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The New
World Order Always Knew We Would Resist
"The establishment of the world community will surely exact a price
- and who can tell what that price may be? - in toil, suffering, and
blood."
Old-Thinker News |
Feb. 27, 2008
By Daniel Taylor
Advancing
globalization and trends to world governance have become regular
headlines throughout the world. As these trends continue, resistance
to losses of sovereignty and globalization are increasing. This is
coming as little surprise to the planners who have foreseen the rise
of world government, and actively participated in its formation.
Zbigniew Brzezinski
admitted in his book,
Between Two Ages: America's Role in the Technetronic Era,
that the formation of the world system would require "sacrifices" on
part of Americans that will harm America's favorable position in the
world. Brzezinski states,
"The
nation-state is gradually yielding its sovereignty... In the
economic-technological field, some international cooperation has
already been achieved, but further progress will require greater
American sacrifices. More intensive efforts to shape a new world
monetary structure will have to be undertaken, with some
consequent risk to the present relatively favorable American
position."
There is little doubt that Brzezinski knew exactly what kind of
response this action would evoke from patriotic Americans. At the
moment we are witnessing America's favorable economic position being
drastically eroded as the dollar continues its freefall, with former
Federal Reserve chairman
Alan Greenspan's endorsement.
The great dream of
world governance comes at a price. Ancient ideas of national
sovereignty have no place in the modern era. Sacrifices must be
made.
What reactions do the
global planners expect?
James P. Muldoon, Jr., Senior
Fellow of the Center for Global Change and Governance at Rutgers
University, writes in The Architecture of Global Governance
that the transition to the international system will emerge out of
'chaos',
"For some, the disarray of
traditional relationships in international affairs indicates a
dangerous deterioration of the international order and portends
collapse of the system into chaos or anarchy. Others consider
the turbulence of the 1990s as part of the process of evolution,
an inevitable consequence of the transformation of the
international system into a global system. In some respects,
both are right. The international order has indeed deteriorated
into 'disorder' in large measure, but there is growing evidence
that a global system is emerging out of this 'chaos.'"
H.G. Wells, a strong proponent of
a planned world state, wrote in The New World Order in 1940,
"Countless people, from
maharajas to millionaires from pukka sahibs to petty ladies,
will hate the new world order, be rendered unhappy by
frustration of their passions and ambitions through its advent
and will die protesting against it. When we attempt to estimate
its promise we have to bear in mind the distress of a generation
or so of malcontents, many of them quite gallant and
graceful-looking people."
H.G. Wells again writes in The
Open Conspiracy, an earlier book written in 1928,
"The establishment of the
world community will surely exact a price - and who can tell
what that price may be? - in toil, suffering, and blood."
While speaking at a conference
hosted by AKbank in Istanbul Turkey on May 31, 2007, just prior to
the scheduled Bilderberg meeting, Henry Kissinger gave a speech in
which he stated,
"What we in America call
terrorists are really groups of people that reject the international
system..."
Government trends analysts have
taken into consideration the expanding world system and have based
predictions on its impact on social, political, and economic
conditions. A December 2000 CIA report titled "Global Trends 2015"
outlines possible outcomes of globalization and worldwide
integration. The report states,
"Scenario Two: Pernicious
Globalization Global elites thrive, but the majority of the
world’s population fails to benefit from
globalization... migration becomes a major source of
interstate tension... Internal conflicts increase,
fueled by frustrated expectations, inequities, and
heightened communal tensions..."
A report released from the U.K.
Ministry of Defense, "DCDC Global Strategic Trends
Programme 2007-2036", states that globalization and the
effective erasing of borders in an international system will cause
upheaval.
"Economic globalization and indiscriminate migration may
lead to levels of international integration that
effectively bring interstate warfare to an end; however,
it will also result in communities of interest at every
level of society that transcend national boundaries and
could resort to the use of violence."
It is not my position to advocate
violent actions as a solution, as this would only worsen our situation.
What can be seen from the above statements is that violence and turmoil
is expected by globalist planners and analysts during the "transition"
period that will carry us into the New World Order.
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