The Davos set, those progressive politicians, corporate bosses, bankers
and sanctimonious celebrities who meet in the Swiss Alps every spring,
have plenty of power and privilege. They talk of ‘smart cities’, digital
currencies, radical action against climate change, internet safety and
social justice. These assorted concerns may not readily make a coherent
and realistic prospectus, but Covid-19 showed that where there’s a will,
there’s a way to change the world.
What makes and motivates a
‘globalist’? Several books have been published on the phenomenon of
global leaders – people who have changed the world for better or worse.
Ian Kershaw’s Personality and Power selected twelve famous figures,
while Henry Kissinger chose six for his book Leadership. An interesting
character study is From Silk to Silicon: the Story of Globalization
Through Ten Extraordinary Lives, by economic policy journalist Jeffrey
Garten. Only one person is featured in all three books – can you guess?
(answer below). .
Garten’s ten catalysts of globalisation begin
and end in the East, with Genghis Khan and the late Chinese leader Deng
Xiaoping, but let’s begin in Frankfurt in the late eighteenth century. A
cramped ghetto street named Judengasse was the humble home of Mayer
Amschel Rothschild (1744-1812), founder of the global banking empire.
With his mastery of accounting and accrual, and ability to form
relationships with powerful people, Rothschild established himself as an
intermediary between Gernan princes and London banks. Amidst wars and
uprisings, he devised win-win situations by secretly supporting both
sides in a conflict .Rothschild transcended borders and trading
barriers, undermining the jealously guarded control of kings and
emperors He thus began the process of overriding national autonomy with
supranational finance.
While not whitewashing his chosen
characters, in discussing the Rothschild legacy Garten omits legitimate
criticisms of the dynasty and its disruptive influence on hitherto
stable societies. For example; the American Civil War is a suspected
case of the bankers’ divide-and-rule strategy: agitation between North
and South was provoked for a preferred settlement of incorporating the
northern states in Canada, then a financial fiefdom of Lionel Rothschild
(while his brother had controlling interests in the Confederacy).
The
Rothschilds are often mentioned alongside the Rockefeller family as
shadow governors of the modern world. John D Rockefeller (1839-1937)
had modest background in a Baptist family in New York state. He joined
the oil rush in Ohio and Pennsylvania, and went on to buy all the major
refineries in Cleveland, Philadelphia and West Virginia. He steadily
built the Standard Oil company, using his purchasing power to quash
competitors, and he manipulated the railways for his commercial ends.
His predatory practices eventually got him in trouble, and in 1911 his
firm was broken up by a federal court ruling.
His reputation
tarnished, Rockefeller turned to social causes, using his massive wealth
to fund educational reform. In 1901 the Rockefeller Institute for
Medical Research was founded. At that time (before mass motoring),
medicine was a potential market for petroleum. His father was literally a
snake-oil salesman, but under Rockefeller’s direction the American
medical profession banished natural remedies, The seed was sown for the
Big Pharma takeover. Half of the training schools closed, as funding
concentrated on prestigious institutes lubricated by Rockefeller grants....<<<Read More>>>...
Welcome to "A Light In The Darkness" - a realm that explores the mysterious and the occult; the paranormal and the supernatural; the unexplained and the controversial; and, not forgetting, of course, the conspiracy theories; including Artificial Intelligence; Chemtrails and Geo-engineering; 5G and EMR Hazards; The Global Warming Debate; Trans-Humanism and Trans-Genderism; The Covid-19 and mRNA vaccine issues; The Ukraine Deception ... and a whole lot more.