FINAL WARNING: A History of the New World Order

(Dana P.) #1

FINAL WARNING: Bringing the World Together


English Channel area.

When the ship was sunk off the coast of Ireland, 1201 people were
killed, including 128 Americans. The Illuminati used the incident to
create a war fever, portraying the Germans as being barbaric. Because
of President Wilson’s handling of the Lusitania affair, William Jennings
Bryan, his Secretary of State, resigned.

Colonel House was already in England, making firm commitments that
America would enter the war; and on April 6, 1917, Congress declared
war, selling it as a “war to end all wars,” and a war “to make the world
safe for democracy.”

When the war was finally over, over 63,000 American soldiers had been
killed in the fighting. A year later, in 1919, Lenin offered four-fifths of
Soviet territory, in exchange for the formal recognition of his
communist government, and economic aid from the United States. He
offered to accept the creation of allied-sponsored non-communist
states in the Baltic region, in the area of Archangel, Western
Byelorussia, half of the Ukraine, Crimea, the Caucasus, the Ural
Mountains, and all of Siberia. Wilson rejected the offer for “patriotic
reasons,” because the Illuminati had big plans for that country. Had he
accepted the offer, Russia would have never have become a world
power.

THE LEAGUE OF NATIONS

Before World War I, the Illuminati, using various influential groups in
the United States and Great Britain, urged the creation of an
organization to promote world peace, even though George Washington
warned against involvement with foreign nations. President Wilson
favored the idea, and echoed those sentiments in his famous “Peace
Without Victory” speech before the Senate. He proposed his idea of a
League of Nations to the Senate in 1917, seeing it as a means of
preventing another World War. It would provide “collective security,”
or in other words, an attack on one, would be considered an attack on
all. The League would also help in the arbitration of international
disputes, the reduction of armaments, and the development of open
diplomacy.
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