FINAL WARNING: A History of the New World Order

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FINAL WARNING: Introduction


and Pennsylvania (1943), said: “If totalitarianism wins this conflict, the
world will be ruled by tyrants, and individuals will be slaves. If
democracy wins, the nations of the earth will be united in a
commonwealth of free peoples; and individuals, wherever found, will
be the sovereign units of the new world order.”

From an article in a June, 1942 edition of the Philadelphia Inquirer:
“Undersecretary of State Sumner Welles tonight called for the early
creation of an international organization of anti-Axis nations to control
the world during the period between the armistice at the end of the
present war and the setting up of a new world order on a permanent
basis.”

According to a February, 1962 New York Times article called
“Rockefeller Bids Free Lands Unite: Calls at Harvard for Drive to Build
New World Order,” New York Governor Nelson Rockefeller told an
audience at Harvard University: “The United Nations has not been
able– nor can it be able– to shape a new world order which events so
compellingly demand ... (The new world order that will answer
economic, military, and political problems) urgently requires, I believe,
that the United States take the leadership among all the free peoples to
make the underlying concepts and aspirations of national sovereignty
truly meaningful through the federal approach.” The Associated Press
reported that on July 26, 1968, Governor Rockefeller said in a speech
to the International Platform Association at the Sheraton Park Hotel in
New York, that “as President, he would work toward international
creation of a New World Order.”

Richard Nixon wrote in the October, 1967 issue of the Council on
Foreign Relation’s (CFR) journal Foreign Affairs: “The developing
coherence of Asian regional thinking is reflected in a disposition to
consider problems and loyalties in regional terms, and to evolve
regional approaches to development needs and to the evolution of a
new world order.” In 1972, while in China, in a toast to Chinese Premier
Chou En-lai, Nixon expressed “the hope that each of us has to build a
new world order.”

Richard Gardner, former Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for
International Organizations under Kennedy and Johnson, and a
member of the Trilateral Commission, wrote in the April, 1974 issue of

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