Shaolin Abbot:
The enemy has only images and illusions behind which he hides his true motives. Destroy the image and you will break the enemy.
-
https://www.quotes.net/mquote/28924
Shaolin Abbot:
The enemy has only images and illusions behind which he hides his true motives. Destroy the image and you will break the enemy.
https://www.quotes.net/mquote/28924
They pretend to be righteous, pious, patriotic and good, all illusions behind which they hide their true motives.
They clamor about the founding fathers as they seek to undo everything the founding fathers created to help us keep our freedom.
Shatter the illusion of their sanctimonious falsehoods by exposing their true motives.
Know a tree by its fruits. If it produces evil, then it is evil, if it produces good, then it is good.
Beautiful leaves do not mean that the fruit is good.
TRI families.
Trilateral Commission
The Trilateral Commission is a non-governmental, nonpartisan discussion group founded by David Rockefeller in July 1973 to foster closer cooperation among Japan, Western Europe, and North America.[1][2]
The Trilateral Commission was formed in 1973 by private citizens of Japan, North American nations (the U.S. and Canada), and Western European nations[2] to foster substantive political and economic dialogue across the world. The idea of the Commission was developed in the early 1970s, a time of considerable discord among the United States and its allies in Western Europe, Japan, and Canada.[3] To quote its founding declaration:
"Growing interdependence is a fact of life of the contemporary world. It transcends and influences national systems… While it is important to develop greater cooperation among all the countries of the world, Japan, Western Europe, and North America, in view of their great weight in the world economy and their massive relations with one another, bear a special responsibility for developing effective cooperation, both in their own interests and in those of the rest of the world."
"To be effective in meeting common problems, Japan, Western Europe, and North America will have to consult and cooperate more closely, on the basis of equality, to develop and carry out coordinated policies on matters affecting their common interests… refrain from unilateral actions incompatible with their interdependence and from actions detrimental to other regions… [and] take advantage of existing international and regional organizations and further enhance their role."
"The Commission hopes to play a creative role as a channel of free exchange of opinions with other countries and regions. Further progress of the developing countries and greater improvement of East-West relations will be a major concern."[4]
Zbigniew Brzezinski, a Rockefeller advisor who was a specialist on international affairs (and later President Jimmy Carter's National Security Advisor from 1977 to 1981), left Columbia University to organize the group, along with:[5]
Zbigniew Brzezinski
Zbigniew Brzezinski, a Rockefeller advisor who was a specialist on international affairs (and later President Jimmy Carter's National Security Advisor from 1977 to 1981), left Columbia University to organize the group, along with:[5]
Organize the group. Who did Q say was in charge of organizations? Soros. My guess is there is a connection between him an Brzezinski.
Other founding members included Alan Greenspan and Paul Volcker, both later heads of the Federal Reserve System.
The organization's records are stored at the Rockefeller Archive Center in North Tarrytown, NY.[8]
Oh look, Epstein was a member. Imagine that.
Notable members
Bowie, Robert R. (Foreign Policy Association and director of the Harvard Center for International Affairs)[5][12]
Brzezinski, Zbigniew (10th United States National Security Advisor, Jimmy Carter administration)[5][13]
Carter, Jimmy (President of the United States)[12][13]
Donovan, Hedley (former editor-in-chief, Time)[13]
Epstein, Jeffrey (former hedge fund manager and convicted sex-trafficker)[14]
Gardner, Richard (Columbia University)[13]
Franklin, George S. (executive director of the Council on Foreign Relations in New York)[5][13]
Hornblower, Marshall (former partner at Wilmer, Cutler & Pickering)[5]
Huntington, Samuel P. (former director of Harvard’s Center for International Affairs, former White House Coordinator of Security Planning for the National Security Council)[13]
Kohnstamm, Max (European Policy Centre)[5]
Mondale, Walter[13]
Nye, Joseph S. (Jr.) (former U.S. Assistant Secretary of Defense for International Security Affairs)[13][12]
Owen, Henry D. (foreign policy studies director at the Brookings Institution)[6][13]
Reischauer, Edwin (professor at Harvard University and United States Ambassador to Japan, 1961–1966)[5]
Scranton, William (former governor of Pennsylvania)[5]
Trezise, Philip H. (Center for Law and Social Policy)[13]
Vance, Cyrus[13]
Warnke, Paul C. (Center for Law and Social Policy, Clifford, Warnke, Glass, McIlwain & Finney)[13]
Yamamoto, Tadashi (Japan Center for International Exchange)[7][5][13]
Social critic and academic Noam Chomsky has criticized the commission as undemocratic, pointing to its publication The Crisis of Democracy, which describes the strong popular interest in politics during the 1970s as an "excess of democracy".[15] He described it as one of the most interesting and insightful books showing the modern democratic system not to really be a democracy at all, but controlled by elites. Chomsky says that as it was an internal discussion they "let their hair down" and talked about how the public needs to be reduced to its proper state of apathy and obedience.[16]
Essentially liberal internationalists from Europe, Japan and the United States, the liberal wing of the intellectual elite. That's where Jimmy Carter's whole government came from. […] [The Trilateral Commission] was concerned with trying to induce what they called "more moderation in democracy"—turn people back to passivity and obedience so they don't put so many constraints on state power and so on. In particular they were worried about young people. They were concerned about the institutions responsible for the indoctrination of the young (that's their phrase), meaning schools, universities, church and so on—they're not doing their job, [the young are] not being sufficiently indoctrinated. They're too free to pursue their own initiatives and concerns and you've got to control them better.[17]
Critics accuse the Commission of promoting a global consensus among the international ruling classes in order to manage international affairs in the interest of the financial and industrial elites under the Trilateral umbrella.[18][19]
In his 1980 book With No Apologies, Republican Senator Barry Goldwater suggested the discussion group was "a skillful, coordinated effort to seize control and consolidate the four centers of power: political, monetary, intellectual, and ecclesiastical… [in] the creation of a worldwide economic power superior to the political governments of the nation-states involved."[20] Right-wing groups such as the John Birch Society and conspiracy theorists such as Alex Jones have also promulgated this idea.[21]
Conspiracy theories
Some conspiracy theorists believe the organization to be a central plotter of a world government or synarchy. As documented by journalist Jonathan Kay, Luke Rudkowski interrupted a lecture by former Trilateral Commission director Zbigniew Brzezinski in April 2007 and accused the organization and a few others of having orchestrated the 9/11 attacks to initiate a new world order.[22]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trilateral_Commission