FINAL WARNING: The Illuminati Influence on International Affairs
destroyed the economy of the entire world; and yet, they would be so
wealthy, that it would not substantially affect their vast holdings. The
novel is about a man who stops the motor of the world, of what
happens when “the men of the mind, the intellectuals of the world, the
originators and innovators in every line of industry go on strike; when
the men of creative ability in every profession, in protest against
regulation, quit and disappear.”
If we are to believe that the book represents the Illuminati’s plans for
the future, then the following excerpts may provide some insight to the
mentality of the elitists who are preparing us for one-world
government.
One of the characters, Francisco d’Anconia, a copper industrialist and
heir to a great fortune, the first to join the strike, says:
“I am destroying d’Anconia Copper, consciously, deliberately, by
plan and by my own hand. I have to plan it carefully and work as
hard as if I were producing a fortune- in order not to let them
notice it and stop me, in order not to let them seize the mines
until it is too late ... I shall destroy every last bit of it and every
last penny of my fortune and every ounce of copper that could
feed the looters. I shall not leave it as I found it- I shall leave it as
Sebastian d’Anconia found it- then let them try to exist without
him or me!”
A bit later, d’Anconia says: “We produced the wealth of the world- but
we let our enemies write its moral code.” Still later, he says: “We’ll
survive without it. They won’t.”
Dagney Taggart, the main character of the book, is the head of the
Taggart Transcontinental Railroad. Her goal was to find out who John
Galt was. She discovered that he was a young inventor with the
Twentieth Century Motor Company, who said he would put an end to
the regulations which bound a man to his job indefinitely. Before
disappearing, he said: “I will stop the motor of the world.” He told her:
“Dagney, we who’ve been called ‘materialists’ ... we’re the only
ones who know how little value or meaning there is in material
objects ... we’re the ones who create their value and meaning. We