FINAL WARNING: A History of the New World Order

(Dana P.) #1

FINAL WARNING: The Communist Agenda


for the rights of the people.

Marx worked as a correspondent for the New York Tribune (whose
Editor was Horace Greeley, 1852-61), covering the 1848 European
revolutions. One source has reported that even these articles were
written by Engels. In 1857 and 1858, Marx wrote a few articles for the
New American Cyclopedia.

On September 28, 1864, Marx and Engels founded the International
Workingmen’s Association at St. Martin’s Hall in London, which
consisted of English, French, German, Italian, Swiss, and Polish
Socialists, who were dedicated to destroying the “prevailing economic
system.” It later became known as the First Socialist International,
which eight years later spread to New York and merged with the
Socialist Party. The statutes they adopted were similar to Mazzini’s,
and in fact, a man named Wolff, the personal secretary of Mazzini, was
a member, and pushed Mazzini’s views. Marx wrote to Engels: “I was
present, only as a dumb personage on the platform.” James
Guillaume, a Swiss member, wrote: “It is not true that the
Internationale was the creation of Karl Marx. He remained completely
outside the preparatory work that took place from 1862 to 1864...”
Again, we find evidence that the Illuminati did in fact control the
growing communist movement, but not to deal with the problems of
workers and industry, rather it was to instigate riot and revolution. The
Marxist doctrine produced by the Association was accepted and
advocated by the emerging labor movement, and soon the
organization grew to 800,000 dues-paying members.

Even though Marx publicly urged the working class to overthrow the
capitalists (the wealthy who profited from the Stock Exchange), in
June, 1864, “in a letter to his uncle, Leon Phillips, Marx announced that
he had made 400 pounds on the Stock Exchange.” It is obvious that
Marx didn’t practice what he preached, and therefore didn’t really
believe in the movement he was giving birth to. He was an employee,
doing a job for his Illuminati bosses.

Nathan Rothschild had given Marx two checks for several thousand
pounds to finance the cause of Socialism. The checks were put on
display in the British Museum, after Lord Lionel Walter Rothschild, a
trustee, had willed his museum and library to them.
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