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THE
NEW WORLD ORDER
Part 1: Ages of Time
by Douglas V.
Gnazzo
November
15, 2006
Series
Articles
"Dieu Et Mon
Droit"
Introduction
Murmurs
felt below, the first warnings of that which it is yet to come. The
great white snowy owl sits aloft, gazing over his dominion –
pondering: how long – before its time.
As
the vibrations grow louder, the denizens of the earth know a shift is
beginning. The tectonic plates of history are repositioning themselves
according to what has been, and what shall be.
A
process born of desire – as all thought is. Its issuance into the
outside world causes changes across the globe. Changes in the way man
feels, thinks, and acts. The times they are a changing.
A
force rarely visited upon the Isle of Man has been germinating for
centuries. When the destiny of the world enters the field, it is best to
sit up and take notice: to heed the warning, whatever it may be.
The
Riddle of the Sphinx
A
baby grows into a child, the child becomes an adult, the adult matures
into old age, and the four phases of life are complete. So too does the
human race progress: from the infant, to the child, to an adult, and
finally to old age. As above – so below: the microcosm within the
macrocosm.
The
human race is at an important point in its progression: it either moves
forward or falls back, it really is as simple as that. Man has entered a
new age – the Age of Aquarius: the age of adulthood in which he can
either blossom or regress. The choice is his and his alone.
Four
broad strokes cross the canvas of man’s history, the paradigm shifts
that the human race has so far endured are destiny’s brush – the
collective behavior of the races provide the pallet of colors.
Stages
Man
has traveled from the ancient world, to the industrial world, to the
post-industrial world, to the age of technology – where man is trying
to seek control of Mother Nature: not the wisest of choices he has ever
made, but his to make nonetheless.
That
is man’s right, which free will offers. The consequences of his
actions, however, form his destiny – as the potter’s hands shape the
form of clay that is the expression of his inner thoughts.
The
journey through nature has involved billions of souls and billions of
changes. Some were easy, while others seemed impossible. Time waits for
no man, it marches on as the relentless measure of change: until no
longer needed – its task complete – destiny fulfilled.
Many
earth-moving events have occurred, caused by the tectonic plates of the
human drama shifting about – moaning and groaning from the strain of
the friction between the twins. At one moment in time the golden age
prevailed, at another, the age of silver; next came the age of bronze,
and last came the age of iron – the present time that is upon
us.
The
Industrial Revolution
There
can be no doubt that the industrial revolution was an earth-shattering
event that forever changed the landscape, as well as the lives of those
thereon. It began in the late seventeen hundreds in Europe, its
highpoint the middle to late 1800’s.
A
question of some substance is why did it start in Europe, predominantly
in England, before other nations strode upon the stage. Why did England
dominate the world from the mid 1700’s to the early 1900’s – until
the end of the war?
The
people that flooded into Europe during the Dark and Medieval Ages came
up from the south and east; and down from the North and West. Once the
Roman Empire fell the next millennium witnessed a great Diaspora
spreading its wings across the land: the migration of man had begun.
The
fields of England were chosen as the middle ground. The all-seeing owl
nodded his head in approval, as he cast a glance over his shoulder –
his shadow reflected upon the ground.
The
Dark Ages
The
greatness of Rome was no more; its fall left a large void in the
world’s collective consciousness. From the later 400’s onward, the
Dark Ages were the sign of the times.
Petrarch
was the first to coin the term, referring to the time that followed
ancient Greece and Rome, as the Dark Ages.
The
darkness of the age had many shades: some referred to the lack of
communication between different peoples, as books were rare artifacts,
leaving entire nations unaware of their fellow man.
There
was, however, a darker side as well, where bloodlust ruled the day. The
most savage and evil tortures imaginable occurred, as if they were
nothing more then a harsh lesson exacting its due toll. Even women and
children suffered the curse of fate.
The
Enlightenment
Then
came the age of enlightenment, the rays of reason beamed bright on the
child of man below. Just prior came the reformation, the time the
Church’s back was pinned against the wall: questions were asked in
public, which before were whispered behind closed doors.
Now
both mind and body joined to perform man’s tasks. Man wrought forth
great feats with nothing more than his bare hands guided by his wit.
Huge Cathedrals, bridges, and cities now adorned the land.
Man
had discovered that by using his mind he could produce more goods than
by manual labor alone. The age of tools and machines had arrived: the
age of industry – the industrial revolution.
The
Age of Machines
At
first, the tools were simple, but soon they grew into machines of
greater complexity: spinning wheels and looms that processed cotton and
wool, farm equipment that harvested wheat from the fields.
Finally,
the invention that changed the world – the steam engine, and the huge
machines it could power: the steam ship, and eventually the steam engine
of the trains.
These
were not just steps forward in man’s productive well being – they
were leaps across unknown waters that vastly improved the division of
labor and the economy of man.
It
was now possible to effectively transport both people and goods, over
much longer distances, and into more remote areas; either on steamships
along the waterways; or on trains along the iron rails.
Soon
the ever-expanding need for more and more steel required the need for
mass production of the metal: production begets production.
At
the same time mass manufacturing of steel was taking place, other
industries were beginning to blossom: the all important petroleum
industry that provided fuel and lubricants the machines of the future
required; the chemical industry that produced and refined the essential
ingredients for both the construction of certain products, and the
improvement and utility of others.
Then
it came – like a bolt of lightening from out of the sky: electricity
and all its marvels suddenly appeared upon the stage. Giants of industry
were born: AT & T, US Steel, Standard Oil. The times they were a
changing.
The
Center of Finance
The
birth of the industrial giants gave birth to yet another: the industry
of finance. Thread Needle St., Wall Street, and the stock market were
about to blossom.
It
had become apparent to those in the know that the ways of money were
unknown to all but a few, its tracks forever covered, hidden from sight,
as are those of the wise old owl by a new fallen snow.
Many
great minds have debated the reason as to why the revolution first took
hold in England, well before other European nations. The answer is
really quite simple: it was because Britain was where the preponderance
of the elite banking families from Italy migrated to after the fall of
Rome.
And
as birds of a feather flock together – so too did the other great
banking Houses of Europe set up shop in merry Old England. The land of
the Brits became the hub of world finance, the center from which the
clarion call to profits sounded loud and clear.
The
Money Power
Money
is the sinew of war – it is also the sinew of commerce and industry as
well. The money power is the most awesome power that man possesses; and
man should respect it accordingly – as opposed to his present meek
acquiesance that hands the money power over to others: to the State and
the elite bankers who have no right to possess such an unalienable and
inviolate right of man.
Britain
came out of the 19th century as the leader and super power of
the world. This was in large part due to their leading role in the
industrial revolution and the financing thereof. Their reach stretched
across the world: to India, the Middle East, Australia, China, and
Africa. No stone went unturned in the pursuit of profit. Then came the
War to end all wars – World War I.
War
The
mid 1700’s witnessed the colonies of the New World revolting against
the inequity and despotism of Britain’s monarchy. The colonists were
free men with unalienable rights – not subjects to be treated as mere
chattel. Revolution was the call to arms that wrought forth liberty and
freedom for all.
Then
came the Great French War – the continuous years of fighting from 1792
until 1815, ending with the defeat of Napolean at the battle of
Waterloo: defeated by the English under the leadership of General
Wellington.
Some
say it was Rothschild’s gold delivered to Wellington that won the day;
the same is said about Alexander’s gold defeating his enemies – not
Alexander. As Horace wrote: “Gold
can a path through hosts of warders clear. And walls of stone more
swiftly can displace than ever lightening could."
The
War
World
War I pitted The
Allied Powers of France, England, and Russia, and eventually the United
States, against the Central Powers: Germany, Austria-Hungary and the
Ottoman Empire.
The
established worldview perceived the purpose of World War I to be the war
to end all wars. It did not accomplish its stated cause; instead, it
laid the groundwork for World War II. It was as if a purposeful design
had formed and followed a desired function.
What
World War I did accomplish, and with surgical precision, was the end of
the Old World Order, and the
preparation of a fertile crucible: the human race – to accept the New
World Order.
Absolutism
So
what was this Old World Order? First, recall that Napoleon ruled over
almost all of Western Europe, just as the Romans had in their time. The
French Revolution exposed a set of ideals that flew in the face of the
Old World Order: the order of absolutism.
Absolutism
vests all power in the monarch – the King is the ruler of the land. He
has the sovereign power to rule all men as his subjects, without
question as to right or wrong – all rights were held by the King –
for the King’s advantage.
There
were no laws other than the King’s Prerogative. The King was sovereign
– the people were subjects of the King: mere chattel to perform his
bidding. Right was had by might.
No
opposition to the rule of might exists, unless one possesses a greater
might, one capable of overpowering the King’s men – the strong arm
of en-force-ment. The law is what the King says it is. There is no
Constitution declaring the rights of man. There is no natural law. The
King rules by Divine Right. The law is what the King decrees it to be
– nothing more nor less.
Old
Ways Die Hard
It
is most telling that even to this day, coronations of British monarchs
still take place according to the Old World Order. Monarchs are anointed
with the Holy oils by the Archbishop of Canterbury, just as they were in
the days of old; thereby ordaining them to the rule with God’s
blessing – rule by Divine Right, which is fairly absolute is it not?
The
roots of this heritage and bloodline of descent can be traced back to
ancient times when David ruled as King. The Davidic line is coveted by
those that have the need to do so – to fill the void within. Most
Royal Houses can be traced back to the same roots: Cain and Able: the
left hand path, and the right hand path.
The
ancients themselves ruled by Divine Right, at least the ancients that
history is aware of: Egypt, Sumer, and Babylon, and back further to
Atlantis and Lemuria, and to the time when the watchers came and partook
of the forbidden fruit; the time when the gods walked the earth –
those that still had to obey the three Sisters of Fate – of Destiny
– of that which is, and yet to come.
The
supposed purpose of World War One was to end the Old World Order of
absolutism, and to establish the New World Order. Yet even after the war
was over, and to this very day, England retains the sacred tradition of
the coronation ceremony, including the anointing with Holy Oil to ordain
the ruler to be according to Divine Right and the will of God.
The
Cost of War
At
first the British sold large stock positions in the US railroads to
raise needed capital to pay the huge expenses of war. All too soon the
funds ran out. Britain was left with no other alternative to fund their
war machine, except to borrow heavily from the U.S. bankers on Wall
Street – many of whom were frontmen for the elite international
bankers of Europe.
The
Versailles Treaty culminated the end of the war. Germany was forced to
pay staggering reparation payments. The Germans did this by borrowing
from the United States bankers on Wall Street. It seems that both sides
of the war were funded by the same entities, especially by the House of
Morgan.
In
1919, the U.S. demanded that England repay their loans. These loans had
been partially funded by German reparation payments. As stated above,
German reparation payments were funded by loans from J.P. Morgan to
Germany. By 1930 this little game of merry-go-round came to a halt –
setting the stage for the rise of Nazi Germany and World War II.
As
already stated, one of the main objectives of World War One was to
replace the Old World Order with a New World Order. In regards to
changing the Old World Order the war was quite successful. Four empires
and their respective royal dynasties were destroyed: the Ottoman empire
and dynasty; the House of Habsburg and the Austrian dynasty; the
Romanovs and the Russian dynasty; and the House of Hohenzollern and the
German dynasty.
Once
again, just as in their keeping of the Old World Order Royal Coronation
Traditions of Divine Right, Britain also retained the Old World Order of
the ruling House of Windsor. It appears the New World Order entails
Britain keeping its Old World Order intact, while the rest of the world
marches to a different drummer.
Needless
to say, the war wrought untold suffering upon the world, leaving
physical, emotional, and mental scars on both the land and greater still
– on the people of the land. Different people reacted in different
ways. For the very strong of heart, the war was a learning experience
that made one stronger. Others were completely devastated.
Internationalism
Nationalism
was the new scapegoat. The intelligentsia propagandized that the cause
of the war was one nation trying to impose its belief system on another;
and that the ONLY way such evil could be prevented was by a more internationalistic
world: a New World Order – thus the League of Nations was born.
Others
had pretty much the opposite reaction to the atrocities of the war, they
became brazen and more emboldened in the belief that might was right;
and to survive in the world one must be the strongest and most
aggressive and dominant alpha male: thus Nazism and fascism rose from
the ashes of the war to end all wars.
Communist
and socialist ideology suddenly became popular as well, especially in
the European countries that had suffered the most during the war.
Recall
that the war to end all wars had just been fought and did not
quite accomplish its supposed goal of ending either war or absolutism,
which were the reasons give that an international order of nations was
needed.
This
ends part one. The quote at the top of the paper: Dieu Et Mon Droit is
the British Royal Family’s motto, which translates as: God and My
Birth Right. Absolute or not – the reader can judge for themselves.

© 2006 Douglas V. Gnazzo
Editorial Archive
All
rights reserved. Any republication without written permission
of author
and Financial Sense prohibited.
CONTACT
INFORMATION
Douglas V. Gnazzo
Honest Money Gold & Silver Report, LLC
Canton Center, CT USA
Email
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About
the author: Douglas V.
Gnazzo is CEO of New England Renovation LLC, a historical restoration contractor
that specializes in restoring older buildings that are vintage historic
landmarks. He writes for numerous websites and his work appears both
here and abroad. Just recently he was honored by being chosen as a Foundation
Scholar for the Foundation for the Advancement of Monetary Education
(FAME).
Disclaimer:
The contents of this article represent the opinions of Douglas V.
Gnazzo. Nothing contained herein is intended as investment advice or
recommendations for specific investment decisions, and you should not
rely on it as such. Douglas V. Gnazzo is not a registered investment
advisor. Information and analysis above are derived from sources and
using methods believed to be reliable, but Douglas. V. Gnazzo cannot
accept responsibility for any trading losses you may incur as a result
of your reliance on this analysis and will not be held liable for the
consequence of reliance upon any opinion or statement contained herein
or any omission. Individuals should consult with their broker and
personal financial advisors before engaging in any trading activities.
Do your own due diligence regarding personal investment decisions. This
article may contain information that is confidential and/or protected by
law. The purpose of this article is intended to be used as an
educational discussion of the issues involved. Douglas V. Gnazzo is not
a lawyer or a legal scholar. Information and analysis derived from the
quoted sources are believed to be reliable and are offered in good
faith. Only a highly trained and certified and registered legal
professional should be regarded as an authority on the issues involved;
and all those seeking such an authoritative opinion should do their own
due diligence and seek out the advice of a legal professional. Lastly
Douglas V. Gnazzo believes that The United States of America is the
greatest country on Earth, but that it can yet become greater. This
article is written to help facilitate that greater becoming. God Bless
America.
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