FINAL WARNING: The Illuminati Influence on International Affairs
William O. Douglas; Sen. Ralph Flanders (R-Vermont), Sen. Hubert
Humphrey (D-Minnesota), John J. McCloy (former Assistant Secretary
of Defense and former High Commissioner to Germany), Paul Hoffman
(of the State Department), Thomas K. Finletter, John Foster Dulles
(Secretary of State), and President Eisenhower, who said it would
curtail the power of the Presidency. After a long, bitter fight, the
Amendment failed by a vote of 60-31, just one vote short of the
necessary two-thirds majority of the U.S. Senate.
H. G. Wells wrote in his 1933 book The Shape of Things to Come:
“When the existing governments and ruling theories of life, the
decaying religious and the decaying political forms of today, have
sufficiently lost prestige through failure and catastrophe, then and
then only will world-wide reconstruction be possible.”
Robert M. Hutchins (former President of Rockefeller’s University of
Chicago) was the Chairman of the Committee to Form a World
Government, who had drafted a new Constitution. On August 12, 1945,
they said on a Round Table broadcast, that they wanted to turn control
of our nation over to a Socialist world government. In Hutchin’s 1947
book, The Constitutional Foundations for World Order (published for
the Foundation for World Order), he says: “Tinkering with the United
Nations will not help us, if we agree with the New York Times that our
only hope is in the ultimate abolition of war through an ultimate world
government.” President Dwight D. Eisenhower said on October 31,
1956: “I am more deeply convinced that the United Nations represents
the soundest hope for peace in the world.”
A State Department document, #7277, called Freedom From War: The
United States’ Program for General and Complete Disarmament in a
Peaceful World, revealed a plan to disarm the U.S. military, shut down
bases, and to give the UN control of our Armed Forces, and nuclear
weapons. The UN military arm would then be the world’s police force
to act as “peacekeepers.” The document, which on September 1, 1961,
was sent by courier to the UN Secretary General, suggested a
“progressive reduction of the war-making capability of the nations and
the simultaneous strengthening of international institutions to settle
disputes and maintain the peace...” It was to be done through a three-
step program: