05-02-2017, 09:37 AM
It occurs to me that the following website would be of interest to this tread. The two British researchers have used Carroll Quigley's book Tragedy & Hope as a basis for undertaking deep research into the British secret elite and the First World War. It's an extensive project and very well researched and put together.
This is their opening para:
"If you are sympathetic to the view that Germany was responsible for the war and that Britain and her allies fought for the noble cause of saving civilization from German tyranny, we invite you to consider the possibility that you have been misled." We too were once convinced of Germany's guilt, but having studied the war in minute detail for many years are now firmly of the opinion, and confident we can prove to you, that it was not Germany to blame, but a secret coterie of immensely wealthy upper-class men in Britain. Men who saw the rapidly developing economic, commercial and industrial power of Germany as a threat to their secret plan to bring the entire civilised world under the control of the British Empire. From the early years of the 20th century they met regularly in their great English country houses and plush London clubs to plan in secret how to bring an end to the German threat.
After WWI these immensely wealthy upper-class men concluded that only America could carry this project forward, hence the development of the Anglo-American "special relationship" and Quigley's other book The Anglo-American Establishment.
Read in full HERE.
This is their opening para:
"If you are sympathetic to the view that Germany was responsible for the war and that Britain and her allies fought for the noble cause of saving civilization from German tyranny, we invite you to consider the possibility that you have been misled." We too were once convinced of Germany's guilt, but having studied the war in minute detail for many years are now firmly of the opinion, and confident we can prove to you, that it was not Germany to blame, but a secret coterie of immensely wealthy upper-class men in Britain. Men who saw the rapidly developing economic, commercial and industrial power of Germany as a threat to their secret plan to bring the entire civilised world under the control of the British Empire. From the early years of the 20th century they met regularly in their great English country houses and plush London clubs to plan in secret how to bring an end to the German threat.
After WWI these immensely wealthy upper-class men concluded that only America could carry this project forward, hence the development of the Anglo-American "special relationship" and Quigley's other book The Anglo-American Establishment.
Read in full HERE.
The shadow is a moral problem that challenges the whole ego-personality, for no one can become conscious of the shadow without considerable moral effort. To become conscious of it involves recognizing the dark aspects of the personality as present and real. This act is the essential condition for any kind of self-knowledge.
Carl Jung - Aion (1951). CW 9, Part II: P.14