FINAL WARNING: The Illuminati Influence on International Affairs
the New World Order. By 1963, fifteen experts (known as the SSG or
Special Study Group) from various academic fields: psychology,
anthropology, international law, biochemistry, physics, astronomy,
mathematics, literature, history, military, economy, sociology, and
industry. Their first and last meeting had taken place at Iron Mountain
in Hudson, New York, the first secure underground records storage
center designed to protect vital corporate records in case of a nuclear
disaster.
There was some speculation that the think-tank known as the Hudson
Institute actually conducted the study. The Institute was started in
1961, “to help determine the entire future of the U.S.- and time
permitting, much of the world beyond. Many of their fellows and
members belonged to the CFR.
The long-term plan to control the population was said to have been
completed in 1966. It was reported that President Johnson ordered the
Report to be sealed, because with the knowledge it contained, the
American people could have used it to prevent the takeover of their
country during the early stages. The cover letter of the Report said:
“Because of the unusual circumstances surrounding the
establishment of this Group, and in view of the nature of its finding, we
do not recommend that this Report be released for publication ... such
actions would not be in the public interest ... a lay reader, unexposed
to the exigencies of higher political or military responsibility, will
misconstrue the purposed of this project, and the intent ...We urge
that the circulation of the Report be closely restricted to those who’s
responsibilities require that they be apprised of its contents...”
The Report, in fact, appeared to be a blueprint for the future of this
country, and contained recommendations that included plans for
governmental control and manipulation, depopulation, gun control and
disarmament, an international police force, and concentration camps.
One man, calling himself John Doe, who was involved in the Report,
decided to release its contents, it was published in 1967 by Dial Press
(a division of Simon and Schuster) as the Report From Iron Mountain
on the Possibility and Desirability of Peace. Even though it was
publicly renounced by the Establishment as a hoax, it was translated
into fifteen languages.