In 1919, American engineer Howard Scott founded the Technical Alliance, an organization designed to track economic and social trends in North America, ultimately seeking to expose the inefficiencies of capitalism. When asked about public opinion, Scott infamously remarked, “What the public thinks does not matter; it makes not the slightest difference whether the public knows about it or not.” Once again, we see the theme of powerful men doing increasingly nefarious things.
Though the Technical Alliance dissolved in 1921, it gave rise to the Technocracy movement at Columbia University in 1932. This movement sought to replace politicians and business leaders with scientists and engineers who would oversee the economy – an early attempt at eliminating capitalism in favor of centralized control.
The 1930s saw the decline of the Technocracy movement, which was overshadowed by President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s New Deal – a series of programs that vastly expanded the federal government’s power. This period established the President as the ultimate authority, a trend that persisted into the 1970s. By 1936, support for the New Deal was considered progressive, while opposition was labeled conservative – a division that still shapes modern political discourse.
During the early 1970s, David Rockefeller spearheaded the creation of the Trilateral Commission, a private organization composed of leaders from politics, business, media, and academia. This commission aims to foster global cooperation, particularly among the United States, Japan, Western Europe, and North America, with the ultimate goal of dissolving national borders and establishing a one-world system.
At the same time, the World Economic Forum (WEF) emerged in Geneva, branding itself as an organization committed to “improving the state of the world” through business and political collaboration. Notably, in 2016, the WEF openly declared its vision: “In 10 years, you will own nothing and be happy.” This blatant agenda aligns with longstanding globalist ambitions to control economies, food supplies, healthcare, and public movement – all under the guise of sustainability.
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Earth Day comes to mind. Founded on Lenin's centennial birthday April 22, 1970. Radical environmentalists meshed with communist orthodoxy bent on destroying private property rights. Earth Day spawned another destructive federal agency that same year, EPA.
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