Chapter Four: Tax Exempt Foundations by William H Mcllhany II: How the World Really Works by Alan B. Jones from Third World Traveler
from the book
Tax Exempt Foundations
by William H Mcllhany II
1980
The 1954 hearings of the House of Representatives' Special Committee to Investigate Tax Exempt Foundations, were chaired by Rep. Carroll Reece. Norman Dodd was the Research Director of the 1954 House of Representatives' Special Committee to Investigate Tax Exempt Foundations.
p61
Norman Dodd, the Research Director of the 1954 House of Representatives'
Special Committee to Investigate Tax Exempt Foundations (the Reece Committee).
minutes from the 1911 trustees meeting of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace
[The trustees of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, at a 1911 meeting] raised a question. And they discussed the question and the question was specific, 'Is there any means known to man more effective than war, assuming you wish to alter the life of an entire people?' And they discussed this and at the end of a year they came to the conclusion that there was no more effective means to that end known to man. So, they raised question number two, and the question was, 'How do we involve the United States in a war?
p63
Norman Dodd, the Research Director of the 1954 House of Representatives'
Special Committee to Investigate Tax Exempt Foundations (the Reece Committee)
talking about the trustees of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace,
at the 1911 trustees' meeting
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minutes from the 1911 trustees meeting of the Carnegie Endowment for
International Peace
[The Carnegie trustees upon encountering resistance from established historians, set about] to build their own stable of kept historians, and they even got a working agreement with the Guggenheim Foundation to grant scholarships to their selected candidates who were seeking graduate degrees .... The extent to which the Carnegie trustees were able to build their stable of submissive historians is significant .... Though encountering resistance at first, this group succeeded gradually in capturing more influence in the American Historical Association and affiliated circles.
p63
William H Mcllhany II, commenting on the minutes from the 1911 trustees meeting
of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace
It is important to remember that the [Carnegie Endowment supported U.S. entry into the war, not for any patriotic purpose, but so that the war would provide an excuse for, if not necessitate, Andrew Carnegie's goal of British-American regional government.
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Andrew Carnegie,1893
Time may dispel many pleasing illusions and destroy many noble dreams, but it shall never shake my belief that the wound caused by the wholly unlooked-for and undesired separation of the mother from her child is not to bleed forever. Let men say what they will, therefore, I say that as surely as the sun in the heavens once shown upon Britain and America united, so surely is it one morning to rise, shine upon, and greet again the reunited state, the British-American union.
p65
Norman Dodd, the Research Director of the 1954 House of Representatives'
Special Committee to Investigate Tax Exempt Foundations (the Reece Committee),
speaking about a meeting with Rowan Gaither, the president of the Ford
Foundation in December 1953
Rowan Gaither, the president of the Ford Foundation:
Of course, [Mr. Dodd,] you know that we at the executive level here were, at one time or another, active in either the OSS, the State Department, or the European Economic Administration. During those times, and without exception, we operated under directives issued by the White House. We are continuing to be guided by just such directives. Would you like to know the substance of these directives?
Norman Dodd, the Research Director of the 1954 House of Representatives' Special Committee to Investigate Tax Exempt Foundations (the Reece Committee):
And I said, 'Yes, Mr. Gaither, I'd like to know.
Rowan Gaither, the president of the Ford Foundation:
The substance was to the effect that we should make every effort to so alter life in the United States as to make possible a comfortable merger with the Soviet Union.
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Cecil Rhodes attached to his will a "Confession of Faith"
The idea gliding and dancing before our eyes like a willow - a wish at last frames itself into a plan. Why should we not join ... a secret society with but one object: the furtherance of the British Empire, for the bringing of the whole uncivilized world under British rule, for the recovery of the United States, for the making the Anglo-Saxon race but one Empire.
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The real objective [of the global banking elite] is to reorganize the world by
socializing its governments and then merging them into one, by, for example,
altering life in the United States such as to make possible a comfortable
merger with the Soviet Union.
p69
Cleon Skousen
[The] world hierarchy of the dynastic super-rich is out to take over the entire planet, doing it with socialistic legislation where possible, but having no reluctance to use Communist revolution where necessary.
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