Significant
Dates in the Creation of the New World Order
Perhaps the best way to relate a brief history of the New
World Order, would be to use the words of those who have been
striving to make it real throughout the ages. You will be amazed at
how far back this grand plan has extended, and how many similarities
there are in early Century 21 compared to the 1990's, with two Presidents
from the Bush family in power.
1910-1929 | 1930 | 1940 | 1950 | 1960 | 1970
1980 - Present
1912 -- Colonel Edward M. House, a
close advisor of President Woodrow Wilson, publishes Phillip Dru:
Administrator in which he promotes "socialism as dreamed of by
Karl Marx."
1913 -- The Federal Reserve (neither
federal nor a reserve) is created. It was planned at a secret meeting in
1910 on Jekyll Island, Georgia by a group of bankers and
politicians, including Col. House. This transferred the power to create
money from the American government to a private group of bankers. It is
probably the largest generator of debt in the world.
July 28, 1914 -- World War I is triggered by the
assassination of Archduke
Francis Ferdinand of Austria.
May 27, 1916 -- President Woodrow Wilson
proposes at the League of Nations in a speech before the League to
Enforce Peace, a world needed to prevent the recurrence of a similar war
was a world government.
November 11, 1918 -- The end of World War I, after
the signing of the Armistice at the 11th hour on the 11th day of the 11th
month.
May 30, 1919 -- Prominent British and American
personalities establish the Royal Institute of International Affairs in England and the Institute of International Affairs in the U.S. at a meeting arranged by Col.
House attended by various Fabian socialists, including noted economist
John Maynard Keynes. Two years later, Col. House reorganizes the Institute of International Affairs into the Council on Foreign
Relations (CFR).
December 15, 1922 -- The CFR endorses World
Government in its magazine Foreign Affairs. Author Philip Kerr,
states:
"Obviously there is
going to be no peace or prosperity for mankind as long as [the earth]
remains divided into 50 or 60 independent states until some kind of
international system is created...The real problem today is that of the
world government."
1928 -- The Open Conspiracy: Blue Prints
for a World Revolution by H.G. Wells is published. A former Fabian
Socialist, Wells writes:
"The political world
of the into a Open Conspiracy must weaken, efface, incorporate and
supersede existing governments... The Open Conspiracy is the natural
inheritor of socialist and communist enthusiasms; it may be in control of
Moscow before it is in control of New York... The character of the Open
Conspiracy will now be plainly displayed... It will be a world
religion."
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1920 |
1930 | 1940 | 1950 | 1960 | 1970
1931 -- Students at the Lenin School of
Political Warfare in Moscow are taught:
"One day we shall
start to spread the most theatrical peace movement the world has ever
seen. The capitalist countries, stupid and decadent...will fall into the
trap offered by the possibility of making new friends. Our day will come
in 30 years or so... The bourgeoisie must be lulled into a false sense of
security.
1932 -- New books are published urging New
World Order:
Toward Soviet America by William Z. Foster. Head of the
Communist Party USA, Foster indicates that a National Department of
Education would be one of the means used to develop a new socialist
society in the U.S.
The New World Order by F.S. Marvin, describing the League of Nations as the first attempt at a New
World Order. Marvin says, "nationality must rank below the
claims of mankind as a whole."
Dare the School Build a
New Social Order? is published. Educator author George Counts asserts that:
"...the teachers should deliberately reach for power and then make
the most of their conquest" in order to "influence the social
attitudes, ideals and behavior of the coming generation...The growth of
science and technology has carried us into a new age where ignorance must
be replaced by knowledge, competition by cooperation, trust in Providence
by careful planning and private capitalism by some form of social
economy."
Plan for Peace by American Birth Control League
founder Margaret Sanger (1921) is published. She calls for coercive
sterilization, mandatory segregation, and rehabilitative concentration
camps for all "dysgenic stocks" including Blacks, Hispanics,
American Indians and Catholics.
1933 -- The first Humanist Manifesto
is published. Co-author John Dewey, the noted philosopher and educator,
calls for a synthesizing of all religions and "a socialized and
cooperative economic order."
Co-signer C.F. Potter said
in 1930: "Education is thus a most powerful ally of humanism,
and every American public school is a school of humanism. What can the
theistic Sunday schools, meeting for an hour once a week, teaching only a
fraction of the children, do to stem the tide of a five-day program of
humanistic teaching?
1933 -- The Shape of Things to Come
by H.G. Wells is published. Wells predicts a second world war around
1940, originating from a German-Polish dispute. After 1945 there would be
an increasing lack of public safety in "criminally infected"
areas. The plan for the "Modern World-State" would succeed on
its third attempt (about 1980), and come out of something that occurred
in Basra, Iraq.
The book also
states, "Although world government had been plainly coming for
some years, although it had been endlessly feared and murmured against,
it found no opposition prepared anywhere."
1934 -- The Externalization of the
Hierarchy by Alice A. Bailey is published. Bailey is an occultist,
whose works are channeled from a spirit guide, the Tibetan Master [demon
spirit] Djwahl Kuhl. Bailey uses the phrase "points of light"
in connection with a "New Group of World Servers" and claims that
1934 marks the beginning of "the organizing of the men and
women...group work of a new order...[with] progress defined by
service...the world of the Brotherhood...the Forces of Light...[and] out
of the spoliation of all existing culture and civilization, the new
world order must be built."
The book is published by
the Lucis Trust, incorporated originally in New York as the Lucifer Publishing Company.
Lucis Trust is a United Nations NGO and has been a major player at the
recent U.N. summits. Later Assistant Secretary General of the U.N. Robert
Mueller would credit the creation of his World Core Curriculum for
education to the underlying teachings of Djwahl Kuhl via Alice Bailey's
writings on the subject.
October 28, 1939 -- In an address by John Foster
Dulles, later U.S. Secretary of State, he proposes that America lead the transition to a new
order of less independent, semi-sovereign states bound together by a
league or federal union.
1939 -- New World Order
by H. G. Wells proposes a collectivist one-world state"' or "new
world order" comprised of "socialist democracies." He
advocates "universal conscription for service" and declares
that "nationalist individualism...is the world's disease." He
continues:
"The manifest
necessity for some collective world control to eliminate warfare and the
less generally admitted necessity for a collective control of the
economic and biological life of mankind, are aspects of one and the same
process." He proposes that this be accomplished through
"universal law" and propaganda (or education)."
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1920 | 1930
| 1940 | 1950 | 1960 | 1970
1940 -- The New World Order is published by the Carnegie
Endowment for International Peace and contains a select list of
references on regional and world federation, together with some special
plans for world order after the war.
December 12, 1940 -- In The Congressional Record
an article entitled A New World Order John G. Alexander
calls for a world federation.
September 11, 1941 -- Construction officially began
at the Pentagon. 60 years later to the day, the Pentagon was to be
attacked on the fateful September 11, 2001.
1942 -- The leftist Institute of Pacific Relations publishes Post War Worlds
by P.E. Corbett:
"World government is
the ultimate aim...It must be recognized that the law of nations takes
precedence over national law...The process will have to be assisted by
the deletion of the nationalistic material employed in educational
textbooks and its replacement by material explaining the benefits of
wiser association."
June 28, 1945 -- President Truman endorses world
government in a speech:
"It will be just as
easy for nations to get along in a republic of the world as it is for us
to get along in a republic of the United States."
October 24, 1945 -- The United Nations Charter
becomes effective. Also on October 24, Senator Glen Taylor (D-Idaho) introduces
Senate Resolution 183 calling upon the U.S. Senate to go on record
as favoring creation of a world republic including an international
police force.
1946 -- Alger Hiss is elected President
of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. Hiss holds this office
until 1949. Early in 1950, he is convicted of perjury and sentenced to
prison after a sensational trial and Congressional hearing in which
Whittaker Chambers, a former senior editor of Time, testifies that Hiss
was a member of his Communist Party cell.
1946 -- The Teacher and World
Government by former editor of the NEA Journal (National
Education Association) Joy Elmer Morgan is published. He says:
"In the struggle to
establish an adequate world government, the teacher...can do much to prepare
the hearts and minds of children for global understanding and
cooperation...At the very heart of all the agencies which will assure the
coming of world government must stand the school, the teacher, and the
organized profession."
1947 -- The American Education
Fellowship, formerly the Progressive Education Association, organized by
John Dewey, calls for the:
"...establishment of
a genuine world order, an order in which national sovereignty is
subordinate to world authority..."
October, 1947 -- NEA Associate Secretary William
Carr writes in the NEA Journal that teachers should:
"...teach about the
various proposals that have been made for the strengthening of the United
Nations and the establishment of a world citizenship and world
government."
1948 -- Walden II by behavioral
psychologist B.F. Skinner proposes "a perfect society or new and
more perfect order" in which children are reared by the State,
rather than by their parents and are trained from birth to demonstrate
only desirable behavior and characteristics. Skinner's ideas would be
widely implemented by educators in the 1960s, 70s, and 80s as Values
Clarification and Outcome Based Education.
July, 1948 -- Britain's Sir Harold Butler, in the CFR's Foreign
Affairs, sees "a New World Order" taking shape:
"How far can the life
of nations, which for centuries have thought of themselves as distinct
and unique, be merged with the life of other nations? How far are they
prepared to sacrifice a part of their sovereignty without which there can
be no effective economic or political union?...Out of the prevailing
confusion a new world is taking shape... which may point the way
toward the new order... That will be the beginning of a real United
Nations, no longer crippled by a split personality, but held together by
a common faith."
1948 -- UNESCO president and Fabian
Socialist, Sir Julian Huxley, calls for a radical eugenic policy in UNESCO:
Its Purpose and Its Philosophy. He states:
"Thus, even though it
is quite true that any radical eugenic policy of controlled human
breeding will be for many years politically and psychologically
impossible, it will be important for UNESCO to see that the eugenic
problem is examined with the greatest care and that the public mind is
informed of the issues at stake that much that is now unthinkable may at
least become thinkable."
1948 -- The preliminary draft of a
World Constitution is published by U.S. educators advocating regional
federation on the way toward world federation or government with England incorporated into a European
federation.
The Constitution provides
for a "World Council" along with a "Chamber of
Guardians" to enforce world law. Also included is a
"Preamble" calling upon nations to surrender their arms to the
world government, and includes the right of this "Federal Republic of the World" to seize
private property for federal use.
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1920 | 1930 | 1940 | 1950 | 1960 | 1970
February 9, 1950 -- The Senate Foreign Relations
Subcommittee introduces Senate Concurrent Resolution 66 which
begins:
"Whereas, in order to
achieve universal peace and justice, the present Charter of the United
Nations should be changed to provide a true world government
constitution."
The resolution was first
introduced in the Senate on September 13, 1949 by Senator Glen Taylor (D-Idaho).
Senator Alexander Wiley (R-Wisconsin) called it "a consummation
devoutly to be wished for" and said, "I understand your
proposition is either change the United Nations, or change or create, by
a separate convention, a world order." Senator Taylor later stated:
"We would have to
sacrifice considerable sovereignty to the world organization to enable
them to levy taxes in their own right to support themselves."
April 12, 1952 -- John Foster Dulles, later to become
Secretary of State, says in a speech to the American Bar Association in Louisville, Kentucky, that "treaty laws can
override the Constitution." He says treaties can take power away
from Congress and give them to the President. They can take powers from
the States and give them to the Federal Government or to some
international body and they can cut across the rights given to the people
by their constitutional Bill of Rights.
A Senate amendment,
proposed by GOP Senator John Bricker, would have provided that no treaty
could supersede the Constitution, but it fails to pass by one vote.
1954 -- Prince Bernhard of the Netherlands establishes the Bilderbergers,
international politicians and bankers who meet secretly on an annual
basis, even to this day. The 2003 meeting took place over the weekend of
15 to 18 May in Versailles, Paris.
1958 -- World Peace through World
Law is published, where authors Grenville Clark and Louis Sohn
advocate using the U.N. as a governing body for the world, world
disarmament, a world police force and legislature.
1959 -- The Council on Foreign
Relations calls for a New International Order. Study Number 7,
issued on November 25, advocated:
"...new
international order [which] must be responsive to world aspirations
for peace, for social and economic change...an international
order...including states labeling themselves as 'socialist'
[communist]."
1959 -- The World Constitution and
Parliament Association is founded which later develops a Diagram of
World Government under the Constitution for the Federation of Earth.
1959 -- The Mid-Century Challenge to
U.S. Foreign Policy is published, sponsored by the Rockefeller
Brothers' Fund. It explains that the U.S.:
"...cannot escape,
and indeed should welcome...the task which history has imposed on us.
This is the task of helping to shape a new world order in all its
dimensions -- spiritual, economic, political, social."
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1920 | 1930 | 1940 | 1950 | 1960 | 1970
September 9, 1960 -- President Eisenhower signs
Senate Joint Resolution 170, promoting the concept of a federal
Atlantic Union. Pollster and Atlantic Union Committee treasurer, Elmo
Roper, later delivers an address titled, The Goal Is Government of All
the World, in which he states:
"For it becomes clear
that the first step toward World Government cannot be completed until we
have advanced on the four fronts: the economic, the military, the
political and the social."
1961 -- The U.S. State Department
issues a plan to disarm all nations and arm the United Nations. State Department
Document Number 7277 is entitled Freedom From War: The U.S. Program for General and Complete
Disarmament in a Peaceful World. It details a three-stage plan to disarm all nations and
arm the U.N. with the final stage in which "no state would have the
military power to challenge the progressively strengthened U.N. Peace
Force."
1962 -- New Calls for World Federalism.
In a study titled, A World Effectively Controlled by the United
Nations, CFR member Lincoln Bloomfield states:
"...if the communist dynamic
was greatly abated, the West might lose whatever incentive it has for
world government."
The Future of
Federalism by
author Nelson Rockefeller is published. The one-time Governor of New
York, claims that current events compellingly demand a "new world
order," as the old order is crumbling, and there is "a new
and free order struggling to be born." Rockefeller says there
is:
"a fever of
nationalism...[but] the nation-state is becoming less and less competent
to perform its international political tasks....These are some of the
reasons pressing us to lead vigorously toward the true building of a new
world order... [with] voluntary service...and our dedicated faith in
the brotherhood of all mankind....Sooner perhaps than we may
realize...there will evolve the bases for a federal structure of the free
world."
1963 -- J. William Fulbright, Chairman
of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee speaks at a symposium sponsored
by the Fund for the Republic, a left-wing project of the Ford Foundation:
"The case for
government by elites is irrefutable...government by the people is
possible but highly improbable."
November 22, 1963 -- President Kennedy is
assassinated on November 22, 1963. He was killed according to
the occult number signature of eleven [11]. He was killed in the 11th
month, on the 22nd day, and on the 33rd parallel. He was also killed in
the Masonic Dealey Plaza, the most powerful secret society
in the world today to whom the number 11 is extremely important. See cuttingedge
for details.
1964 -- Taxonomy of Educational
Objectives, Handbook II is published. Author Benjamin Bloom states:
"...a large part of
what we call 'good teaching' is the teacher's ability to attain affective
objectives through challenging the students' fixed beliefs."
His Outcome-Based
Education (OBE) method of teaching would first be tried as Mastery
Learning in Chicago schools. After five years, Chicago students' test scores had
plummeted causing outrage among parents. OBE would leave a trail of
wreckage wherever it would be tried and under whatever name it would be
used. At the same time, it would become crucial to globalists for
overhauling the education system to promote attitude changes among school
students.
1964 -- Visions of Order by
Richard Weaver is published. He describes:
"progressive
educators as a 'revolutionary cabal' engaged in 'a systematic attempt to
undermine society's traditions and beliefs.'"
1967 -- Richard Nixon calls for New
World Order. In Asia after Vietnam, in the October issue of Foreign
Affairs, Nixon writes of nations' dispositions to evolve regional
approaches to development needs and to the evolution of a "new
world order."
1968 -- Joy Elmer Morgan, former editor
of the NEA Journal publishes The American Citizens Handbook
in which he says:
"the coming of the
United Nations and the urgent necessity that it evolve into a more
comprehensive form of world government places upon the citizens of the
United States an increased obligation to make the most of their
citizenship which now widens into active world citizenship."
July 26, 1968 -- Nelson Rockefeller pledges
support of the New World Order. In an Associated Press report,
Rockefeller pledges that, "as President, he would work toward
international creation of a new world order."
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1920 | 1930 | 1940 | 1950 | 1960 | 1970
1970 -- Education and the mass media
promote world order. In Thinking About A New World Order for the
Decade 1990, author Ian Baldwin, Jr. asserts that:
"...the World Law
Fund has begun a worldwide research and educational program that will
introduce a new, emerging discipline -- world order -- into
educational curricula throughout the world...and to concentrate some of
its energies on bringing basic world order concepts into the mass media again
on a worldwide level."
1972 -- President Nixon visits China. In his toast to Chinese Premier
Chou En-lai, former CFR member and now President, Richard Nixon,
expresses "the hope that each of us has to build a new world
order."
May 18, 1972 -- In speaking of the coming of world
government, Roy M. Ash, director of the Office of Management and
Budget, declares that:
"within two decades
the institutional framework for a world economic community will be in
place...[and] aspects of individual sovereignty will be given over to a
supernational authority."
September 11, 1972 -- The world was introduced to
terrorism at the 1972 Munich Olympic Games. There were 11 Israeli
athletes killed. Exactly 29 years after this attack, another more
despicable horror occurred - the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks.
1973 -- The Trilateral Commission is
established. Banker David Rockefeller organizes this new private body and
chooses Zbigniew Brzezinski, later National Security Advisor to President
Carter, as the Commission's first director and invites Jimmy Carter to
become a founding member.
1973 -- Humanist Manifesto II is
published:
"The next century can
be and should be the humanistic century...we stand at the dawn of a new
age...a secular society on a planetary scale....As non-theists we begin
with humans not God, nature not deity...we deplore the division of
humankind on nationalistic grounds....Thus we look to the development of
a system of world law and a world order based upon transnational federal
government....The true revolution is occurring."
September 11, 1973 -- Chilean President Salvador
Allende is killed in a brutal, violent military coup led by General
Augusto Pinochet. Henry Kissinger was strongly implicated in this
attack, and if he were to ever stand trial in an International Court, it is likely he would be charged
with masterminding this coup and ordering the assassination of Allende.
April, 1974 -- Former U. S. Deputy Assistant Secretary of
State, Trilateralist and CFR member Richard Gardner's article The Hard
Road to World Order is published in the CFR's Foreign Affairs
where he states that:
"the 'house of world
order' will have to be built from the bottom up rather than from the top
down...but an end run around national sovereignty, eroding it piece by
piece, will accomplish much more than the old-fashioned frontal
assault."
1974 -- The World Conference of
Religion for Peace, held in Louvain, Belgium is held. Douglas Roche presents a
report entitled We Can Achieve a New World Order.
The U.N. calls for wealth
redistribution: In a report entitled New International Economic
Order, the U.N. General Assembly outlines a plan to
redistribute the wealth from the rich to the poor nations.
1975 -- A study titled, A New
World Order, is published by the Center of International Studies, Woodrow Wilson School of Public
and International Studies, Princeton University.
1975 -- In Congress, 32 Senators and 92
Representatives sign A Declaration of Interdependence, written by
historian Henry Steele Commager. The Declaration states that:
"we must join with
others to bring forth a new world order... Narrow notions of
national sovereignty must not be permitted to curtail that
obligation."
Congresswoman Marjorie
Holt refuses to sign the Declaration saying:
"It calls for the
surrender of our national sovereignty to international organizations. It
declares that our economy should be regulated by international
authorities. It proposes that we enter a 'new world order' that
would redistribute the wealth created by the American people."
1975 -- Retired Navy Admiral Chester
Ward, former Judge Advocate General of the U.S. Navy and former CFR
member, writes in a critique that the goal of the CFR is the
"submergence of U. S. sovereignty and national
independence into an all powerful one-world government..."
1975 -- Kissinger on the Couch
is published. Authors Phyllis Schlafly and former CFR member Chester Ward
state:
"Once the ruling
members of the CFR have decided that the U.S. government should espouse a
particular policy, the very substantial research facilities of the CFR
are put to work to develop arguments, intellectual and emotional, to
support the new policy and to confound, discredit, intellectually and
politically, any opposition..."
1976 -- RIO: Reshaping the International Order is published by the globalist Club
of Rome, calling for a new
international order, including an economic redistribution of wealth.
1977 -- The Third Try at World Order
is published. Author Harlan Cleveland of the Aspen Institute for
Humanistic Studies calls for:
"changing Americans'
attitudes and institutions" for "complete disarmament (except
for international soldiers)" and "for individual entitlement to
food, health and education."
[Sound like America today?]
1977 -- Imperial Brain Trust by
Laurence Shoup and William Minter is published. The book takes a critical
look at the Council on Foreign Relations with chapters such as: Shaping
a New World Order: The Council's Blueprint for Global Hegemony, 1939-1944
and Toward the 1980's: The Council's Plans for a New World Order.
1977 -- The Trilateral Connection
appears in the July edition of Atlantic Monthly. Written by
Jeremiah Novak, it says:
"For the third time
in this century, a group of American schools, businessmen, and government
officials is planning to fashion a New World Order..."
1977 -- Leading educator Mortimer Adler
publishes Philosopher at Large in which he says:
"...if local civil
government is necessary for local civil peace, then world civil
government is necessary for world peace."
1979 -- Barry Goldwater, retiring
Republican Senator from Arizona, publishes his autobiography With
No Apologies. He writes:
"In my view The
Trilateral Commission represents a skillful, coordinated effort to seize
control and consolidate the four centers of power -- political, monetary,
intellectual, and ecclesiastical. All this is to be done in the interest
of creating a more peaceful, more productive world community. What the
Trilateralists truly intend is the creation of a worldwide economic power
superior to the political governments of the nation-states involved. They
believe the abundant materialism they propose to create will overwhelm
existing differences. As managers and creators of the system they will
rule the future."
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Next: NWO Timeline: 1980 - Present
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New World Order. Is there a purpose for World War?
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