Results 1 to 2 of 2

Thread: The Architecture of the New World Order - HG Wells, 1940

  1. #1
    Aramas's Avatar
    Join Date
    Oct 2016
    Location
    United States
    Posts
    2,263
    Mentioned
    127 Post(s)
    Tagged
    1 Thread(s)

    Default The Architecture of the New World Order - HG Wells, 1940

    "Nor does it alter the fact that even when the struggle seems to be drifting definitely towards a world social democracy, there may still be very great delays and disappointments before it becomes an efficient and beneficent world system. Countless people, from maharajas to millionaires and from pukkha sahibs to pretty ladies, will hate the new world order, be rendered unhappy by frustration of their passions and ambitions through its advent and will die protesting against it. When we attempt to estimate its promise we have to bear in mind the distress of a generation or so of malcontents, many of them quite gallant and graceful-looking people."

    "This new and complete Revolution we contemplate can be defined in a very few words. It is (a) outright world-socialism, scientifically planned and directed, plus (b) a sustained insistence upon law, law based on a fuller, more jealously conceived resentment of the personal Rights of Man, plus (c) the completest freedom of speech, criticism and publication, and sedulous expansion of the educational organisation to the ever-growing demands of the new order. What we may call the eastern or Bolshevik Collectivism, the Revolution of the Internationale, has failed to achieve even the first of these three items and it has never even attempted the other two."

    http://gutenberg.net.au/ebooks04/0400671h.html

    https://archive.org/stream/H.g.Wells...ge/n0/mode/2up

    "Wells has one essential enemy that the Open Conspiracy must destroy: that is, the sovereign nation-state. The goal of its destruction is his life's work."

    Well, how about that. The truth in plain view. Thanks, Papa Wells!

    Look into: links between Wells, the Fabian Society, and George Orwell

    Specifically note that the title of Orwell's 1984 comes from the centenary anniversary of the Fabian Society in 1884. Interestingly: April 4th was the date of the first pamphlet of the Society, and April 4th was the first day in Orwell's 1984. There are lots of references to the Fabians in Orwell's 1984.

    Aldous Huxley also had ties to the Fabian Society. Check this out:
    http://www.larouchepub.com/other/200...littleton.html

    Russell's blunt description of a "scientific dictatorship" was matched by the account of Aldous Huxley, author of the utopian tract Brave New World, in a speech on the U.S. State Department's Voice of America, in 1961, of a world of pharmacologically manipulated slaves, living in a "concentration camp of the mind," enhanced by propaganda and psychotropic drugs, learning to "love their servitude," and abandoning all will to resist. "This," Huxley concluded, "is the final revolution."

    Speaking at the California Medical School in San Francisco, Huxley announced: "There will be in the next generation or so a pharmacological method of making people love their servitude and producing dictatorship without tears, so to speak. Producing a kind of painless concentration camp for entire societies so that people will in fact have their liberties taken away from them but will rather enjoy it, because they will be distracted from any desire to rebel by propaganda, or brainwashing, or brainwashing enhanced by pharmacological methods. And this seems to be the final revolution."
    Other members of the Fabian Society: "their most recognized members were poets Edward Carpenter and John Davidson, sexologist Havelock Ellis, writer Edward R. Pease, and we can add legends such as Annie Besant, Graham Wallas, Hubert Bland, Edith Nesbit, Sydney Olivier, Oliver Lodge, Leonard Woolf, Virginia Woolf, Ramsay MacDonald, Emmeline Pankhurst and Bertrand Russell."

    http://www.ratkomartinovic.com/txt/i...modern-society

    The second individual worth of mentioning is Huxley's apprentice Eric Arthur Blair, better known as George Orwell. He encoded the true Fabian society's intentions in his book titled 1984, which is the society's hundred year anniversary, and not the actual revolutionary year. Besides the term 'Big Brother', neologisms and spins (which will be described in detail in the next chapter), this book is also famous for containing sentences such as: 'If you want a vision of the future, imagine a boot stamping on a human face – forever'; or 'One does not establish a dictatorship in order to safeguard a revolution; one makes a revolution in order to establish a dictatorship'. Thus, he successfully depicted, along with 'animal farm' and some animals being 'more equal that others', the world of today. Unfortunately he died only months after publishing his most distinguished book which prevented him from finishing his work the way he intended.
    So much for the NWO being a conspiracy.
    Last edited by Aramas; 11-23-2017 at 05:46 AM.

  2. #2
    Aramas's Avatar
    Join Date
    Oct 2016
    Location
    United States
    Posts
    2,263
    Mentioned
    127 Post(s)
    Tagged
    1 Thread(s)

    Default

    Another little tidbit from the archive.org link:

    Screenshot from 2017-11-23 13-59-32.png

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •