FINAL WARNING: The Illuminati Influence on International Affairs
Their first book, called The Limits to Growth, was published in 1972,
and described their vision for the world:
“We believe in fact that the need will quickly become evident for
social innovation to match technical change, for radical reform of
the institutions and political processes at all levels, including the
highest, that of world polity. And since intellectual enlightenment
is without effect if it is not also political, The Club of Rome also
will encourage the creation of a world forum where statesmen,
policy-makers, and scientists can discuss the dangers and hopes
for the future global system without the constraints of formal
intergovernmental negotiation.”
For the most part, the Club (main office at 193 Rissener Landstr. In
Hamburg, Germany) functions as a research institute on economic,
political, and social problems, and claim that “there is no other viable
alternative to the future survival of civilization than a new global
community under a common leadership.” Their website claims:
“The Club of Rome’s mission is to act as a global catalyst of
change that is free of any political, ideological or business
interest. The Club of Rome contributes to the solution of what it
calls the world problematique, the complex set of the most crucial
problems- political, social, economic, technological,
environmental, psychological and cultural- facing humanity. It
does so taking a global, long term and interdisciplinary
prospective aware of the increasing interdependence of nations
and the globalization of problems that pose predicaments beyond
the capacity of individual countries.”
It almost sounds like the Club of Rome is the A-Team of
internationalist groups. Just like how the proposals suggested by the
Bilderbergers seem to gain acceptance, we have to worry that the
same thing will happen with the COR.
On September 17, 1973, they released a Report called the
“Regionalized and Adaptive Model of the Global World System,”
which was prepared by Directors Mihajlo Mesarovic and Eduard Pestel
(part of the “Strategy for Survival Project”), which revealed the Club’s
goal of dividing the world into ten political/economic regions (which