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  1. #1
    Senior Member AirborneSapper7's Avatar
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    Erica Carle: WHO IS IN CHARGE OF THE "NEW WORLD ORDER?"



    WHO IS IN CHARGE OF THE "NEW WORLD ORDER?"
    PART 1



    Erica Carle
    September 5, 2010
    NewsWithViews.com

    Who is in charge of efforts to bring about a "New World Order?" It is not George Soros! No matter how much money and influence George has, he never could be the chief organizer. He is part of it, but much more is needed than a single individual with a plan and unlimited resources.

    What is needed is an organization that reaches into every country, has the sanction and cooperation of governments, has unlimited national and international contacts, and the respect and support of millions of ordinary citizens who do not really understand what they are doing or where the organization is leading them. I submit that the chief organizing body for the New World Order is the Chamber of Commerce.

    There are millions of Chamber of Commerce members in communities all over the world. They promote their own communities, welcome visitors, help promote local businesses, and sometimes perform community services. They also try to influence legislation.

    In the United States the many Chambers of Commerce were mostly separate organizations until 1912. Change began in December 1911 when President Taft suggested to Congress that an association of Chambers of Commerce would be of great value in supporting American interests. [1]

    Then in January 1912 Senator Knute Nelson of Minnesota spoke in the Senate saying:

    "I received this morning a telegram from a Chamber of Commerce in my state urging me to vote against the bill now before us. This afternoon I received a telegram from another business organization asking me to vote for it. What does business really think?"

    On March 1, 1912 President Taft issued a call for a conference of commercial and trade organizations and directed Charles Nagel, Secretary of Commerce and Labor to make arrangements. The conference was held April 22, 1912. Seven hundred representatives of 392 commercial and industrial organizations attended.

    At the conference Secretary Nagel said:

    "It has been suggested not only that you organize so as to have a common commercial opinion to submit to the Government, but that you get the sign of authority in the shape of a national charter which will enable every officer of the Government to say –'This is the recognized representative of the commerce and industry of the United States'."

    On June 4, 1912 a bill giving the Chamber of Commerce of the United States a federal charter was reported by the Judiciary Committee of the House with the recommendation that the bill be passed.

    The Chamber of Commerce of the United States did become the recognized representative of commerce and industry. Harry A. Wheeler of Chicago was elected the first President. Thereafter legislators and presidents dutifully listened to and complied with legislative recommendations of the Chamber of Commerce of the United States, a blanket organization the government itself helped to create.

    January 14, 1913 the National Chamber membership voted for a national budget system.

    June 10, 1921 Congress passed a law creating a national budget system.

    On August 25, 1913 President Wheeler and a Chamber committee urged before the Senate Banking and Currency Committee the establishment of a Federal Reserve System.

    On December 23, 1913 the Federal Reserve Act was passed.

    April 14, 1914 the Chamber by referendum vote recommended creation of Federal Trade Commission.

    September 26, 1914 Federal Trade Commission Act passed.

    November 15, 1915 Chamber recommends an International Court of Justice or Council of Conciliation.


    In 1916 Congress approved Federal Highway Policy conforming to Chamber declarations.

    January 17, 1917 – Chamber members, by referendum, urged federal legislation permitting cooperative agreements, under federal supervision, for conservation of natural resources.

    On April 4, 1917 President Wilson told Congress, "World must be made safe for democracy." April 6 war with Germany was declared.

    In 1917 the Chamber organized more than 400 War Service Committees, representing as many industries,

    functioning under War Service Executive Committee of Chamber and cooperating with Council of National Defense.

    In 1917 the Chamber voted for heavily increased taxes to lessen government borrowing and avoid inflation.

    Also in 1917 Chamber members voted for an excess-profits tax as a source of war revenue.

    On October 17, !919 an International trade conference paved the way for organization of an International Chamber of Commerce in Paris the following year.

    After 1920 hometown chambers of commerce had a new blanket organization, the International Chamber of Commerce, over a blanket organization, the Chamber of Commerce of the United States, over thousands of hometown chambers and chamber members.

    April 27-29, 1920 – "Suitable agricultural organizations" were invited to join the Chamber.

    In May 1922 the Chamber advocated adherence to Court of International Justice as a means of promoting peaceful settlement of international disputes. The Chamber made this recommendation earlier on November 15, 1915.

    February 9, 1923 - The Chamber declared itself against a federal department of education and against federal aid for common school education.

    In August 1923 the Chamber set up an agricultural bureau giving increasing attention to agricultural conditions.

    1924 – National Forestry Act passed in general agreement with Chamber recommendations.

    1925 - Chamber supports legislation to increase salaries of all federal judges. Legislation was enacted in 1926.

    May 8-11, 1928 – Chamber affirms faith in 3 separate divisions of government. "Any effort by the legislative branch to usurp or limit functions of the judiciary must result in disaster."

    January 10, 1930 – Membership supports Federal Reserve System

    Collaboration on legislation between the U. S. Chamber of Commerce and the U. S. Government was becoming habitual. It is assumed that the recommendations of the Chamber of Commerce of the United States trump the opinions of any hometown chambers or any individual members.


    Chamber of Commerce influence over legislation has increased as its membership has grown. Part two coming soon.
    [Read Erica Carle's books: Why Things Are The Way They Are. and "Give Us The Young"]

    Click here for part -----> 1, 2,

    Footnotes:
    1, Quotes and information on the C of C from 1911 to 1930 are from These Tremendous Years 1912-1937 by Neil M. Clark as researched by Amber Clark, and published in MILWAUKEE COUNTY NEWS April 10 & 24, 1975.
    © 2010 Erica Carle - All Rights Reserved

    Erica Carle is an independent researcher and writer. She has a B.S. degree from the University of Wisconsin. She has been involved in radio and television writing and production, and has also taught math and composition at the private school her children attended in Brookfield, Wisconsin. For ten years she wrote a weekly column, "Truth In Education" for WISCONSIN REPORT, and served as Education Editor for that publication.

    Website: EricaCarle.com

    E-mail: hist.detective@yahoo.com


    Erica Carle -- Who is in Charge of the "New World Order?"
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  2. #2
    Senior Member AirborneSapper7's Avatar
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    WHO IS IN CHARGE OF THE "NEW WORLD ORDER?"
    PART 2

    Erica Carle
    September 5, 2010
    NewsWithViews.com

    Chamber of Commerce - Change Agent Since 1912

    In the 1930s and 1940s the Chamber of Commerce blanket organizations went for planning in a big way. Control of supply and demand was seen as the answer to "problems" of unequal distribution. Unequal distribution was seen as the main cause of war. The quotes that follow are but a few examples of plans for change proposed by the U. S. and International Chambers of Commerce.

    "America thus far has trusted to rugged individualism, but now that rugged individualism is selling below par, America is beginning to think more realistically. Men like John Dewey, Charles A. Beard, and Stuart Chase are spreading the idea of planning. Mr. Swope of the General Electric Company has widely publicized his plan to organize the various industries in national units under government supervision. According to Mr. Swope's plan, industries employing over fifty men and failing to come into the plan within three years would be compelled to do so.

    "The United States Chamber of Commerce has conducted a national referendum on a programme and, as a result, the Board of Directors has voted in favour of a national voluntary economic council. The Chamber would modify the anti-trust laws so as to legalise combinations that could control supply in relation to normal demand. Government tribunals are called for, with power to control production in certain natural resources, such as coal, oil, lumber, and copper. The plan also includes private and voluntary unemployment insurance. The plan of the Chamber of Commerce is interesting, as showing the growing recognition of the need for planning. Excepting the Russian system, the 'New Deal' is the world's largest effort at planning."[1]

    In 1933 the U.S. Chamber of Commerce was a leading promoter toward restoring diplomatic relations with Russia:"In November of 1933 when Maxim Litvinov, at Roosevelt's invitation, arrived on the liner 'United States' for nine days of historic conferences, Watson (NOTE: Thomas J. Watson of IBM) welcomed the event . . .

    "After an exchange of eleven letters and one memorandum between representatives of the U.S. and Soviet governments, signifying the restoration of diplomatic relations, Watson spoke at a farewell dinner for Litvinov at the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel in New York. On hand with the diplomats for the festivities were executives of the House of Morgan, the Chase National Bank, the Pennsylvania Railroad, and other converted titans of finance and industry. Acknowledging the fact that something less than national unanimity greeted the re-entry of Russia into America's sphere of non-Communist influence, Watson urged every American to 'refrain from making any criticism of the present form of government adopted by Russia.

    "Many leading businessmen winced, and some of the more viscerally reactive editorial writers howled, but as President of the American Chamber of Commerce, Watson was listened to."[2]

    The following was included in the resolution adopted by the ninth congress of the International Chamber of Commerce. "In all countries, the rapid progress of science and invention, and modern methods of production and transport would permit of the standard of living being greatly improved, provided the world would cooperate in rational distribution.

    "For such cooperation to be effective, it is necessary that each country, while taking the responsibility of developing its own economy, should be ready and willing to contribute its share, out of its own national resources and productive capacity, to the aggregate of goods and services which constitute the real income of the world. This contribution of each to the welfare of all can only be fully effective if the world is brought into the position in which the international exchange of goods and services as well as migration can take place under favorable conditions."[3]

    Economic development as promoted by the International Chamber of Commerce in 1939 meant redistribution of the wealth of the world:

    "The Chamber advocates procedure and policies which will render unnecessary the movements of armies across frontiers and which will substitute therefore the increasing movement of goods, services and capital. Believing that the door to peace is still open, its objective is to help people everywhere to convert their longings for peace, security and prosperity into a practical program of economic adjustment and human understanding.

    "Thus declaring its aims, the International Chamber recommends:

    "That the governments of France, Germany, Italy, Japan, the United Kingdom, and the United States of America, each collaborate, insofar as this is not the case already, with their own leading business men in a thorough study of the economic and fiscal condition of their individual countries with respect to their national needs and their possible contribution to the world's economic development."That when these countries shall have completed their surveys, their economic experts meet for the purpose of formulating a plan of adjustment which will give all countries of the world a fair opportunity to share in the resources of the world.

    "For the accomplishment of this purpose, the facilities of the International Chamber of Commerce are available if desired."[4]

    The Chamber of Commerce kept an office in Stockholm throughout WWII as a center of postwar economic planning. On Nov. 10, 1939 plans for its Committee on International Economic Recovery were drafted at the first wartime meeting of the Chamber's governing council that was held in Amsterdam. Forty delegates attended from twenty-one countries, including nations at war with each other. One participant commented:


    "To see Englishmen, Frenchmen and Germans sitting around the same table at this moment was a bit uncanny, but somehow it struck me as indicative of the Chamber's fundamental strength."
    [5]

    "The Committee for Economic Reconstruction was organized by the International Chamber of Commerce and is sponsored by the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace . . . Our Committee is making studies by which we hope to develop plans for distribution of the resources of the world on a basis that will be fair to all countries. "[6]

    For further information on Chamber of Commerce1 - The Chamber of Commerce Its Power and Goals by Erica Carle
    2 - The Chamber of Commerce Blanket Over the World by Erica Carle
    [Read Erica Carle's books: Why Things Are The Way They Are. and "Give Us The Young"]

    Click here for part -----> 1, 2,

    Footnotes:1. "Introduction To A Planned Society" Speech by Dean Curtis W. Reese, Th.G., Ph.B., D.D. at the World Fellowship of Faiths which was held in Chicago in 1933 in conjunction with the Century of Progress World's Fair. World Fellowship, Edited by Charles Frederick Weller, Liveright Publishing, P. 97.
    2. Think, by William Rogers, Stein & Day, 1969. P109.
    3. THINK, August, 1937
    4. Thomas J. Watson, speaking as President of the International Chamber of Commerce in a world-wide radio address from the Chamber's Tenth Biennial Congress at Copenhagen, Denmark on June 28, 1939. THINK, July, 1939
    5. Merchants of Peace, George L. Ridgeway, P. 138.
    6. Thomas J. Watson, President of IBM and Hon. President of the International Chamber of Commerce on May 27, 1940 at the Golden Gate International Exposition.

    © 2010 Erica Carle - All Rights Reserved
    Erica Carle is an independent researcher and writer. She has a B.S. degree from the University of Wisconsin. She has been involved in radio and television writing and production, and has also taught math and composition at the private school her children attended in Brookfield, Wisconsin. For ten years she wrote a weekly column, "Truth In Education" for WISCONSIN REPORT, and served as Education Editor for that publication.


    Website: EricaCarle.com


    E-mail: hist.detective@yahoo.com


    Erica Carle -- Who is in Charge of the "New World Order?," Part 2






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