, Manchester, NH, September 26,1990.
67. Phyllis Shlafly and Chester Ward, Kissinger On The Couch, 1975, Arlington
House, New York.
68. Paul Craig Roberts, August 3, 1991, quoted by Phoebe Courtney, TAX FAX No.
235, "Why a Tax Revolt Is Brewing," Independent American, P.O. Box
636, Littleton, CO 80160.
69. Tom Baden, "Red tape rolls as Bush unchains regulatory watchdogs,"
Houston Chronicle, December 30,1990.
70. Richard N. Gardner, In Pursuit Of World Order, 1964, Praeger Publishing
Company, New York.
71. John F. McManus, Whose Side Are They On?, 1991, The John Birch
Society, Appleton, WI 54913. This booklet contains a complete photographic
reproduction of the 24-page 1961 State Department
Document No. 7277 entitled Freedom From War: The U.S. Program For General and
Complete Disarmament in a Peaceful World.
72. Michael Duffy, "The Perfect Spy," Time, November
5,1990.
73. Antony C. Sutton, The Best Enemy Money Can Buy, 1986, Liberty
House Press, Billings, MT. Dr. Sutton's earlier and more comprehensive works
detailing the flow of Western aid to communist nations include National
Suicide and the three volume Western Technology and Soviet
Economic Development.
74. Lincoln P. Bloomfield, "Study Memorandum No. 7: A World
Effectively Controlled By the United Nations." Dr. Bloomfield's
work carried the notation, "Prepared for the
Institute of Defense Analysis in support of a study submitted to the Department
of State under contract No. SCC 28270, dated February 24,1961."
It was released by IDA on March 10, 1962.
75. Mikhail S. Gorbachev, Perestroika: New Thinking for Our Country and
the World, 1987, Harper & Row, New York.
76. Paul Bednrd, "Bush defends power grab by Gorbachev as necessary,"
Washington Times, December 28,1990.
77. Mikhail S. Gorbachev, The August Coup: The Truth and the Lessons,
1991, HarperCollins, New York.
78. Annual Report 1990, Council on Foreign Relations.
79. Facts On File, 1989, Page 916.
80. A. M. Rosenthal, "Yeltsin fails to charm," Milwaukee Journal,
September 21, 1989.
81. Stephen Labaton, "Strauss to Forego $4 million in Pay to Take Moscow
Post," New York Times, July 13, 1991.
82. During the 1992 Presidential primaries, Democratic candidate Bill Clinton's
membership in both the CFR and the TC never became an issue. Opponents Paul
Tsongas. Jerry Brown. Tom Harkin, and Bob Kerrey were not themselves formal
members of either of the Insider group. Their refusal to make an issue out of
Clinton's memberships, especially the fact that his ties to these organizations
linked him to George Bush, can only mean that they would like to hold such
memberships themselves and are not going to jeopardize the possibility of being
invited to join either or both in the future.
83. John J. Fialka, "Mr. Kissinger Has Opinions on China - And Business
Ties," Wall Street Journal, September 15, 1989.
84. James J. Drummey, The Establishment's Man, 1991, Western
Islands, Appleton, WI 54913.
85. David B. Funderburk, Betrayal of America: Bush's Appeasement of
Communist Dictators Betrays American Principles, distributed by Betrayal
of America, Dunn, NC 28334. Dr. Funderburk served as U.S. Ambassador to Romania
during the early years of the Reagan Administration. His book supplies details
about then-Vice President George Bush's friendliness to Romanian dictator
Nicolai Ceausescu and Mr. Bush's refusal to consider Dr. Funderburk's critical
assessment about the conditions in Romania and the unreliable personnel in the
State Department.
86. Annual Report 1990, Council on Foreign Relations.
87. "Bush to Renew China's Trade Privileges," New York Times, May
28,1991.
88. "Notable & Quotable," Wall Street Journal, April 10, 1991.
Four top leaders of the Wall Street Journal hold membership in the CFR:
Chairman & Publisher Peter R.
Kann; Executive Editor Norman Pearlstine; Editor Robert L. Bartley; and Managing
Editor Paul E. Steiger.
89. For a comprehensive and revealing history of the Council on Foreign
Relations using its own source documents for evidence of its intentions to
destroy national sovereignty and abolish personal freedom, see James Perloffs The
Shadows of Power, 1988, Western Islands, Appleton, WI 54913.
90. As of June 30, 1991, the CFR Annual Report 1991 lists the following U.S.
Senators as CFR members:
Boren (OK), Chafee (RI), Cohen (ME),
Dodd (CT), Graham (FL), Lieberman (CT), Mitchell (ME), Moynihan (NY), Pell (RI),
Pressler (SD), Robb (VA), Rockefeller (WV), Roth (DE), Rudman (NH), Sanford
(NC), Wirth (CO), and Wofford (PA).
The following are some of the CFR members in the U.S. House of Representatives:
Aspin (WI), Fascell (FL), Foley
(WA), Gejdenson (CT), Gephardt (MO), Gingrich (GA), Houghton (NY), Hyde (IL),
Johnson (CT), Levine (CA), McCurdy (OK), Moody (WI), Petri (WI), Schroeder (CO),
Snowe (ME), Solarz (NY), Spratt (SC), Stokes (OH), and Wolpe (MI).
In April 1991, the Trilateral Commission listed the following U.S. Senators as
members:
Chafee (RI), Cohen (ME), Robb (VA),
Rockefeller (WV), and Roth (DE).
And the TC listed the following U.S. Representatives as members:
Foley (WA), Leach (IA), and Rangel,
(NY).
[end]
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