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BOOK REVIEW Conspiratorial junkies are, at bottom, serious. The definitive conspiracy conundrum has been who is ultimately in control. For most of us, who go along with life as observers, as participants but not as messiahs the debate is a little academic. Readers of this web page will understand that I have something of a concern for our civilization. This is the civilization of the bourgeoisie. The bourgeoisie, or Western civilization is precious to me. I contend that it is the best civilization humanity has ever experienced. It has within it a little of Christianity and a lot of Greek tradition, the Renaissance and above all laissez faire. The great threat is the new world order. All the socialist junk we are moving into with phrases like 'sustainable development' are code words for Luddite destruction of our civilization.
1) We have wondered if the Eastern establishment and the bankers have had ultimate control of the vortex of deterioration: "Let me issue and control a nations money and I care not who writes its laws." This is a quote from Meyer Amschel Rothschild, father of the dynasty of bankers; Which is it? In Joseph D. Douglass Jr.'s book BETRAYED [2002, ISBN 1-4033-0131-X] we find something of an answer. At least I should say that I find something of an answer. The book does not presume to address this issue directly. Douglass mentions evidence, almost parenthetically, that many of the world's main bankers have been co-opted by the KGB. I am, however getting ahead of myself. That is not the main thrust of this very important book. We learn about the perfidy of the American government from the times of Woodrow Wilson at the end of the first world war; the abandonment of American POWs to guinea pig experiments on humans for the development of drugs to alter the mind and ultimately for conquest and control. Here are some of the uses for the new drugs developed for warfare you have not heard of:
Your blood will curdle when you read about the transfer of our boys to Russia for torture for high tech barbaric horror experiments for planned future warfare. I don't recommend this book for pleasant reading. Thomas Dorman, MD |