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The
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Occult
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The Initiation of the Son of a
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Technology Finance Capitalist into the Arcane
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Secrets of Political and Economic
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of Power
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Power
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**********
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A Project of the
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Society for Illuminating
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the Sources of Power
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**********
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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The Occult Technology
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of Power, 64 page Paperback Edition $8.95
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Copyright 1974 by Alpine Enterprises
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PO Box 766
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Dearborn, Michigan 48121
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All Rights Reserved for Printed Editions
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E-text editions may be distributed without limit
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as long as the address of the Copyright Holder
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or publisher is included. Print-outs from e-text
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are not allowed.
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Published by:
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Alpine Enterprises
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PO Box 766
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Dearborn, MI 48121 (Include $2.00 postage and handling fee)
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ISBN 0-55950-009-3
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Library of Congress
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Card Catalog Number 88-083670
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For further information, sources, comments, & discussion write:
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Alpine Enterprises
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PO Box 766
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Dearborn, Ml 48121
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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To My Son
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". . . the world is governed by very different
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personages from what is imagined by those who are
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not behind the scenes."
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-Benjamin Disraeli
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(Earl of Beaconsfield)
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In this thin volume you will find the transcripts of your
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initiation into the secrets of my empire Read them again
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not for the arcane knowledge which is now second nature
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you, hut in order to re-experience the shock and awe you felt
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twenty years ago when at age thirty the fabulous scope of
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my power was revealed to you by my trusted, and now
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mostly departed advisors. Remember the surprise, to the
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point of disbelief, with which you beheld the invisibly
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delicate, but invincible chains of deceit, confusion, ar
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coercion with which we finance capitalists enslave this chaotic
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world. Remember the feats of will and strategy that have
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been required to retain our position. Then, inspect your
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retinue carefully. Your heir must be equal to and eager for
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the task much as you were. Choose him carefully. As I lie
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here waiting for the end I can afford to relish the thought
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our empire lasting forever as I never dared while in charge.
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Rational power calculations, so easily disrupted by the thrill
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of power, are now entirely in your hands.
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"Know!--Will--Dare--and be Silent!"
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Aleister Crowley
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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THE TRANSCRIPTS
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My Introduction to your Initiation
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1. Professor A. on the Role of Fraud in Nature
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2. Professor Q. on Occult Knowledge as
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the Key to Power
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3. Professor M. on the Economics of
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Central Banking
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4. Professor B. on the Functions of the Central
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Bank in the Mature Finance Capitalist System
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5. Professor G. on Social and Business Legislation
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and Policy
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6. Professor D. on the Role of Public Education
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7. Professor X. on Prestigious Associations and
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Secret Societies
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8. Professor Y. on Covert Operations
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and Intelligence
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My Closing Remarks
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Afterword by the Transcriber
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Sources:
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Indispensable Thoughts on History, Economics, Politics,
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Philosophy, and Human Nature
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The Left on the Ruling Class
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The Right on the Conspiracy Theory of History
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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MY INTRODUCTION TO
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YOUR INITIATION
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"Man is a rope stretched between the animal and
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the Superman a rope over an abyss. "
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"I teach you the Superman. Man is something to be
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surpassed."
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-Friedrich Nietzsche
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"Self reverence, self-knowledge, self-control these
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three alone lead to sovereign power."
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-Alfred Lord Tennyson
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"And nothing, not God, is greater to one than one's
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self is. "
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-Walt Whitman
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"Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the law."
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-Aleister Crowley
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The Book of the Law
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My Son, the time has arrived to make formal what you
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have confidently awaited for some years. Of all your
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brothers, sisters, and cousins, as well as the offspring of my
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close allies, I have chosen you to be heir to my empire. All
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the trust funds, foundations, and accounts through which my
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empire is controlled shall pass into your hands upon my
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retirement. All my alliances, understandings, and enmities
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with my handful of peers around the globe shall gradually
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become yours. Over the next twenty years we shall collaborate
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closer and closer, you and I, until, we finally act as one.
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For ten years you have toured my empire in a succession
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of managerial assignments and are now familiar with the
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outward operations of my crucial banking, foundation, gov-
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ernmental, and think tank organizations. Until now, my ad-
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visors and I have deflected your questions as to how and if
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my diverse operations and holdings, which seem autonomous
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and even contradictory, are integrated into an organic whole
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to serve the dynasty's interests. The fact that you asked
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these questions, rejecting my carefully nurtured public image
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as an idle, coupon clipping philanthropist, was a major
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factor in the high esteem in which I hold you. Most of your
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competitors found puppet leadership in any one of my organi-
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zations so awesome and gratifying that they immediately
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eliminated themselves from the contest for the top position
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which you have won. Such men of limited vision are neces-
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sary for my success. They bend unconsciously to the subtle
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pressures to which I expose them. They can be led in any
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direction I choose by simple-minded rationalizations aimed at
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their vanity without being privy to my motives which would
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be short lived secrets in their undisciplined and envious
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minds .
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Most important in your selection as my successor,
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however was your psychological nature which has been
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faithfully reported to me over the years by my associates
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many of whom have advanced psychological training. A man
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in my position must have total mastery over his emotions.
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All actions affecting the power of the dynasty must be taken
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on the basis of coldly reasoned power calculations il the
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dynasty is to survive and prosper at the expense of its
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subjects and rivals. All power is impossible to those whose
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pursuit is ruled by sentimentality, love, envy power-lust
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revenge, prejudice, hatred, justice, alcohol, drugs, or sexual
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desire. Sustained power is impossible to those who repress
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all their irrational longings into their subconscious only to
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have them return in compulsive, out of control behavior that
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inevitably leads to their ruin. Although often clothed in the
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rationalizations of power calculation, compulsive behavior is
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at root, the emotionalism of a frightened child, desperately
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projecting his inner agony into a reality he is afraid to under
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stand, much less master.
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Although you now must begin to pursue it consciously you
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have already displayed the alienation from your emotional
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nature that is so essential to achieving real worldly power.
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You must recognize your emotional nature as a primitive
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survival mechanism that was appropriate for the jungle and
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perhaps useful to common men, but useless for the tasks that
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confront us finance capitalists. Attachment to what you do,
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just because you do it, is the primary psychological
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characteristic of ordinary mortals. Such cognitive dissonance
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spells disaster for us. Our emotional mechanism makes our
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lives worth living, but is no guide to the occult arts of
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intrigue. So, continue to gratify your senses and emotions
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fully at your leisure. As long as the empire prospers you will
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have the resources to indulge in systematic gratification
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which will leave your irrational urges sated and, therefore,
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powerless. You will never be in the unenviable position of the
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middle class strivers who must, from lack of resources,
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repress their emotional natures if they are to attain any
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power whatever during their lives. Typically, they end up
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taking their pleasure from the victories and cruelties of their
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struggle. Thus, their end ceases to be power and they event-
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ually defeat themselves with reckless behavior in pursuit of
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dominant thrills.
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I have brought you into seclusion with my most trusted
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advisors in order to inaugurate a new phase of your instruct-
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tion. Your formal training in the "official" political-economic
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world is now complete. This weekend will mark the begin-
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ning of your training in the occult technology of power that
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lurks behind outer appearances. As your tutors will explain,
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"occult" or secret knowledge is the basis of all power in
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human society, so I use the word "occult" advisedly, in its
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pristine usage. As I am sure you are aware by now, produc-
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tivity in itself does not secure power and therefore does not
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secure the gratifications of life. After all, slaves can be
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productive. None of my organizations in which you served so
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well are concerned with advancing the techniques of satisfy-
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mg human needs and desires. Rather, all are dedicated to the
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surreptitious centralization of productive, but especially
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coercive, efforts in my hands or in creating the intellectual
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climate in which such veiled control would be tolerated in tb
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future. I destroy or paralyze productive efforts that cannot
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be ensnarled in my web
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After a break Professor A. will take the floor in order to
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put finance capitalism into full biological perspective. His
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short talk will be followed by similar abbreviated summaries
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by his six associates, all of whom you know well. The rest of
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the weekend will be devoted to forthright fielding of your
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questions.
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**1**
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PROFESSOR A. ON THE
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ROLE OF FRAUD IN NATURE
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"Are we not all predatory animals by instinct? If
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humans ceased wholly from preying upon each
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other, could they continue to exist?"
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-Anton Szandor LaVey
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"Nature, to be commanded must be obeyed "
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-Francis Bacon
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Organisms typically base their success primarily on de-
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ception and rely on actual force or mutually advantage-
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ous trade (symbiosis) as little as possible. This should be
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nearly self-evident, but is generally overlooked due to the
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moral codes we elitists foist on our subjects. Let me give a
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few examples in case the moral culture has to some extent
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impaired your powers of objective observation. Camouflage
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is universal among predators and victims alike. Blossoms
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imitate fragrances and colors which are sexually attractive to
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certain insects in order to effect pollination. Dogs bark fero-
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ciously and feign attack on enemies of whom they are, in
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fact, terrified. The Venus Fly Trap plant lures flies to their
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deaths. Men proclaim their altruism to others and even
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themselves while they selfishly scramble for personal advan-
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tage. If you doubt that fraud is normal in nature you should
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read section 3 of the first chapter of Robert Ardrey's, The
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Social Contract for a wealth of fascinating examples. (Of
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course Ardrey fails tn grasp the full application to contempor-
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ary human society of his brilliant insights into man's animal
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nature.)
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Human mental prowess and communicative powers have
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merely provided superb elaboration on nature's old theme of
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fraud and added its own distinctive feature: self delusion.
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Primitive animal hierarchies are based on bluff and bluster,
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and each member is well aware of and accepts, at least tem-
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porarily, its position in the hierarchy. The same wild enthu-
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siasm and fascination for dominance and submission rages in
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human hearts. However, fraud is taken one step further. Not
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only is fraudulent bluff and bluster used to achieve
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dominance but fraudulent altruism and collective institutions
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are used to conceal dominance once achieved. Human hier-
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archies, in contrast to the animal variety, are best sustained
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when the members are deluded regarding the oppressive na-
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ture, or better, even the very existence of the hierarchy!
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Visible rulers are highly vulnerable. Thus we see visible
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rulers claiming to be representatives of God, the common
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good, the material forces of history, the general will (either
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through vote or intuition), tradition, or other intellectual
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"spooks" that serve to lessen the envy of the ruled for the
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rulers. Encouraging such self delusions among the masses of
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the ruled is universal for visible governments. However, such
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spooks are little protection for the leaders of such systems
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against their sophisticated elite rivals and no protection
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against men like your father. The Roman Empire was
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unquestioned by the mass of its subjects for centuries, but
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the Emperors lived in constant fear of coup and assassina-
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tion .
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By embracing deception wholeheartedly at every level,
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finance capitalism, or rule through money, has fashioned
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the ultimate system yet devised for the secure exercise of
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power. Men like your father, the hidden masters of finance
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capitalism, govern those who govern, produce, and think
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through invisible financial tentacles, the operations of which
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will be elucidated later by my colleagues. Dominance in all
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aspects of society is surreptitiously accomplished while the
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great majority of the ruled, and even most of the visible
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leaders, believe themselves to be fairly autonomous, if
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harried, members of a pluralistic society. Nearly everyone
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believes major decisions to be the vector sum of autonomous
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pressures exerted by business, labor, government, consum-
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ers, social classes, and other special interests. In fact, the
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vectors of societal power are carefully balanced by us so that
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any net movement is in a direction chosen by us. The only fly
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in the ointment is the occasional, but extremely messy,
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interferences by competing financial dynasties. This discon-
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certing problem will not be a major topic for this weekend.
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I now yield to Professor Q. who will elucidate the central
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secrets of your father's immense money power.
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**2**
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PROFESSOR Q. ON OCCULT
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KNOWLEDGE AS THE
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KEY TO POWER
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"The theory of aggregate production which is the
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point of the following book, nevertheless can be
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much easier adapted to the conditions of a totalitar-
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ian state than the theory of production and distribu-
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tion of a given production put forth under conditions
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of free competition. . ."
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John Maynard Keynes
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Forward to the German
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Edition of the
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General Theory
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September 7, 1936
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Throughout history, secure ruling elites arise through se-
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cret, or occult knowledge which they carefully guard and
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withhold from outsiders The power of such elites or cults
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diminishes as their occult knowledge is transformed into
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"scientific" knowledge and vanishes as soon as it becomes
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"common sense." Before analyzing the secrets of the finance
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capitalist money cult let us glance for historical perspective
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at occult astronomy, the oldest source of stable rule known to
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man of which astrology is hut the pathetic remnant.
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As soon as men abandoned the life of wandering, tribal
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hunters to till the soil they needed to predict the seasons.
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Such knowledge was required in order to know when to
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plant, when to expect floods in fertile valleys, when to expect
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rainy seasons, and so on. Months of back breaking work were
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wasted by the unavailability of the calendar, a convenience
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we take for granted. The men who first studied and grasped
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the regularities of sun, moon, and stars that presage the
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seasons had a valuable commodity to sell and they milked it
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to the fullest at the expense of their credulous fellowmen.
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The occult priesthoods of early astronomers and mathemati-
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cians such as the designers of Stonehenge, convinced their
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subjects that they alone had contact with the gods, and thus,
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they alone could assure the return of planting seasons and
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weather favorable to bountiful harvests. The staging
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(predicting) of solar and lunar eclipses was particularly
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effective in awing the community The general success
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resulting from following the priesthood's tilling, planting,
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nurturing, and harvesting time tables insured the priest-
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hood's power. Today's Christmas holiday season continues
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the tradition set by ancient priesthoods, who conducted
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rituals on the winter solstice to reverse the retreat of the sun
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from the sky. Their invariable success was followed by wild
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celebrations. Popular knowledge of seasonal regularities was
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discouraged by every manner of mysticism and outlandish
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ritual imaginable. Failures in prediction were blamed on sins
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of the people and used to justify intensified oppression. For
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centuries people who had literally no idea of the number of
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days between seasons and couldn't count anyway, cheerfully
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gave up a portion of their harvests, as well as their most
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beautiful daughters, to their "faithful servants" in the priest-
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hoods .
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The power of our finance capitalist money cult rests on a
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similar secret knowledge, primarily in the field of economics.
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Our power is weakened by real advances in economic science.
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(Fortunately, the public at large and most revolutionaries
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remain totally ignorant of economics. However, we estab-
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lished money lords have been able to prolong and even
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reverse our decline by systematically corrupting economic
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science with fallacious and spurious doctrines. Through our
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power in the universities, publishing, and mass media we
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have been able to reward the sincere, professorial cranks
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whose spurious doctrines happen to rationalize in terms of
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"common good" the government supported institutions, laws,
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and economic measures upon which our money powers
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depend. Keynesianism is the highest form of phoney
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economics yet developed to our benefit. The highly centraliz-
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ed, mixed economy resulting from the policies advocated by
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Lord Keynes for promoting "prosperity" has all the
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characteristics required to make our rule invulnerable to our
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twin nemeses: real private competition in the economic arena
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and real democratic process in the political arena. Laissez-
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faire or free market, classical economics was our original at-
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tempt to corrupt economic science Its beautiful internal con-
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sistency blinded economists for many years to the fact that it
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had virtually nothing to do with current reality. However,
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we are so powerful today that it is no longer possible to
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conceal our imposing institutions with the appearances of free
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competition Keynesianism rationalizes this omnipotent state
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which we require, while retaining the privileges of private
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property on which our power ultimately rests. Although the
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interim reforms advocated by Marx in his Communist
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Manifesto such as central banking, income tax, and other
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centralizing measures can be corrupted to coincide exactly
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with our requirements, we no longer allow Marxist move-
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ments major power in developed countries. Our coercive in
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institutions are already in place. Any real steps toward com-
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munism would mean our downfall. Of course, phoney
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Marxism is an excellent ideological veil in which to cloak our
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puppet dictators in underdeveloped areas.
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Secondarily, the power of the lords of money rests on an
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occult knowledge in the area of politics and history. We have
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quite successfully corrupted these sciences. Although many
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people are familiar with our secrets through such books as
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1984 by the disillusioned George Orwell, few take them seri-
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ously and usually dismiss such ideas as paranoia. Since real
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politics is motivated by individual self-interest, history is
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viewed most accurately as a struggle for power and wealth
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We do our best to obscure this self-evident truth by
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popularizing the theory that history is made by the imper-
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sonal struggles between ideas, political systems, ideologies,
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races, and classes. Through systematic infiltration of all
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major intellectual, political, and ideological organizations,
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using the lure of financial support and instant publicity, we
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have been able to set the limits of public debate within the
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ideological requirements of our money power
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The so-called Left-Right political spectrum is our creation.
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In fact, it accurately reflects our careful, artificial polariza-
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tion of the population on phoney issues that prevents the
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issue of our power from arising in their minds. The Left
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supports civil liberties and opposes economic or entrepre-
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neural liberty. The Right supports economic liberty and op-
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poses civil liberty. Of course neither can exist fully (which is
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our goal) without the other. We control the Right-Left
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conflict such that both forms of liberty are suppressed to the
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degree we require Our own liberty rests not on legal or
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moral "rights," but on our control of the government
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bureaucracy and courts which apply the complex, subjective
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regulations we dupe the public into supporting for our
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benefit .
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Innumerable meaningless conflicts to divert the attention
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of the public from our operations find fertile ground in the
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bitter hatreds of the Right(c)Left imbroglio. Right and Left are
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irreconcilable on racial policy, treatment of criminals, law
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enforcement, pornography, foreign policy, women's lib, and
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censorship to name just a few issues. Although censorship in
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the name of "fairness" has been useful in broadcasting and
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may yet be required in journalism, we generally do not take
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sides in these issues. Instead we attempt to prolong the
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conflicts by supporting both sides as required. War, of
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|
course, is the ultimate diversionary conflict and the health of
|
|
our system. War provides the perfect cover of emergency
|
|
and crisis behind which we consolidate our power. Since
|
|
nuclear war presents dangers even to us, more and more we
|
|
have resorted to economic crisis, energy shortages, ecological
|
|
hysteria, and managed political drama to fill the gap. Mean-
|
|
ingless, brushfire wars, though, remain useful.
|
|
|
|
We promote phoney free enterprise on the Right and
|
|
phoney democratic socialism on the Left. Thus, we obtain a
|
|
"free enterprise" whose "competition" is carefully regulated
|
|
by the bureaucracy we control and whose nationalized enter-
|
|
prises are controlled directly through our government. In this
|
|
way we maintain a society in which the basis of our power,
|
|
legal titles to property and money, remain secure, but in
|
|
which the peril of free, unregulated competition is avoided
|
|
and popular sovereignty is nullified. The democratic process
|
|
is a sitting duck for our money power. Invariably we
|
|
determine the candidates of the major parties and then
|
|
proceed to pick the winners. Any attempts at campaign
|
|
reforms simply put the rules of the game more firmly under
|
|
our government's control.
|
|
|
|
Totalitarianism of the fascist of communist varieties is no
|
|
danger to us as long as bastions of private property remain
|
|
to serve as our bases of operation. Totalitarian governments
|
|
of both Right and Left, because of the vulnerability of their
|
|
highly visible leaders to party rivals, can be manipulated
|
|
easily from abroad. Primarily, totalitarian dictatorships ef-
|
|
ficiently prevent new money lords that could challenge our
|
|
power from arising in whole continents, civilizations, and
|
|
races.
|
|
|
|
Perhaps a few words on ideology proper are in order
|
|
before I conclude. The only valid ideology, of course is
|
|
rational egoism, that is, the maximization of the individual's
|
|
gratification by whatever means prove practical. This
|
|
requires power over nature, especially, when possible, power
|
|
over other humans who are the most versatile and valuable
|
|
tools of all. Fortunately, we do not have a society of egoists.
|
|
Money lords would be impossible in such a society as the
|
|
mental spooks and rationalizations by which we characteris-
|
|
tically manipulate and deceive would be a laughing stock
|
|
Under such circumstances a policy of live and let live or true
|
|
"laissez(c)faire" anarchy might be the only alternative
|
|
Certainly a hierarchical order would be difficult to maintain
|
|
by force alone. However, in the current era, while minds are
|
|
yet in the thrall of altruistic collectivistic, and divine
|
|
moralistic spooks, the egoist's rational course is to utilize
|
|
such spooks to control others.
|
|
|
|
The next speaker, Professor M., will detail the key in-
|
|
stitution of our power: Central Banking.
|
|
|
|
|
|
**3**
|
|
PROFESSOR M. ON THE
|
|
ECONOMICS OF
|
|
CENTRAL BANKING
|
|
|
|
"It (a bank) can take the depositors' goods, the
|
|
goods that it holds for safekeeping, and lend them
|
|
out to people on the market. It can earn interest on
|
|
these loans, and as long as only a small percentage
|
|
of depositors ask to redeem their certificates at any
|
|
one time, no one vs the wiser. Or, alternatively, it
|
|
can issue pseudo warehouse receipts for goods that
|
|
are not there and lend these on the market. this is
|
|
the more subtle practice. the pseudo receipts will
|
|
be exchanged on the same basis as the true receipts,
|
|
since there is no indication on their face whether
|
|
they are legitimate or not.
|
|
|
|
It should be clear that this practice is outright
|
|
fraud."
|
|
-Murray Rothbard
|
|
Man, Economy, and State
|
|
|
|
"The bold effort the present bank has made to
|
|
control the Government, the distress it has wantonly
|
|
produced,. . ., are but premonitions of the fate
|
|
that awaits the American People should they be
|
|
deluded into a perpetuation of this institution (The
|
|
Bank of the United States), or the establishment of
|
|
another like it. ''
|
|
|
|
-Andrew Jackson
|
|
December 2, 1834
|
|
|
|
As you have a doctorate degree in economics from a great
|
|
university I will touch as lightly as my verbosity allows
|
|
on facts accepted by economic "science" and proceed to occult
|
|
aspects of Central Banking.
|
|
|
|
Since the division of labor is the key to all human achieve-
|
|
ment and satisfaction, a system of exchange is crucial. Barter
|
|
is hopelessly complicated. A command economy, in which
|
|
each does and receives what be is told, is also hopelessly
|
|
cumbersome and fails to take advantage of individual initia-
|
|
tive, ability, and concrete knowledge. A medium of
|
|
exchange, money, is the obvious solution. (Even our highly
|
|
centralized economies on the socialist model now enthusias-
|
|
tically embrace money as an indispensable simplifying tool in
|
|
their economic planning.)
|
|
|
|
When left to themselves people of a given geographical
|
|
area settled upon a durable luxury commodity, usually gold
|
|
or silver, to use as money. Because money is a store of value
|
|
as well as a medium of exchange, people saved part of their
|
|
gold income rather than spending it all. This gold was often
|
|
stored in the vaults of a local goldsmith, the precursor of the
|
|
modern banker, for safe keeping. The depositor received a
|
|
receipt that entitled him to an equal quantity and quality of
|
|
gold on demand from the goldsmith. At some point the
|
|
goldsmith realized that there was no reason he could not loan
|
|
out some of the gold for interest as long as he kept gold on
|
|
hand sufficient to meet the fairly predictable withdrawal
|
|
rate. After all, be simply promised to pay on demand, not
|
|
bold the gold as such. Better yet, be could simply issue more
|
|
receipts for gold than be bad gold and the receipts, renamed
|
|
notes, could circulate freely among the populace as money.
|
|
However, be soon found that there was a definite limit set on
|
|
this process by reality. Not all the extra notes issued
|
|
circulated forever among the public. The rate of note re-
|
|
demption began to increase rapidly as the receipts passed
|
|
into the hands of people unfamiliar with his reputation and
|
|
especially when competitive goldsmiths, always eager for
|
|
more gold reserves, came into possession of his notes. To
|
|
prevent a disastrous run on his gold reserves, note issuance
|
|
had to be kept within bounds. But the spending power of
|
|
over-issuance was a grave temptation. Especially relished was
|
|
the power over governments, industry, and merchants that
|
|
the miraculous loan power of the goldsmith could obtain.
|
|
Many succumbed to temptation, overextended themselves
|
|
and brought ruin to their depositors while others slowly
|
|
became wealthy bankers by pursuing conservative loan policies.
|
|
|
|
At this point, according to economic "science," Central
|
|
Banks are instituted to protect the public from periodic
|
|
financial catastrophe at the hands of unscrupulous fractional
|
|
reserve bankers. Nothing could be further from the truth.
|
|
Central Banks are established to remove the limitation on
|
|
over issuance that reality places on competitive banking
|
|
systems. As early as ancient Babylon and India, Central
|
|
Banking, the art of monopolizing the issuance of money, had
|
|
been developed into a perfect method for looting the general
|
|
public. Even today many bankers copy the traditions of the
|
|
earlier exploitive priesthoods and design their banks to re-
|
|
semble temples! Defenses of Central Banking are simply part
|
|
of the deception that lies at the heart of all power elites.
|
|
|
|
Let us look at the way a new Central Bank is created
|
|
where none has existed previously. We bankers approach the
|
|
Prince or ruling assembly (both of whom always want more
|
|
money to fight wars or to curry favor with the people and,
|
|
typically, are ignorant of economics) with a compelling
|
|
proposal: "Grant our bank a national Charter to regulate
|
|
private banking and to issue legal tender notes, that is, force
|
|
our notes to be accepted as payment for all debts, pubic and
|
|
private. In exchange we will provide the government all the
|
|
notes it prudently requires at interest rates easily payable
|
|
with existing taxes. The increased government purchasing
|
|
power thus created will simultaneously assure the power an
|
|
prestige of the currently precarious nation and stimulate the
|
|
sluggish, credit starved economy to new heights of
|
|
prosperity. Most important the violent banking panics and
|
|
credit collapses caused by unscrupulous private bankers will
|
|
be replaced by our even handed, beneficent and scientific
|
|
management of money and banking. Our public spirited
|
|
expertise will be at the disposal of the state while we remain
|
|
independent enough of momentary political pressures to
|
|
assure sound management."
|
|
|
|
For a while this system seems to work remarkably well
|
|
with full employment for everyone. The government an
|
|
public does not notice that we issuers of the new notes are
|
|
using the notes we create out of thin air to surreptitiously
|
|
build economic empires at the expense of established
|
|
interests. Because of the legal tender laws, few of the new
|
|
notes issued by the Central Bank are returned for
|
|
redemption in gold. In fact, private banks and even a few
|
|
foreign banks may begin to use the Central Bank's notes as
|
|
reserves for further issuance of credit. Soon enough, though,
|
|
prices begin to rise as the added notes increase demand
|
|
relative to the quantity of goods and services. As the value
|
|
of their savings decline more and more foreigners in
|
|
particular begin to question the value of the Central Bank's
|
|
notes and start to demand redemption in gold. We, of course
|
|
do not take responsibility for the rampant inflation when it
|
|
comes. We blame inflation on evil speculators who drive up
|
|
prices for personal gain, as well as the greed of organized
|
|
labor and business who are promptly made subject to wage
|
|
and price controls. Even the consumer can be made to feel
|
|
guilty for agreeing to pay the high prices! Mistaking
|
|
symptoms for causes the government accepts the banker's
|
|
analysis of the problem and continues to give the Bank free
|
|
reign in monetary policy.
|
|
|
|
By slowing the rate of note issuance periodically,v the
|
|
ultimate crisis stage is postponed until many decades after
|
|
the original Central Bank Charter was granted. Before the
|
|
rapidly dwindling gold reserves on which faith in our Bank
|
|
depends is exhausted we abruptly contract our loan volume
|
|
to private industry and government as well. With the
|
|
contraction of the money supply a great deflationary crash
|
|
begins in earnest with all its attendant unemployment, bank-
|
|
ruptcies, and civil strife. We do not take responsibility for
|
|
the depression. We blame it on evil hoarders who are
|
|
refusing to spend their money and the prophets of doom who
|
|
are spoiling business confidence. The government accepts
|
|
this analysis and leaves monetary policy in our hands. If
|
|
things go well we bankers channel the fury and unrest into
|
|
puppet movements and pressure groups that carry our
|
|
agents into full control of the government. Once in charge we
|
|
devalue our outstanding bank notes in terms of gold and
|
|
make them inconvertible for all but possibly foreign Central
|
|
Banks and begin plans to restore a "prosperity" that will be
|
|
totally ours.
|
|
|
|
When lucky, we are able to confiscate the gold of private
|
|
citizens as punishment for hoarding during the climax of the
|
|
depression.
|
|
|
|
Once the old order is subdued during the chaos of the
|
|
crash and desperation of the depression, the field is open for
|
|
our full finance capitalist system to be realized. If the money
|
|
lords behind the Central Bank can avoid lapsing into political
|
|
and economic competition among themselves a new and
|
|
lasting order can be established. A war timed for this period
|
|
of consolidation provides the perfect excuse for the regimen-
|
|
tation required to crush all opposition.
|
|
|
|
Professor B., a former Chairman of a Central Bank, will
|
|
explain the functioning of the Central Plank in the typical,
|
|
fully developed finance capitalist system.
|
|
|
|
**4**
|
|
PROFESSOR B. ON THE
|
|
FUNCTION OF THE
|
|
CENTRAL BANK IN THE
|
|
MATURE FINANCE
|
|
CAPITALIST SYSTEM
|
|
|
|
"We are undone, my dear sir, if legislation is still
|
|
permitted which makes our money, much or little,
|
|
real or imaginary, as the moneyed interests shall
|
|
choose to make it."
|
|
-Thomas Jefferson
|
|
|
|
|
|
"From now on depressions will be scientifically
|
|
created."
|
|
-Congressman Charles A.
|
|
Lindberg, Sr.-1923
|
|
|
|
|
|
In its pristine form a Central Bank is a private monopoly
|
|
of a nation's money and credit issuance supported by the
|
|
coercive power of the state. That the Central Bank be direct-
|
|
ly in our hands is vital until our new order is firmly
|
|
established throughout the governmental, business, intellect-
|
|
ual and political spheres of society. After our order is
|
|
consolidated, formal nationalization of the Central Bank with
|
|
great fanfare is usually advisable in order to dispel any
|
|
lingering suspicion that it is operated for private gain. Of
|
|
course only loyal agent.s of the dynasty are allowed to obtain
|
|
high offices in the Bank and our power remains intact.
|
|
Obvious private monopolies are always the targets of sharp
|
|
reformist agitators. Only the most paranoid, however, can
|
|
see through the public facade to the private monopoly of the
|
|
nationalized or quasi-nationalized Central Bank.
|
|
|
|
The Central Bank is the primary monopoly on which all
|
|
our monopoly power depends. The occult power of the
|
|
Central Bank to create money out of nothing is the fountain-
|
|
head that fuels our far flung financial and political empire. I
|
|
will make a quick survey of a few of the ways this secret
|
|
money power is brought to bear.
|
|
|
|
Basically, the power of our Central Bank flows from its
|
|
control over the points of entry into the economy of new.
|
|
inflationary money which it creates out of thin air. Ordinar-
|
|
ily, bills of exchange, acceptances, private bonds, govern-
|
|
ment honds and other credit instruments are purchased by
|
|
the Central Bank through specially privileged dealers in
|
|
order to put the new money, often only checking accounting
|
|
entries, into circulation. The dealers are allowed a large
|
|
profit since they are fronts operated by our agents. Our pur-
|
|
chase of government securities pleases the government, as
|
|
our purchase of private debt pleases private debtors. As a
|
|
quid pro quo to assure "good management" our agents are
|
|
given directorships, managerial posts, and offices in the cor-
|
|
porations and government's so benefitted. As the addiction to
|
|
the narcotic of inflationary easy credit grows and grows we
|
|
demand more and more control of our dependent entourage
|
|
of governments and corporations. When we finally end the
|
|
easy credit to "combat inflation" the enterprises and govern(c)
|
|
ments either fall directly into our hands, bankrupt, or are
|
|
rescued at the price of total control.
|
|
|
|
Also, we ruling bankers control the flow of money in the
|
|
economy through the wide authority of the Central Bank to
|
|
license, audit, and regulate private banks. Banks that loan to
|
|
interests outside the loyal entourage are "audited" by the
|
|
Central Bank and found to be dangerously overextended.
|
|
Just a hint of insolvency from the respected Central Bank
|
|
authorities is enough to cause a run on the disobedient bank
|
|
or at least dry up its vital lines of credit. Soon the banking
|
|
establishment learns to follow the hints and nods of your
|
|
father's agents at the Central Bank automatically.
|
|
|
|
Further, the periodic cycles of easy money and tight
|
|
money that we initiate through our control of the Central
|
|
Bank cause corresponding fluctuations in all markets. Our
|
|
inner circle knows in advance the timing of these cycles and,
|
|
therefore reaps windfall profits by speculating in commodity,
|
|
stock, currency, gold, and bond markets. Monopolistic stock
|
|
and commodity Exchanges are a vital adjunct to our power
|
|
made possible by our Central Bank power. We do not allow a
|
|
fair auction market to exist, but make a great show of
|
|
"tough" government regulation to create a false sense of
|
|
confidence among small investors. With the aid of our regula-
|
|
tory charade and financial power we are able to maintain
|
|
Exchanges tailored to our entourage's need to manipulate
|
|
stock prices at the expense of independent investors. Our
|
|
privileged specialists on the floors of our Exchanges, aided
|
|
by the propaganda of our financial press and brokerage
|
|
houses, continually play on naivete and greed to drain the
|
|
savings of the unwary into our coffers. The stock, commodi-
|
|
ties, and securities held in trading accounts by the Exchange
|
|
and brokerage houses provides us with a clout far beyond our
|
|
own actual holdings with which we can manipulate prices and
|
|
win proxy fights for corporate takeovers.
|
|
|
|
Little danger to our lucrative racket exists from public
|
|
spirited regulation. Our manipulations are so complex that
|
|
only the most brilliant experts could comprehend them. To
|
|
most economists our Exchange operations appear to be
|
|
helpful efforts to "stabilize" the market. We ruling bankers,
|
|
if able to keep peace among ourselves, become richer and
|
|
richer as time passes without the annoyance of exerting
|
|
productive effort of benefit to others.
|
|
|
|
The next speaker, Professor G. will discuss the secrets of
|
|
social legislation and policy that do so much to cement our
|
|
power.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
**5**
|
|
PROFESSOR G. ON SOCIAL
|
|
AND BUSINESS
|
|
LEGISLATION AND POLICY
|
|
|
|
|
|
"There is no proletarian, not even a Communist,
|
|
movement, that has not operated in the interests of
|
|
money, in the direction indicated by money, and for
|
|
the time being permitted by money--and that
|
|
without the idealists among its leaders having the
|
|
slightest suspicion of the fact. "
|
|
-Oswald Spengler
|
|
Decline of the West
|
|
|
|
"Also at the (SDS) convention, men from Business
|
|
International Roundtables .... tried to buy up
|
|
some radicals. These are the world's leading indus-
|
|
trialists and they convene to decide how our lives
|
|
are going to go .....
|
|
We were also offered Esso (Rockefeller) money.
|
|
They want us to make a lot of radical commotion so
|
|
they can look more in the center as they move to
|
|
the left."
|
|
-James Kunen
|
|
The Strawberry Statement:
|
|
Notes of a College
|
|
Revolutionary
|
|
|
|
The danger to our system clearly is not that the "people"
|
|
will spontaneously rise up and dispossess us. The "peo-
|
|
ple" never initiate anything. All successful movements are
|
|
led from the top, usually without the knowledge of the move-
|
|
ment, by men like your father with vast resources and
|
|
brilliant plans. The real danger arises in the upper-middle
|
|
classes. Occasionally, these people make vast fortunes
|
|
through some brilliant technological innovation in their
|
|
business or through the favor of local politicians that escape
|
|
our influence. Because of their ignorance of the reality of our
|
|
power, however, the new rich usually fall easily into our
|
|
hands. For instance, they seldom realize until too late that
|
|
the dozens of loans they may owe to apparently independent
|
|
banks can be called simultaneously with a mere nod from
|
|
your father. Graver danger is presented by those whose
|
|
enterprises are so successful as to be self-financing. Since
|
|
the advent of the corporate income tax truly self-financing
|
|
corporations are extremely rare. Most disquieting is when
|
|
these upstarts acquire the covert or open support and advice
|
|
of your father's major international antagonists. This is par-
|
|
ticularly dangerous in countries with long democratic tradi-
|
|
tions where it is difficult to make our arbitrary rulings stick.
|
|
|
|
The best solution is to enact comprehensive taxes and
|
|
business regulations in the name of the common good. Such
|
|
measures reduce the incidence of significant upstart competi-
|
|
tion to manageable levels. This policy, of course, strangles
|
|
innovation and productivity. Reduction of the GNPs in
|
|
countries under your father's control would be acceptable in
|
|
the interests of secure power under the pretext of conserva-
|
|
tion, ecology. or no-growth stability except that if carried too
|
|
far your father's clout vis-a vis his international rivals would
|
|
be impaired. The most difficult problem for the money lord is
|
|
determining the level of social and economic freedom he
|
|
dares allow for the sake of his international power. Only
|
|
method is to maintain a home base of carefully monitored,
|
|
relative freedom on which to base the economic and military
|
|
strength required to maintain an empire of totalitarian dic-
|
|
tatorships abroad. The following measures, however, are
|
|
found necessary by nearly all money lords:
|
|
|
|
1. Steeply Graduated Income Tax. Income tax does not affect
|
|
us because our money was accumulated before the tax was
|
|
imposed and most of it is now safely protected in our
|
|
network of tax exempt foundations. Foundation income and
|
|
capital can legally be used to finance the bulk of our social,
|
|
economic, literary, and even political propaganda. In a pinch
|
|
it is easily diverted to illegal uses. Expensive "studies"
|
|
required by our profitable economic operations can be legiti-
|
|
mately financed through foundations.
|
|
|
|
To the middle classes, however. income tax makes life
|
|
into an endless treadmill. Even the most productive find
|
|
themselves unable to accumulate significant capital. They are
|
|
forced into the clutches of our Central Bank entourage for
|
|
injections of the inflationary credit which we are privileged
|
|
to create out of nothing. The self-financing wealth of the
|
|
legendary 19th Century robber barons and early Twentieth
|
|
Century tycoons is no longer possible. Although your grand
|
|
father owed his start to just those wide-open conditions, he
|
|
was among the first of the super-rich to advocate the
|
|
erection of the tax wall that is now in place. Please note that
|
|
in democratic countries eternal vigilance is required to
|
|
prevent our tax shield from being riddled with loop holes by
|
|
conniving legislators, who are usually of the tax oppressed,
|
|
upper-middle class origins themselves.
|
|
|
|
2. Business Regulation. When upstarts slip through our
|
|
financial tentacles and tax shields, perhaps with the aid of
|
|
outsiders, a second line of defense becomes vital licensing in
|
|
the crucial area of broadcasting has proven particularly
|
|
necessary. This makes serious upstart-led mass political
|
|
challenge impossible. Harassment by bureaucrats armed with
|
|
arbitrary and voluminous industrial safety regulations is a
|
|
new and increasingly effective technique. Security registra-
|
|
tion requirements, "to protect the small investor," can cause
|
|
fatal delays in an upstart's ability to raise capital on the stock
|
|
market. Ecological considerations are easily perverted to
|
|
stymie the plans of those who would upset the stability of
|
|
our carefully planned system.
|
|
|
|
Anti-trust law, however, is our ultimate weapon. The
|
|
handy doctrine of "pure and perfect" competition which we
|
|
have fostered in our universities is ideally suited to convict-
|
|
mg any successful competitor, at our discretion. If the
|
|
competitor charges a lower price than ours he is accused of
|
|
"unfair competition" aimed at driving us from the field to
|
|
impair future competition. If he asks the same price as we
|
|
he is open to the charge of collusion. If he charges more than
|
|
us, he is obviously exploiting his "monopoly power" at the
|
|
expense of the consumer. Fortunately, the rulings of our
|
|
bureaucrats are so complicated that even when successfully
|
|
appealed in court many years elapse before the ruling is
|
|
rendered. By then our goals are often achieved through
|
|
harassment.
|
|
|
|
Product quality, safety, and testing regulations are
|
|
excellent methods by which we insulate our established
|
|
industries from potential competition. Beside raising the
|
|
costs of entry into the auto business, for instance, the cost of
|
|
"safety" can be passed to the consumer along with a healthy
|
|
profit mark-up.
|
|
|
|
3. Subsidies, Tariffs, and Foreign Aid. Although direct sub-
|
|
sidies can occasionally be procured for our entourage of cor-
|
|
porations by appealing to the masses' desire to preserve jobs,
|
|
this exploitive technique is usually too obvious. Tariffs are
|
|
easily passed, but lead to retaliation against our foreign
|
|
holdings. Foreign aid and soft (sure to be defaulted) govern-
|
|
ment guaranteed loans, however, fill the bill perfectly under
|
|
modern conditions. Foreign aid maintains our empire of for-
|
|
eign dictators abroad while providing guaranteed, highly
|
|
profitable sales to our corporations at home base. Foreign aid
|
|
should always be contingent on the purchase of goods,
|
|
usually military hardware, that only our entourage of firms
|
|
can provide. Few have the courage to oppose such altruistic
|
|
aid to the "starving masses" of the "third world."
|
|
|
|
4. Centralization of Power. Real division of power between
|
|
national, state, and local government is dangerous to our
|
|
system. When local politicians have real autonomy, even in
|
|
limited spheres, they can do much to enable upstarts to
|
|
challenge our power. Our program is to bring all levels of
|
|
government under our sway through such innovations as
|
|
federal aid, revenue sharing, high federal taxation, and
|
|
regional government.
|
|
|
|
5. Alliance with the Lower Classes. In order to keep our
|
|
valuable regulatory machinery in place and under our control
|
|
we must have the mass support of the numerous lower
|
|
classes against our vigorous, but scarce middle-class rivals.
|
|
The best method is to provide the lower classes with sub-
|
|
sidies at the expense of the middle class. This creates a
|
|
mutual hatred that prevents the middle class from appealing
|
|
effectively to the lower classes for support. Social security,
|
|
free health care, unemployment benefits, and direct welfare
|
|
payments, while doing nothing for us directly, create a de-
|
|
pendent class whose support for our critical measures can
|
|
easily be made part of a package deal. Please note also that
|
|
the major labor unions began with our financing and are led
|
|
to this day by leaders of our choosing. No one can rise to or
|
|
remain at the top of a rough and tumble union without our
|
|
financial backing. In spite of their rebellious rhetoric, bought
|
|
union leaders are the source of our power over the manage-
|
|
ment of firms with widely held stock. Unions are the ultimate
|
|
weapon for destroying otherwise invulnerable, self-financing
|
|
rivals. Further, downward flexibility of wages and prices
|
|
which obtains without widespread unionization would in-
|
|
crease the ability of the economy to survive without our aid
|
|
during the economic crises we create.
|
|
|
|
Bread and circuses are as useful today as in Roman times
|
|
for mobilizing the mob against our staid adversaries. Next,
|
|
Professor D. will describe our education policies.
|
|
|
|
|
|
**6**
|
|
PROFESSOR D. ON THE
|
|
ROLE OF PUBLIC
|
|
EDUCATION
|
|
|
|
"In our dreams we have limitless resources and the
|
|
people yield themselves with perfect docility to our
|
|
molding hands. The present educational conventions
|
|
fade from our minds, and unhampered by tradition,
|
|
we work our good will upon a grateful and respon-
|
|
sive rural folk . . . The task we set before ourselves
|
|
is a beautiful one, to train these people as we find
|
|
them to a perfectly ideal life just as they are. So we
|
|
will organize our children into a little community and
|
|
teach them to do in a perfect way the things their
|
|
fathers and mothers are doing in an imperfect way
|
|
in the home, in shop, and on the farm."
|
|
-The objective of Rockefeller
|
|
"philanthropies" stated by him and
|
|
Gates in Occasional Letter No. 1 of
|
|
Rockefeller's General Education Board.
|
|
|
|
|
|
"A general state education is a mere contrivance for
|
|
molding people to be exactly like one another; and
|
|
as the mold in which it casts them is that which
|
|
pleases the predominant power in the government-
|
|
whether this be a monarch, a priesthood, an aristoc-
|
|
racy, or the majority of the existing generation--in
|
|
proportion as it is efficient and successful, it estab-
|
|
lishes a despotism over the mind, leading by natural
|
|
tendency to one over the body."
|
|
-John Stuart Mill
|
|
|
|
|
|
In order to maintain our system of power, the institution
|
|
of universal public education is indispensable. The an-
|
|
archy of private education in which any manner of dangerous
|
|
ideas could be spread cannot be tolerated. Thus we make
|
|
private education financially impossible to all but the few
|
|
mostly the elite offspring of our financial entourage, by means
|
|
of burdensome taxation and regulation. The primary purpose
|
|
of public education is to inculcate the idea that our crucial
|
|
institutions of coercion and monopoly were created for the
|
|
public good by popular national heroes to blunt the past
|
|
power of the malefactors of great wealth. Crucial is to create
|
|
the impression that, although the people have been exploited
|
|
in the past, today the wealthy are at the mercy of an all-
|
|
powerful government which is firmly in the hands of the
|
|
people or do-gooding liberals.
|
|
|
|
For those of more sophistication who reject this Pollyanna
|
|
view of reality, we promote the "liberal reformer mentality"
|
|
which holds that a new era of reform is on the verge of
|
|
crushing forever the last vestiges of money lordism. Of
|
|
course, the reforms, after taking shape as a bewildering
|
|
myriad of regulatory agencies and taxes, are found to be
|
|
ineffective in subordinating our power to the popular will,
|
|
whereupon we stir up another era of progressive reform.
|
|
|
|
Our contrived Left-Right spectrum which our compulsory
|
|
education helps to make universal is valuable in assuring that
|
|
this charade does not get out of hand. The Pollyannas in the
|
|
middle are neither dangerous nor useful in this endeavor.
|
|
What is needed is a feeble, but persistent right-conservatism
|
|
to moderate and emasculate the liberal reforms. Conserva-
|
|
tives tend to resist all the advances in centralized, govern-
|
|
ment power that we lead the liberals to see as necessary in
|
|
order to totally end the "undemocratic" power of money in
|
|
society. Conservatism would rather promote a "pluralism" of
|
|
competing interests in which money is the medium of compe-
|
|
tition than risk the excesses of "big government," When
|
|
"liberal" reforms show signs of exceeding our intentions and
|
|
actually threaten to place our key institutions in the hands of
|
|
the people, we can always count on the conservatives to
|
|
defend our power under the illusion that they are defending
|
|
the legitimate rights of "free-enterprise capitalists." On the
|
|
rare occasions when conservatives call for subjecting our
|
|
enterprises to laissez-faire competition, we can count on the
|
|
dominant liberal reformers to insist on more government
|
|
interference, unaware of our desire for such, in effect, self-
|
|
administered regulation.
|
|
|
|
The Right has such a fear of the Left's dream of democra-
|
|
tic collectivism and the Left such a hatred for what it sees as
|
|
the Right's elitist, rugged individualism that there is little
|
|
danger that they will ever join forces to overturn our govern-
|
|
ment-backed monopolies even though we violate the ideals of
|
|
both left and right.
|
|
|
|
Centralization of control at the state, or preferably
|
|
national level, assists in building the climate of opinion we
|
|
require in public education. Failing to obliterate local control,
|
|
other methods nearly as effective are available. Our over-
|
|
whelming financial clout in the publishing industry can induce
|
|
relatively uniform textbook selection. Further leverage can
|
|
be created by promoting teacher colleges and teaching
|
|
machines. National teacher's associations and unions are also
|
|
an excellent power base from which to foster our programs
|
|
of indoctrination.
|
|
|
|
With our great influence in publishing and publicity we
|
|
are able to, selectively popularize educational theorists whose
|
|
views are incidentally beneficial, compatible, or at least not
|
|
in conflict with our own goals. This way we obtain sincere,
|
|
energetic activists to propagate our desires without having to
|
|
reveal our motives or even existence. We do not want an
|
|
educational system that produces hard-driving individuals
|
|
bent on amassing great wealth and power. Therefore, we
|
|
discourage education that would develop the potential powers
|
|
of students to their fullest. "Liberal" education that stresses
|
|
knowledge for its own sake or even sophistry and sterile
|
|
mental gymnastics is of no danger to us. "Relevant,"
|
|
vocational, or career oriented education also poses no danger
|
|
to our power. Education that prepares students to accept a
|
|
cog-like existence in our military-industrial-social-welfare-
|
|
regulation complex is ideal. Progressive education with its
|
|
stress on "social adjustment" also produces the conformity
|
|
we require of our subjects. Emphasis on competitive sports
|
|
may produce a certain amount of disruptive competitiveness
|
|
among the participants, but primarily has the effect of
|
|
creating life-long voyeuristic spectators who will enthusias-
|
|
tically sublimate their competitiveness into endless hours of
|
|
following college and professional sports on the boob tube.
|
|
Space spectaculars and dramatic political infighting are also
|
|
marvelous diversions with which to occupy the masses.
|
|
|
|
Anyone seeking social change will gravitate to the field of
|
|
education. Our strategy is simple: Let only those succeed
|
|
whose influence would be compatible with our power. En-
|
|
courage all who would develop the passive or receptive mode
|
|
of existence. Discourage all who promote the aggressive or
|
|
active capacities. Build a great cult of salvation through end-
|
|
less education, touting it as the "democratic" path to success
|
|
Deride the frontal approach to success of the "outmoded';
|
|
rugged individualist.
|
|
|
|
Before yielding the floor to Professor X., who will discuss
|
|
the role of secret societies and prestigious clubs, I would like
|
|
to comment on the demise of religious education as a vehicle
|
|
for social control. Religion, in its time, was a remarkable
|
|
weapon for inculcating subservience, altruism, and self-abne-
|
|
gation among our subjects. We did not give up this weapon
|
|
voluntarily. Your grandfather, for one, supported the Baptist
|
|
faith well after most finance capitalists had turned wholly to
|
|
secular ideologies. However, a trend toward rationality in
|
|
human affairs plods along inexorably quite outside the reach
|
|
of our power. Only in our totalitarian dictatorships can this
|
|
trend be quashed entirely. In the semi-open societies in
|
|
which our money power is based, the forces of reason can
|
|
only be impeded and diverted. Some have theorized that,
|
|
eventually, widespread rational egoism will overturn our
|
|
order. I am confident that secular faiths and just plain confu-
|
|
sion will suffice to sustain our power for many centuries to
|
|
come.
|
|
|
|
**7**
|
|
PROFESSOR X. ON
|
|
PRESTIGIOUS
|
|
ASSOCIATIONS AND
|
|
SECRET SOCIETIES
|
|
|
|
|
|
"Every compulsion is put upon writers to become
|
|
safe, polite, obedient, and sterile. In protest, I de-
|
|
clined election to the National Institute of Arts and
|
|
Letters some years ago, and now I must decline the
|
|
Pulitzer Prize. "
|
|
-Upton Sinclair
|
|
|
|
|
|
"It is useless to deny, because it is impossible to
|
|
conceal, that a great part of Europe--the whole of
|
|
Italy and France and a great portion of Germany, to
|
|
say nothing of other countries--is covered with a
|
|
network of these secret societies, just as the super-
|
|
ficies of the earth is now being covered with rail-
|
|
roads."
|
|
-Benjamin Disraeli
|
|
(Earl of Beaconsfield)
|
|
July 14, 1856
|
|
|
|
In preserving and protecting our grasp on nations we
|
|
must exert veiled control of all major opinion molding
|
|
associations and especially prestigious clubs which attract the
|
|
leaders in various fields and do so much to influence the dis-
|
|
pensing of commanding positions in government and
|
|
business. Associations of the leading scholars, businessmen,
|
|
writers, religionists, artists, bureaucrats, newsmen, ideolo-
|
|
gists, publishers, broadcasters, and professional men as well
|
|
as special interest groups representing laborers, farmers,
|
|
consumers, racial minorities, and so on must be subtly kept
|
|
under the broad limits of our sway. Since membership dues
|
|
and fees are never sufficient to support their ambitious ac-
|
|
tivities, voluntary, non-profit organizations are easy prey for
|
|
the nearly unlimited financial resources of our entourage.
|
|
However, our real motive, to further our political and econo-
|
|
mic power, must not be revealed in the process. Our policies
|
|
must be laboriously rationalized in terms compatible with
|
|
prevalent ideologies and moralities or the material advantage
|
|
of the groups involved. Leaders of such groups are remark-
|
|
ably quick to accept our rationalizations when financial
|
|
support is extended. We engage in outright bribery only as a
|
|
last resort, and then, only in extreme cases. Our long-range
|
|
interests are better served by temporarily postponing a
|
|
policy victory than by risking exposure of our power by at-
|
|
tempting outright bribery. In fact, clumsy bribery and intim-
|
|
idation attempts are characteristic of our foolish nouveau
|
|
riche opponents.
|
|
|
|
As an example, if we decide that federal rather than state
|
|
chartering or licensing of corporations would further our
|
|
control over the economy, we would not simply order
|
|
politicians and opinion leaders to support our desires. Cor-
|
|
porations not relishing central control would be suspicious
|
|
that something was afoot and might expose our plot. Our
|
|
strategy would be as follows: 1. Sacrifice one of our less
|
|
competent management teams in a well-publicized corporate
|
|
scandal in order to focus attention on the "widespread
|
|
problem of corporate corruption under current, lax regula-
|
|
tions." 2. Through well-funded agents, thrust into the public-
|
|
ity spotlight intellectuals or groups who already support
|
|
federal licensing as a piecemeal step toward socialism. (One
|
|
can find pre-existing supporters for nearly any measure with
|
|
sufficient effort.) 3. After the issue is before the public, offer
|
|
to support through foundations the "objective" study of the
|
|
federal licensing proposals being discussed with an eye
|
|
toward proposing legislation. Often, simultaneous support for
|
|
studies by disreputable, irrational groups who will oppose the
|
|
proposal is useful as well. Provide no platform for
|
|
well-reasoned opposition. 4. When a ground swell of support
|
|
appears to be building provide the interested lobbying organ-
|
|
izations with plenty of funds to grease the palms of politi-
|
|
cians. The enactment of the federal licensing law thus
|
|
appears as the will of society. Last ditch opposition automa-
|
|
tically appears mean spirited, obstructionist, reactionary, and
|
|
paranoid, serving only to discredit our opposition.
|
|
|
|
In our fully developed system of finance capitalist thought
|
|
control and promotion control, our hierarchy of prestigious
|
|
associations is capped by a single prestige society: The
|
|
Council of World Affairs. This organization is a front for the
|
|
secret society of which your father is head. This secret
|
|
society is made up of the people who have spoken, plus six
|
|
others not present. You are replacing Professor Q. who is to
|
|
retire shortly. Eventually you will replace your father. We
|
|
thirteen are your father's advisors and only confidants. All
|
|
other agents are misled as to the bulk of our objectives and
|
|
motives. Their knowledge is restricted to the details required
|
|
by their assignments. The penalty for disloyalty is death.
|
|
|
|
The Council is invaluable for propagating our policy deci-
|
|
sions to our entourage without revealing our motives and
|
|
strategy. In many instances, policy can he successfully sold
|
|
to our entourage and thus transmitted to the multitudes by
|
|
merely airing it along with appropriate rationalizations in a
|
|
single awe-inspiring session of the Council. The informal
|
|
power of the Council is such that our policy manipulations are
|
|
usually attainable without the clumsy exercises in brute
|
|
power that invariably snag the independent power seekers.
|
|
The Council is at the heart of what is called the Establish-
|
|
ment and we are at the heart of the Council.
|
|
|
|
At the Council's inception, we worked hard to attract the
|
|
successful of all fields with all the prestige that our money
|
|
power could buy. We had to work hard convincing the
|
|
independent, self-made Council members to move in harmony
|
|
with our policy objectives. We had many failures. Now
|
|
everything is changed. Membership is no longer a reward for
|
|
success as much as it is a prerequisite for major success.
|
|
Without Council membership only the most outstanding can
|
|
achieve national prominence. With membership, glaring
|
|
mediocrities, with the "right" attitudes, achieve prominence.
|
|
In fact. mediocrities are much more adapted to propagating
|
|
our policy rationalizations and less likely to detect and oppose
|
|
our ulterior motives. A power lusting mediocrity is not likely
|
|
to judge his benefactors too harshly or inquire diligently into
|
|
the nature of the power structure that brought him what he
|
|
fears was undeserved success. The vanity of even idealistic,
|
|
committed humanitarians militates against such a course.
|
|
|
|
The Council is now a giant employment agency of loyal-
|
|
ists ready to parrot our public line from the commanding
|
|
posts of government, foundations, broadcasting, industry,
|
|
banking, and publishing. Although Council members are en-
|
|
couraged to take sides and bicker over the diversionary
|
|
issues we create to entertain and enfeeble the populace, their
|
|
solidarity in defending our power structure, root and branch,
|
|
when pressed is a sight to behold! And to think that most see
|
|
themselves as righteous defenders of the public good while
|
|
they dismiss whispered rumors of our power structure as
|
|
"kooky paranoia."
|
|
|
|
Classical secret societies with elaborate circles within
|
|
circles no longer play a major role in finance capitalist power
|
|
structures. Most wide membership secret societies have
|
|
degenerated into middle class excuses for escaping the wife
|
|
and kids once a month for the company of men. But secret
|
|
societies were a major weapon of our bourgeoisie forebearers
|
|
in their struggle with the old feudal order of kings and
|
|
princes. Under authoritarian despotism of the old style, the
|
|
secret society was the only place a free thinking man could
|
|
express himself. Through threats of exposure, loyalty oaths,
|
|
patronage, deception, and rewards we bound such malcon-
|
|
tents into a fierce force for our revolution. The multitude of
|
|
degrees, occult mumbo-jumbo, and vague humanitarianism
|
|
concealed the real goals of our secret societies from the bulk
|
|
of the membership. The roles of the "Illuminated" Masonic
|
|
Lodges in European revolutions were decisive in our final
|
|
victory over the old order.
|
|
|
|
I now yield the floor to Professor Y. who will discourse
|
|
on the real "secret societies" the Modern Finance Capitalist
|
|
State: the National Security Institutions and Intelligence
|
|
Agencies.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
**8**
|
|
PROFESSOR Y. ON COVERT
|
|
OPERATIONS AND INTELLIGENCE
|
|
|
|
|
|
In our fully developed state-capitalist systems we have found absolute
|
|
control of governmental intelligence gathering and covert operations to be
|
|
vital.
|
|
|
|
Besides providing a valuable tool in our struggle with rival dynasties,
|
|
such control is now an integral and necessary part of our day to day
|
|
operations. Large intelligence communities are inevitable, given the
|
|
system of all encompassing governments which we have imposed upon the
|
|
world during our ascent to power. Our power would be short-lived indeed if
|
|
the pervasive influence and power of these iron-disciplined intelligence
|
|
agencies fell into the hands of mere politicians, especially those beyond
|
|
our control.
|
|
|
|
We do not allow intelligence agencies to pursue the "national
|
|
interest," the way the public conceives "spies" to operate. Politicians
|
|
cannot be permitted to divert the power and influence of our intelligence
|
|
community from the esoteric requirements of our Money Power to petty
|
|
political struggles.
|
|
|
|
Neither nationalistic aspirations of races and peoples nor ideological
|
|
visions of intellectuals for humanity can be allowed to pervert
|
|
intelligence and covert operations. Our rationalizations, both within the
|
|
intelligence community and to the public at large, must be diverse and
|
|
flexible, but the intelligence community must further without exception
|
|
the inexorable goals we have set for humanity.
|
|
|
|
No crisis is more serious for our Money Power than an attempt by a head
|
|
of government to assume personal control of intelligence and operations or
|
|
to by-pass existing agencies by setting up parallel ones. Such intrusions
|
|
must be met decisively. Although a contrived scandal to remove the
|
|
offending politician from office is the first line of defense, we dare not
|
|
shrink from assassination when necessary.
|
|
|
|
Perhaps the most accurate overview of our intelligence community can be
|
|
achieved by visualizing it as a "nationalized secret society." Our
|
|
predecessors, in their struggle against the old order of kings and
|
|
princes, had to finance secret societies such as the Illuminati, Masons,
|
|
German Union, etc. out of their own pockets.
|
|
|
|
At great expense and risk such secret societies were able to infiltrate
|
|
the major governmental and private institutions of the nations that our
|
|
noble predecessors targeted for take over by the Money Power. Such
|
|
bureaucratic take-overs are expensive and time consuming. They can be
|
|
considered complete only when promotions, raises, and advancements are no
|
|
longer based on objective service to the stated organizational objectives,
|
|
but are in the hands of the infiltrating group and its secret goals.
|
|
|
|
How much easier it is for us, the inheritors of a fully developed
|
|
state- capitalist system! By appealing to "national security" we are able
|
|
to finance and erect secret societies of a colossal scope, far beyond the
|
|
wildest dreams of our path breaking predecessors. Besides the benefits of
|
|
public financing reaped by these "nationalized secret societies," we
|
|
obtain a decisive advantage from the fact that these our "spook"
|
|
operations are sanctioned by law!
|
|
|
|
Maintaining discipline, loyalty, and secrecy is no longer solely a
|
|
matter of propaganda, blackmail, patronage, and intimidation. Although
|
|
these remain important tools, especially in emergency cases, ordinary
|
|
discipline among initiates (now called agents) can be encouraged by
|
|
appealing to patriotism and can be enforced in courts of law by
|
|
prosecuting "national security violations."
|
|
|
|
As massive as our intelligence community has become in itself, we still
|
|
operate strictly on the finance capitalist principle of leverage. Just as
|
|
a rational finance capitalist never owns more stock in a corporation than
|
|
the bare minimum required for control, intelligence operatives are placed
|
|
only in as many key positions as are required to control the target
|
|
organizations. Our goal, after all, is agent control of all significant
|
|
organizations, not intelligence community member ship for the entire
|
|
population.
|
|
|
|
The organizational pattern of baffling "circles within circles,"
|
|
characteristic of classical secret societies, is retained and refined by
|
|
our intelligence community. That "one hand not know what the other is
|
|
doing" is essential to the success of our operations. In most cases, we do
|
|
not allow the operatives themselves to know the ultimate, and when
|
|
possible, even the short-range objectives of their assignments.
|
|
|
|
They operate under "covers" that disguise our goals not only from the
|
|
public and target groups, but from the agents themselves. For instance,
|
|
many agents operating under "left cover" are led to believe that the
|
|
agency, or at least their department, is secretly, but sincerely motivated
|
|
by socialistic ideology. Thus, they assume that the intelligence agency's
|
|
ultimate goal is to guide left-wing groups in "productive" directions,
|
|
even though they cannot always see how their own assignment fits into
|
|
those assumed goals.
|
|
|
|
Other "left-cover" agents, those with right-wing predilections, are
|
|
encouraged to believe the agency is simply "monitoring" violence prone,
|
|
subversive groups in order to protect the public. When such agents are
|
|
asked to participate in or even lead radical activity they assume that the
|
|
ultimate objective is to fully infiltrate and destroy the organization for
|
|
the good of the country. This is very seldom the case. We waste little or
|
|
no money protecting the "public" or defending the "nation."
|
|
|
|
Agents operating under "right-cover" are handled in symmetrical
|
|
fashion. Agents with right-wing prejudices are encouraged to believe the
|
|
agency is right-wing. Left-prejudiced agents are asked to operate under
|
|
"right- cover" in order to "monitor" dangerous rightist organizations.
|
|
Most intelligence agents remain blithely ignorant of the big picture which
|
|
is so clear to us from our spectacular vantage point. Very few have enough
|
|
information or intelligence to reason out how their specific and sometimes
|
|
baffling assignments promote the legislative, judicial, operational and
|
|
propaganda needs of our Money Power. Most would never try. They are paid
|
|
too much to think about such things.
|
|
|
|
Agents with a "gangster-cover" are of two types. First, there is the
|
|
sincere gangster that draws his salary from an intelligence agency. He b
|
|
led to believe that the gangland "Godfathers" control the government
|
|
agency for their own purposes. Actually, the situation is the opposite.
|
|
The agency controls the gangster for other purposes. Second, is the
|
|
sincere crime fighter who is led to believe that the agency is at tempting
|
|
to infiltrate and monitor the gangsters as a preliminary step to
|
|
destroying organized crime. Such "upstanding" agents commit many crimes in
|
|
their zeal to rid the country of organized crime!
|
|
|
|
To envision how we operate in this lucrative field, let's briefly look
|
|
at the mechanics of dope smuggling. Police and customs officials are told
|
|
to leave certain gangsters alone, even when transporting suspicious
|
|
cargoes. This is made to seem perfectly proper since it is well known that
|
|
secret police infiltrators of organized crime must participate in crimes
|
|
in order to gain the confidence of gangsters.
|
|
|
|
What customs agent would want to upset a carefully laid plan to
|
|
"set-up" the underworld kingpins of dope pushing! But the agent, as well
|
|
as the police who cooperate, are mistaken in believing that the purpose of
|
|
the assignment to help smuggle dope is ultimately to smash organized
|
|
crime. If he could see the big picture, as we can, the agent would see
|
|
that practically all our dope is smuggled by federal intelligence agents
|
|
and secret police! How ever could such a volume be transported safely?
|
|
Real harassment and prosecution is reserved for those who enter the field
|
|
without our approval.
|
|
|
|
Here is our organized crime strategy: On the one hand we pass laws to
|
|
ensure that mankind's favorite pastimes (vices) are illegal. On the other
|
|
hand, we cater to these "vices" at a huge monopoly profit with complete
|
|
immunity from prosecution.
|
|
|
|
A new and growing methodology of our intelligence community is psycho
|
|
and drug-controlled agents. Properly, these are referred to as "behavior
|
|
modified" agents, or, in the vernacular, "zombies." With the use of
|
|
hypnotic drugs, brain washing, sensory deprivation, small group
|
|
"sensitivity" training, and other behavior modification techniques, the
|
|
scope of which was hinted in the movie "Clockwork Orange," complete
|
|
personalities can be manufactured from scratch, to the specifications of
|
|
value structure profiles we design by computer to suit our purposes. Such
|
|
personalities are quite neurotic and unstable due to defects in our still
|
|
developing technology, but still useful for many purposes.
|
|
|
|
The primary virtue of "zombies," of course, is loyalty. Agents that are
|
|
subconsciously programmed for the assignment at hand cannot be conscious
|
|
traitors. All a "zombie" can do is reveal how compulsive and psychotic he
|
|
is with regard to his "cause." Even to trained psychologists he simply
|
|
appears to be the proverbial "lone nut." Although the "zombie" may have
|
|
memories of psychotherapy at a government agency when questioned under
|
|
hypnosis, this is unlikely to raise suspicion in the mind of
|
|
court-appointed psychologists. After all, "lone nuts" should be kept in
|
|
insane asylums and subjected to psychotherapy! At most, the government
|
|
hospital will be reprimanded for letting a loony loose before he was
|
|
cured.
|
|
|
|
Until our techniques can be perfected the use of "zombies" must be
|
|
restricted to "national dramas" designed to justify the growing power of
|
|
our centralized governments over the lives of our people. Most suicidal
|
|
radicals and "crazies" who so mysteriously avoid arrest for years at a
|
|
time are "zombies" conditioned to terrorize the public in the name of some
|
|
irrational ideology. After repeated doses of such terror, the public is
|
|
conditioned to accept the necessity of our intrusive police- state with
|
|
very little objection.
|
|
|
|
The way is clear for an accelerated program of behavior modification
|
|
research to be conducted mostly at public expense in the name of mental
|
|
health and rehabilitation. Such research can be conducted with little
|
|
complaint in prisons, refugee camps, drug rehabilitation centers,
|
|
government hospitals, veterans hospitals, and even public schools and day
|
|
care centers. Mental institutions, methadone maintenance centers, and
|
|
prisons are fertile fields for recruiting the deranged or drug addicted
|
|
persons most suitable for "zombie" conversions. Of course, only a few of
|
|
our most trusted agents actually participate in the creation of "zombies."
|
|
The brilliant researchers and experimenters who make most of the
|
|
break-throughs earnestly believe that their techniques are destined
|
|
strictly for the betterment of mankind.
|
|
|
|
Inevitably, a fraction of the population objects to behavior
|
|
modification as an infringement of man's "sacred" free-will even if they
|
|
are convinced that our intentions are benign. We carefully leak a few
|
|
scandals to satisfy such persons that our experiments are being kept
|
|
within bounds and that excesses are being stopped. Our artificial scandals
|
|
exposing the "excesses" of coercive psychology are carefully designed to
|
|
make the researchers seem incompetent and clumsy to the point of maiming
|
|
and killing their "patients." This effectively conceals the fantastic
|
|
strides we have made toward total behavioral control. Great things are
|
|
going to be possible in the future.
|
|
|
|
I now return the floor to your father for his concluding remarks.
|
|
|
|
|
|
MY CLOSING REMARKS
|
|
|
|
|
|
My son, you surely have many questions about my strategy in the
|
|
seemingly momentous economic and political crises that are shaking
|
|
national and international affairs. You and I will begin handling them in
|
|
detail shortly. For tonight, let me be brief. Most of the current national
|
|
upheavals are stage-managed to consolidate our monopoly position in
|
|
government and business against the continual nuisance of economically
|
|
competent, but politically naive competitors. Likewise, most international
|
|
crises are managed to exert pressure on our obstreperous, reluctant puppet
|
|
dictators in underdeveloped areas. These events are fairly easy to manage.
|
|
I expect to place such management in your hands as soon as possible.
|
|
|
|
The real challenge lies in dealing with my international peers. These
|
|
are the real crises since they are crises of my power structure, not just
|
|
of my subject populations and puppets. In the vast chess game with my
|
|
peers there are no rules and no proven tactics. Mutual vulnerability,
|
|
alone, limits the conflict. My peers and I have labored for decades to
|
|
erect a world government and banking system under which we could all share
|
|
finance capitalism's millennium without the nightmare of internecine
|
|
warfare. With the advent of nuclear war a new world order seemed
|
|
particularly desirable. I say ostensibly we have labored for world
|
|
government because none of us are sure the others will ever voluntarily
|
|
surrender sovereignty to the group. The schedule set after the last World
|
|
War has not been met. So far, the world government idea has served mainly
|
|
to enthuse collectivist intellectuals, and secondarily to veil each
|
|
finance capitalist's maneuvers for supremacy from the rest.
|
|
|
|
The future course of finance capitalism is difficult to predict. Our
|
|
empires are too fragile to risk all-out battles for supremacy among
|
|
ourselves. Our power would dissipate to second echelon wealthy during the
|
|
struggle. Yet we continue to chip away at rival empires on the premise
|
|
that offense is the best defense. On the other hand, purely political
|
|
leaders are helpless before our money power. When Caesars arise, they are
|
|
of our making.
|
|
|
|
Perhaps our system will simply remain much as it is, secure on the
|
|
national level and disturbingly pluralistic at the international level,
|
|
until reason and egoism have developed among our populations to such an
|
|
extent that our occult technology of money power becomes obvious to all
|
|
who think and must yield to either anarchy or a more advanced form of
|
|
deception
|
|
|
|
|
|
AFTERWORD
|
|
BY THE TRANSCRIBER
|
|
|
|
"The names of some of these banking families are
|
|
familiar to all of us and should be more so. They in-
|
|
clude Baring, Lazard, Erlanger, Warburg, Schroder,
|
|
Seligman, the Speyers, Mirabaud, Mallet, Fould,
|
|
and above all Rothschild and Morgan."
|
|
--Dr. Carroll Quigley
|
|
Tragedy and Hope
|
|
|
|
|
|
Any resemblance of these characters to persons living or
|
|
dead is purely coincidental. Any resemblance of their meth-
|
|
odology to that of real ruling elites is purely intentional. The
|
|
extent to which I represent or exaggerate the self-conscious,
|
|
intentional power technology of real politico-economic rulers
|
|
and their unity is for the reader to decide after studying
|
|
available empirical evidence.
|
|
|
|
I am providing a bibliography of relevant historical works
|
|
to aid the curious reader. I have included no works written
|
|
from spurious pluralistic suppositions no one seems to
|
|
consider pluralism as a proposition requiring evidence since
|
|
they are flooding the market. Unfortunately, many works
|
|
listed affirm that ideas rather than individual struggles for
|
|
wealth and power propel history; that is, they view the elites
|
|
they observe ruling the world as ideologically motivated.
|
|
Thus we have the spectacle of the Right claiming that major
|
|
finance capitalists such as the Rockefellers or Rothschilds are
|
|
"communist" conspirators or "socialists." On the other hand,
|
|
we see the I,Left claiming that the same people are bent on
|
|
imposing laissez -faire capitalism, or in a slightly more
|
|
realistic vein, are fanatical proponents of fascism. Virulent
|
|
white racism is another ideology foolishly ascribed to the
|
|
ruling class by the Left. This opinion is nicely balanced by
|
|
the charge from the Right that the elite wants to "mongrel-
|
|
ize" and thus submerge the white race. As usual the elite,
|
|
completely free of prejudice, supports both sides of this
|
|
battle for its own ends.
|
|
|
|
As should be clear by now, I believe that finance capital-
|
|
ists (Ferdinand Lundberg has dubbed them finpols, or
|
|
financial politicians) are understandably attempting to make
|
|
their power as extensive as possible without incurring the
|
|
severe risks which plague pubpols (public politicians).
|
|
(It seems that only the most daring finpols are willing to take
|
|
on the additional risks of pubpoldom, perhaps only because
|
|
they are denied the reins to the family's fortune by more
|
|
privileged relatives.) Pubpols lose their privacy and thus
|
|
their right to sexual impropriety in addition to incurring vul-
|
|
nerability to electioneering and worse in "democratic" coun-
|
|
tries. In most areas of the world the lot of the pubpols is
|
|
even worse. Purge, assassination, and armed coup are regu-
|
|
lar events. While totalitarianism of Right or Left at home
|
|
eliminates the shield of secure private property desired by
|
|
finpols, laissez--faire is likewise rejected out-of-hand as hell-
|
|
on-earth by enlightened power-seekers.
|
|
|
|
Egoism, mitigated only by the reality of circumstance, is
|
|
the motive to realistically attribute to healthy elites. An elite
|
|
under the spell of mental spooks could not hold sway for
|
|
long. Although finpol statism is increasingly a crisis for its
|
|
victims, there is as yet no evidence that the elite itself is in
|
|
serious crisis. Even inflation, the current crisis for the
|
|
powerless, is simply another crisis to be managed toward the
|
|
end of consolidating, extending, and refreshing elite power.
|
|
No doubt the depression which must inevitably follow will be
|
|
managed to even better effect at the expense of the masses.
|
|
|
|
I have classified the bibliography into the categories Right
|
|
and Left. In each list I begin with the most objective works
|
|
and proceed to the works most infected with mental spooks
|
|
and emotional hysteria. These books should be read for
|
|
empirical data, not theoretical insight. A list of less ideologi-
|
|
cally biased works is provided as well. I quote and recom-
|
|
mend authors, not to imply support for my scenario where
|
|
there is none, but to credit a few of those who have provided
|
|
grist for my thoughts.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
BIBLIOGRAPHY
|
|
|
|
|
|
"We are much beholden to Machiavelli and others,
|
|
that write what men do, and not what they ought to do.
|
|
|
|
-Francis Bacon
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Indispensable Thoughts on History, Economics, Politics,
|
|
Philosophy, and Human Nature.
|
|
|
|
Murray N. Rothbard, Economic Determinism and the Con-
|
|
spiracy Theory of History Revisited, Audio-Forum.
|
|
America's Great Depression, Nash, 1972.
|
|
|
|
Carroll Quigley, Tragedy and Hope Macmillan, 1966
|
|
|
|
Gabriel Kolko, The Triumph of Conservatism, Quadrangle
|
|
|
|
Carroll Quigley, The Evolution of Civilizations.
|
|
|
|
Anton Szandor LaVey, The Satanic Bible, Avon Books, 1969.
|
|
|
|
Arkon Daraul, Secret Societies, Citadel Press, 1962.
|
|
|
|
Count Egon Caesar Corti, The Rise of the House of Roths-
|
|
child, The Reign of the House of Rothschild, Cosmopolitan
|
|
Book Corp., 1928.
|
|
|
|
Max Stirner, The Ego and His Own, Libertarian Book Club,
|
|
1963.
|
|
|
|
Robert Ardrey, The Social Contract, Dell Publishing, 1970.
|
|
|
|
Friedrich Nietzsche, Beyond Good and Evil: Prelude to a
|
|
Philosophy of the Future, Random House, 1966.
|
|
|
|
George Orwell, Animal Farm, New American Library
|
|
|
|
Niccolo Machiavelli, The Prince, Encyclopedia Britannica,
|
|
1955.
|
|
|
|
Ludwig von Mises, Theory and History, Arlington House,
|
|
1969. Human Action, Henry Regnery, 1966.
|
|
|
|
James J. Martin, Revisionist Viewpoints, Ralph Myles Pub-
|
|
lisher, 1971.
|
|
|
|
Committee on Government Operations-U.S. Senate, Dis-
|
|
closure of Corporate Ownership, U.S. Government Print-
|
|
ing Office, 1974.
|
|
|
|
Antony C. Sutton, Wall Street and the Bolshevik Revolution,
|
|
Wall Street and FDR, Arlington House, 1975.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The Left on the Ruling Class
|
|
|
|
Gabriel Kolko, The Triumph of Conservatism, Quadrangle
|
|
Books, 1967.
|
|
|
|
Richard Ney, The Will Street Gang, Praeger Publishers,
|
|
1974.
|
|
|
|
Ferdinand Lundberg, The Rich and the Super-Rich, Lyle
|
|
Stuart, 1968. America's 60 Families, Vanguard, 1938.
|
|
|
|
William G. Domhoff, Who Rules America? Prentice Hall,
|
|
1967. The Higher Circles. Random House, 1970.
|
|
|
|
Matthew Josephson, Money Lords, New American Library,
|
|
1973. The Robber Barons. Harcourt Brace & Co., 1934.
|
|
|
|
George H. Shibley, The Money Question, Stable Money Pub-
|
|
lishing Co., 1896.
|
|
|
|
Jules Archer, The Plot to Seize the White House, Hawthorn
|
|
Books, 1973.
|
|
|
|
William Hoffman. David: Report on a Rockefeller, Dell Pub-
|
|
lishing, 1972.
|
|
|
|
Joel Andreas, The Incredible Rocky, North American Con-
|
|
gress on Latin America, 1973.
|
|
|
|
Gustavus Myers, The History of the Great American Fortunes
|
|
1907
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The Right on the Conspiracy Theory of History
|
|
|
|
Antony C. Sutton, National Suicide, Arlington House, 1973.
|
|
|
|
Charles A. Lindbergh, Sr., The Economic Pinch, Dorrance &
|
|
Company, Inc., 1923, Reprinted by Omni Publications.
|
|
|
|
Louis T. McFadden, Collective Speeches of Congressman
|
|
McFadden, Omni Publications, 1970.
|
|
|
|
H.S. Kenan, The Federal Reserve Bank, The Noontide Press,
|
|
1968.
|
|
|
|
Gary Allen, None Dare Call It Conspiracy , Concord Press,
|
|
1973. Richard Nixon - The Man Behind the Mask,
|
|
Western Islands, 1971. The Rockefeller File, '76 Press,
|
|
1976.
|
|
|
|
Dan Smoot, The Invisible Government, The Dan Smoot Re-
|
|
port, Inc., 1962.
|
|
|
|
W. Cleon Skousen, The Naked Capitalist, The Author, 1970.
|
|
|
|
Taylor Caldwell, Captains and Kings, Fawcett Publications,
|
|
1973.
|
|
|
|
John Robison, Proofs of Conspiracy, 1798, Reprinted by
|
|
Western Islands.
|
|
|
|
Nesta Webster, Secret Societies and Subversive Movements,
|
|
Christian Book Club, 1967.
|
|
|
|
A. N. Field, The Truth About the Slump, 1931, Reprinted by
|
|
Omni Publications, 1962.
|
|
|
|
William Robert Plumme, The Untold History, The Committee
|
|
for the Restoration of the Republic, 1964.
|
|
|
|
June Grem, Karl Marx: Capitalist, Enterprise Publications,
|
|
1972.
|
|
|
|
Emanuel Josephson, Rockefeller Internationalist: Man Who
|
|
Misrules the World, Chedney Press, 1962.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
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|
|
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|
|
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