FINAL WARNING: A History of the New World Order

(Dana P.) #1

FINAL WARNING: The Communist Agenda


ultimate goal of Babeuf, who wrote: “The French Revolution is only the
forerunner of another revolution, very much greater, very much more
solemn, and which will be the last!”

The earliest advocate of the movement, later to be known as Socialism,
was the English mill owner Robert Owen (1771-1858). He was a student
of spiritualism and published his views in the Rational Quarterly
Review. At his Scotland textile factory, he was known as a model
employer because of the reforms he instituted, even enacting child
labor laws. He felt production could be increased if competition was
eliminated. Many of his principles were derived from the writings of
Weishaupt. For instance, Weishaupt wrote that the aim of the
Illuminati, was “to make the human race, without any distinction of
nation, condition or profession, one good and happy family.” Owen
said that the “new state of existence upon the earth, which, when
understood and applied rationally to practice, will cordially unite all as
one good and enlightened family.” Many of Owen’s philosophies were
parallel to those of the Illuminati.

Owen’s long term goal was to “cut the world into villages of 300 to
2,000 souls,” in which, “the dwellings for the 200 or 300 families
should be placed together in the form of a parallelogram.” According
to his philosophy, “individualism was to be disallowed,” and “each
was to work for the benefit of all.” A colony established along those
lines in Ireland failed, so in 1824, Owen sailed to America, where he
bought several thousand acres from George Rapp’s pietistic Harmony
Society, in Posey County, Indiana. In 1825, with 1,000 settlers, he
started his “New Harmony Community of Equality.” It was a model
town of non- profit making stores.

Other settlements like this were started in America and Scotland, and
communism was born. However, Owen was a weak leader, had few
skilled workmen, and had to put additional duties on the few
competent workers that he had, in an attempt to insure success. In
1826, he adopted a Constitution that condemned private property and
organized religion.

However, Owen had failed to take into account human nature,
something he had fought so hard for in earlier years, when he
advocated better housing for workers, better education for children,
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