The Rise of Global
Governance
By Henry Lamb
The desire to rule the
world has been a part of the human experience throughout
recorded history. Alexander the Great led Greece to
dominance of the known world, only to become the victim
of Rome's quest for world dominance. The Roman Empire,
built on bloody battlefields across the land, was
swallowed up by the Holy Roman Empire, built on the fear
and hopes of helpless people. History is a record of the
competition for global dominance. In every age, there has
always been a force somewhere, conniving to conquer the
world with ideas clothed in promises imposed by military
might. The 20th century is no different from any other.
Marx, Lenin, and Hitler reflect some of the ideas which
competed for world dominance in the 1900s. The
competition is still underway. The key players change
from time to time, as do the words that describe the
various battlefields, but the competing ideas remain the
same.
One of the competitors is the idea that people are born
free, "totally free and sovereign," and choose
to surrender specified freedoms to a limited government
to achieve mutual benefits. The other competitor is the
idea that government must be sovereign in order to
distribute benefits equitably and to manage the
activities of people to protect them from one another.
The first idea, the idea of free people, is the idea that
compelled the pilgrims to migrate to America. The U.S.
Constitution represents humanity's best effort to
organize and codify the idea of free people sovereign
over limited government. It is a relatively new idea in
the historic competition for world dominance.
The other idea, the idea of sovereign government, is not
new. Historically, the conqueror was the government. The
Emperor, the King, the conqueror by whatever name,
established his government by appointment and established
laws by decree. Variations of this idea emerged over time
to give the perception that the people had some say in
the development of law. The Soviet Union, for example,
held elections to choose its leaders; but the system
assured the outcome of the elections as well as the
ultimate sovereignty of the government. During the 1700s,
the first idea was ascendant as evidenced by the creation
of America. During the 1900s, the second idea has again
become ascendant as evidenced by the emergence of global
governance. This report identifies and traces some of the
major forces, events, and personalities that are
responsible for the rise of global governance in the 20th
century.
The League of
Nations (1900-1924)
Competition for world
dominance was fierce in the first quarter of the 20th
century. New, dynamic ideas emerged to fill the vacuum
created by the crumbling British Empire and the end of
the colonial era. At the turn of the century, America,
though hardly a world leader, was expanding rapidly.
Economic and technological advances attracted worldwide
interest. Halfway around the world, another idea was
taking hold. The oppression of Nicholas II in Russia,
combined with the influence of Karl Marx, gave rise to
the Russian Social Democratic Labor Party (Bolsheviks)
which became the Socialist Revolutionary Party. Under the
leadership of Vladimir Ilyich Lenin, the party platform
called for the "establishment of nurseries for
infants and children in all shops, factories, and other
enterprises that employ women"1 and for the
"nationalization and re-distribution of land."2
What began as a rebellion against the oppression of
government sovereignty as imposed by Czar Nicholas was
hijacked by Lenin who, with his colleagues Stalin and
Trotsky, promptly replaced the Czar's oppression with
their own. Within weeks after Nicholas' assassination,
Lenin nationalized all private, ecclesiastical and
czarist land without compensation. He introduced press
censorship, nationalized big industry, outlawed strikes,
nationalized the banks, built up a police force and
ordered the requisition of grain from the peasants to
feed the Red Army.3 By the time Lenin died in 1924,
Stalin had consolidated his power and organized his
government to become the world's most dominant example of
the idea of government sovereignty.
Americans were far too busy earning a living to pay much
attention to the tumult in Russia. While Lenin's party
was forging the Principles of Communism in 1903, Orville
Wright made his historic flight. The first automobile
trip across the United States was completed, and the U.S.
government ratified the Panama Canal Treaty. Congress
created the Federal Reserve System in 1913, and Ford
Motor Company shocked the industrialized world by raising
wages from $2.40 for a nine-hour day to $5 for an
eight-hour day in 1914. Americans were divided about
entering the First World War, but did in 1917, and had a
million troops in Europe when the war ended in 1918 when
the warring parties accepted Woodrow Wilson"s
"Fourteen Points" which became the basis for
the League of Nations.
Edward Mandell House was Wilson's chief advisor. He
persuaded Wilson to sign the Federal Reserve Act and he
was the real architect of the League of Nations.4 House
was no ordinary advisor. He was Wilson's "alter
ego," and he was an "unabashed and
unapologetic" socialist.5 House published a novel in
1912 entitled Philip Dru, Administrator. The story
is a recitation of socialist thinking enacted by Dru,
whose purpose was "to pursue Socialism as dreamed of
by Karl Marx," and who, in the story, replaced
Constitutional government with "omnicompetent"
government in which "the property and lives of all
were now in the keeping of one man."6 In the story,
Dru created a "League of Nations" much like the
League of Nations he fashioned for Woodrow Wilson.
More importantly, House came to his position with Woodrow
Wilson from an elite circle of friends known as the
"Inquiry": Paul Warburg, J. P. Morgan, John D.
Rockefeller, John W. Davis, among others, all of whom had
direct interest in the Federal Reserve System and great
interest in the League of Nations. House was well on his
way to transforming Woodrow Wilson into his fictional
Philip Dru until the Senate refused to ratify the
League of Nations in 1920. Embarrassed and defeated,
Wilson died four years later, ironically, the same year
Lenin died.
The dream of world domination, however, did not die.
House and his friends realized that public opinion in
America had to be changed before any form of world
government could succeed. While shuttling to Europe on
post-war peace negotiations, House arranged an assembly
of dignitaries from which was created the Institute of
International Affairs which had two branches. In London,
it was called the Royal Institute of International
Affairs (RIIA); in New York, it was called the Council on
Foreign Relations (CFR), formed officially July 29, 1921.
The founding President of the CFR was John W. Davis,
personal attorney to J. P. Morgan. Paul Cravath and
Russell Leffingwell, both Morgan associates, were also
among the founding officers.7 Money for the new
organizations was provided by J. P. Morgan, Bernard
Baruch, Otto Kahn, Jacob Schiff, Paul Warburg, and John
D. Rockefeller, the same people involved in the forming
of the Federal Reserve. 8 The purpose of the CFR was to
create a stream of scholarly literature to promote the
benefits of world government, and attract a membership of
rich intellectuals who could influence the direction of
foreign policy in America. The CFR, supported by the
world's wealthiest foundations and individuals, has been
extremely successful. Its flagship publication, Foreign
Affairs, is the port-of-entry for many ideas that become
public policy. The U.S. delegation to the founding
conference of the United Nations included 47 members of
the CFR. The Secretary-General of the conference, Alger
Hiss, was a member of the CFR. Hiss was later convicted
of perjury for lying about having provided government
documents to a Communist espionage ring.9
The first quarter of the 20th century forced America into
a world war where the strength of its economy and
effectiveness of its technology were displayed to the
world. On the other side of the Atlantic, Russia gave
birth to Stalin's version of Communism. At the time, both
nations were primarily concerned about domestic issues
with little thought of dominating the world. The Soviet
Union exemplified the idea of government sovereignty;
America exemplified the idea of free people sovereign
over its government. Sooner or later, the two ideas had
to collide. Other competitors were also at work. The CFR
began to rebuild its plans for a world government, and a
new competitor arose on Russia's eastern border.
The United Nations
(1925 -- 1950)
While Stalin reigned
over "The Great Terror," in which an estimated
20 million Russians were executed, and instituted the
first of a series of "five-year plans,"10
America struggled through some of its hardest years.
Prohibition brought organized crime, Federal Reserve
policies brought a stock market crash, drought brought a
dust bowl to the bread basket, and a nation-wide
depression brought crushing poverty to most Americans.
Franklin D. Roosevelt was elected to the White House in
1932. The CFR was to Roosevelt what Edward House was to
Woodrow Wilson. "The organization [CFR] essentially
ran FDR's State Department."11 Henry Wallace, a
committed Marxist, was FDR's Secretary of Agriculture.12
The "New Deal" delivered by Roosevelt resembled
the performance of Philip Dru in Edward House's novel.
By 1941, Hitler had invaded Russia and Japan had bombed
Pearl Harbor. For the next five years the world tried to
commit suicide. Those not caught up in the war, the CFR,
realized that the war provided an excellent reason for
the nations of the world to try once again to create a
global institution that could prevent war. Two weeks
after Pearl Harbor, Secretary of State, Cordell Hull,
recommended the creation of a Presidential Advisory
Committee on Post War Foreign Policy. The committee was
the planning commission for the United Nations. Ten of
the committee's 14 members were members of the CFR.13
The process of creating the United Nations lasted
throughout the war. The first public step was the
Atlantic Charter (August 14, 1941), signed by Roosevelt
and Winston Churchill, which committed the two nations to
a "permanent system of general security."
Because Stalin was under attack by Germany, Russia was
forced to join the allies in the Moscow Declaration
(October 30, 1943) which declared the necessity of
establishing an international organization to maintain
peace and security. The Dumbarton Oaks Conversations
(August, 1944) which produced the World Bank, also
settled political and legal issues that were drafted into
the UN Charter. The Yalta Summit (February, 1945)
produced a compromise which gave the Soviets three votes
(USSR, Byelorussia, and the Ukraine) in exchange for
voting procedures demanded by the U.S.14 Edward
Stettinius made another extremely significant concession.
He agreed that the UN official in charge of military
affairs would be designated by the Russians. Fourteen
individuals have held the position since the UN was
created; all were Russians. 15 The committee designed and
FDR sold the United Nations to the 50 nations that came
to the San Francisco conference in 1945. Among the 47 CFR
members in the official U.S. delegation were Edward
Stettinius, the new Secretary of State, John Foster
Dulles, Adlai Stevenson, Nelson Rockefeller, and Alger
Hiss. To ensure that the new organization would be
located in America, John D. Rockefeller, Jr., donated the
land for the UN headquarters.16
In his 1962 book, Why Not Victory, former Senator
Barry Goldwater recalls that the UN was approved by the
Senate largely because of the representations of the
State Department which assured the Senate that
" . . . it [UN] in no sense constituted a form of
World Government and that neither the Senate nor the
American people need be concerned that the United Nations
or any of its agencies would interfere with the
sovereignty of the United States or with the domestic
affairs of the American People."17
Five years later, in testimony before the Senate Foreign
Relations Committee, CFR member James Warburg said "We
shall have world government whether or not you like it
--by conquest or consent."18
The ink on the UN Charter had not yet dried when the
Charter for UNESCO (United Nations Educational,
Scientific, and Cultural Organization) was presented in
London, November, 1945. UNESCO swallowed and expanded the
Paris-based International Institute for Intellectual
Cooperation which was a holdover from the League of
Nations. Julian Huxley was the prime mover of UNESCO and
served as its first Director-General. Huxley had served
on Britain's Population Investigation Commission before
World War II and was vice president of the Eugenics
Society from 1937 to 1944. In a 1947 document entitled
"UNESCO Its Purpose and Its Philosophy", Huxley
wrote
"Thus even though it is quite true that any radical
eugenic policy will be for many years politically and
psychologically impossible, it will be important for
UNESCO to see that the eugenic problem is examined with
the greatest care, and that the public mind is informed
of the issues at stake so that much that now is
unthinkable may at least become thinkable."19
UNESCO's primary function is set forth in its Charter.
"Since wars begin in the minds of men, it is in the
minds of men that the defenses of peace must be
constructed." UNESCO was created to construct a
world-wide education program to prepare the world for
global governance. UNESCO advisor, Bertrand Russell,
writing for the UNESCO Journal, "The Impact of
Science on Society", said "Every government
that has been in control of education for a generation
will be able to control its subjects securely without the
need of armies or policemen . . . ."20 The National
Education Association was a major advocate for UNESCO. In
a 1942 article in the NEA Journal, written by Joy Elmer
Morgan, the NEA called for " . . . certain world
agencies of administration such asa police force; a board
of education . . . ."
A year later in London, the Conference of Allied
Ministers of Education called for a United Nations Bureau
of Education. UNESCO became the Board of Education for
the world.
Huxley believed the world needed a single, global
government. He saw UNESCO as an instrument to "help
in the speedy and satisfactory realization of the
process." He described UNESCO's philosophy as
global, scientific humanism. He said "Political
unification in some sort of world government will be
required for the definitive attainment" of the next
stage of social development.21 From the beginning, UNESCO
has designed programs to capture children at the earliest
possible age to begin the educational process.
William Benton, Assistant U.S. Secretary of State, told a
UNESCO meeting in 1946
"As long as the child breathes the poisoned air of
nationalism, education in world-mindedness can produce
only precarious results. As we have pointed out, it is
frequently the family that infects the child with extreme
nationalism. The school should therefore use the means
described earlier to combat family attitudes that favor
jingoism . . . . We shall presently recognize in
nationalism the major obstacle to development of
world-mindedness. We are at the beginning of a long
process of breaking down the walls of national
sovereignty. UNESCO must be the pioneer."22
The UN and UNESCO were created in the wake of the worst
war carnage the world had ever witnessed. Conditioned by
a constant stream of propaganda produced by the CFR in
America, and by the Royal Institute of International
Affairs in Europe, the move toward global governance was
accepted and allowed to go forward. Julian Huxley
realized, however, that to be successful over the long
haul, a world-wide constituency would have to be
developed. In 1948, Huxley and his long-time friend and
colleague, Max Nicholson, both of whom were involved with
the Royal Institute of International Affairs, created the
International Union for the Conservation of Nature
(IUCN).
The IUCN drew heavily from the 50-year-old British Fauna
and Flora Preservation Society (FFPS) for its leadership,
funding and its members. Sir Peter Scott, FFPS Chairman,
drafted the IUCN Charter and headed one of its important
Commissions. This important non-governmental organization
(NGO) was instrumental in the formation of the World
Wildlife Fund (WWF) in 1961 and the World Resources
Institute (WRI) in 1982. These three NGOs are to the
United Nations System what the CFR was to Franklin
Roosevelt, or what Edward House was to Woodrow Wilson.
These three NGOs have become the driving force behind the
rise of global governance.
The Cold War
(1950-1970)
The dream of world
dominance is not, nor has it ever been, the pursuit by an
exclusive cadre of conspirators. The dream has been held
by many different factions -- often simultaneously --
always in competition with one another. By 1950, at least
three major forces -- all competing for world dominance
-- were clearly identified. Each of the three major
forces worked overtly and covertly to achieve their
objectives.
The Soviet Union had clearly defined its
Marx/Lenin/Stalin version of Communism. Its systematic
program of expansionism -- including an active
organization in the United States -- fully intended to
bring all the world under its control. So confident were
the Soviets of their eventual success that, on his 1959
tour of the U.S., Nikita Kruschchev pounded his shoe on a
podium before the television cameras and declared to
America "We will bury you!"
America would have no part of a world under Communist
rule. Senator Joseph McCarthy led a crusade against
Communists in America. His campaign tarnished many
non-communists but was successful in rooting out Alger
Hiss, Julius and Ethel Rosenberg, and Morton Sobell, all
convicted of espionage-related crimes. (Because of the
statute of limitations, Hiss could not be tried for
espionage but was convicted of perjury for lying about
his espionage activities.) 23
More importantly, the televised McCarthy hearings
awakened America to the "Communist threat," and
when U.S. troops entered Korea to fight the communists,
support for the Communist Party USA diminished steadily
from a high of more than 100,000 members to its current
low of about 1000 members.24 American leaders did not
pound their shoes, nor proclaim a program of world
dominance. American foreign and economic policy, however,
left no doubt that at the very least, America intended to
prevent the Soviets from achieving world dominance.
The third force competing for world dominance was not the
United Nations, but the people whose dreams of a world
government were frustrated by what the United Nations
turned out to be. The annihilation of the League of
Nations by the U.S. Senate left the advocates of world
government with a large dose of reality. They realized
that the UN could exist only by the grace of the U.S. and
the Soviets, and that the UN itself could have no
authority or power over the major powers. But it was a
real start toward global governance which provided an
official, if impotent, mechanism for the incremental
implementation of their global aspirations.
During the 1950s and 1960s, the UN was little more than a
debating society that occasionally attempted to referee
disputes among the major world powers. Public attention
was riveted on domestic issues and the deepening cold
war. Russia's Sputnik launch was a catalyst for the
launch of the U.S. space program. Fidel Castro's embrace
of Communism in Cuba stiffened America's policy of
"containment" -- first articulated in the CFR
Journal, Foreign Affairs.25
The 1954 Supreme Court desegregation decision pushed
McCarthy, Communism, and the UN completely off the
domestic radar screen. Rosa Park's refusal to give up her
seat on a Birmingham bus to a white man was the fuse that
ignited an explosion of racial riots. Federal troops
confronted Alabama National Guardsmen over Governor
Orville Faubus' refusal to let nine black children enter
Little Rock Central High School. Dr. Martin Luther King
delivered his "I have a dream" speech to a
quarter-million people on the Mall in Washington, and
tanks rolled on the streets of Chicago and Detroit.
Domestic events also obscured American awareness of the
creation of the World Wildlife Fund. The same Julian
Huxley who founded UNESCO and the IUCN, along with his
friend, Max Nicholson, formed the organization primarily
as a way to fund the work of the IUCN. Prince Philip,
Duke of Edinburgh, served as President. An auxiliary
organization called the "1001 Club" charged an
initiation fee of $10,000 which went into a trust fund to
provide ongoing revenues to WWF. The WWF and the IUCN
share an office building in Gland, Switzerland. (In 1987,
the name was changed to the World Wide Fund for Nature,
but the acronym remained the same).26
Behind the scenes, America developed and launched the
Nautilus, the first of a new generation of atomic powered
submarines. Both Russia and America tested nuclear
devices with ever increasing payloads. Bomb shelters were
the mainstay of civil defense, and school children were
taught to "duck-and-cover." The official
defense policy was MAD -- Mutually Assured Destruction.
Much, much further behind the scenes, plans were being
developed to defuse the MAD policy. The UN had no
authority or power in its own right to do anything about
the spiraling arms race between the world's two
super-powers. It became the stage, however, on which the
advocates of global governance performed their strategic
play, using the U.S. and the Soviet Union in the starring
roles. In 1961, newly elected President John F. Kennedy
presented a disarmament plan Freedom From War. The
United States Program for General and Complete
Disarmament in a Peaceful World, also known as the
Department of State Publication 7277. The plan called for
three phases which would ultimately result in the gradual
transfer of U.S. military power to the United Nations.
The plan called for all nations to follow the U.S. lead
and disarm themselves to "a point where no state
would have the military power to challenge the
progressively strengthened UN Peace Force."27 A new
and improved version of the same idea was presented in
May, 1962, called blueprint for the Peace Race Outline of
Basic Provisions of a Treaty on General and Complete
Disarmament in a Peaceful World released by the U.S. Arms
Control and Disarmament Agency (Publication 4, General
Series 3, May 3, 1962) headed by John McCloy.
It is neither fair, nor accurate, to say that these
documents were the product of the CFR. It is accurate,
and instructive, to realize that these documents were
developed by men who were members of the CFR. John McCloy
and Robert Lovett were described as "distinguished
individuals" in an article by John F. Kennedy which
appeared in Foreign Affairs in 1957. Lovett was offered
his choice of cabinet positions in the Kennedy
administration but declined, choosing instead to make
recommendations all of which were accepted by Kennedy.
Lovett recommended Dean Rusk as Secretary of State. Rusk
had been a member of the CFR since 1952 and had published
an article in Foreign Affairs in 1960 on how the new
President should conduct foreign policy. The New York
Times reported that of the first 82 names submitted to
Kennedy for State Department positions, 63 were members
of the CFR.28 Like FDR and every President since, JFK
filled his State Department and surrounded himself with
individuals who were, perhaps coincidentally, members of
the Council on Foreign Relations. Lovett, John McCloy,
Dean Rusk, McGeorge Bundy, and Adlai Stevenson (JFK's
Ambassador to the UN), all members of the CFR, guided
Kennedy through the disastrous "Bay of Pigs"
operation and the Cuban missile crisis.
That members of the CFR have exercised extraordinary
influence on foreign policy cannot be denied. Whether
that influence is the result of organizational
strategies, or the result of individuals who simply
happen to be members of the same organization, is an
endlessly debated question. Richard Harwood, of the
Washington Post, observes that members of the Council on
Foreign Relations
". . . are the closest thing we have to a ruling
Establishment in the United States. The President is a
member. So is his Secretary of State, the Deputy
Secretary of State, all five of the Under Secretaries,
several of the Assistant Secretaries and the department's
legal adviser. The President's National Security Adviser
and his Deputy are members. The Director of Central
Intelligence (like all previous directors) and the
Chairman of the Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board are
members. The Secretary of Defense, three Under
Secretaries and at least four Assistant Secretaries are
members. The Secretaries of the Departments of Housing
and Urban Development, Interior, Health and Human
Services and the Chief White House Public Relations man .
. . along with the Speaker of the House [are members] . .
. . This is not a retinue of people who "look like
America," as the President once put it, but they
very definitely look like the people who, for more than
half a century, have managed our international affairs
and our military-industrial complex."29
Article 11 of the UN Charter gives the General Assembly
authority to "consider" and
"recommend" principles governing disarmament
and the regulation of armaments, but virtually no
authority to enforce disarmament. Kennedy's proposal was
a bold first step toward giving the UN the power which
early, necessary compromises had stripped from the
original vision of a world government.
The Kennedy plan has never been revoked. Though modified
and delayed by political necessity, the essential
principle of relinquishing arms, as well as control of
the production and distribution of arms, to the UN has
guided the disarmament policy of every American President
since JFK. Prior to the Kennedy Disarmament Plan, the UN
sponsored a Truce Supervision Operation in 1948, and a
Military Observer Group in India and Pakistan in 1949.
Since the Kennedy Disarmament Plan, the number of UN
Peace-keeping operations has steadily increased.30
Still further behind the scenes, the fledgling United
Nations was beginning to take shape. UNICEF (United
Nations International Emergency Children's Fund) was
created in 1946 to provide emergency relief to the child
victims of WWII. It was re-authorized in 1950 to shift
its emphasis to programs of long-term benefit to children
in underdeveloped countries. It became a permanent UN
entity in 1953. UNESCO's purpose was to
"educate" the world. UNICEF was created to
provide the mechanism through which that education could
be delivered to children.
UN Article 55 provides for the UN to "promote higher
standards of living, full employment, and conditions of
economic and social progress and development." To
fulfill this charge, the UN Expanded Program of Technical
Assistance (UNEPTA) was created in 1949, and expanded
with a Special Fund in 1957. By 1959, the program had
been transformed into the United Nations Development
Program (UNDP) (now headed by James Gustave Speth, former
President of the World Resources Institute) which spends
more than $1 trillion annually, mostly in developing
countries.
The UN Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in
the Near East (UNRWA) was created in 1949. The UN High
Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) was created in 1951.
The UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) brought
together existing international food programs in 1946 and
began its World Food Program in 1963. The UN's
International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) was created in
1953. The International Civil Aviation Organization
(ICAO) was created in 1947. The International Labor
Organization (ILO) created in 1919 as an instrument of
the failed League of Nations was reconstituted and folded
into the United Nations in 1948. The International
Maritime Organization (IMO) was authorized in 1947.
Founded in 1863, the Universal Postal Union (UPU) became
an entity of the UN in 1948. The World Health
Organization (WHO) was created in 1948. The International
Telecommunication Union (ITU) which had existed since
1865 was folded into the UN system in 1949. The United
Nations Industrial Development Organization (UNIDO) was
created in 1966. The World Intellectual Property
Organization (WIPO) was established in 1967. These are
only a few of the 130 UN agencies and organizations that
proliferated during and since the Cold War.
While the UN organization was expanding exponentially,
out of the media spotlight which was focused on race
riots and the arms race, UNESCO plodded forward with its
mission to educate the world. Robert Muller, long-time
Secretary-General of the UN's Economic and Social Council
under which the UNESCO operates, delivered a speech at
the University of Denver in 1995. His musings and
recollections provide valuable insights into the kind of
education UNESCO was preparing for the world. From
Muller's comments:
"I had written an essay which was circulated by
UNESCO, and which earned me the title of "Father of
Global Education." I was educated badly in France.
I've come to the conclusion that the only correct
education that I have received in my life was from the
United Nations. We should replace the word politics by
planetics. We need planetary management, planetary
caretakers. We need global sciences. We need a science of
a global psychology, a global sociology, a global
anthropology. Then I made my proposal for a World Core
Curriculum."31
The first goal of Muller's World Core Curriculum, is
"Assisting the child in becoming an integrated
individual who can deal with personal experience while
seeing himself as a part of "the greater
whole." In other words, promote growth of the group
idea, so that group good, group understanding, group
interrelations and group goodwill replace all limited,
self-centered objectives, leading to group
consciousness."32
The World Core Curriculum Manual says:
"The underlying philosophy upon which the Robert
Muller School is based will be found in the teachings set
forth in the books of Alice A. Bailey, by the Tibetan
teacher, Djwhal Khul (published by Lucis Publishing
Company, 113 University Place, 11th floor, New York, NY
10083) and the teachings of M. Morya as given in the Agni
Yoga Series books (published by Agni Yoga Society, Inc.,
319 West 107th Street, New York, NY 10025)."33
Alice Bailey established the Lucifer Publishing Company,
which was renamed Lucis Press in 1924, expressly to
publish and distribute her own writings and those of
Djwhal Khul, which consisted of some 20 books written by
Bailey as the "channeling" agent for the
disembodied Tibetan she called Djwhal Khu1.34 Until
recently, the Lucis Trust, parent organization of the
Lucis Press, was headquartered at the United Nations
Plaza in New York.35 Bailey assumed the leadership of the
Theosophical Society upon the death of Helena Petrovna
Blavatsky. The Societys 6,000 members include
Robert McNamara, Donald Regan, Henry Kissinger, David
Rockefeller, Paul Volker, George Shultz, and the names
that also appear on the membership roster of the CFR.36
Hindsight reveals that -- while the United States was
performing on the UN stage, sparring with the Soviet
Union, keeping score with nuclear warheads -- the forces
which heavily influenced the official policies of both
the United States and the United Nations were actually
outside both governments non-governmental organizations
(NGOs). Three distinct NGO influences were clear by the
end of the 1960s:
the CFR and its assortment of affiliated spin-off
organizations; the mystic, occult, or "new-age"
spiritual movement; and the growing number of
organizations affiliated with the International Union for
the Conservation of Nature (IUCN).
In 1968, the IUCN led a lobbying effort with the United
Nations Economic and Social Council (headed by Robert
Muller) to adopt Resolution 1296 which grants
"consultative" status to certain NGOs. This
resolution paved the highway for global governance. The
Lucis Trust was one of the first NGOs to be granted
"consultative" status with the UN.
Copyright (C) July 4, 1996 All rights
reserved by Henry Lamb
Henry Lamb's Website
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