FINAL WARNING: Ready to Spring the Trap
#11310 (10-11-66) Gives Government the power to use all prisons to
administer medical treatment, for mass feeding, and housing.
#11490 (10-28-69) was amended by the 36-page Executive Order
#11921 (6-11-76), which consolidated the following Executive Orders:
#10312, #10346, #10997-#11005, #11087-#11095, and #11310. It
assigned emergency preparedness functions to most Federal
Departments and Agencies to assure the “continuity of the Federal
Government.”
On the heels of these provisions that would initiate martial law, a
meeting arranged by Nelson Rockefeller, was held from April 5-8, 1976
in Philadelphia with representatives from the Center for the Study of
Democratic Institutions, the League of Women Voters, the National
Council of Churches, National Urban League, NAACP, United Auto
Workers, Common Cause, and various other University professors and
governmental experts, to study our present Constitution to see if it
could be modernized and improved.
On January 30, 1976, came the announcement of “A Declaration of
Interdependence,” a document which endorsed a one-world
government. The announcement was made at a meeting held at
Philadelphia’s Independence Hall, which was sponsored by the World
Affairs Council (and had stemmed from a five point program they had
announced in September, 1975). The meeting was funded with a
$100,000 grant from the Pennsylvania Bicentennial Committee. The
document, written by CFR member Henry Steele Comsmager began
with this sentence: “Two centuries ago our forefathers brought forth a
new nation; now we must join with others to bring forth a new world
order.” It was signed by 24 U.S. Senators and 80 U.S. Representatives,
such as: Sen. Alan Cranston (D-CA, CFR), Sen. Jacob Javits (R-NY),
Sen. Hubert Humphrey D-MN), Sen. George McGovern (D-SD), Sen.
William Proxmire (D-WI), Sen. Charles Mathias (CFR), Sen. Claiborne
Pell (CFR), Rep. Paul Simon, Rep. Patricia Schroder, Rep. Louis
Stokes, Rep. Les Aspin (Secretary of Defense under Clinton), Rep.
John B. Anderson (R-IL), and Rep. Morris K. Udall (D-AZ).
This document went through further drafts, and in 1984, it was
presented by the Committee on a Constitutional System (CCS) as an