FINAL WARNING: The Illuminati Influence on International Affairs
activities extended back to 1939. Other Americans who attended: Harry
Dexter White, Virginius Coe, Noel Field, Laurance Duggan, Harry
Wadleigh, John Carter Vincent, David Weintraub, Nathan Silvermaster,
Harold Glasser, Victor Perlo, Irving Kaplan, Solomon Adler, Abraham
Silverman, William Ullman, William Taylor, and John Foster Dulles
(who had been hired by Joseph Stalin to be the Soviet Union’s legal
counsel in the United States).
In February, 1945, at the Yalta Conference, President Roosevelt,
Winston Churchill, and Joseph Stalin agreed to the plans proposing
the establishment of the United Nations.
The April, 1945 issue of Political Affairs, the official publication of the
U.S. Communist Party, said: “Great popular support and enthusiasm
for the United Nations policies should be built up, well organized and
fully articulated ... The opposition must be rendered so impotent that it
will be unable to gather any significant support in the Senate against
the United Nations Charter and the treaties which will follow.”
On June 26, 1945, the San Francisco Conference, attended by 50
nations, established the United Nations, and adopted the Charter
which had been drafted. The General Assembly held their first meeting
in London, on January 10, 1946. The U.S. Senate ratified the UN
Charter with only two dissenting votes; and in December, 1946, John
D. Rockefeller III donated an 18-acre tract of land in Manhattan (which
he had purchased for $8,500,000, with New York City contributing the
remaining $4,250,000), to provide the organization with a permanent
headquarters, which is located between First Avenue and Roosevelt
Drive, and East 42nd and East 48th Streets.
The United World Federalists were established on February 22, 1947,
by two CFR members, Norman Cousins and James P. Warburg, when
the Americans United for World Government, World Federalists,
Massachusetts Committee for World Federation, Student Federalists,
World Citizens of Georgia, and World Republic, all merged. Their goal
was to endorse “the efforts of the United Nations to bring about a
world community favorable to peace ... (and) to strengthen the United
Nations into a world government of limited powers adequate to prevent
a war and having direct jurisdiction over the individual.” Nixon said of
them: “Your organization can perform an important service by