FINAL WARNING: Ready to Spring the Trap
Clearing House (also known as the “1313”) and translated it into
legislation to develop regional government, which would usurp the
power of the local government. The Clearing House, located at the
Rockefeller-controlled University of Chicago, represented a group of
26 private organizations which had been infiltrating local government
agencies to usurp their power and authority. Some of these
organizations are: National Association of Counties, National League
of Cities, U.S. Conference of Mayors, American Public Works
Association, Public Personnel Association, National Association of
Attorney Generals, and the National Governors Conference. Their
purpose was to train and place a “new administrative class” in every
level of government, which would replace elected officials.
On March 27, 1969, as published in the Federal Register, under the
direction of his Illuminati advisers, President Nixon announced the
“Restructuring of Government Service Systems,” which called for the
merging of states into eight federally-controlled regions.
An Executive Order, when decreed by the President, is printed in the
Federal Register, and then becomes law 15 days later. After Bill Clinton
signed Executive Order #13083, Presidential Aide Paul Begala was
overheard saying: “Stroke of a pen, law of the land. Kinda cool.”
Executive Order #11647 was signed by Nixon on February 10, 1972,
establishing Federal Regional Councils for the “development of closer
working relationships between major Federal grant-making agencies of
State and local government.” In each of the ten standard Federal
Regions, there was to be a council made up of the directors of the
regional offices of: Dept. of Labor; Dept. of Health, Education, and
Welfare; Dept. of Housing and Urban Development; Secretarial
Representative of the Dept. of Transportation; Office of Economic
Opportunity; Environmental Protection Agency; and the Law
Enforcement Assistance Administration. The President was to
designate one member of each Council as the Chairman.
This Executive Order was unconstitutional because Article IV of the U.
S. Constitution prohibited the merging of the states, and guaranteed a
government represented by elected officials. However, regional
government was accepted, because it brought with it, revenue-sharing
funds.