FINAL WARNING: A History of the New World Order

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FINAL WARNING: Introduction


Federation of Education Associations said:

“If there are those who think we are to jump immediately into a
new world order, actuated by complete understanding and
brotherly love, they are doomed to disappointment. If we are ever
to approach that time, it will be after patient and persistent effort
of long duration. The present international situation of mistrust
and fear can only be corrected by a formula of equal status,
continuously applied, to every phase of international contacts,
until the cobwebs of the old order are brushed out of the minds of
the people of all lands.”

Adolf Hitler said: “National Socialism will use its own revolution for the
establishing of a new world order.”

In the 1932 book The New World Order, author F. S. Marvin said that
the League of Nations was the first attempt at a New World Order, and
said that “nationality must rank below the claims of mankind as a
whole.”

Edward VIII became King of England on January 20, 1936, but he was
forced to abdicate the throne eleven months later, when he married a
commoner. He became the Duke of Windsor, and in July, 1940, became
the governor of the Bahamas. He is on record as saying: “Whatever
happens, whatever the outcome, a new Order is going to come into the
world ... It will be buttressed with police power ... When peace comes
this time there is going to be a new Order of social justice. It cannot be
another Versailles.”

In a New York Times article in October, 1940, called “New World Order
Pledged to Jews,” comes the following excerpt: “In the first public
declaration on the Jewish question since the outbreak of the war,
Arthur Greenwood, member without portfolio in the British War
Cabinet, assured the Jews of the United States that when victory was
achieved an effort would be made to found a new world order based on
the ideals of ‘justice and peace’.”

The “Declaration of the Federation of the World,” written by the
Congress on World Federation, which was adopted by the Legislatures
of some states, including North Carolina (1941), New Jersey (1942),

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