"Conspiracy Theorists" take note! (Insider Report).Calling all "conspiracy theorists"! Can you guess what paranoid, right-wing publication recently printed the following jaw-dropping disclosures: While the isolationists ... tempted millions with their siren's appeal to nativism nativism, in anthropology, social movement that proclaims the return to power of the natives of a colonized area and the resurgence of native culture, along with the decline of the colonizers. -- the internationalists were always hard at work in quiet places making plans for a more perfect global community. In the end the internationalists have always dominated national policy. Even so, they haven't bragged about their globe-building for fear of reawakening reawakening n → despertar m reawakening n → réveil m reawakening n → Wiedererwachen nt the other half of the American psyche, our berserker berserker (from Old Norse beserkr, “bearskin”) In premedieval and medieval Norse and Germanic history and folklore, any member of unruly warrior gangs that worshiped Odin and attached themselves to royal and noble courts as bodyguards and shock troops. nativism. And so they have always done it in the most out-of-the-way places and with little ado. In December 1917 the Inquiry, a group of eager reformers who included a young Walter Lippmann, secretly met in New York to draw up Wilson's Fourteen Points (which proposed the formation of the League of Nations, among other things). In 1941, FDR concocted the Atlantic Charter in the mists off Newfoundland. The dense woods of New Hampshire gave birth to the Bretton Woods institutions -- the IMF IMF See: International Monetary Fund IMF See International Monetary Fund (IMF). and World Bank -- in 1944. And a year later the United Nations came to life at the secluded Georgetown estate of Dumbarton Oa ks.... So what emerged took us more or less by surprise. We had built a global order without quite realizing it, bit by bit, era by era.... Not the sort of bald admission one expects in a "mainstream," Establishment-controlled news source, right? Wrong. The foregoing appeared in the special "Issues 2002" issue of Newsweek, in an article by Michael Hirsh entitled "The Death of a Founding Myth." Invoking the tiresome specter of "isolationism isolationism National policy of avoiding political or economic entanglements with other countries. Isolationism has been a recurrent theme in U.S. history. It was given expression in the Farewell Address of Pres. ," Hirsh warns that "we must now embrace the global community we ourselves built." Turns out, though, that the "we" Hirsh refers to in no way coincides with the general American populace. Instead, under a subheading sub·head·ing n. See subhead. subheading Noun the heading of a subdivision of a piece of writing Noun 1. "Secret Agreements," Hirsh glibly documents what we at THE NEW AMERICAN have been saying all along, that the drive toward global government has been meticulously, deliberately, and covertly orchestrated by an internationalist elite, which we unblushingly un·blush·ing adj. 1. Lacking or exhibiting a lack of shame or embarrassment. See Synonyms at shameless. 2. Not blushing. un·blush refer to as a "conspiracy." |
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