- 'This is a transcript of two out of three tapes on the
"New World System." Tapes one and two were recorded in 1988 and
are the recollections of Dr. Lawrence Dunegan regarding a lecture he attended
on March 20, 1969 at a meeting of the Pittsburgh Paediatric Society. The
lecturer at that gathering of paediatricians (identified in tape three
recorded in 1991) was a Dr. Richard Day (who died in 1989). At the time,
Dr. Day was Professor of Paediatrics at Mount Sinai Medical School in New
York. Previously he had served as Medical Director of Planned Parenthood
Federation of America.
-
-
- Dr. Dunegan was formerly a student of Dr. Day at the
University of Pittsburgh and was well acquainted with him, though not intimately.
He describes Dr. Day as an insider of the "Order" and although
Dr. Dunegan's memory was somewhat dimmed by the intervening years, he is
able to provide enough details of the lecture to enable any enlightened
person to discern the real purposes behind the trends of our time. This
is a transcript of a loose, conversational monologue that makes for better
listening than reading.'
-
-
- New World System
-
- This is a transcript of two out of three tapes on the
"New World System." Tapes one and two were recorded in 1988 and
are the recollections of Dr. Lawrence Dunegan regarding a lecture he attended
on March 20, 1969 at a meeting of the Pittsburgh Paediatric Society. The
lecturer at that gathering of paediatricians (identified in tape three
recorded in 1991) was a Dr. Richard Day (who died in 1989). At the time,
Dr. Day was Professor of Paediatrics at Mount Sinai Medical School in New
York. Previously he had served as Medical Director of Planned Parenthood
Federation of America. Dr. Dunegan was formerly a student of Dr. Day at
the University of Pittsburgh and was well acquainted with him, though not
intimately. He describes Dr. Day as an insider of the "Order"
and although Dr. Dunegan's memory was somewhat dimmed by the intervening
years, he is able to provide enough details of the lecture to enable any
enlightened person to discern the real purposes behind the trends of our
time. This is a transcript of a loose, conversational monologue that makes
for better listening than reading.
-
- The transcripts of Tape 1 and Tape 2 have been very slightly
edited to remove verbal mannerisms and to improve readability.
- The original unedited transcript may be found using the
following link <http://100777.com/node/19>http://100777.com/node/19
- Tape 3 is an interview by Randy Engel, Director of the
U.S. Coalition for Life, with Dr. Larry Dunegan and was recorded on Oct.
10, 1991 in Pittsburgh, Penn.
- This set of three audio tapes may be ordered from the
Florida Pro-family Forum, P.O. Box 1059, Highland City, FL 33846-1059 ($20.00).
-
- CONTENTS
-
- IS THERE A POWER, A FORCE OR A GROUP OF MEN ORGANIZING
AND REDIRECTING CHANGE?
-
- EVERYTHING IS IN PLACE AND NOBODY CAN STOP US NOW
-
- PEOPLE WILL HAVE TO GET USED TO CHANGE
-
- THE REAL AND THE STATED GOALS
-
- POPULATION CONTROL
-
- PERMISSION TO HAVE BABIES
-
- REDIRECTING THE PURPOSE OF SEX
-
- CONTRACEPTION UNIVERSALLY AVAILABLE TO ALL
-
- SEX EDUCATION AS A TOOL OF WORLD GOVERNMENT
-
- TAX FUNDED ABORTION AS POPULATION CONTROL
-
- ENCOURAGING HOMOSEXUALITY
-
- TECHNOLOGY
-
- FAMILIES TO DIMINISH IN IMPORTANCE
-
- EUTHANASIA AND THE 'DEMISE PILL'
-
- LIMITING ACCESS TO AFFORDABLE MEDICAL
-
- PLANNING THE CONTROL OVER MEDICINE
-
- ELIMINATION OF PRIVATE DOCTORS
-
- NEW DIFFICULT TO DIAGNOSE AND UNTREATABLE DISEASES
-
- SUPPRESSING CANCER CURES AS A MEANS OF POPULATION CONTROL
-
- INDUCING HEART ATTACKS AS A FORM OF ASSASSINATION
-
- EDUCATION AS A TOOL FOR ACCELERATING ONSET OF PUBERTY
AND EVOLUTION
-
- BLENDING ALL RELIGIONS, THE OLD RELIGIONS WILL HAVE TO
GO
-
- CHANGING THE BIBLE THROUGH REVISIONS OF KEY WORDS
-
- THE CHURCHES WILL HELP US
-
- RESTRUCTURING EDUCATION AS A TOOL OF INDOCTRINATION
-
- MORE TIME IN SCHOOLS, BUT THEY WOULDN'T LEARN ANYTHING
-
- CONTROLLING WHO HAS ACCESS TO INFORMATION
-
- SCHOOLS AS THE HUB OF THE COMMUNITY
-
- BOOKS WOULD JUST DISAPPEAR FROM THE LIBRARIES
-
- CHANGING LAWS
-
- THE ENCOURAGEMENT OF DRUG ABUSE TO CREATE A JUNGLE ATMOSPHERE
-
- ALCOHOL ABUSE
-
- RESTRICTIONS ON TRAVEL
-
- THE NEED FOR MORE JAILS, AND USING HOSPITALS AS JAILS
-
- NO MORE SECURITY
-
- CRIME USED TO MANAGE SOCIETY
-
- CURTAILMENT OF AMERICAN INDUSTRIAL PRE-EMINENCE
-
- SHIFTING POPULATIONS AND ECONOMIES - TEARING THE SOCIAL
ROOTS
-
- SPORTS AS A TOOL OF SOCIAL CHANGE
-
- SEX AND VIOLENCE INCULCATED THROUGH ENTERTAINMENT
-
- TRAVEL RESTRICTIONS AND IMPLANTED ID
-
- FOOD CONTROL
-
- WEATHER CONTROL
-
- KNOW HOW PEOPLE RESPOND - MAKING THEM DO WHAT YOU WANT
-
- FALSIFIED SCIENTIFIC RESEARCH
-
- TERRORISM
-
- FINANCIAL CONTROL
-
- SURVEILLANCE, IMPLANTS, AND TELEVISIONS THAT WATCH YOU
-
- HOME OWNERSHIP A THING OF THE PAST
-
- THE ARRIVAL OF THE TOTALITARIAN GLOBAL SYSTEM
-
-
- IS THERE A POWER, A FORCE OR A GROUP OF MEN ORGANIZING
AND REDIRECTING CHANGE?
-
- There has been much written, and much said, by some people
who have looked at all the changes that have occurred in American society
in the past 20 years or so, and who have looked retrospectively to earlier
history of the United States, and indeed, of the world, and come to the
conclusion that there is a conspiracy of sorts which influences, indeed
controls. major historical events, not only in the United States, but also
around the world. This conspiratorial interpretation of history is based
on people making observations from the outside, gathering evidence and
concluding that from the outside they see a conspiracy. Their evidence
and conclusions are based on evidence gathered in retrospect. I want to
now describe what I heard from a speaker in 1969, which in several weeks
will now be 20 years ago. The speaker did not speak in terms of retrospect,
but rather predicting changes that would be brought about in the future.
The speaker was not looking from the outside in, thinking that he saw conspiracy,
rather, he was on the inside, admitting that, indeed, there was an organised
power, force, group of men, who wielded enough influence to determine major
events involving countries around the world. In addition, he predicted,
or rather expounded on, changes that were planned for the remainder of
this century. As you listen, if you can recall the situation, at least
in the United States in 1969 and the few years there after, and then recall
the kinds of changes which have occurred between then and now, almost 20
years later, I believe you will be impressed with the degree to which the
things that were planned to be brought about have already been accomplished.
Some of the things that were discussed were not intended to be accomplished
yet by 1988. [Note: the year of this recording] but are intended to be
accomplished before the end of this century. There is a timetable; and
it was during this session that some of the elements of the timetable were
brought out. Anyone who recalls early in the days of the Kennedy campaign
when he spoke of progress in the decade of the 60's": That was kind
of a cliché in those days - "the decade of the 60's."
Well, by 1969 our speaker was talking about the decade of the 70's, the
decade of the 80's, and the decade of the 90's. Prior to that time, I don't
remember anybody saying "the decade of the 40's and the decade of
the 50's. So I think this overall plan and timetable had taken important
shape with more predictability to those who control it, sometime in the
late 50's. That's speculation on my part. In any event, the speaker said
that his purpose was to tell us about changes which would be brought about
in the next 30 years or so, so that an entirely new world-wide system would
be in operation before the turn of the century. As he put it, "We
plan to enter the 21st Century with a running start." [emphasis supplied]
-
- EVERYTHING IS IN PLACE AND NOBODY CAN STOP US NOW
-
- He said, as we listened to what he was about to present,
"Some of you will think I'm talking about Communism. Well, what I'm
talking about is much bigger than Communism!" At that time he indicated
that there is much more co-operation between East and West than most people
realise. In his introductory remarks, he commented that he was free to
speak at this time. He would not have been able to say what he was about
to say, even a few years earlier. But he was free to speak at this time
because now, and I'm quoting here, "everything is in place and nobody
can stop us now." He went on to say that most people don't understand
how governments operate and even people in high positions in governments,
including our own, don't really understand how and where decisions are
made. He went on to say that people who really influence decisions are
names that for the most part would be familiar to most of us, but he would
not use individuals' names or names of any specific organisation. But that,
if he did, most of the people would be names that were recognised by most
of his audience. He went on to say that they were not primarily people
in public office, but people of prominence who were primarily known in
their private occupations or private positions. The speaker was Dr. Richard
Day, a doctor of medicine and a former professor at a large Eastern university,
and he was addressing a group of doctors of medicine, about 80 in number.
His name would not be widely recognised by anybody likely to hear this.
The only purpose in recording this is that it may give a perspective to
those who hear it regarding the changes which have already been accomplished
in the past 20 years or so, and a bit of a preview to what at least some
people are planning for the remainder of this century, so that they would
enter the 21st Century with a flying start. Some of us may not enter that
Century. His purpose in telling our group about these changes that were
to be brought about was to make it easier for us to adapt to these changes.
Indeed, as he quite accurately said, "they would be changes that would
be very surprising, and in some ways difficult for people to accept,"
and he hoped that we, as sort of his friends, would make the adaptation
more easily if we knew somewhat beforehand what to expect.
-
- PEOPLE WILL HAVE TO GET USED TO CHANGE
-
- Somewhere in the introductory remarks he insisted that
nobody have a tape recorder and that nobody take notes, which for a professor
was a very remarkable kind of thing to expect from an audience. Something
in his remarks suggested that there could be negative repercussions against
him if it became widely known that indeed he had spilled the beans, so
to speak. When I first heard that, I thought maybe that was sort of an
ego trip, somebody enhancing his own importance. But as the revelations
unfolded, I began to understand why he might have had some concern about
not having it widely known what was said although this was a fairly public
forum where he was speaking. Nonetheless, he asked that no notes be taken,
no tape recording be used. This was suggesting there might be some personal
danger to himself if these revelations were widely publicised. Again, as
the remarks began to unfold, and heard the rather outrageous things that
were said, I made it a point to try to remember as much of what he said
as I could and to connect my recollections to simple events around me to
aid my memory for the future, in case I wanted to do what I'm doing now
- recording this. I also wanted to try to maintain a perspective on what
would be developing, if indeed, it followed the predicted pattern - which
it has! At this point, so that I don't forget to include it later, I'll
just include some statements that were made from time to time throughout
the presentation. One of the statements was having to do with change. The
statement was, "People will have to get used to the idea of change,
so used to change, that they'll be expecting change. Nothing will be permanent."
This often came out in the context of a society where people seemed to
have no roots or moorings, but would be passively willing to accept change
simply because it was all they had ever known. This was sort of in contrast
to generations of people up until this time where certain things you expected
to be, and remain in place as reference points for your life. So change
was to be brought about, change was to be anticipated and expected, and
accepted, no questions asked. Another comment that was made from time to
time during the presentation was. "People are too trusting, people
don't ask the right questions." Sometimes, being too trusting was
equated with being too dumb. But sometimes when he would say that "People
don't ask the right questions," it was almost with a sense of regret
as if he were uneasy with what he was part of, and wished that people would
challenge it and maybe not be so trusting.
-
- THE REAL AND THE STATED GOALS
-
- Another comment that was repeated from time to time,
particularly in relation to changing laws and customs was, "Everything
has two purposes. One is the ostensible purpose which will make it acceptable
to people and second is the real purpose which would further the goals
of establishing the new system. Frequently he would say, "There is
just no other way, there's just no other way!" This seemed to come
as a sort of an apology, particularly at the conclusion of describing some
particularly offensive changes. For example, the promotion of drug addiction
which we'll get into later.
-
- POPULATION CONTROL
-
- He was very active with population control groups, the
population control movement, and population control was really the entry
point into specifics following the introduction. He said the population
is growing too fast. Numbers of people living at any one time on the planet
must be limited or we will run out of space to live. We will outgrow our
food supply and will pollute the world with our waste.
-
- PERMISSION TO HAVE BABIES
-
- People won't be allowed to have babies just because they
want to or because they are careless. Most families would be limited to
two. Some people would be allowed only one, however outstanding people
might be selected and allowed to have three. But most people would be allowed
to have only two babies. That's because the zero population growth rate
is 2.1 children per completed family. So something like every 10th family
might be allowed the privilege of the third baby. To me, up to this point,
the words 'population control' primarily connoted limiting the number of
babies to be born. But this remark about what people would be 'allowed'
and then what followed, made it quite clear that when you hear 'population
control' that means more than just controlling births. It means control
of every endeavour of an entire world population; a much broader meaning
to that term than I had ever attached to it before hearing this. As you
listen and reflect back on some of the things you hear, you will begin
to recognise how one aspect dovetails with other aspects in terms of controlling
human endeavours.
-
- REDIRECTING THE PURPOSE OF SEX
-
- Well, from population control, the natural next step
then was sex. He said sex must be separated from reproduction. Sex is too
pleasurable, and the urges are too strong, to expect people to give it
up. Chemicals in food and in the water supply to reduce the sex drive are
not practical. The strategy then would be not to diminish sex activity,
but to increase sex activity, but in such a way, that people won't be having
babies.
-
- CONTRACEPTION UNIVERSALLY AVAILABLE TO ALL
-
- The first consideration here was contraception. Contraception
would be very strongly encouraged, and it would be connected closely in
people's minds with sex. They would automatically think contraception when
they were thinking or preparing for sex, and contraception would be made
universally available. Contraceptives would be displayed much more prominently
in drug stores, right up with the cigarettes and chewing gum. Out in the
open rather than hidden under the counter where people would have to ask
for them and maybe be embarrassed. This kind of openness was a way of suggesting
that contraceptives are just as much a part of life as any other items
sold in the store. Contraceptives would be advertised and also dispensed
in the schools in association with sex education!
-
- SEX EDUCATION AS A TOOL OF WORLD GOVERNMENT
-
- The sex education was to get kids interested early, making
the connection between sex and the need for contraception early in their
lives, even before they became very active. At this point I was recalling
some of my teachers, particularly in high school and found it totally unbelievable
to think of them agreeing, much less participating in, and distributing
of contraceptives to students. But, that only reflected my lack of understanding
of how these people operate. That was before the school-based clinic programs
got started. Many cities in the United States by this time have already
set up school-based clinics, which are primarily contraception, birth control,
population control clinics. The idea then is that the connection between
sex and contraception introduced and reinforced in school would carry over
into marriage. Indeed, if young people when they matured decided to get
married, marriage itself would be diminished in importance. He indicated
some recognition that most people probably would want to be married, but
this certainly would not be any longer considered necessary for sexual
activity.
-
- TAX FUNDED ABORTION AS POPULATION CONTROL
-
- No surprise then that the next item was abortion. And
this, now back in 1969, four years before Roe vs. Wade, he said, "Abortion
will no longer be a crime." Abortion will be accepted as normal, and
would be paid for by taxes for people who could not pay for their own abortions.
Contraceptives would be made available by tax money so that nobody would
have to do without contraceptives. If school sex programs would lead to
more pregnancies in children, that was really seen as no problem. Parents
who think they are opposed to abortion on moral or religious grounds will
change their minds when it is their own child who is pregnant. So this
will help overcome opposition to abortion. Before long, only a few die-hards
will still refuse to see abortion as acceptable, and they won't matter
anymore.
-
-
- ENCOURAGING HOMOSEXUALITY
-
- "People will be given permission to be homosexual,"
that's the way it was stated. They won't have to hide it. In addition,
elderly people will be encouraged to continue to have active sex lives
into the very old ages, just as long as they can. Everyone will be given
permission to have sex, to enjoy however they want. Anything goes. This
is the way it was put. In addition, I remember thinking, "How arrogant
for this individual, or whoever he represents, to feel that they can give
or withhold permission for people to do things!" But that was the
terminology that was used. In this regard, clothing was mentioned. Clothing
styles would be made more stimulating and provocative. Back in 1969 was
the time of the mini skirt, when those mini-skirts were very, very high
and very revealing. He said, "It is not just the amount of skin that
is exposed that makes clothing sexually seductive, but other, more subtle
things are often suggestive." Things like movement, and the cut of
clothing, and the kind of fabric, the positioning of accessories on the
clothing. "If a woman has an attractive body, why should she not show
it?" was one of the statements. There was no detail on what was meant
by 'provocative clothing', but since that time if you watched the change
in clothing styles, blue jeans are cut in a way that they're more tight-fitting
in the crotch. They form wrinkles. Wrinkles are essentially arrows. Lines
which direct one's vision to certain anatomic areas. This was around the
time of the 'burn your bra' activity. He indicated that a lot of women
should not go without a bra. They need a bra to be attractive, so instead
of banning bras and burning them, bras would come back. But they would
be thinner and softer allowing more natural movement. It was not specifically
stated, but certainly, a very thin bra is much more revealing of the nipple
and what else is underneath, than the heavier bras that were in style up
to that time.
-
- TECHNOLOGY
-
- Earlier he said that sex and reproduction would be separated.
You would have sex without reproduction and then technology was reproduction
without sex. This would be done in the laboratory. He indicated that already
much, much research was underway about making babies in the laboratory.
There was some elaboration on that, but I don't remember the details. How
much of that technology has come to my attention since that time. I don't
remember in a way that I can distinguish what was said from what I subsequently
have learned as general medical information.
-
- FAMILIES TO DIMINISH IN IMPORTANCE
-
- Families would be limited in size. We already alluded
to not being allowed more than two children. Divorce would be made easier
and more prevalent. Most people who marry will marry more than once. More
people will not marry. Unmarried people would stay in hotels and even live
together. That would be very common - nobody would even ask questions about
it. It would be widely accepted as no different from married people being
together. More women will work outside the home. More men will be transferred
to other cities and in their jobs, more men would travel. Therefore, it
would be harder for families to stay together. This would tend to make
the marriage relationship less stable and, therefore, tend to make people
less willing to have babies. The extended families would be smaller, and
more remote. Travel would be easier, less expensive, for a while, so that
people who did have to travel would feel they could get back to their families,
not that they were abruptly being made remote from their families. But
one of the net effects of easier divorce laws combined with the promotion
of travel, and transferring families from one city to another, was to create
instability in the families. If both husband and wife are working and one
partner is transferred, the other one may not be easily transferred. Soon,
either gives up his or her job and stays behind while the other leaves,
or else gives up the job and risks not finding employment in the new location.
Rather a diabolical approach to this whole thing!
-
- EUTHANASIA AND THE 'DEMISE PILL'
-
- Everybody has a right to live only so long. The old are
no longer useful. They become a burden. You should be ready to accept death.
Most people are. An arbitrary age limit could be established. After all,
you have a right to only so many steak dinners, so many orgasms, and so
many good pleasures in life. After you have had enough of them and you're
no longer productive, working, and contributing, then you should be ready
to step aside for the next generation. Some things that would help people
realise that they had lived long enough, he mentioned several of these.
I don't remember them all but here are a few, the use of very pale printing
ink on forms that people are necessary to fill out. Older people wouldn't
be able to read the pale ink as easily and would need to go to younger
people for help. Automobile traffic patterns, there would be more high-speed
traffic lanes that older people with their slower reflexes would have trouble
dealing with and thus, loses some of their independence.
-
- LIMITING ACCESS TO AFFORDABLE MEDICAL
-
- A big item that was elaborated on at some length was
the cost of medical care would be made burdensomely high. Medical care
would be connected very closely with one's work but also would be made
very, very high in cost so that it would simply be unavailable to people
beyond a certain time. Unless they had a remarkably rich, supporting family,
they would just have to do without care. And the idea was that if everybody
says, "Enough! What a burden it is on the young to try to maintain
the old people," then the young would become agreeable to helping
Mom and Dad along the way, provided this was done humanely and with dignity.
Then the example was - there could be a nice, farewell party, a real celebration.
Mom and Dad had done a good job. Then after the party's over they take
the 'demise pill'.
-
- PLANNING THE CONTROL OVER MEDICINE
-
- The next topic is Medicine. There would be profound changes
in the practice of medicine. Overall, medicine would be much more tightly
controlled. The observation that was made in 1969 that, "Congress
is not going to go along with national health insurance, is now, abundantly
evident. But it's not necessary, we have other ways to control health care".
These would come about more gradually, but all health care delivery would
come under tight control. Medical care would be closely connected to work.
If you don't work or can't work, you won't have access to medical care.
The days of hospitals giving away free care would gradually wind down,
to where it was virtually non-existent. Costs would be forced up so that
people won't be able to afford to go without insurance. People pay for
it, you're entitled to it. It was only subsequently that I began to realise
the extent to which you would not be paying for it. Your medical care would
be paid for by others. Therefore, you would gratefully accept, on bended
knee, what was offered to you as a privilege. Your role being responsible
for your own care would be diminished. As an aside here, this is not something
that was developed at that time; I didn't understand it at the time that
it was an aside.
-
- The way this works, everybody has made dependent on insurance
and if you don't have insurance then you pay directly; the cost of your
care is enormous. The insurance company, however, paying for your care,
does not pay that same amount. If you are charged, say, $600 for the use
of an operating room, the insurance company does not pay $600; they only
pay $300 or $400. That differential in billing has the desired effect:
It enables the insurance company to pay for that which you could never
pay for. They get a discount that's unavailable to you. When you see your
bill you're grateful that the insurance company could do that. And in this
way you are dependent, and virtually required to have insurance. The whole
billing is fraudulent. Access to hospitals would be tightly controlled
and identification would be needed to get into the building. The security
in and around hospitals would be established and gradually increased so
that nobody without identification could get in or move around inside the
building. Theft of hospital equipment, things like typewriters and microscopes
and so forth would be 'allowed' and exaggerated; reports of it would be
exaggerated so that this would be the excuse needed to establish the need
for strict security until people got used to it. Anybody moving about the
hospital would be required to wear an identification badge with a photograph
and telling why he was there, employee or lab technician or visitor or
whatever. This is to be brought in gradually, getting everybody used to
the idea of identifying themselves - until it was just accepted. This need
for ID to move about would start in small ways: hospitals, some businesses,
but gradually expand to include everybody in all places! It was observed
that hospitals can be used to confine people and for the treatment of criminals.
This did not mean, necessarily, medical treatment. At that time I did not
know the term 'Psycho-Prison' they are in the Soviet Union, but,
without trying to recall all the details, basically, he was describing
the use of hospitals both for treating the sick, and for confinement of
criminals for reasons other than the medical well-being of the criminal.
The definition of criminal was not given.
-
- ELIMINATION OF PRIVATE DOCTORS
-
- The image of the doctor would change. No longer would
he be seen as an individual professional in service to individual patients.
But the doctor would be gradually recognized as a highly skilled technician
- and his job would change. The job is to include things like executions
by lethal injection. The image of the doctor being a powerful, independent
person would have to be changed. He went on to say, "Doctors are making
entirely too much money. They should advertise like any other product."
Lawyers would be advertising too. Keep in mind, this was an audience of
doctors; being addressed by a doctor. And it was interesting that he would
make some rather insulting statements to his audience without fear of antagonizing
us. The solo practitioner would become a thing of the past. A few die-hards
might try to hold out, but most doctors would be employed by an institution
of one kind or another. Group practice would be encouraged, corporations
would be encouraged, and then once the corporate image of medical care
gradually became more and more acceptable, doctors would more and more
become employees rather than independent contractors. Along with that,
of course, unstated but necessary, is the employee serves his employer,
not his patient. So we've already seen quite a lot of that in the last
20 years. And apparently more on the horizon. The term HMO was not used
at that time, but as you look at HMO's you see this is the way that medical
care is being taken over since the National Health Insurance approach did
not get through the Congress. A few die-hard doctors may try to make a
go of it, remaining in solo practice, remaining independent, which, parenthetically,
is me but they would suffer a great loss of income. They'd be able to scrape
by, maybe, but never really live comfortably as would those who were willing
to become employees of the system. Ultimately, there would be no room at
all for the solo practitioner after the system is entrenched.
-
- NEW DIFFICULT TO DIAGNOSE AND UNTREATABLE DISEASES
-
- The next heading to talk about is Health and Disease.
He said there would be new diseases to appear which had not ever been seen
before. Would be very difficult to diagnose and be untreatable - at least
for along time. No elaboration was made on this, but I remember, not long
after hearing this presentation, when I had a puzzling diagnosis to make,
I would be wondering, "Is this a case of what he was talking about?"
Some years later AIDS developed. I think AIDS was at least one example
of what he was talking about. I now think that AIDS probably was a manufactured
disease.
-
- SUPPRESSING CANCER CURES AS A MEANS OF POPULATION CONTROL
-
- Cancer. He said. "We can cure almost every cancer
right now. Information is on file in the Rockefeller Institute, if it's
ever decided that it should be released. But consider - if people stop
dying of cancer, how rapidly we would become overpopulated. You may as
well die of cancer as of something else." Efforts at cancer treatment
would be geared more toward comfort than toward cure. There was some statement
that ultimately the cancer cures which were being hidden in the Rockefeller
Institute would come to light because independent researchers might bring
them out, despite these efforts to suppress them. But at least for the
time being, letting people die of cancer was a good thing to do because
it would slow down the problem of overpopulation.
-
- INDUCING HEART ATTACKS AS A FORM OF ASSASSINATION
-
- Another very interesting thing was heart attacks. He
said, "There is now a way to simulate a real heart attack. It can
be used as a means of assassination." Only a very skilled pathologist
who knew exactly what to look for at an autopsy, could distinguish this
from the real thing. I thought that was a very surprising and shocking
thing to hear from this particular man at that particular time. This, and
the business of the cancer cure, really still stand out sharply in my memory,
because they were so shocking and, at that time, seemed to me out of character.
He then went on to talk about nutrition and exercise sort of in the same
framework. People would have to eat right and exercise right to live as
long as before. Most won't. This in the connection of nutrition, there
was no specific statement that I can recall as to particular nutrients
that would be either inadequate or in excess. In retrospect, I tend to
think he meant high salt diets and high fat diets would predispose toward
high blood pressure and premature arteriosclerotic heart disease. And that
if people who were too dumb or too lazy to exercise as they should then
their circulating fats go up and predispose to disease. He also said something
about diet information would be widely available, but most people, particularly
stupid people, who had no right to continue living anyway, would ignore
the advice and just go on and eat what was convenient and tasted good.
There were some other unpleasant things said about food. I just can't recall
what they were. But I do remember having reflections about wanting to plant
a garden in the backyard to get around whatever these contaminated foods
would be. I regret I don't remember the details about nutrition and hazardous
nutrition.
-
- With regard to exercise, he went on to say that more
people would be exercising more, especially running, because everybody
can run. You don't need any special equipment or place. You can run wherever
you are. As he put it. "people will be running all over the place."
And in this vein, he pointed out how supply produces demand. And this was
in reference to athletic clothing and equipment. As this would be made
more widely available and glamorised, particularly as regards running shoes,
this would stimulate people to develop an interest in running as part of
a whole sort of public propaganda campaign. People would be encouraged
then to buy the attractive sports equipment and to get into exercise. In
connection with nutrition he also mentioned that public eating places would
rapidly increase. That this had a connection with the family too. As more
and more people eat out, eating at home would become less important. People
would be less dependent on their kitchens at home. And then this also connected
to convenience foods being made widely available - things like you could
pop into the microwave. Whole meals would be available pre-fixed. And of
course we've now seen this. But this whole different approach to eating
out and to previously prepared meals being eaten in the home was predicted
at that time to be brought about. The convenience foods would be part of
the hazards. Anybody who was lazy enough to want the convenience foods
rather than fixing his own also had better be energetic enough to exercise.
Because if he was too lazy to exercise and too lazy to fix his own food,
then he didn't deserve to live very long. This was all presented as sort
of a moral judgement about people and what they should do with their energies.
People who are smart, who would learn about nutrition, and who are disciplined
enough to eat right and exercise right are better people - and the kind
you want to live longer.
-
- EDUCATION AS A TOOL FOR ACCELERATING ONSET OF PUBERTY
AND EVOLUTION
-
- Somewhere along in here there was also something about
accelerating the onset of puberty. And this was said in connection with
health, and later in connection with education, and connecting to accelerating
the process of evolutionary change. There was a statement that "we
think that we can push evolution faster and in the direction we want it
to go." I remember this only as a general statement. I don't recall
if any details were given beyond that.
-
- BLENDING ALL RELIGIONS
-
- Another area of discussion was Religion. This is an avowed
atheist speaking. He said, "Religion is not necessarily bad. A lot
of people seem to need religion, with it's mysteries and rituals - so they
will have religion. But the major religions of today have to be changed
because they are not compatible with the changes to come. The old religions
will have to go especially Christianity. Once the Roman Catholic Church
is brought down, the rest of Christianity will follow easily. Then a new
religion can be accepted for use all over the world. It will incorporate
something from all of the old ones to make it more easy for people to accept
, and feel at home. Most people won't be too concerned with religion. They
will realise that they don't need it."
-
- CHANGING THE BIBLE THROUGH REVISIONS OF KEY WORDS
-
- In order to do this, the Bible will be changed. It will
be rewritten to fit the new religion. Gradually, key words will be replaced
with new words having various shades of meaning. Then the meaning attached
to the new word can be close to the old word - and as time goes on, other
shades of meaning of that word can be emphasised. and then gradually that
word replaced with another word." I don't know if I'm making that
clear, but the idea is that everything in Scripture need not be rewritten,
just key words replaced by other words. The variability in meaning attached
to any word can be used as a tool to change the entire meaning of Scripture,
and therefore make it acceptable to this new religion. Most people won't
know the difference; and this was another one of the times where he said,
"the few who do notice the difference won't be enough to matter."
-
- THE CHURCHES WILL HELP US
-
- Then followed one of the most surprising statements of
the whole presentation: He said, "Some of you probably think the Churches
won't stand for this," and he went on to say, "the churches will
help us!" There was no elaboration on this, it was unclear just what
he had in mind when he said, "the churches will help us!" In
retrospect I think some of us now can understand what he might have meant
at that time. I recall then only of thinking, "no they won't!"
and remembering our Lord's words where he said to Peter, "Thou art
Peter and upon this rock I will build my Church, and gates of Hell will
not prevail against it." So yes, some people in the Churches might
help and in the subsequent 20 years we've seen how some people in Churches
have helped. But we also know that our Lord's Words will stand, and the
gates of Hell will not prevail.
-
- RESTRUCTURING EDUCATION AS A TOOL OF INDOCTRINATION
-
- Another area of discussion was Education. In connection
with education and remembering what he said about religion, was in addition
to changing the Bible he said that the classics in Literature would be
changed. I seem to recall Mark Twain's writings was given as one example.
But he said that the casual reader reading a revised version of a classic
would never even suspect that there was any change. Somebody would have
to go through word by word to even recognise that any change was made in
these classics, the changes would be so subtle. But the changes would be
such as to promote the acceptability of the new system.
-
- MORE TIME IN SCHOOLS, BUT THEY WOULDN'T LEARN ANYTHING
-
- As regards education, he indicated that kids would spend
more time in schools, but in many schools they wouldn't learn anything.
They'll learn some things, but not as much as formerly. Better schools
in better areas with better people, their kids will learn more. In the
better schools Iearning would be accelerated. This is another time where
he said, "We think we can push evolution." By pushing kids to
learn more he seemed to be suggesting that their brains would evolve, that
their offspring would evolve; sort of pushing evolution where kids would
learn and be more intelligent at a younger age. As if this pushing would
alter their physiology. Overall, schooling would be prolonged. This meant
prolonged through the school year. I'm not sure what he said about a long
school day, I do remember he said that school was planned to go all summer,
that the summer school vacation would become a thing of the past. Not only
for schools, but for other reasons. People would begin to think of vacation
times year round, not just in the summer. For most people it would take
longer to complete their education. To get what originally had been in
a bachelor's program would now require advanced degrees and more schooling.
So that a lot of school time would be just wasted time. Good schools would
become more competitive. I inferred when he said that, that he was including
all schools - elementary up through college - but I don't recall if he
actually said that. Students would have to decide at a younger age what
they would want to study and get onto their track early. It would be harder
to change to another field of study once you get started. Studies would
be concentrated in much greater depth, but narrowed. You wouldn't have
access to material in other fields, outside your own area of study, without
approval. This seem to be more where he talked about limited access to
other fields. I seem to recall this as being more at the college level
perhaps. People would be very specialised in their own area of expertise.
But they won't be able to get a broad education and won't be able to understand
what is going on overall.
-
- CONTROLLING WHO HAS ACCESS TO INFORMATION
-
- He was already talking about computers in education,
and at that time he said anybody who
- wanted computer access, or access to books that were
not directly related to their field of study would have to have a very
good reason for so doing. Otherwise, access would be denied.
-
- SCHOOLS AS THE HUB OF THE COMMUNITY
-
- Another angle was that the schools would become more
important in people's overall life. Kids in addition to their academics
would have to get into school activities unless they wanted to feel completely
out of it. But spontaneous activities among kids; the thing that came to
my mind when I heard this was - sand lot football and sand lot baseball
teams that we worked up as kids growing up. I said the kids wanting any
activities outside of school would be almost forced to get them through
the school. There would be few opportunities outside. Now the pressures
of the accelerated academic program, the accelerated demands where kids
would feel they had to be part of something - one or another athletic club
or some school activity - these pressures he recognized would cause some
students to burn out. He said. "The smartest ones will learn how to
cope with pressures and to survive. There will be some help available to
students in handling stress, but the unfit won't be able to make it. They
will then move on to other things." In this connection and later on
with drug abuse and alcohol abuse he indicated that psychiatric services
to help would be increased dramatically. In all the pushing for achievement,
it was recognized that many people would need help, and the people worth
keeping around would be able to accept and benefit from that help, and
still be super achievers. Those who could not would fall by the wayside
and therefore were sort of dispensable 'expendable' I guess is the
word I want. Education would be lifelong and adults would be going to school.
There'll always be new information that adults must have to keep up. When
you can't keep up anymore, you're too old. This was another way of letting
older people know that the time had come for them to move on and take the
demise pill. If you got too tired to keep up with your education, or you
got too old to learn new information, then this was a signal - you begin
to prepare to get ready to step aside.
-
- SOME BOOKS WOULD JUST DISAPPEAR FROM THE LIBRARIES
-
- In addition to revising the classics, which I alluded
to awhile ago and with revising the Bible, he said, "Some books would
just disappear from the libraries." This was in the vein that some
books contain information or contain ideas that should not be kept around.
Therefore, those books would disappear. I don't remember exactly if he
said how this was to be accomplished. But I seem to recall carrying away
this idea that this would include thefts. That certain people would be
designated to go to certain libraries and pick up certain books and just
get rid of them. Not necessarily as a matter of policy - just simply steal
it. Further down the line, not everybody will be allowed to own books.
And some books nobody will be allowed to own.
-
- CHANGING LAWS
-
- Another area of discussion was laws that would be changed.
At that time a lot of States had blue laws about Sunday sales, certain
Sunday activities. He said the blue laws [Sunday laws] would all be repealed.
Gambling laws would be repeated or relaxed, so that gambling would be increased.
He indicated then that governments would get into gambling. We've had a
lot of state lotteries pop up around the country since then. And, at the
time, we were already being told that would be the case. "Why should
all that gambling money be kept in private hands when the State would benefit
from it?" was the rational behind it. But people should be able to
gamble if they want to. So it would become a civil activity, rather than
a private, or illegal activity. Bankruptcy laws would be changed. I don't
remember the details, but just that they would be. And I know subsequent
to that time they have been. Antitrust laws would be changed, or be interpreted
differently, or both. In connection with the changing anti-trust laws,
there was some statement that in a sense competition would be increased.
But this would be increased competition within otherwise controlled circumstances.
So it's not a free competition. I recall of having the impression that
it was like competition but within members of a club. There would be nobody
outside the club who would be able to compete. Like teams competing within
a professional sports league; if you're the NFL or the American or National
Baseball Leagues - you compete within the league but the league is all
in agreement on what the rules of competition are - not a really free competition.
-
- THE ENCOURAGEMENT OF DRUG ABUSE TO CREATE A JUNGLE ATMOSPHERE
-
- Drug use would he increased. Alcohol use would be increased.
Law enforcement efforts against drugs would be increased. On first hearing
that it sounded like a contradiction. Why increase drug abuse and simultaneously
increase law enforcement against drug abuse? But the idea is that, in part,
the increased availability of drugs would provide a sort of law of the
jungle whereby the weak and the unfit would be selected out. There was
a statement made at the time: "Before the earth was overpopulated,
there was a law of the jungle where only the fittest survived. You had
to be able to protect yourself against the elements and wild animals and
disease, but if you were fit you survived. But now we've become so civilised
- we're over civilised - and the unfit are enabled to survive only at the
expense of those who are more fit." The abuse of drugs would restore,
in a certain sense, the law of the jungle and selection of the fittest
for survival. News about drug abuse and law enforcement efforts would tend
to keep drugs in the public consciousness. And would also tend to reduce
this unwarranted American complacency that the world is a safe place, and
a nice place.
-
- ALCOHOL ABUSE
-
- The same thing would happen with alcohol. Alcohol abuse
would be both promoted and demoted at the same time. The vulnerable and
the weak would respond to the promotions and therefore use and abuse more
alcohol. Drunk driving would become more of a problem; and stricter rules
about driving under the influence would be established so that more and
more people would lose their privilege to drive. Again, much more in the
way of psychological services would be made available to help those who
got hooked on drugs and alcohol. The idea being, that in order to promote
this - drug and alcohol are used to screen out some of the unfit - people
who otherwise are pretty good would also be subject to getting hooked.
And if they were really worth their salt they would have enough sense to
seek psychological counselling and to benefit from it. So this was presented
as sort of a redeeming value on the part of the planners. It was as if
he was saying, "You think we're bad in promoting these evil things
- but look how nice we are - we're also providing a way out!"
-
- RESTRICTIONS ON TRAVEL
-
- This also had connection with something we'll get to
later about overall restrictions on travel. Not everybody should be free
to travel the way they do now in the United States. People don't have a
need to travel that way. It's a privilege! It was kind of the high-handed
the way it was put.
-
- THE NEED FOR MORE JAILS, AND USING HOSPITALS AS JAILS
- More jails would be needed. Hospitals could serve as
jails. Some new hospital construction would be designed so as to make them
adaptable to jail-like use.
-
- End of Tape 1
-
- TAPE 2
-
- NO MORE SECURITY
-
- Nothing is permanent. Streets would be re-routed and
renamed. Areas you had not seen in a while would become unfamiliar. Among
other things, this would contribute to older people feeling that it was
time to move on, they feel they couldn't even keep up with the changes
in areas that were once familiar. Buildings would be allowed to stand empty
and deteriorate, and streets would be allowed to deteriorate in certain
localities. The purpose of this was to provide the jungle, the depressed
atmosphere for the unfit. Somewhere in this same connection he mentioned
that buildings and bridges would be made so that they would collapse after
a while, there would be more accidents involving aeroplanes and railroads
and automobiles. All of this to contribute to the feeling of insecurity,
that nothing was safe. Not too long after this presentation, and I think
one or two even before in the area where I live, we had a newly constructed
bridge break. Another newly constructed bridge defect was discovered before
it too broke. I remember reading just scattered incidents around the country
where shopping malls would fall in right where they were filled with shoppers.
I also remember that one of the shopping malls in our area, the first building
I'd ever been in where you could feel this vibration throughout the entire
building when there were a lot of people in there. I remember wondering
at that time whether this shopping mall was one of the buildings he was
talking about. Talking to construction people and architects about it they
would say, "Oh no, that's good when the building vibrates like that,
that means it's flexible not rigid." Well, maybe so, we'll wait and
see. Other areas there would be well maintained. Not every part of the
city would be slums.
-
- CRIME USED TO MANAGE SOCIETY
-
- There would be the created slums and other areas well
maintained. Those people able to leave the slums for better areas then
would learn to better appreciate the importance of human accomplishment.
This meant that if they left the jungle and came to civilisation, so to
speak, they could be proud of their own accomplishments that they made
it. There was no related sympathy for those who were left behind in the
jungle of drugs and deteriorating neighbourhoods. Then a statement that
was kind of surprising, "We think we can effectively limit crime to
the slum areas, so it won't be spread heavily into better areas".
I should maybe point out here that these are obviously not word for word
quotations after 20 years, but where I say that I am quoting, I am giving
the general drift of what was said close to word for word, perhaps not
precisely so. I remember wondering, how can he be so confident that the
criminal element is going to stay where he wants it to stay? But he went
on to say that increased security would be needed in the better areas.
That would mean more police, better co-ordinated police efforts. He did
not say so, but I wondered at that time about the moves that were afoot
to consolidate all the police departments of suburbs around the major cities.
I think the John Birch Society was one that was saying "Support your
local police, don't let them be consolidated." I remember wondering
if that was one of the things he had in mind about security. It was not
explicitly stated. Anyhow he went on to say there would be a whole new
industry of residential security systems to develop with alarms and locks
and alarms going into the police department so that people could protect
their wealth and their well being. Because some of the criminal activity
would spill out of the slums into better, more affluent looking areas that
looked like they would be worth burglarizing. And again it was stated like
it was a redeeming quality: See we're generating all this more crime but
look how good we are - we're also generating the means for you to protect
yourself against the crime. A sort of repeated thing throughout this presentation
was the recognised evil and then the self forgiveness thing, "See
we've given you a way out."
-
- CURTAILMENT OF AMERICAN INDUSTRIAL PRE-EMINENCE
-
- American industry came under discussion - it was the
first that I'd heard the term global interdependence or that notion. The
stated plan was that different parts of the world would be assigned different
roles of industry and commerce in a unified global system. The continued
pre-eminence of the United States and the relative independence and self-sufficiency
of the United States would have to be changed. This was one of the several
times that he said in order to create a new structure, you first have to
tear down the old, and American industry was one example of that. Our system
would have to be curtailed in order to give other countries a chance to
build their industries, because otherwise they would not be able to compete
against the United States. This was especially true of our heavy industries
that would be cut back while the same industries were being developed in
other countries, notably Japan. At this point there was some discussion
of steel and particularly automobiles - I remember saying that automobiles
would be imported from Japan on an equal footing with our own domestically
produced automobiles, but the Japanese product would be better. Things
would be made so they would break and fall apart, that is in the United
States. so that people would tend to prefer the imported variety and this
would give a bit of a boost to foreign competitors.
-
- One example was the Japanese. In 1969 Japanese automobiles,
if they were sold here at all I don't remember, but they certainly weren't
very popular. But the idea was you could get a little bit disgusted with
your Ford, GM or Chrysler product or whatever because little things like
window handles would fall off more and plastic parts would break which
had they been made of metal would hold up. Your patriotism about buying
American would soon give way to practicality that if you bought Japanese,
German or imported that it would last longer and you would be better off.
Patriotism would go down the drain. It was mentioned elsewhere things being
made to fall apart too. I don't remember specific items or if they were
even stated other than automobiles, but I do recall of having the impression,
sort of in my imagination, of a surgeon having something fall apart in
his hands in the operating room at a critical time. Was he including this
sort of thing in his discussion? But somewhere in this discussion about
things being made deliberately defective and unreliable not only was to
tear down patriotism but to be just a little source of irritation to people
who would use such things. Again the idea that you not feel terribly secure,
promoting the notion that the world isn't a terribly reliable place. The
United States was to be kept strong in information, communications, high
technology, education and agriculture. The United States was seen as continuing
to be sort of the keystone of this global system. But heavy industry would
be transported out. One of the comments made about heavy industry was that
we had had enough environmental damage from smoke stacks and industrial
waste. Other people could put up with that for a while. This again was
supposed to be a redeeming quality for Americans to accept. You took away
our industry but you saved our environment. So we really didn't lose on
it.
-
- SHIFTING POPULATIONS AND ECONOMIES - TEARING THE SOCIAL
ROOTS
-
- And along this line there were talks about people losing
their jobs as a result of industry and opportunities for retraining, and
particularly population shifts would be brought about. This is sort of
an aside. I think I'll explore the aside before I forget it. Population
shifts were to be brought about so that people would be tending to move
into the Sun Belt. They would be the sort of people without roots in their
new locations, and traditions are easier to change in a place where there
are a lot of transplanted people, as compared to trying to change traditions
in a place where people grew up and had an extended family, and had roots.
Things like new medical care systems, if you pick up from a Northeast industrial
city and you transplant yourself to the South Sunbelt or Southwest, you'll
be more accepting of whatever kind of, for example, controlled medical
care you find there than you would accept a change in the medical care
system where you had roots and the support of your family. Also in this
vein was mentioned (he used the plural personal pronoun we) we take control
first of the port cities - New York, San Francisco, Seattle - the idea
being that this is a piece of strategy, the idea being that if you control
the port cities with your philosophy and your way of life, the heartland
in between has to yield. I can't elaborate more on that but it is interesting.
The heartland, the Midwest, does seem to have maintained its conservatism.
But as you take away industry and jobs and relocate people then this is
a strategy to break down conservatism. When you take away industry and
people are unemployed and poor they will accept whatever change seems,
to offer them survival, and their morals and their commitment to things
will all give way to survival. That's not my philosophy, that's the speaker's
philosophy. Anyhow, going back to industry, some heavy industry would remain,
just enough to maintain a sort of a seed bed of industrial skills which
could be expanded if the plan didn't work out as it was intended. So the
country would not be devoid of assets and skills. But this was just sort
of a contingency plan. It was hoped and expected that the world-wide specialisation
would be carried on. But, perhaps repeating myself, one of the upshots
of all of this is that with this 'global interdependence' the national
identities would tend to be de-emphasised. Each area depended on every
other area for one or another elements of its life. We would all become
citizens of the world rather than citizens of any one country.
-
- SPORTS AS A TOOL OF SOCIAL CHANGE
-
- And along these lines then we can talk about sports.
Sports in the United States was to be changed, in part as a way of de-emphasising
nationalism. Soccer, a world-wide sport, was to be emphasised and pushed
in the United States. This was of interest because in this area the game
of soccer was virtually unknown at that time. I had a few friends who attended
an elementary school other than the one I attended where they played soccer
and they were a real novelty. This was back in the 50's. So to hear this
man speak of soccer in this area was kind of surprising. Anyhow, soccer
is seen as an international sport and would be promoted and the traditional
sport of American baseball would be de-emphasised and possibly eliminated
because it might be seen as too American. And he discussed eliminating
this. One's first reaction would be - well, they pay the players poorly
and they don't want to play for poor pay so they give up baseball and go
into some other sport or some other activity. But he said that's really
not how it works. Actually, the way to break down baseball would be to
make the salaries go very high. The idea behind this was that as the salaries
got ridiculously high there would be a certain amount of discontent and
antagonism as people resented the athletes being paid so much, and the
athletes would begin more and more to resent among themselves what other
players were paid and would tend to abandon the sport. And these high salaries
also could break the owners and alienate the fans. And then the fans would
support soccer and the baseball fields could be used as soccer fields.
It wasn't said definitely this would have to happen, but if the international
flavour didn't come around rapidly enough this could be done.
-
- There was some comment along the same lines about football,
although I seem to recall he said football would be harder to dismantle
because it was so widely played in colleges as well as in the professional
leagues and would be harder to tear down. There was something else also
about the violence in football that met a psychological need that was perceived,
and people have a need for this vicarious violence. So football, for that
reason, might be left around to meet that need. The same thing is true
of hockey. Hockey had more of an international flavour and would be emphasised.
There was some foreseeable international competition about hockey and particularly
soccer. At that time hockey was international between the United States
and Canada. I was kind of surprised because I thought the speaker just
never impressed me as being a hockey fan, and I am. And it turns out he
was not. He just knew about the game and what it would do to this changing
sports program. But in any event soccer was to be the keystone of athletics
because it is already a world wide sport in South America, Europe, and
parts of Asia and the United States should get on the bandwagon. All this
would foster international competition so that we would all become citizens
of the world to a greater extent than citizens of our own narrow nations.
-
- There was some discussion about hunting, not surprisingly.
Hunting requires guns and gun control is a big element in these plans.
I don't remember the details much, but the idea is that gun ownership is
a privilege and not everybody should have guns. Hunting was an inadequate
excuse for owning guns and everybody should be restricted in gun ownership.
The few privileged people who should be allowed to hunt could maybe rent
or borrow a gun from official quarters rather than own their own. After
all, everybody doesn't have a need for a gun, is the way it was put. Very
important in sports was sports for girls. Athletics would be pushed for
girls. This was intended to replace dolls. Baby dolls would still be around,
a few of them, but you would not see the number and variety of dolls. Dolls
would not be pushed because girls should not be thinking about babies and
reproduction. Girls should be out on the athletic field just as the boys
are. Girls and boys really don't need to be all that different. Tea sets
were to go the way of dolls, and all these things that traditionally were
thought of as feminine would be de-emphasised as girls got into more masculine
pursuits. Just one other thing I recall was that the sports pages would
be full of the scores of girls teams just right along- there with the boys
teams. And that's recently begun to appear after 20 years in our local
papers. The girls sports scores are right along with the boys sports scores.
So all of this is to change the role model of what young girls should look
to be. While she's growing up she should look to be an athlete rather than
to look forward to being a mother.
-
- SEX AND VIOLENCE INCULCATED THROUGH ENTERTAINMENT
-
- Entertainment. Movies would gradually be made more explicit
as regards sex and language. After all, sex and rough language are real
and why pretend that they are not? There would be pornographic movies in
the theatres and on television. VCR's were not around at that time, but
he had indicated that these cassettes would be available, and video cassette
players would be available for use in the home and pornographic movies
would be available for use on these as well as in the neighbourhood theatre
and on your television. He said something like: "you'll see people
in the movies doing everything you can think of." He went on to say
that all of this is intended to bring sex out in the open. That was another
comment that was made several times- the term "sex out in the open."
Violence would be made more graphic. This was intended to desensitise people
to violence. There might need to be a time when people would witness real
violence and be a part of it. Later on it will become clear where this
is headed. So there would be more realistic violence in entertainment which
would make it easier for people to adjust. People's attitudes toward death
would change. People would not be so fearful of it but more accepting of
it, and they would not be so aghast at the sight of dead people or injured
people. We don't need to have a genteel population paralysed by what they
might see. People would just learn to say, well I don't want that to happen
to me. This was the first statement suggesting that the plan includes numerous
human casualties which the survivors would see. This particular aspect
of the presentation came back in my memory very sharply a few years later
when a movie about the Lone Ranger came out and I took my very young son
to see it and early in the movie were some very violent scenes. One of
the victims was shot in the forehead and there was sort of a splat where
the bullet entered his forehead and blood and I remember regretting that
I took my son and feeling anger toward the doctor who spoke. Not that he
made the movie, but he agreed to be part of this movement, and I was repelled
by the movie and it brought back this aspect of his presentation very sharply
in my memory.
-
- As regards music, he made a rather straightforward statement
like: Music will get worse. In 1969 Rock music was getting more and more
unpleasant. It was interesting the way he expressed it, "it would
get worse" acknowledging that it was already bad. Lyrics would become
more openly sexual. No new sugary romantic music would be publicised like
that which had been written before that time. All of the old music would
be brought back on certain radio stations and records for older people
to hear, and older folks would have sort of their own radio stations to
hear and for younger people, their music as it got worse and worse would
be on their stations. He seemed to indicate that one group would not hear
the other group's music. Older folks would just refuse to hear the junk
that was offered to young people, and the young people would accept the
junk because it identified them as their generation and helped them feel
distinct from the older generation. I remember at the time thinking that
would not last very long because even young kids wouldn't like the junk
when they got a chance to hear the older music that was prettier they would
gravitate toward it. Unfortunately I was wrong about that, when the kids
get through their teens and into their 20's some of them improve their
taste in music, but unfortunately he was right. They get used to this junk
and that's all they want. A lot of them can't stand really pretty music.
He went on to say that the music would carry a message to the young and
nobody would even know the message was there they would just think it was
loud music. At the time I didn't understand quite what he meant by that,
but in retrospect I think we know now what the messages are in the music
for the young.
-
- And again he was right. This aspect was sort of summarised
with the notion that entertainment would be a tool to influence young people.
It won't change the older people, they are already set in their ways, but
the changes would all be aimed at the young who are in their formative
years and the older generation would be passing. Not only could you not
change them but they are relatively unimportant anyhow. Once they live
out their lives and are gone the younger generation being formed are the
ones that would be important for the future in the 21st century. He also
indicated all the old movies would be brought back again and I remember
on hearing that through my mind ran quickly the memory of a number of old
movies. I wondered if they would be included, the ones that I thought I
would like to see again. Along with bringing back old music and movies
for older people there were other privileges that would also be accorded
older folks: free transportation, breaks on purchases, discounts, tax discounts,
- a number of privileges just because they were older. This was stated
to be sort of a reward for the generation which had grown up through the
depression and had survived the rigors of World War II. They had deserved
it and they were going to be rewarded with all these goodies, and the bringing
back of the good old music and the good old movies was going to help ease
them through their final years in comfort. Then the presentation began
to get rather grim, because once that generation passed, and that would
be in the late 80's and early 90's where we are now, most of that group
would be gone and then gradually things would tighten up and the tightening
up would be accelerated. The old movies and old songs would be withdrawn,
the gentler entertainment would be withdrawn.
-
- TRAVEL RESTRICTIONS AND IMPLANTED I.D.
-
- Travel, instead of being easy for old folks, travel then
would become very restricted. People would need permission to travel and
they would need a good reason to travel. If you didn't have a good reason
for your travel you would not be allowed to travel, and everyone would
need ID. This would at first be an ID card you would carry on your person
and you must show when you are asked for it. It was already planned that
later on some sort of device would be developed to be implanted under the
skin that would be coded specifically to identify the individual. This
would eliminate the possibility of false ID and also eliminate the possibility
of people saying "Well, I lost my ID." The difficulty about these
skin implant that ID was stated to be getting material that would stay
in or under the skin without causing foreign body reaction whereby the
body would reject it or cause infection, and that this would have to be
material on which information could be recorded and retrieved by some sort
of scanner while it was not rejected by the body. Silicon was mentioned.
Silicon at that time was thought to be well tolerated. It was used to augment
breasts. Women who felt their breasts were too small would get silicon
implants, and I guess that still goes on. At any rate silicon was seen
at that time as the promising material to do both: to be retained in the
body without rejection and to be able to retain information retrievable
by electronic means.
-
- FOOD CONTROL
-
- Food supplies would come under tight control. If population
growth didn't slow down, food shortages could be created in a hurry and
people would realise the dangers of overpopulation. Ultimately, whether
the population slows down or not the food supply is to be brought under
centralised control so that people would have enough to be well-nourished
but they would not have enough to support any fugitive from the new system.
In other words, if you had a friend or relative who didn't sign on, and
growing ones own food would be outlawed. This would be done under some
sort of pretext. In the beginning I mentioned there were two purposes for
everything - one the ostensible purpose and one the real purpose, and the
ostensible purpose here would be that growing your own vegetables was unsafe,
it would spread disease or something like that. So the acceptable idea
was to protect the consumer but the real idea was to limit the food supply
and growing your own food would be illegal. And if you persist in illegal
activities like growing your own food, then you're a criminal.
-
- WEATHER CONTROL
-
- There was a mention then of weather. This was another
really striking statement. He said, "We can or soon will be able to
control the weather." He said, "I'm not merely referring to dropping
iodide crystals into the clouds to precipitate rain that's already there,
but REAL control." And weather was seen as a weapon of war, a weapon
of influencing public policy. It could make rain or withhold rain in order
to influence certain areas and bring them under your control. There were
two sides to this that were rather striking. He said, "On the one
hand you can make drought during the growing season so that nothing will
grow, and on the other hand you can make for very heavy rains during harvest
season so the fields are too muddy to bring in the harvest, and indeed
one might be able to do both." There was no statement how this would
be done. It was stated that either it was already possible or very, very
close to being possible. Politics. He said that very few people really
know how government works. Something to the effect that elected officials
are influenced in ways that they don't even realise and they carry out
plans that have been made for them and they think that they are authors
of the plans. But actually they are manipulated in ways they don't understand.
-
- KNOW HOW PEOPLE RESPOND - MAKING THEM DO WHAT YOU WANT
-
- Somewhere in the presentation he made two statements
that I want to insert at this time. I don't remember just where they were
made, but they're valid in terms of the general overall view. One statement
is, "People can carry in their minds and act upon two contradictory
ideas at one time, provided that these two contradictory ideas are kept
far enough apart." The other statement is, "You can know pretty
well how rational people are going to respond to certain circumstances
or to certain information that they encounter. So, to determine the response
you want you need only control the kind of data or information that they're
presented or the kinds of circumstance that they're in; and being rational
people they'll do what you want them to do. They may not fully understand
what they're doing or why."
-
- FALSIFIED SCIENTIFIC RESEARCH
-
- Somewhere in this connection, then, was the statement
admitting that some scientific research data could be, and indeed has been,
falsified in order to bring about desired results. Here he said, "People
don't ask the right questions. Some people are too trusting." Now
this was an interesting statement because the speaker and the audience
all being doctors of medicine and supposedly very objective, dispassionately
scientific and science being the be all and end-all. To falsify scientific
research data in that setting is like blasphemy in the church, you just
don't do that. Anyhow, out of all of this was to come the New International
Governing Body, probably to come through the U.N. and with a World Court,
but not necessarily through those structures. It could be brought about
in other ways. Acceptance of the U.N . at that time was seen as not being
as wide as was hoped. Efforts would continue to give the United Nations
increasing importance. People would be more and more used to the idea of
relinquishing some national sovereignty. Economic interdependence would
foster this goal from a peaceful standpoint. Avoidance of war would foster
it from the standpoint of worrying about hostilities. It was recognised
that doing it peaceably was better than doing it by war. It was stated
at this point that war was "obsolete."
-
- I thought that was an interesting phrase because obsolete
means something that once was seen as useful is no longer useful. But war
is obsolete, because of nuclear bombs, war is no longer controllable. Formerly
wars could be controlled, but if nuclear weapons would fall into the wrong
hands there could be an unintended nuclear disaster. It was not stated
who the "wrong hands" are. We were free to infer that maybe this
meant terrorists, but in more recent years I'm wondering whether the wrong
hands might also include people that we've assumed they've had nuclear
weapons all along, maybe they don't have them. Just as it was stated that
industry would be preserved in the United States - a little bit just in
case the world wide plans didn't work out; just in case some country or
some other powerful person decided to bolt from the pack and go his own
way, one wonders whether this might also be true with nuclear weapons.
When he said they might fall into the wrong hands, there was some statement
that the possession of nuclear weapons had been tightly controlled, sort
of implying that anybody who had nuclear weapons was intended to have them.
That would necessarily have included the Soviet Union, if indeed they have
them. But I recall wondering at the time, "Are you telling us, or
are you implying that this country willingly gave weapons to the Soviets?."
-
- At that time that seemed like a terribly unthinkable
thing to do, much less to admit. The leaders of the Soviet Union seem to
be so dependent on the West though, one wonders whether there may have
been some fear that they would try to assert independence if they indeed
had these weapons. So, I don't know. It's something to speculate about
perhaps. Who did he mean when he said, "If these weapons fall into
the wrong hands"? Maybe just terrorists. Anyhow, the new system would
be brought in, if not by peaceful co-operation with everybody willingly
yielding national sovereignty and then by bringing the nation to the brink
of nuclear war. Everybody would be so fearful as hysteria is created by
the possibility of nuclear war that there would be a strong public outcry
to negotiate a public peace and people would willingly give up national
sovereignty in order to achieve peace, and thereby this would bring in
the 'New International Political System.' This was stated and a very impressive
thing to hear then, "If there were too many people in the right places
who resisted this, there might be a need to use one or two or possibly
more nuclear weapons." As it was put this would be possibly needed
to convince people that, "We mean business." That was followed
by the statement that, "By the time one or two of those went off then
everybody, even the most reluctant, would yield." He said something
about, "This negotiated peace would be very convincing", as in
a framework or in a context that the whole thing was rehearsed but nobody
would know it.
-
- People hearing about it would be convinced that it was
a genuine negotiation between hostile enemies who finally had come to the
realisation that peace was better than war. In this context discussing
war, and war is obsolete, a statement was made that there were some good
things about war. One was you're going to die anyway and people sometimes
in war get a chance to display great courage and heroism. If they die they've
died well and if they survive they get recognition. So that in any case,
the hardships of war on soldiers are worth it because that's the reward
they get out of their warring. Another justification expressed for war
was, if you think of the many millions of casualties in WWI and WWII had
not died but had continued to live and continued to have babies then there
would be millions upon millions and we would already be overpopulated.
So those two great wars served a benign purpose in delaying over-population.
But now there are technological means for the individual and governments
to control over-population so in this regard war is obsolete. It's no longer
needed. And then again it's obsolete because nuclear weapons could destroy
the whole universe. War, which once was controllable, could get out of
control and so for these two reasons it's now obsolete.
-
- TERRORISM
-
- There was a discussion of terrorism. Terrorism would
be used widely in Europe and in other parts of the world. Terrorism at
that time was thought would not be necessary in the United States. It could
become necessary in the United States if the United States did not move
rapidly enough into accepting the system. But at least in the foreseeable
future it was not planned. And very benignly on their part. Maybe terrorism
would not be required here, but the implication being that it would be
indeed used if it was necessary. Along with this came a bit of a scolding
that Americans had had it too good anyway and just a little bit of terrorism
would help convince Americans that the world is indeed a dangerous place,
or can be if we don't relinquish control to the proper authorities.
-
- FINANCIAL CONTROL
-
- There was discussion of money and banking. One statement
was, "Inflation is infinite. You can put an infinite number of zeros
after any number and put the decimals points wherever you want", as
an indication that inflation is a tool of the controllers. Money would
become predominately credit. It was already. Money is primarily a credit
thing but exchange of money would be not cash or palpable things but electronic
credit signal. People would carry money only in very small amounts for
things like chewing gum and candy bars. Any purchase of any significant
amount would be done electronically. Earnings would be electronically entered
into your account. It would be a single banking system. It may have the
appearance of being more than one but ultimately and basically it would
be one single banking system, so that when you got paid your pay would
be entered for you into your account balance and then when you purchased
anything at the point of purchase it would be deducted from your account
balance and you would actually carry nothing with you. Also computer records
can be kept on whatever it was you purchased so that if you were purchasing
too much of any particular item and some official wanted to know what you
were doing with your money they could go back and review your purchases
and determine what you were buying.
-
- There was a statement that any purchase of significant
size like an automobile, bicycle, a refrigerator, a radio or television
or whatever might have some sort of identification on it so it could be
traced, so that very quickly anything which was either given away or stolen
- whatever - authorities would be able to establish who purchased it and
when. Computers would allow this to happen. The ability to save would be
greatly curtailed. People would just not be able to save any considerable
degree of wealth. There was some statement of recognition that wealth represents
power and wealth in the hands of a lot of people is not good for the people
in charge so if you save too much you might be taxed. The more you save
the higher rate of tax on your savings so your savings really could never
get very far. And also if you began to show a pattern of saving too much
you might have your pay cut. We would say, "Well, your saving instead
of spending. You really don't need all that money."
-
- That basically the idea being to prevent people from
accumulating any wealth which might have long range disruptive influence
on the system. People would be encouraged to use credit to borrow and then
also be encouraged to renege on their debt so they would destroy their
own credit. The idea here is that, again, if you're too stupid to handle
credit wisely, this gives the authorities the opportunity to come down
hard on you once you've shot your credit. Electronic payments initially
would all be based on different kinds of credit cards which were already
in use in 1969 to some extent. Not as much as now, but people would have
credit cards with the electronic strip on it and once they got used to
that then it would be pointed out the advantage of having all of that combined
into a single credit card, serving a single monetary system and then they
won't have to carry around all that plastic.
-
- SURVEILLANCE, IMPLANTS, AND TELEVISIONS THAT WATCH YOU
-
- So, the next step would be the single card and then the
next step would be to replace the single card with a skin implant. The
single card could be lost or stolen, give rise to problems; could be exchanged
with somebody else to confuse identify. The skin implant on the other hand
could not be not lost or counterfeited or transferable to another person
so you and your accounts would be identified without any possibility of
error. And the skin implants would have to be put some place that would
be convenient to the skin; for example your right hand or your forehead.
At that time when I heard this I was unfamiliar with the statements in
the Book of Revelation. The speaker went on to say, "Now some of you
people who read the Bible will attach significance to this to the Bible,"
but he went on to disclaim any Biblical significance at all. This is just
common sense of how the system could work and should work and there's no
need to read any superstitious Biblical principals into it. As I say, at
the time I was not very familiar with the words of Revelations.
-
- Shortly after I became familiar with it and the significance
of what he said really was striking. I'll never forget it. There was some
mention, also, of implants that would lend themselves to surveillance by
providing radio signals. This could be under the skin or a dental implant,
put in like a filling so that either fugitives or possibly other citizens
could be identified by a certain frequency from his personal transmitter
and could be located at any time or any place by any authority who wanted
to find him. This would be particularly useful for somebody who broke out
of prison. There was more discussion of personal surveillance. One more
thing was said, "You'll be watching television and somebody will be
watching you at the same time at a central monitoring station." Television
sets would have a device to enable this. The T.V. set would not have to
be on in order for this to be operative. Also, the television set can be
used to monitor what you are watching. People can tell what you're watching
on TV and how you're reacting to what you're watching. And you would not
know that you were being watched while you were watching your television.
How would we get people to accept these things into their homes? Well,
people would buy them when they buy their own television. They won't know
that they're on there at first.
-
- This was described by being what we now know as Cable
TV to replace the antenna TV. When you buy a TV set this monitor would
just be part of the set and most people would not have enough knowledge
to know it was there in the beginning. And then the cable would be the
means of carrying the surveillance message to the monitor. By the time
people found out that this monitoring was going on, they would also be
very dependent upon television for a number of things. Just the way people
are dependent upon the telephone today. One thing the television would
be used for would be purchases. You wouldn't have to leave your home to
purchase. You just turn on your TV and there would be a way of interacting
with your television channel to the store that you wanted to purchase.
And you could flip the switch from place to place to choose a refrigerator
or clothing. This would be both convenient, but it would also make you
dependent on your television so the built-in monitor would be something
you could not do without.
-
- There was some discussion of audio monitors too, just
in case the authorities wanted to hear what was going on in rooms other
than where the television monitor was. In regard to this the statement
was made, "Any wire that went into your house, for example your telephone
wire, could be used this way". I remember this in particular because
it was fairly near the end of the presentation and as we were leaving the
meeting place I said something to one of my colleagues about going home
and pulling all of the wires out of my house, except I knew I couldn't
get by without the telephone. And the colleague I spoke to just seemed
numb. To this day I don't think he even remembers what we talked about
or what we hear that time, cause I've asked him. But at that time he seemed
stunned. Before all these changes would take place with electronic monitoring,
it was mentioned that there would be service trucks all over the place,
working on the wires and putting in new cables. This is how people who
were on the inside would know how things were progressing.
-
- HOME OWNERSHIP A THING OF THE PAST
-
- Privately owned housing would become a thing of the past.
The cost of housing and financing housing would gradually be made so high
that most people couldn't afford it. People who already owned their houses
would be allowed to keep them but as years go by it would be more and more
difficult for young people to buy a house. Young people would more and
more become renters, particularly in apartments or condominiums. More and
more unsold houses would stand vacant. People just couldn't buy them. But
the cost of housing would not come down. You'd right away think, well the
vacant house, the price would come down, the people would buy it. But there
was some statement to the effect that the price would be held high even
though there were many available so that free market places would not operate.
People would not be able to buy these and gradually more and more of the
population would be forced into small apartments. Small apartments which
would not accommodate very many children. Then as the number of real home-owners
diminished they would become a minority. There would be no sympathy for
them from the majority who dwelled in the apartments and then these homes
could be taken by increased taxes or other regulations that would be detrimental
to home ownership and would be acceptable to the majority. Ultimately,
people would be assigned where they would live and it would be common to
have non-family members living with you. This by way of your not knowing
just how far you could trust anybody. This would all be under the control
of a central housing authority. Have this in mind in 1990 when they ask,
"How many bedrooms in your house? How many bathrooms in your house?
Do you have a finished game room? "This information is personal and
is of no national interest to government under our existing Constitution.
But you'll be asked those questions and decide how you want to respond
to them.
-
- THE ARRIVAL OF THE TOTALITARIAN GLOBAL SYSTEM
-
- When the new system takes over people will be expected
to sign allegiance to it, indicating that they don't have any reservations
or holding back to the old system. "There just won't be any room",
he said, "for people who won't go along. We can't have such people
cluttering up the place so such people would be taken to special places",
and here I don't remember the exact words, but the inference I drew was
that at these special places where they were taken, then they would not
live very long. He may have said something like, "disposed of humanely",
but I don't remember very precisely, just the impression the system was
not going to support them when they would not go along with the system.
That would leave death as the only alternative.
-
- Somewhere in this vein he said there would not be any
martyrs. When I first heard this I thought it meant the people would not
be killed, but as the presentation developed what he meant was they would
not be killed in such a way or disposed of in such a way that they could
serve as inspiration to other people the way martyrs do. Rather he said
something like this. "People will just disappear." Just a few
additional items sort of thrown in here in the end which I failed to include
where they belong more perfectly. The bringing in of the new system he
said probably would occur on a weekend in the winter. Everything would
shut down on Friday evening and Monday morning when everybody wakened there
would be an announcement that the New System was in place.
-
- During the process in getting the United States ready
for these changes everybody would be busier with less leisure time and
less opportunity to really look about and see what was going on around
them. Also, there would be more changes and more difficulty in keeping
up as far as one's investments. Investment instruments would be changing.
Interest rates would be changing so that it would be a difficult job with
keeping up with what you had already earned. Interesting about automobiles;
it would look as though there were many varieties of automobiles, but when
you look very closely there would be great duplication. They would be made
to look different with chrome and wheel covers and this sort of thing,
but looking closely one would see that the same automobile was made by
more than one manufacturer.
-
- This recently was brought down to me when I was in a
parking lot and saw a small Ford - I forget the model - and a small Japanese
automobile which were identical except for a number of things like the
number of holes in the wheel cover and the chrome around the plate and
the shape of the grill. But if you looked at the basic parts of the automobile,
they were identical. They just happened to be parked side-by-side where
I was struck with this and I was again reminded of what had been said many
years ago. I'm hurrying here because I'm just about to the end of the tape.
Let me just summarise here by saying, all of these things said by one individual
at one time in one place relating to so many different human endeavours
and then to look and see how many of these actually came about. Meaning
the changes accomplished between then and now [1969 - 1988] and the things
which are planned for the future. I think there is no denying that this
is controlled and there is indeed a conspiracy.
-
- The question then becomes what to do. I think first off,
we must put our faith in God and pray and ask for his guidance. And secondly
do what we can to inform other individuals as much as possible, as much
as they may be interested. Some people just don't care, because they're
preoccupied with getting along in their own personal endeavours. But as
much as possible I think we should try to inform other people who may be
interested, and again put our faith and trust in God and pray constantly
for his guidance and for the courage to accept what we may be facing in
the near future. Rather than accept peace and justice which we hear so
much now. It's a cliché! Let's insist on liberty and justice for
all.
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