New world order,ancient plan of secret societies.- William T. Still-

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New world order,ancient plan of secret societies.- William T. Still-

Transcript of New world order,ancient plan of secret societies.- William T. Still-

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2. NEW WORLD ORDERTHE ANCIENT PLAN OF SECRET SociETIESWilliam T. StillHuntington House Publishers.. ....!:. I~.._ 3. Twelfth PrintingCopyright 1990 by William T. StillAll rightsreser~.-ed. No part of this book may bereproduced without permission from -the publisher,except by a reviewer who may quote brief passages in a review; nor may any part of this book be repro- duced, stored in a retrieval system or copied by mechanica!, photocopying, recording or oLlier means, without permission from the publisher.1Huntington House PublishersP.O. Box 53788 Lafayette, Louisiana 705:05Library of .Congress Card Catalog Ncmber 90-80397ISBN t)"9l0311..{}4-1 P-rinted in USA 4. CoNTENTs Acknowledgements _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _v., Introduction-- - - - - - - - - - - - - - vi One-October 1973: The Nixon Coup - - - - --7 Two- Ancient Secret Societies - - - - - - - -21 Three-The Great Atlantean Plan 41 Four-Early America and the Revolution _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _~_____ 55 Five-Weis h aupts Illuminati _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _69 Six- The French Revolution_________83 Seven-American Jacobins - - - - - - - - - -92 Eight-American Masonry _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ 98 Nine-Albert Pike, Mazzini and the Italian Revolution -------- -118 Ten-Karl Marx. and the Intemationale - - -- -129 Eleven-The Soviet Revolution _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ 139 ~welve--Central Banking, the C~ & FOR ~- - __: 146 Thirteen-World WarU and the Communist Aftermath --- _---- - -1.61 Fourteen-The Pt:esent _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _175 Fifteen-The Constitutional Assult.185 Notes - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -194 S eied Bibliography _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ -,-2.04 Inde x - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 206 5. Acknowledgements With any project of this magnitude, there are many to thank.First of all to my parents, William and Mary Still, who helped inmany ways, and second to my wife, Cynthia, who read and re--read,edited and re-edited, my sincere thanks. rn addition, thanks to Bob and Diane Still and Sili Mich~lmore, David Hazard, .Pat .andDr-ew P.auHs, Ron Payne, Paul M.eti, -Jimmy and 5ylvia Fleming,David and Tam, Rich fuHock,TicScudder,Mike R-esnick, .and royo ld h istory teat:hers,Clonel M~lanahanattd Ken.ny Rollins, aH -of/hom p layed a role, whether they knew it-or not. 6. Introduction This book shows how an ancient plan has been hidden forcenturies d-eep within secret societies. This scheme isdesigned to bring all of mankind under a single worldgovernment - a New World Order. This plan is of suchantiquity that its result is even mentioned in the Bible - therule of the Antichrist mentioned in the Revelation of SaintJohn the Divine.other works on the subject do not trace the plan bey.ondthe founding of one of the most notorious of these secretsocieties, the German Illuminati, founded in 1776. Otherworks fail to see any continuity betv,reen the New VvorldOrder and secret societies at all. Still others dont connect theancient secret societies to the modern versions. This book shows what the secret societies ar:e after and how they are going about it. It shows the symbols a ndemblems these groups have left down .through the ages,subtly marking the path Jar their - descendents. This book shows why members of these secret societies can participate in something which will obviously lead to wodddespotism. It shows how their own-members are tricked by them. It reveals enough -of the -secret rituals to e stablishcredibility even with the most artakingoutfu:l!-page ads in>the Nf!"tJJ Y.orkTimes urg.ilg irn,peadunent()fthe ,president.My{ather was.dumbfunded by-fhe " suggestion -that a ooup was .afoot. .1ortttnately;~ew.asable.to:>ncealhisshocklongi:mough:to:leam someofthedetailsfromhis.associate,Mr.joseplason:Shortly- thereafter,: .~ 9. he wrote a memor,1ndum dlt,1iling the incit"knt Only -aHhe request~fNelson Rodbserversthought-w.oultf.bepohtic-ah>blivion whenhe -was-defeated by Pat8rown. S~;pposet.i~y Nixon wa-s .broke, .bothec-onom.ic-aUy and po1itkatly, hut soon, a ~emarkabte f.ehabihtation 18. ONE-THE NIXONCouP Pbegan to take place. Researcher Gary Allen noted, however: When Nixon left Washington, he, by his own claim, had little morethan an Oldsmobile automobile, Pats respectable Republican cloth coat, and a government pension. While in law practice Nixon had an income of $200,000 per year....By 1968, he reported his net worth as 5515, 830.16 During those years Nixon lived in a posh $100,000-a-year Manhattan apartment Ov ned by Nelson Rockefeller. 17 And what did Nixon do from 1962 to 1968 to earn hisS200,DOO-a-yearsalary? He "spent most of his time touring the country and the world, first rebuilding his political reputation and then campcigning to get the 1968 Republicannomination. "18 In 1968, Nixon campaigned as the arch-enemy of Communism, yetafter the elections, his actions quickly boggled the minds Of mostconservatives. Gary Allen wrote in 1971: "The Nixon Game Plan isinfinitely more clever and dangerous than those of his pred ecessorsbecause it masquerades as being the opposite of what it is." 19 Even during his campaign, Nixon began proclaiming that if elected,he would pursue a program which he termed "new internationalism.""New internationalism" turned out to be a euphemism for thedisastrous trade policy with the Soviet Union, also known as "detente,"the likes of which had not been seen since President Franklin Roosev-elts Lend Lease policy of the early 1940s rebuilt tlreSoviet war machineinto the dominant iorce that it is today. This "new internationalism" was merely a prelude to the real goal ofthe secret societies, which they call the "New World Order," Or eventheir "New Atlantis."After Nixon was elected, his former boss, John Mitchell, took over asAttorney General. Nixon also appointed Dr. Henry Kissinger, anotherRockefeller confidant; as hi.s,mational seturity advisor. Kissinger wasRockefellers personaladvisorOn foreign affairs and a paid staff memberof the Council onForeignRelations. Thesignificance of this relationshipis e xplained in later chapters as are the persistent allegations thatKissinger was a Soviet ag ent. . After the 1968 election, the Nixon team .q1:1ickly moved to .e stablishth.e most~pro-Soviet-program-theUnited States had seen in twenty--fiveyears. Outgoing President L~ndon Johnson was astonished by Nixnlssweeping turn to the .Jeft. In a Dec-ember 1, 1971 .ar;tide in the now-defunct Washington Star he said.: Cant you see the uproar..:if I had been responsible f.or Taiw-an :getting kicked out.oftheUnited. Nations? Or if I had imposed sweepi11gnationalcontrols on prices and wa.ges?... Nixon has gotten by with it.Columnist Stewar-t Aisop::ertainly ag.r.eed: There .is a sor.t,of-unoonsdous-conspiracy between the President 19. 18NEW WORLD OROF:R and h1s natural .enemies, the Iibera I Democrats, tOf Congn.-ss)TH-E MAC!CA!.STAR The cc.Ont.rov.ersia.l :fiv.e-pointed sta-r-t.~mbteFn:of Masonry he First Degree of Masonrytech:?s I the cc:ndidatcl that his actions must-be squared by the preceptscontained in the Holy Bible, the constant study "of which is stronglyrecommended."~ As we will see, however, the "Christian" cf_political;EQUAUTY,by those :lawfully in authority. Ma-sonry was ,the firstapostle-of EQUAt:ITY!! 30. Two-AsCIENT SECRET SociETIES29Pike also explained that Masonry must deceive its members in thefirst three degrees, called the "Blue Degrees." The Blue Degrees are but the .outer court or portico of the Temple.Part of the symbols are d isplayed there to the Initiate, but he isintentionally misled by false interpretations. It is not intended that heshall understand them; but it is intended that he shall imagine heundersta nds them. Their true explanation is reserved for the Adepts,the Princes of J.,.1aso nry. 33 This basic deception of Masonry is perfectly depicted by the Sphinx. It is w ell enough for the mass of those called Masons, to imaginethat all is contained in the Blue Degrees; and whose a tten~pts toundeceie them ,ill labor in vain.... Masonry is the veritable Sphinx,buried to the head in the sands heaped round it by the ag;:s.:4 Masons must swear oaths, knov-m as "blood oaths," that they illnever reveal the secrets of their order on pain of a barbaric death. Afterextensive memorization of Masonic lore and philosophy, the candidateis initiated into v hat is known as the lodge. At first, members are toldlittle about the goals of their order. It is only gradually, as the memberadvances through the various degrees, or steps of initiation, that thetrue scope of Masonry is revealed. One Masonic source has said:"Masonry should be felt everywhere, but nowhere should it be un-veiled. The whole strength of Masonry lies in its discretion. Ourenemies fear us all the more because we never reveal our methods ofaction." 35As the new Mason becomes more trusted and more involved, hegradually becomes able to accept the "truths" of his new-found relig-ion. The moment a Mason does not accept one of the new tenets of his"new morality," his advancement mysteriously freezes. WHY SECRECY? If Masonry were really pu~eying pure truth, as it claims, then whyw ould it need to keep its ancient secrets hidden? For, as Jesus said inJohn 18:20, "I have always taught in synagogues and in the temple, where all Jews come together; I have said nothing secretly."36 . In reality, there are two reas.ons for Masonic secrecy. First of all, if every Masons wife knew the ;exact cntent.f the blood oaths~ to which her husband had swom,:then Masonry would collapse-in a single night. In the wider scope, anti-Masonic investigatioRs,- nquisitionsrand i purges have been launched whenever the l()rder-s secr-ets .f avebeen revealed. Secondly, secrecy ma-kesmembersfeel that they are partnf an.elrte group. This tends to better weld them into a .unit. Adam W.eishaup~1 father of the eighteenth-century group which evenruaUy oon.sum.ed. . European Masonry, the Illuminati, wrote: 31. 30 NEwVwu.11 01WE1< For LHIT Ordtr wisht.>s tl> b.. !Gnosticism, as-the Mothe.rf1=ceemasonry, has i-mposed its mark in t he very centre of fiye pointedstarf.caming the-:fe:erC. DiffertltexplanatioostQ!ledge from an unknovm higher source, resulting in superiorhuman intelligence. This group was condemned by an edict of theGrand Inquisition in 1623, in what was another battle in the long-running ,.v ar between the Catholic Church and the secret societies.64 Some writers claim that a group known as the "Illuminated Ones"was founded by Joachim of Floris in-the eleventh century and taught aprimitive~ supposedly Christian doctrine of "poverty and equality."This tactic to disguise Illuminism behind a thin veil of Christianity isnow a ,. eil-established theme..Later, this group is said to have becomevviolent, plundering the rich and thez:eby discrediting Christianity as awhole. Still other writers-trace thellluminatito the dreaded Ishmaelian sectof Islam, also knovvn as the "Order of Assassins." Founded in 1090 byHassan Sabah, this group combined the use :Of the drug hashish withmurder as their main .path to illumination. .. ~Killing was a mystical..e~pex:ience -to this :branch of the MysterySchools. They -notoniy maintained thei-r.control by murderand threatsof murder, theybelievedthatthe assassincould acquire thegnosis, orsoul energy from the viCtim. This4s,the;theorybeh.ind t.J:ehuma-n andanimal sacrifices of Satanists throaghouthistory. Primitive-religions get the same,e ffectbydancing and drumbea-ting.Seeking this fonn of i11umination was the main attraction ofd.rugs likemarijuana, hashish, and LSD to the- head of both-Masonry and RosecrucianJsm of his e.ra; Sir Francis Bacon. in the .eadyT600sBaconauthored.anovelen-t~tled NcwAtlRntis,which,biCI out the t:hat:1"rulytheSiX:tlln ...-thetrue fatherof democracy. the 48. THREE--GREAT ATLAJTEAl PLAN47actual and true FOUNDER OF AMERICA ... (and) wise guilrdian andprotector of its history during the last three hundred years. 19Born only sixty-nine years after Columbus "discovered" America,Bacons parentage is very controversial. He v as born to QueenElizabeths lady-in-waiting, Lady Ann Cooke-Bacon, wife of the LordHigh Chancellor of England. But some Bacon scholars no,, believe hewas, in reality, the first-born son of Queen Elizabeth and Lord RobertDudley, the Earl of Leicester, and was merely adopted at birth by theBacons, ,.vho had suffered the misfortune of a stillborn child at approxi-ma tely the same time. 20 That would have made Bacon the gra ndson ofKing Henry VII, and therefore the rightful heir to the British throne. Why the switch? Bacons father, Dudley, was secretly married toElizabeth before she became Queen in 1558 at age twenty-five.~ 1 It iswell known that Elizabeth wanted to marry Dudley openly, but it waspolitically impossible because he was very unpopular. His first wifedied suddenly under suspicious circumstances in 1560, the year beforeBacons birth. Throughout her reign, Elizabeth was haunted by thispersistent rumor that she had given birth to bastard children, Baconbeing the most prominent.22 In any case, at maturity, Bacon, an English lord, became well-versedin the occult, and even claimed to be so mystically adept as to be inpossession of "all knowledge."2. Marie Hall described Bacon in glow-ing terms:He is the Founder of Free Masonry... the guiding light of theRosicrucion Order, the members of which kept the torch of trueuniversal knowledge, the Secret Doctrine of the ages, alive during thedark night of the Middle-Ages.2Bacon had been initiated into the new liberalism representedthroughout Eur-ope by Secret Societies of intellectuals dedicated tocivil and religiousfreedom....La,er, when themomenfwas propitious,he threw the weight of bis literary group with the English colonizationplan for America ...cherishing as he did the dr-eam of a greatcommonwealth in the New Atlantis. 25Though born a half century after the death of.Columbus, t-he ciphersColumbus 1:1sed .vere later to be called "Baconian-ciphers." This secretmethod -of communication involved the -seemingly random use ofitalics, and the use of subtly different type styles to conv.ey c-odedmessages. Sometimes even single letters within wor-ds wer.e italicizedor had Su btle fnt changes. Entire volumes have been devoted -to thedeciphering,ef these coded messag-es, many-of which are available only books section of the Library of Gongress. 26in the rar-e-There is .evidence suggesting that Columbus was a member Of thesame see>r.et -society that Bacon -led in his later een the two are so remarkable that Lor-d Bacon has .even been 49. ~f.W VOIU.I> OtWERrderred to as the "little Columbus of literature::~Bacon was very-secretive. Although he strove mightily to propagatethe"New Atlantis" idea,t.ikemanyothers involved in the plan since, heprefLrred to remain in the background as much as possible. The leadersTbe1ititj>att Of rhf rru~ & hor.o- nl>le hiO:ory,f c.htR!J6t bcvu~r.EIto/:;(_uinzlu" L4rJ Higb ...AJ.ritd.j &g{p,j, bit Smwntt.W._brWilliaca~(courtesv ofthe Library oi Cong~e:.slOrigin;~! Shakespearian title page circa 1600.of the Cr:eat Plan hav.e always been -strictly cautioned against trying tobring their plan to fulfillment too quickly:The-Great P~anreached the Western Hemisphere through a series of incidents. Many.eady explorers and Colonizers are knownto have been associated with SecretSocieties.. :.5ome of .t he c-olonizers were probably unawar.eof the pafts.they wer-e pia ying, a Ad the settlements whichthey found.edremained for generations without the strength or security to advanc.e ideologicaiprograms. The work, .then as always, was in.the:h ands .a-nd keeping of a few initiated 1eacle.s. They w.ere r-espPnsiblefor.the results, and they buiJ.tslowly and wisely, thinking not-of theirowndaysor of.th~ir r~r.utation, but Of .t he" future in which , the Great P-lan would-be.fulftlled ..!S Babv:ious.Thr-ough-time, the hidden .truth shaUf the !>eals or symbols of the:Older"f,theQuest. Cntained within ~tis the.whole.promise of .the.-resur:r~nclman, and the--restitution Of the.di~ne theotogy.29 50. 49TO THE READER.William Rawleys Forward to Sir Francis Bacons New Atlantis, circa 1627(courte;y of the Library of Congress) Baconian scholar and Masonic enthusiast Marie Bauer Hall be-lieves this Great Plan has been perpetuated by ar.. int~nYcl tional .groupof only the highest initiates of the secret societies. She wrote:Perpetuation -of the great plan was seIonization ()f Am~r-ic-.l, w-ith wkmization- :amea for