FINAL WARNING: A History of the New World Order

(Dana P.) #1

FINAL WARNING: The Birth of Tyranny


The fraternity known as Phi-Beta-Kappa was organized in 1776 by
students at the College of William and Mary in Williamsburg, Virginia
(the second oldest in the country, founded in 1694), as a secret
debating club. It was later infiltrated, and used to introduce Illuminati
principles to America.

Their name was derived from their Greek password and motto,
‘Philosophia Biou Kuberuetes,’ which means, ‘Philosophy is the Guide
of Life.’ Open only to university students, their goal was to make
philosophy, not religion, the guiding principle of man’s actions. They
had secret hand signals and handshakes up to 1831, when it was
reorganized and changed from a social organization, to an honorary
society for upper classmen with high scholastic standing.

During the 1700’s, when it looked as through the fraternity would fold,
one of its members, Elisha Parmele, received a grant to establish
chapters at Yale in 1780 (Yale Professor of History, Gaddis Smith, said:
“Yale has influenced the Central Intelligence Agency more than any
other university, giving the CIA the atmosphere of a class reunion.”),
and at Harvard in 1781. They later grew to have chapters on 270
campuses, and with more than 500,000 members.

Among their member have been: Tom Brokaw (NBC commentator),
Glenn Close (actress), Francis Ford Coppola (noted film director),
Henry Kissinger (U.S. Secretary of State, 1973 to 1977; Assistant to the
President for National Security Affairs, 1969-75), Kris Kristofferson
(singer/actor), Dean Rusk (Presidential advisor), Howard K. Smith
(ABC commentator), Caspar Weinberger (U.S. Secretary of Defense,
1981-87), John D. Rockefeller, Jr., Nelson Rockefeller, President
George H. W. Bush, President Jimmy Carter, President Bill Clinton,
President Franklin Roosevelt, President Woodrow Wilson, Gov. Jeb
Bush (from Florida), Sen. Joseph Lieberman (from Connecticut), Byron
White (Supreme Court Justice), and Elihu Root (Secretary of State,
1905-1909; served in the U.S. Senate, 1909-1915; was president of the
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, 1910-1925).

To be fair here, I have to say that the inclusion of Phi Beta Kappa is by
no means intended to downplay the academic achievements of its
thousands of members, or to give the connotation of it being an evil
organization. However, its dubious beginnings, and the fact that many
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