02-01-2011, 06:59 PM
Exactly so John, the very same.
But their very considerable power continued well into the 1970's and then, became almost entirely eclipsed from the public eye. This followed on from Carroll Quigley publishing his massive tomb "Tragedy & Hope" (and of course his earlier book "The Anglo-American Establishment"), that "outed" their long range plans for control of the political structure of the world via the banking system, which they effectively controlled.
The Council for Foreign Relations is simply the US incarnation of the British Chatham House - the Oxford Group's think-tank.
Freeport Sulphur was very close to big oil and had connections stretching back to the OSS and later to the CIA, as I recollect. I looked at them some years ago when I was investigating Project Hammer (have a quick peek at the section under the heading "Mapping the covert connections" HERE). Midland Bank (now HSBC) was the commercial bank of Milner and the Oxford Group (as opposed to their merchant bank).
I would also mention that it was also the Oxford Group's long term goal to own and control the mineral deposits of the world, to ensure their "political" plan bore fruit. I believe (but no longer can be sure - it was some years ago now) that this is stated quite emphatically in Quigley's "Anglo-American Establishment", the endnotes of which also bear close scrutiny.
They didn't think small...
Thank you for the additional documents. The stock holdings seem small, so I suppose there were other considerations involved in owning them. But they also show an emphasis on minerals and mining don't they. Interesting.
But their very considerable power continued well into the 1970's and then, became almost entirely eclipsed from the public eye. This followed on from Carroll Quigley publishing his massive tomb "Tragedy & Hope" (and of course his earlier book "The Anglo-American Establishment"), that "outed" their long range plans for control of the political structure of the world via the banking system, which they effectively controlled.
The Council for Foreign Relations is simply the US incarnation of the British Chatham House - the Oxford Group's think-tank.
Freeport Sulphur was very close to big oil and had connections stretching back to the OSS and later to the CIA, as I recollect. I looked at them some years ago when I was investigating Project Hammer (have a quick peek at the section under the heading "Mapping the covert connections" HERE). Midland Bank (now HSBC) was the commercial bank of Milner and the Oxford Group (as opposed to their merchant bank).
I would also mention that it was also the Oxford Group's long term goal to own and control the mineral deposits of the world, to ensure their "political" plan bore fruit. I believe (but no longer can be sure - it was some years ago now) that this is stated quite emphatically in Quigley's "Anglo-American Establishment", the endnotes of which also bear close scrutiny.
They didn't think small...
Thank you for the additional documents. The stock holdings seem small, so I suppose there were other considerations involved in owning them. But they also show an emphasis on minerals and mining don't they. Interesting.
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