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>From Carroll Quigley to the UN Millennium Summit: Thoughts on the New World Order<BR>
by Steven Yates<BR>
<BR>
Shortly after the collapse of Communism in Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union, 
President George Bush Sr. proclaimed us as on the verge of a New World Order. Bush did 
not coin the phrase, of course; nor did he introduce it into political discourse. 
Exactly what is its intended referent? Either of two things, apparently. (1) A 
would-be global government trumping national governments, meaning the de facto end of 
national sovereignty; or (2) the efforts some believe are currently underway, 
operating through the United Nations in particular but through other groups as well 
(the Council on Foreign Relations is a frequent target) to create such a global order. 
The agenda itself is sometimes called the New World Order conspiracy.<BR>
<BR>
Does such an agenda really exist, or are statements about conspiracies to create world 
government nothing more than "right wing" paranoia? To my mind, this question is 
surprisingly easy to answer, though the best way to approach it has changed in recent 
years. The results ought to give all believers in freedom and genuine 
self-determination more than a few sleepless nights. Yes, Virginia, there is a 
proposed New World Order, whether we call it that or not. Let us consider two separate 
pieces of evidence that point to this conclusion. The first is contained in the 
writings of an historian; the second took place right under our noses this past week 
in New York City. The word conspiracy is, however, a misnomer. Conspiracies, by 
definition, operate in secret. In that case, efforts to build a New World Order may 
have begun in secret, but now all the evidence one needs is on the UN’s own website. 
<BR>
<BR>
Washington, D.C., the 1960s: Carroll Quigley and Tragedy and Hope.<BR>
Back in the early 1960s, historian Carroll Quigley did extensive research for his 
encyclopedic Tragedy and Hope: A History of the World in Our Time. Tragedy and Hope 
recounted, in over 1,300 tightly-written pages of small print, the gradual rise to 
power of a small cadre of extremely wealthy and powerful individuals. Many were 
products of wealthy bloodlines. Some were bankers; others began in other industries 
but got into banking because that was where the real power was. They operated mostly 
behind the scenes, not as national political elites but as an international elite – or 
superelite. For them, natural borders and loyalties were increasingly meaningless. 
Much has been written about the Rothschilds who discovered in the late 1700s that it 
was possible for bankers to get rich by loaning money to governments, extending the 
loans encouraging government to become dependent on them, attaching provisions to the 
extensions calling for specific policies, and then tallying up the interest. Other 
such bloodlines would soon follow (the Rockefellers and Morgans here in the US). <BR>
<BR>
Shortly before the turn of the last century, Cecil Rhodes, the British diamond tycoon 
who had operated for years in South Africa, willed a significant portion of his huge 
fortune to the establishment of a secret society in England. Its purpose was to lay 
the foundations for world government, under the theory that world government alone 
could bring about world peace and security for all. The Rhodes Scholarship program at 
Oxford University was drawn from this fortune as an effort to bring the "best and the 
brightest" under the influence of a certain body of ideas. Bill Clinton, of course, 
was a Rhodes Scholar for a while (although he didn’t complete the program). Many other 
influential politicians, journalists, and writers in the English-speaking world have 
been Rhodes Scholars. <BR>
<BR>
So-called conspiracy theorists have written extensively of organizations such as the 
Council on Foreign Relations, founded in 1921, the Trilateral Commission, founded in 
1973, and the European Bilderberg Group (which, interestingly, has no home page of its 
own) as having the same goal: the creation of a world government with themselves at 
the helm. These groups have been accused of having done everything from financing the 
rise of both Communism and Nazism to bankrolling both sides in World Wars I and II. 
Allegations abound that they set about to gain control over both major political 
parties in the US, the US legal system, the US media (including all major newspapers 
and television networks as well as the Hollywood entertainment culture), and finally – 
and especially – so-called public education at all levels from kindergarten to public 
universities. They would operate by seeing to it that programs and projects that would 
help advance the agenda of centralization were well funded, while others were left to 
fend for themselves – not knowing why. <BR>
<BR>
How much truth there is to these allegations is, of course, not easy to determine. It 
is unlikely that the perpetrators would leave a paper trail that just anyone could 
follow. On the other hand, the existence of such operatives offers an elegant 
explanation, satisfying Ockham’s Razor in its appeal to simplicity, for why so much of 
twentieth century history has been a one-way street, with all traffic flowing left. It 
also answers: Why does the U.S. federal government continue to grow larger and more 
centralized no matter which major political party controls the White House or 
Congress? Why do independent political movements (one thinks of the Libertarians and 
the Reform Party) founder despite having produced some very worthwhile ideas and 
having gained the support of a segment of the public? Why are efforts to achieve 
political, economic and educational independence systematically assaulted by pundits, 
by the media and by well-funded liberal groups as soon as they threaten to become 
influential in the body politic? <BR>
<BR>
Carroll Quigley wrote, in Tragedy and Hope: "There does exist, and has existed for a 
generation, an international Anglophile network which operates, to some extent, in the 
way the radical Right believes the Communists act…. I know of the operations of this 
network because I have studied it for twenty years and was permitted for two years, in 
the early 1960s, to examine its papers and secret records. I have no aversion to it or 
to most of its instruments. I have objected, both in the past and recently, to a few 
of its policies … but in general my chief difference of opinion is that it wishes to 
remain unknown, and I believe its role in history is significant enough to be known." 
<BR>
<BR>
Who was Quigley? Not a "right winger" in the John Birch Society but a highly respected 
senior-level professor of political history at the Foreign Service School at 
Georgetown University. He specialized in macrohistory, or the study of large-scale, 
global developments and trends. In this one passage, he not only puts his finger on 
both conceptions of the New World Order as presented above, he positions himself as 
one of the insiders. While one may, if one is so inclined, discount the writers of 
self-published tracts with PO Box addresses in small towns hardly anyone has heard of 
before, Carroll Quigley is impossible to dismiss. He was, after all, one of Bill 
Clinton’s chief mentors, personal heroes, and the one person Clinton thanked by name 
in his first inaugural address. Quigley had had Clinton as an undergraduate years 
before at Georgetown. As a youth Clinton already had his eyes set on the Presidency. 
Seeing that even as a teenager, Clinton was one of those people who was fascinated by 
power and would compromise any principle to obtain it, Quigley saw him as having the 
"right stuff." It was Quigley’s powerful connections that obtained for Clinton the 
Rhodes Scholarship. <BR>
<BR>
The publishing history of Tragedy and Hope is worth considering, in light of what we 
have seen so far. There is circumstantial evidence that efforts were made to suppress 
the book. When it appeared, published by Macmillan, it became the academic equivalent 
of a bestseller. And then, mysteriously, available copies suddenly disappeared. It 
became almost unobtainable. Inquirers were told that the book had gone out of print, 
which was very unusual since there were thousands of backorders. (First editions are 
now collector’s items fetching hundreds of dollars.) Representatives of Macmillan 
seemed afraid to talk about the book. Quigley himself struggled to get Macmillan to 
issue a second edition, as pirated copies were beginning to circulate. It received a 
legitimate reprint, of course, but by a far smaller publisher with far less prestige, 
and the book was very hard to find for years (today, with the advent of online 
companies such as Amazon.com, the book is easier to obtain). Near the end of his life, 
a despondent Quigley observed that Tragedy and Hope "has brought me many headaches as 
it apparently says something that powerful people don’t want known."<BR>
<BR>
New York City, 2000: The United Nations Millennium Summit, Sept 6-9.<BR>
It has remained easy, despite Quigley’s impressive credentials, to dismiss the thought 
of a relative handful of behind-the-scenes operatives controlling the direction of 
history as the product of kooks. Journalists and pundits routinely and contemptuously 
dismiss "conspiracy theories" almost by reflex. However, some of the major players in 
the "conspiracy" do little to hide their aims. Maurice Strong, co-chairman of a United 
Nations affiliated organization called the UN Commission on Global Governance, said, 
"It is simply not feasible for sovereignty to be exercised unilaterally by individual 
nation-states, however powerful." Shridath Ramphal, another co-chairman of the same 
organization, added, "The bedrock of every country’s international relations must be 
the mission of using the United Nations system as the machinery for working and acting 
together." Strobe Talbott, US Deputy Secretary of State in the Clinton Regime, was 
considerably more blunt: "Nationhood as we know it will be obsolete, all states will 
recognize a single, global authority… National sovereignty wasn’t such a great idea 
after all." None of these people want to end the nation-state in favor of freely 
acting and trading individuals; individualism is an anathema to this mindset. They are 
talking openly of global government, doing everything except calling it that. <BR>
<BR>
So as already noted, we no longer need to approach the topic in conspiratorial terms. 
The evidence is available on the World Wide Web where anyone with a computer and a 
modem can read it. The United Nations website currently contains a gold mine of 
information about the push for global government. To be sure, none of the writers call 
it that; the closest they come is global governance, which its defenders claim is not 
the same thing. Moreover, what is presented is presented in language that is very 
attractive by today’s standards. It makes full use of all the politically correct 
buzzwords about democracy, sustainability, inclusion and diversity. This website makes 
liberal use of the We The Peoples Millennium Forum Declaration and Agenda for Action 
which was adopted last May. This past week, the Millennium Summit convened in New York 
City and has been called the largest assemblage of heads of state under one roof in 
all of human history. <BR>
<BR>
What is this Summit all about? Where does the New World Order vision stand today? From 
above document and others on the website we can glean that the following are on the 
agenda:<BR>
<BR>
A global "peacekeeping force," publicly endorsed Wednesday by Bill Clinton. He told 
the gathered dignitaries that the UN needs "a rapid deployment force of well-trained 
and well-equipped solders capable of projecting ‘credible force’ into trouble spots." 
Along these lines, a Republican, Constance Morella (R-MD), has introduced a bill 
calling for a United Nations Rapid Deployment Force, which would turn 6,000 American 
soldiers over to the UN, which would mean that Americans would be taking orders from 
non-Americans. Seven other countries have already signed aboard with similar pledges. 
The UN is ready to create its own "standing army" of the sort the U.S. Constitution 
forbids. <BR>
An International Criminal Court – ostensibly to hold national governments accountable 
for human rights abuses; an international treaty "would provide for compulsory 
referral of unresolved disputes to [an] International Court of Justice." U.S. citizens 
could, in principle, be tried before tribunals of non-Americans. <BR>
A global system of taxation: [the Forum urges the United Nations] "to introduce 
binding codes of conduct for transnational companies, and effective tax regulation on 
the international financial markets, investing this money in programmes for poverty 
eradication." <BR>
Global coerced redistribution of wealth and income, combined with global affirmative 
action: [Governments should] "focus their efforts and policies on addressing the root 
causes of poverty and providing for the basic needs of all, giving special priority to 
the needs and rights of disadvantaged and underrepresented." <BR>
A global approach to AIDS, already the most politicized disease in human history: 
[Governments should] "address the incidence, impact and continuing human costs of 
HIV/AIDS. To increase spending for health research and to ensure that the fruits of 
this research reach the people." <BR>
The international equivalent of the Americans With Disabilities Act: [Governments 
should] "recognize the special potential of people with disabilities and ensure their 
full participation and equal role in political, economic, social and cultural fields. 
To further recognize and meet their special needs, introduce inclusive policies and 
programmes for their empowerment, and ensure that they take a leading role in poverty 
eradication." <BR>
International radical-feminization: the UN is called upon "to ensure that gender 
mainstreaming effectively brings women into leadership positions throughout the system 
and a gender perspective into all its programmes and policies; to provide gender 
training; … [governments are called upon] "to allocate more recourses and create an 
enabling environment for implementation of their commitments to women’s and girl’s 
human rights, including promotion of women into decision-making positions… " This is 
one of many such remarks, calling for the "gender perspective" invented by the radical 
feminists of American colleges and universities. <BR>
International public education: "provide universal access to ‘education for all,’ 
prioritizing free basic education and skills training…. We call on governments…to 
reduce the technology gap, and to restructure educational policy to ensure that all 
children (girls and boys) receive moral, spiritual, peace and human rights education…. 
Special attention must be paid to the girl child…." <BR>
International equivalents of affirmative action and minimum wage laws: [Governments 
should] "move toward economic reforms aimed at equity: in particular, to construct 
macro economic policies that combine growth with the goal of human development and 
social justice; to prevent the impoverishment of groups that emerged from poverty but 
are still vulnerable to social risks and exclusion; to improve legislation on labor 
standards including the provision of a minimum legal wage…." <BR>
Complete absolution of past debts: [Governments should] "cancel the debts of 
developing countries, including odious debts, the repayment of which diverts funds 
from basic needs…." <BR>
Universal gun registration: the UN should "expand the UN Arms register in order to 
show production and sale of small arms and light weapons. It should include specific 
names of their producers and traders." Of course, those implementing this call for 
arms registration could define "small arms and light weapons" in any way they saw fit. 
<BR>
Strengthening UN power generally: "A major task of the world community in the 
twenty-first century will be to strengthen and greatly enhance the role of the United 
Nations in the global context. Governments must recommit themselves to the realization 
of the goals and mandates of the United Nations Charter. A challenging task is to 
firmly protect the integrity of the United Naitons, counter the erosion of its role 
and to further strengthen and augment international institutions capable of 
implementing and enforcing international standards, norms, and law, leading toward the 
formation of a new political and economic order. [Emphasis mine.] <BR>
Elimination of veto power: [the Forum urges the UN] "to limit and move toward 
eliminating the use of the veto. The UN must move towards veto restriction. First 
could be an enlargement of the area of "procedural votes" for which the Charter 
excludes the veto…. Complete veto abolition should be sought as a step towards the 
elimination of permanency." In others words, a major internal check on the power of 
the superelite is to be eliminated, by incremental steps. <BR>
<BR>
There is, of course, more – much, much more. This is just a sampling; it is 
impossible, in an article of this length, to do more than scratch the surface. 
However, what is here should suffice as evidence that we are looking at a potential 
power grab of unprecedented proportions. There are, we should note, a few table scraps 
tossed toward such notions as national sovereignty and self-determination. At one 
point the call is made for the UN "to respect national sovereignty and the prohibition 
of the use of force, which are fundamental in the UN Charter." But in the next breath, 
it is made clear that the use of force is not ruled out. And "The UN General Assembly 
should set up a broad commission to analyze standards for forceful action in cases 
where crimes against humanity, war crimes, or genocide are committed." As in Kosovo, 
where allegations of such crimes were absurdly exaggerated, international 
"peacekeeping" troops moved in, and the result was the decimation and dislocation of 
entire populations which continues to this day?<BR>
<BR>
Clearly, whether we label the kind of system proposed by the Millennium Forum the New 
World Order or not, we are seeing here the recipe for social engineering on a global 
scale. And just as in individual nations, it could not be implemented without thought 
control on an equally massive scale – which would explain the preoccupation with 
education permeating all the web pages; see (7) above again. Or, as one Charles 
Mercieca, PhD, writes, representing the International Association of Educators for 
World Peace, "We may begin to realize the great challenge our schools face in trying 
to create a new generation that will be influenced merely by high moral standards 
based on the universal welfare of all people without exception. We need to create a 
generation which acts on principles of high moral order, a new generation which views 
money and wealth as occupying the bottom of all major world priorities, a new 
generation which views happiness, serenity and peace as spiritual elements which are 
the key to true and genuine success in life." Perhaps Dr. Mercieca can tell us how 
this "true and genuine success in life" can be had without free producers whose 
preoccupations are likely to be "money and wealth" and whose actions alone can create 
jobs and advance the quality of economic life worldwide. <BR>
<BR>
The socialist overtones of the entire Millennium Forum and its attending documents are 
unmistakable. The much-touted UN Charter for Global Democracy is in fact a call for 
global socialism. This holds true whether the speakers talk about Third World poverty 
and the need to redistribute wealth without any attention to the means by which wealth 
is produced, or whether they appeal to "sustainability" and proceed to the need for 
political and bureaucratic controls on business in the name of radical 
environmentalism. In the final analysis, the Forum vision would concentrate the 
capacity to use force in a network of highly centralized global-governmental 
organizations. It should be clear that "national sovereignty" and the 
"self-determination" rights of indigenous peoples and societies would be respected if 
they conformed to the internationalist vision, and receive short shrift if they did 
not. The calls for "a sustainable environment" which permeate the various documents on 
the UN website would in fact strangle the very independent economic developments which 
alone could lift peoples out of poverty, given sufficient time and effort. <BR>
<BR>
Finally, there is the question of who would foot the bill for all these ventures, 
e.g., free education for all, universal health care, etc. That should be clear. It 
would be U.S. taxpayers, through the new system of global taxation. Protest, and the 
International Criminal Court will come after you. I suspect that this outfit, if it 
was actually put in place, would make the IRS look like choirboys by comparison. <BR>
<BR>
Opposing the New World Order.<BR>
Can an agenda this vast, backed up by the quantity of resources available to the 
superelite, be effectively countered? It would not be surprising if some simply 
despaired of putting a stop to the process of centralization of power in the hands of 
these very few. <BR>
<BR>
The beginnings of an answer may be found in the writings of the eighteenth century 
Scottish philosopher David Hume, if we are willing and able to take them to heart. 
Hume observed that in the final analysis, political authorities derive their 
legitimacy from those they have authority over: no group of tyrants, no matter how 
great their resources, can maintain themselves in power by sheer political might 
indefinitely. We, the people (not the "peoples"), after all, vastly, vastly outnumber 
the superelite who – as the New York City summit has proven – can fit into a large 
auditorium. Those in power remain in power by maintaining credibility, and also by 
keeping everyone else as ignorant as possible about what they are up to. Once they 
lose both, their fall is assured. <BR>
<BR>
One of the chief reasons the Soviet Empire collapsed was that its leaders lost 
credibility in the face of the obvious fact that, given the opportunity, peoples would 
undertake a mass exodus out from under Communist domination. This had happened in 
Eastern Europe, culminating in the dramatic fall of the Berlin Wall in late 1989. It 
could very well happen in the United States, as evidenced by the steadily awakening 
interest in the idea of secession and the appearance of secession movements all over 
the country, including in state legislatures. These are animated by the idea that the 
Washington government has gotten too big, too expensive, too unresponsive, and 
suffering from collective amnesia regarding its founding principles. <BR>
<BR>
Given the failures of the Washington empire, motivated by welfare-state ideology, why 
would anyone regard as credible any effort to expand this ideology to create a global 
empire? It is clear that the UN superelite is trying. <BR>
<BR>
The latter realization has motivated Ron Paul (R-TX), one of the few freedom-believing 
Congressmen, to introduce, or reintroduce, the (HR 1146). This Act, in its second 
incarnation (the first was in 1997), after languishing in committee, has garnered 
attention this past week for obvious reasons. It has become the basis for over 300,000 
signed petitions collected by the American Policy Center, whose president, Tom 
DeWeese, organized the effort. These petitions call for the U.S. to pull out of the 
UN. Paul’s bill would give a pullout the sanction of law by repealing the United 
Nations Participation Act of 1945; moreover, by also repealing the United Nations 
Headquarters Agreement Act, it effectively orders the UN off American soil. Moreover, 
it disallows the appropriation of funds collected in the US for any UN purposes, and 
repeals Acts instituting U.S. involvement in the United Nations Educational, 
Scientific, and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) and US participation in the United 
Nations Environmental Program. Meanwhile, there were protesters in New York City this 
past week. Americans may not be satisfied with the Washington government, but they 
would be even more horrified if they woke up one day and found themselves ruled by an 
international body, even more remote from their interests and concerns.<BR>
<BR>
For all the actual diversity that exists on planet Earth, peoples seem to have one 
thing in common: they resent intrusions into their way of life at the hands of 
outsiders. Most peoples will countenance at least being ruled by their own, even if 
the rule is less than perfect. I predict that the particular vision of a New World 
Order animating the Millennium Forum will not to pass without the very bloodshed the 
150-plus dignitaries say they want to avoid. After all, around the world the leading 
tendency is toward decentralization and secession (Tibet from China, Chechnya from 
Russia, Azerbaijan from Armenia, the Kurds from Iraq, Quebec from Canada: the list 
goes on and on). It goes without saying that there are people right here on U.S. soil 
who are ready to take up arms to protect their natural right to live as they see fit 
if they are not coercing anyone else, and to protect their regional identities and 
values from the hypothetical multiculturalist empire being advocated by the very 
powerful. (Come to think of it, small wonder that the elites and superelites all favor 
"gun control"!)<BR>
<BR>
It is worth realizing that there are unlikely to be any sudden, earthshaking moves 
made to dissolve what little is left of individual freedom in the U.S., subjecting us 
all at once to a global tax, an international standing army, international courts, 
etc. The means by which America’s masses have been stripped of their freedoms to date 
have all been very gradual, often by stealth; there is enough in the above-cited 
documents to indicate that this will not change. Why should it? To date it has been an 
effective methodology of increasing control. It has already led to a level of state 
power over individuals that would have horrified the Framers. All we are likely to see 
is continued encroachments of a new layer of controls, a new bevy of bureaucrats to 
satisfy, new limitations on what we are able to do (and say) legally, and an 
increasingly UN-friendly educational system. Already, one can attend school board 
meetings or faculty meetings on the campuses of technical colleges and hear appeals 
that we should all be educating the young to become "global citizens."<BR>
<BR>
However, are we up to the task? We live in a unique period in history, because of the 
ready availability of information on the World Wide Web and over the Internet. Carroll 
Quigley’s Tragedy and Hope can be ordered online. The literature of liberty is readily 
available through a multitude of forums ranging from the Ludwig von Mises Institute to 
Laissez-Faire Books. Bona fide censorship today is very, very difficult. Moreover, it 
makes little sense to speak of "conspiracies" when what is being done, is being done 
right out in the open where everyone can see it. One is tempted again and again of the 
arrogance of power. The real question, then, is: do we have the will to make use of 
our own resources?<BR>
<BR>
Whether we are up to avoiding further centralization here in the US is still open to 
debate. The effects of decades of "public education" have taken their toll: Americans, 
by and large, are far more fascinated with Survivor, World Championship Wrestling and 
the fall football season than they are the affairs of state that determine the 
long-term destinies of nations. Our educational system now stresses vocational 
training, not the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution, even at so-called 
liberal arts colleges. Consequently, though the UN Summit has been given at least some 
publicity by major media and on the World Wide Web, most people have no idea what it 
is all about – or, in many cases, that the event is even happening. <BR>
<BR>
So for us this question is still up for grabs: New World Order, United Nations 
Millennium Summit style, or freedom? If we do not educate ourselves about the 
superelite is up to – or if we continue to dismiss whistleblowers as kooky "conspiracy 
theorists" – we will deserve the consequences.<BR>
<BR>
September 9, 2000<BR>
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