The Weekly Sam: Conspiratology and Paranoia by Sam Blumenfeld

The other day a friend of mine called to ask if I’d read Wayne Johnson’s October 13
column in WND about my taking Rush Limbaugh to task for being so harsh on us
conspiratologists.  Somehow I had missed it, and so I dug it out of the Archives and read
it.

Indeed, it’s a very interesting article, but I fear that Johnson missed the whole point of
why people like me and my friend even bother to research the conspiracy.
We do it for one very simple reason. The more you know about what goes on behind the
scenes, the better you are able to understand what goes on in front of the scene. For
example, when Bill Clinton paid homage to Prof. Carroll Quigley in his acceptance
speech at the Democratic National Convention in 1992, the few of us in America who
knew the significance of that reference, knew exactly who Clinton was going to serve as
President. For, Quigley was not only Clinton’s professor at Georgetown University, but
also the author of “Tragedy and Hope,” the book that exposed in great detail the Rhodes
conspiracy for world government.

(A link to an interview of Carroll Quigley:  https://youtu.be/OV0zavSKHR4?si=xBks4ELdmrvjGodK

Also, the fact that Clinton was a Rhodes Scholar was significant, just as significant as the
fact that Bill Bradley is also a Rhodes Scholar. The other night, when Bradley was asked
who he personally admired most among world leaders, his answer was President Carter,
Woodrow Wilson, and Gorbachev. Wilson gave us the Federal Reserve System, the
income tax, and entry into World War 1. Carter gave us inflation and social malaise.
And Gorbachev is a lifelong Communist.

It was Cecil Rhodes who founded a secret society about a hundred years ago that would
work toward the creation of a world government, and he created the Rhodes Scholarships
to recruit future young leaders into that society. Rhodes said that for a secret society of
that kind to succeed, it must gain control of the wealth of the world. Setting up a central
bank in America was an essential part of the plan, plus the creation of huge tax-exempt
foundations that could further the goals of the globalists.
By now there are several thousand Rhodes Scholars in positions of influence and power
subverting our national sovereignty. Of course, you don’t have to be a Rhodes Scholar to
believe in world government. The idea is now so prevalent among the academic elite that
it’s now downright respectable, if not mainstream, to believe that our constitution is
obsolete. Most Americans would probably like to get rid of the Second Amendment if
they could. No other unalienable right–the right to bear anns–has been under such
heavy and relentless assault from the mass media, which is controlled by the CFR
establishment.

Am I beginning to sound paranoid? There are probably even a few renegade Rhodes
Scholars who do not favor world government. But at least those of us who know why the
Rhodes Scholarships were created can look at all of those Rhodies in our government and
ask why there are so many of them making policy for the American people – such as
going to war against Yugoslavia and making strategic partnerships with all the countries
surrounding Russia.

Knowledge does not make one paranoid. Lack of knowledge does. Any Jew in Germany
who read Mein Kampf in 1932 would have known that Germany was going to be a very
dangerous place to be if Hitler came to power. He would not have been paranoid if he
acted on that knowledge. Were Russian anti-communists paranoid in 1916? Was David
Koresh paranoid about the U.S. government coming after him with guns and tanks?
Wayne Johnson wrote: “The issue is not so much whether history is being subverted to
serve evil, but rather whether such subversion can ultimately be successful.” My view is
that evil can indeed be defeated, but at what price in human suffering? The Russians
finally got rid of communism after 75 years of totalitarian rule and the slaughter of
millions. Nazism was finally defeated after bringing ruin to Europe and destroying
millions of lives.

Would it not have been better had Hitler been stopped in 1933 rather than in 1945? And
wouldn’t it have been better had the plans of Lenin been thwarted in 1916 than in 1989?
If knowledge of what the conspirators are planning can be exposed to millions of people,
we may yet be able to save this country by electing people to office who understand what
is at stake. Studying the conspiracy does not make one paranoid. But it does tend to make one
cynical about politics, government, bureaucracy, and the establishment. Johnson says he
once subscribed to Foreign Affairs, the journal of the Council on Foreign Relations, and
was bored by it. Well, in order to know what is going on in our education establishment,
I have to read journals of education, and there is no more boring body of writing in the
world than journals of education, mainly because they are so full of nonsense in
convoluted language meant to fill space in order to justify the payment of a salary.

Colleges of education produce thousands of doctors of education who must find
employment somewhere in the mammoth education establishment. And so journals and
educational research projects proliferate just to keep all of these people busy.
Meanwhile, the education system is deliberately dumbing down the American people so
that they can be easily led into the new world order with little or no resistance.
Parents who understand what the conspiracy wants to do to their children are in a better
position to protect them than those parents who willingly put their children in the hands
of the enemy to be lobotomized. That’s why it’s important to know who is doing what to
whom and for what reason.

Most people, sadly to say, do not have the stomach to do this kind of research. But like
any hobby or pursuit, it can become quite challenging. There is also a kind of satisfaction
one gets in gaining knowledge that is withheld from the public at large. It’s nice to be
able to look at a fool like Strobe Talbott, Rhodes Scholar and assistant to Mad Madeleine
Halfbright, and know that he’s not fooling this writer. He may have the backing of the
Council on Foreign Relations, the President, and several multi-billion dollar foundations,
but he has the mind of a programmed robot.

Meanwhile, the conspiracy has highjacked our military services to do the dirty work for
NATO, the military arm of the Council on Foreign Relations. Kosovo was merely a
rehearsal for what is to come. I said as much in the columns I wrote during the war
against Yugoslavia. I wrote that the real target is Russia, and that NATO was preparing
for this conflict by forming strategic partnerships with all of the countries surrounding
Russia. In fact, dissident Alexandre Zinoviev, who recently returned to Russia, said in an
interview with Le Figaro in Paris (7/24/99):

“The Russian catastrophe was wanted and programmed by the West. I say this, because I
was, at a certain time, an initiate. I read the documents, participated in the studies which,
under the pretext of combatting an ideology, were preparing for the death of Russia.”

So the question is: Will American men and women be required to fight in this next war
over oil in the Caspian region? What do you think? Then there is the World Trade
Organization, which will now supercede our constitution with its rulings. Our
sovereignty is slowly being whittled away by the CFR establishment, and most
Americans haven’t a clue.

Whether you want to call these people conspirators, or insiders, or global planners
depends on your view of history. But whatever you call them, you should know who
they are, what they believe in, and where they want to lead us. For starters, I would
advise Wayne Johnson to read “Shadows of Power” by James Perloff. It’s a lot shorter
than Quigley’s book, but just as devastating.

(This article was written by San in 2000-2001.  It is in his archives which can be accessed here:  http://blumenfeld.campconstitution.net/main.htm

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