FINAL WARNING: A History of the New World Order

(Dana P.) #1

FINAL WARNING: Ready to Spring the Trap


Jimmy Carter in my opinion, neither deserves or should expect one
vote from the American people.” According to the Dektor
Psychological Stress Evaluator, a lie detector which measures voice
stress with an oscillograph, there was no stress in Carter’s voice when
he lied, which would seem to indicate that he is a pathological liar.

Even though Carter later resigned from the Commission, he was hardly
an “outsider.” He was supported by the Trilateral Commission, the
Rockefellers, and Time magazine. Early contributions came from Dean
Rusk, C. Douglas Dillon, Henry Luce, and Cyrus Eaton. Leonard
Woodcock of the United Auto Workers Union, and Henry Ford II, both
of whom are CFR members, endorsed Carter on the same day. Carter’s
two major foreign policy speeches during the primary campaign were
made to the Chicago Council on Foreign Relations and the Foreign
Policy Association. He used terms like “a just and peaceful world
order,” and “a new international order.” In another primary campaign
speech, Carter talked about “world-order politics.” A Los Angeles
Times article in June, 1976, identified the advisors that helped Carter
prepare his first major speech on foreign policy: Zbigniew Brzezinski,
Richard Cooper, Richard Gardner, Henry Owen, Edwin O. Reischauer,
Averill Harriman, Anthony Lake, Robert Bowie, Milton Katz, Abram
Chayes, George Ball, and Cyrus Vance; who were all members of the
CFR (and most were also members of the Trilateral Commission).

Carter’s religious convictions became a big part of his campaign, but
things weren’t really what they seemed. Carter claimed that his favorite
theologian was Reinhold Niebuhr (a pro-communist), former professor
at the Union Theological Seminary (which had been funded by the
Rockefellers), who founded the Americans for Democratic Action. He
denied the virgin birth, and the resurrection of Christ. Carter also
admired Karl Barth (who said the Bible was “fallible,” and filled with
“historic and scientific blunders,” and “theological contradictions”),
Paul Tillich, and Soren Kierkegaad, all liberals who led the ‘God is
Dead’ movement during the 1960’s.

Carter told his sister, evangelist Ruth Carter Stapleton, that he
wouldn’t give up politics for Christ. He admitted he wasn’t “born-
again” until 1967, yet he joined a Southern Baptist Church when he
was 10, taught Sunday School at 16, and became a deacon in the
church in his twenties. In the infamous Playboy magazine interview,
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