The New Conservative

The New Conservative

A globalist odyssey (Part II): Technocracy Realised

Niall McCrae & Roger Watson

 

In an office perched high amidst the gleaming skyscrapers of Manhattan, David Rockefeller and Zbigniew Brzezinski felt destiny in their hands. The successive head of the Rockefeller dynasty needs no introduction, but his companion is less known. Brzezinski, though, a Columbia professor of Polish background, was highly influential in Washington. He and Rockefeller would found and lead one of the most powerful globalist organisations, the Trilateral Commission. Unlike the philanthropic mission of Moral Re-Armament (as described in Part One), the Trilateral Commission aimed to establish a world order in which both population and resources would be fully controlled.

Big tech

In 1970 Brzezinski’s book Between the Ages: America’s Role in the Technetronic Era[1] envisaged the emergence of a society, ‘that is shaped culturally, psychologically, socially, and economically by the impact of technology and electronics’. He explained:

‘Such a society would be dominated by an elite whose claim to political power would rest on allegedly superior scientific know-how. Unhindered by the restraints of traditional liberal values, this elite would not hesitate to achieve its political ends by using the latest modern techniques for influencing public behavior and keeping society under close surveillance and control. Under such circumstances, the scientific and technological momentum of the country would not be reversed but would actually feed on the situation it exploits.’

Thus no crisis would be wasted in the shift of power from democratically elected leaders to a global master class. Indeed, Brzenzinski asserted that ‘national sovereignty is no longer a viable concept’. This treatise inspired Rockefeller, industrial magnate and head of Chase Manhattan Bank, who expressed his grand designs for peace and prosperity as a leading figure in the Bilderberg Group and chairman of the Council on Foreign Relations. Rockefeller saw political debate as an obstacle to rational authority. He abhorred the policies of Richard Nixon and the isolationism of the Republican Party (a reaction to the Vietnam War)[2].

By the 1970s it was apparent that multinational companies, particularly oil barons and bankers, held more power than most governments[3]. Empires had crumbled, and the likes of Great Britain, France and Italy were languishing in internal strife, with strikes, inflation, rising debt, trade deficit, and friction caused by the identity politics of race and gender. Politically and economically, the world was changing fast, and traditional certainties were threatened like never before. Liberals were ascendant, but perhaps they should have been careful in what they wished for. While the progressive agenda, as propagandised in the education system[4], promised a world of social freedom and multiculturalism, globalisation threatened the opposite of a democratic, liberal polity.

A brave new world

To explore the motives of Rockefeller and fellow travellers, we must step back to the 1930s, when the American people struggled in the Great Depression. While the communist experiment of the Soviet Union appealed to left-wing intellectuals and trade union activists, it had limited appeal to the common folk of Western nations, where Enlightenment values prevailed. Capitalist enterprise was the mother of invention, and lifestyles were much improved by modern labour-saving appliances. Developments such as radio, however, had collectivist potential, providing a ready means of communicating to the people at large. Advances in technology raised the possibility of harnessing science to create a more orderly society and efficient government.

In 1919 the Technical Alliance of North America was formed in New York, with a reputable multidisciplinary membership from science, education, architecture, mathematics and medicine. The group drew on the principles of scientific management of FW Taylor (initiator of the production line at Ford Motor Company). In 1932 its leader Howard Scott met and soon after joined M King Hubbert at Columbia University, New York. Under the new name of Technocracy Incorporated, Scott and Hubbert presented a blueprint for a North American Technate, a highly regulated society with control of energy based on constant monitoring of citizens. The main objectives were organisation of all industry into a few centrally-planned corporations, equal state income for all (now known as universal basic income), and replaced of political government by bureaucracy and scientific experts[5]. Technocracy Inc[6] boasted ‘we have that plan and it is viable’.

Bankrolled by the Rockefeller Foundtion, Technocracy Inc had a large membership in North America in the 1930s. Members distinguished themselves by their coats and suits of a particular shade of grey; they also bought cars in that colour, with orange hub caps. However, the heyday was brief, partly because the radical plan was a bridge too far for technology of the time, and also due to the overshadowing New Deal interventionism of Franklin D Roosevelt. Technocracy Inc was riven with opposing factions, some supporting the government, but others frustrated by its slow progress and missed opportunities. As war broke out in Europe, leading members urged Roosevelt to declare himself as dictator[7].

The deep state

Three decades later, David Rockefeller wanted the best brains on his pet project to solve global problems of the present and future, including relations between capitalist and communist countries and the impact of population growth in the developing world. Like Technocracy Inc, many of these minds were from Columbia University (also the seat of cultural Marxist Herbert Marcuse[8]). On 23 and 24 July 1972, seventeen chosen experts in finance, international relations and political science met at the Rockefeller estate in Pocantico Hills, upstate New York, to create the Trilateral Commission. At a final planning meeting in Tokyo in January 1973, chairmen were appointed for the three regions of trilateralism: Western Europe, Japan and North America, with Brzezinski as director[9]. Headquarters were sited in Manhattan.

In October 1973 the executive committee of the Trilateral Commission warned that while the threat of nuclear war had diminished, ‘new problems have emerged to heighten the vulnerability of the planet’, and that ‘humanity is faced with serious risks to the global environment’[10]. Following in the footsteps of Technocracy Inc, the Trilateral Commission espoused supranational control of resources and population. Energy would be the currency. Cash, private ownership, elections, free speech and protests would be abolished, enabling a coterie of experts to reign unhindered by individual rights or elections.

In a 1974 article in Foreign Affairs, a publication of the Council on Foreign Relations, by economist and Trilateral Commission member Richard Gardner[11] described the ‘hard road to world order’. The strategy would ensue not by sudden shock but by stealth: a frog would immediately jump out of hot water, but would not react to slowly boiling water until too late. A gradual globalist coup would thrive on episodes of disorder, exploiting a ‘booming, buzzing confusion’.

An important objective was control of the media. Heads of national television networks and prestigious newspapers such as the Washington Post and New York Times were invited to join the Trilateral Commission, on condition that proceedings remain private. This ethically dubious practice has corrupted the mainstream media: journalists know on which side their bread is buttered. Approaching the 1976 presidential election, the Trilateral Commission exerted its considerable media influence in its determination to get the right man in the White House.

Georgian guided

Jimmy Carter, an unremarkable politician hardly known outside Georgia, where he was senator from 1963 to 1967, was groomed for the presidency[12]. The peanut farmer unexpectedly became the Democrat presidential nominee, and with a lavishly funded campaign and speeches written by Brzezinski, he defeated incumbent Gerald Ford. After Carter’s inauguration in January 1977, the Democrat administration was dominated by Trilateral Commission members, including vice-president Walter Mondale, secretary of state Cyrus Vance and chairman of the Federal Reserve Paul Volcker, Brzezinski was Carter’s national security advisor. Reputedly, whenever Carter faced a foreign policy dilemma, he asked ‘has Brzezinski seen this?’ Since then, most occupants of the White House have been members (except Donald Trump).

Public awareness of this shadowy but highly influential organisation was minimal but for the investigative work of Anthony Sutton and Patrick M Wood, who produced the twin-volume Trilaterals over Washington (1979, 1981). However, the Trilateral Commission has successfully stayed out of the limelight. To most ordinary people, its role in American politics is an untold story; neither the organisation nor Brzezinski are mentioned in standard texts on modern US history, despite their seminal role.

Conspiracy theory?

Any concerns raised about the undue influence of international organisations with no democratic mandate were tactically ridiculed in the establishment media, who portrayed the Trilateral Commission as merely a think-tank. Popular books on conspiracy theories have featured several of these entities, from the Bilderberg Group to the enigmatic Illuminati, deriding the notion of a global cabal running a shadow world government[13]. A classic case of cooling off public interest when the heat was rising was the article ‘Beware the Trilateral Commission!’ in the Washington Post in 1992. With a ‘Reds under the bed’ theme, David Mills[14] wrote:

‘Depending on which conspiracy theory you subscribe to, this 19-year-old organization is anti-American, anti-democratic, anti-Christian or anti-worker, and is scheming ultimately to abolish the sovereignty of nations and establish one world government!’

Mills targeted libertarian Lyndon LaRouche, and evangelical Christian and Republican politician Pat Buchanan, whose followers were defined as mostly far-right (alongside some hard-leftists). Continuing in his satirical flow, Mills exclaimed:

‘Now the truth can be told about the 325 people on the Trilateral Commission, and the many previous members.

They do run the world!

The thing is, it has nothing to do with the Trilateral Commission. The TC is like a club for people who run the world anyway’.

The Trilateral Commission, Mills assured, ‘seeks only to promote international cooperation, for the betterment of everybody – nothing sinister’. Time magazine editor Strobe Talbott, a member for six years, told Mills that there was nothing of interest in the most powerful people in the world meeting in private:

‘These are people who don’t have to go halfway around the world for a good meal or a good bottle of wine. They come for something else, and that’s the content of the discussion.’

Scoffing at the notion of secrecy, Mills disingenuously stated that the Trilateral Commission’s annual reports were publicly available. In fact, the meetings were held behind closed doors, with no minutes available to outsiders. The writer also failed to declare a conflict of interest: the Washington Post was gravitationally pulled by the Trilateral Commission’s orbit.

Pat Buchanan’s trenchant criticism of a ‘new world order’ struck a chord with millions of American people. He stood unsuccessfully as Republican candidate for the 1996 presidential election, later joining Ross Perot’s Reform Party. Buchanan’s invective was ridiculed by Democrat-leaning media, as exemplified by Charles Krauthammer[15]:

‘When I was a psychiatrist, I had patients with similar fantasies. Some even thought they were president. Not one, however, actually stood for office.’

British influence

In the UK, the Trilateral Commission worked behind the scenes on foreign policy, hastening the transition of Rhodesia to independent Zimbabwe under Robert Mugabe. Prime minister Jim Callaghan was a member, as became his foreign secretary David Owen, and so too was his counterpart in Margaret Thatcher’s government, Lord Carrington[16]. Several Tory ministers have contributed to the Trilateral Commission’s pursuit of an’ international rules-based order’. Of particular interest is Sir Keir Starmer, a Trilateral Commission member for many years, who became Labour Party leader after only one term as a member of parliament. Since legacy leftist Jeremy Corbyn was ousted, Starmer has resumed the centrist progressive policies of arch-globalist Tony Blair.

Crisis mode

The Trilateral Commission has had considerable influence on the United Nations by pushing the doctrine of sustainable development, which really means global control of food, fuel and other resources. However, while members continue to occupy positions in the Washington ‘deep state’, the Trilateral Commission has been overshadowed by the World Economic Forum. Led by Klaus Schwab, a German financier of Rothschild lineage, the World Economic Forum is less shy of publicity, holding superlative annual conferences at Davos in Switzerland[17].

Like the Trilateral Commission, the World Economic Forum is tightly engaged with the United Nations, promoting Agenda 21 and calling for urgent action against anthropogenic climate change. The World Health Organisation, a previously unremarkable UN agency, suddenly become powerful in response to the Covid-19 pandemic, directing national governments in imposing an unprecedented ‘lockdown’ regime and mass vaccination with digital certification. Draconian restrictions on livelihood and liberty were fully supported by opposition parties; indeed, Keir Starmer regularly urged stricter measures, despite these disproportionately affecting the socio-economically disadvantaged constituency that Labour was founded to represent.

Exploiting the emergency, the World Economic Forum has called for a ‘great reset’, as described by Schwab and Thierry Malleret in a book of that title[18]. The abrupt ‘new normal’ envisaged by the globalists consolidates gains for the ‘fourth industrial revolution’, a concept promoted for many years by Schwab with striking similarities to the tentative plans of Technocracy Inc almost a hundred years ago. Indeed, technocracy, the replacement of elected government by social engineering, is being realised by stealth. Artificial intelligence, a cashless society and digital passports for everyday activities have been introduced with little resistance, as people are duped into accepting encroachments on privacy and freedom for convenience and safety.

A command-and-control system, technocracy is easily confused with either communism or mega-capitalism. But it has no interest in political ideology or a free market. China, under its notionally communist regime, is at an advanced stage of technocracy. Klaus Schwab speaks positively of China despite the obvious human rights abuses of its social credit system[19]. In the West, the UN network of Smart Cities will redesign urban life, restricting our freedom to gather socially, to speak freely or to protest, while obliterating privacy. Implanted microchips are already used in Sweden. Development of a central digital currency, proposed ‘online safety’ laws and the permanence of some covid-19 regulations demonstrate further progress.

At best, the global technocrats are the town planners of the mid-twentieth century, on a grander scale. Concrete housing estates were meant to shape a new society, in defiance of individualist traditions (‘an Englishman’s home is his castle’ and ‘good fences make good neighbours’), but these schemes failed miserably. There is nothing inherently wrong with collectivisation, but the social engineering: of technocrats eschews the time-honoured identities of faith, flag and family. At worst, they are forging an almighty superstate that brings to life Brave New World, which was how Aldous Huxley’s imagined technocracy[20]. In the 1940s, with the internet a distant dream, Orwell’s Nineteen Eighty-Four presciently described a society controlled by video surveillance[21], while The Abolition of Man by CS Lewis[22] warned:

‘What we call Man’s power over Nature turns out to be a power exercised by some men over other men with Nature as their instrument.’

Whatever the origins of the outbreak (some suspect it was planned), Covid-19 has certainly been exploited by globalists. Back in 2017, Klaus Schwab boasted of how the World Economic Forum was infiltrating governments around the world with its leadership programme[23]. He specifically mentioned Canadian prime minster Justin Trudeau, adding that ‘we penetrate the cabinet’; indeed, ‘more than half of his cabinet are actually Young Global Leaders.’

Indeed, Trudeau imposed one of the strictest covid-19 regimes in the world, and when a truckers’ protest against vaccine mandates camped outside the parliament in Ottawa, he invoked a state of emergency. His deputy Chrystia Freeland (whose grandfather was a prominent Nazi[24]), declared the freezing of protestors’ bank accounts without trial[25]. After riot police and army were deployed to brutally quash the peaceful protest, member of parliament Colin Carrie asked whether the World Economic Forum had too much influence on Canada, the speaker of the House of Commons said that he couldn’t hear the question, before a minister stood up and accused the questioner of peddling conspiracy theory[26]. Both of these appointees are members of the World Economic Forum, for whom there is apparently a conspiracy of silence.

Conclusion

From a current perspective, the ‘jaw, jaw not war, war’ approach of Moral Re-Armament seems quaint. Action speaks louder than words, and globalists have exploited the mantra of ‘following the science’, a catchphrase of the covid-19 regime. Science tells us what can be done, not what should be done; the latter is the domain of ethics, a concern sadly lacking in technocrats. ’Lockstep’, as described by a Rockefeller Foundation[27] document in 2010, enables a steady progression to global control, with every advance secured against backsliding. It was defined as ‘a world of tighter top-down government control and more autrhoritarian leadership, with limited innovation and growing citizen pushback’.

At the age of 87, David Rockefeller wrote in his memoirs about the idea that he was ‘part of a secret cabal working against the best interests of the United States, characterising my family and me as internationalists and of conspiring with others around the world to build a more integrated global political and economic structure – One World – if you will’. Instead of rebuttal, Rockefeller exclaimed[28]: –

‘If that’s the charge, I stand guilty, and I am proud of it’.

There has been much smearing of conspiracy theorists. But as we have witnessed with Covid-19, with all governments following the same radical plan, to believe that leaders are acting independently is to waddle in coincidence theory. The existence of the globalist organisations we have described is a matter of fact. As for their plans for now and the future, they are hiding in plain view.

[1] Brzezinski Z (1970): Between the Ages: America’s Role in the Technetronic Era. Viking.

[2] Rockefeller D (2002): Memoirs. New York: Random House.

[3] Tugendhat C (1973): The Multinationals. Harmondsworth: Penguin.

[4] Oulds R, McCrae N (2020): Moralitis: a Cultural Virus. London: Bruges Group.

[5] Wood PM (2014): Technocracy Rising: the Trojan Horse of Global Transformation. Coherent.

[6] Technocracy Inc website (accessed 19 February 2022). www.technocracyinc.org

[7] Wood PM (24 November 2020): interview with James Delingpole. Delingpod.

[8] Kurten D, McCrae N (14 May 2019): Mao’s long march through today’s Tory ranks. Salisbury Review.

[9] Sutton AC, Wood PM (1979, 1980): Trilaterals Over Washington (volumes 1 and 2). August Corporation.

[10] Sutton AC, Wood PM: Trilaterals Over Washington.

[11] Gardner RN (April 1974): The hard road to world order. Foreign Affairs.

[12] Wood PM (2014): Technocracy Rising.

[13] Thomas A (2019): The Facts. The Theories. The Evidence. Watkins.

[14] Mills D (25 April 1992): Beware the Trilateral Commission. Washington Post.

[15] Krauthammer C (2 March 1996): Buchanan’s New World Order delusions. Tampa Bay Times.

[16] Icke D (2004): And the Truth Shall Set You Free (21st Century Edition). Ryde: David Icke Books.

[17] World Economic Forum: website. www.weforum.org (access ed 20 February 2022).

[18] Schwab K, Malleret T (2020): COVID-19: the Great Reset. Agentur Schweiz.

[19] Davis I (22 February 2022): Technocracy: the operating system for the new international rules-based order. Unlimited Hangout.

[20] Huxley A (1932 / 2016): Brave New World. London: Penguin Random House.

[21] Orwell G (1949 / 1990): Nineteen Eighty-Four. Harmondsworth: Pengguin.

[22] Lewis CS (2010): The Abolition of Man.

[23] Corcoran T (18 February 2022): In Canada, follow the money + the ideas. Financial Post.

[24] Hoft J (15 February 2022): Canada’s deputy prime minister Chrystia Freeland’s grandfather was a Nazi and she admires George Soros. It’s no surprise she’s labelling freedom-loving Canadians terrorists. Gateway Pundit.

[25] Zhu YY (18 February 2022): How the Charter of Rights let Canada down. Unherd..

[26] Covid World (20 February 2022): Canadian MP accused of spreading ‘disinformation’ for pointing out WEF’s influence over Trudeau’s government.

[27] Rockefeller Foundation and Global Business Network  (2010): Scenarios for the Future of Technology and International Development.

[28] Rockefeller D (2002): Memoirs.

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2 thoughts on “A globalist odyssey (Part II): Technocracy Realised”

  1. For many decades prior to the re-emergence in the West in the 1970s of technocratic elitism, elitism itself was firmly attached to the Judaic struggle for the End Times. But few except nationalists were brave enough to go to the root of the problem and name it. Elitism’s methodological turn away, so to speak, from pure banking and the ownership of debt to the ownership of hard assets, and away from Olam Ha-ba to the Fourth Industrial Revolution, has enabled discussion across the rest of the political spectrum. But it would have been nice if even a fraction of those right and left libertarians and conservatives who attack today’s drive for The Globality had stood up and explained the nature of the beast before.

    The dynastic bankers are still there, of course; but their role is as investors, behind the asset management giants. They are forced by the new dispensation into the mould of individual elitists, while their kinfolk have had the vax harder than anybody. Richard Herrnstein, with Charles Murray the author of The Bell Curve, saw this detachment of the Jewish elites coming back in the early 1990s, and labelled it cognitive elitism. Notwithstanding that, a large part of the dynastics’ old methodology survives, including the slow genocide by replacement of the European race, which is embedded in UN Agenda 21/30. It remains that genocide which it is Europeans’ duty to fight, before all the rest of the trespasses against liberty, democracy, and the life we all thought we in the West possessed as of right.

    Nothing of liberalism can fight this pestilence; for liberalism underscores it; and conservatism, which is only a part thereof, has no motive power. How many, then, of those inveighing today against technocracy will accept that nationalism … the politics of the life and interests of peoples of the land … is their real ethical home? For such it is.

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