06-04-2014, 10:59 AM
Lauren Johnson Wrote:Look here.
It is also available as a free .pdf that opens directly into your browser here
The book is vast, some 1300 pages, and very heavy too - it damn nearly broke my wrist hefting it around. A .pdf is far more civilised, I think.
As I recall, Quigley said in a later interview that there were a couple of dozen really important pages, and these were, as I recall, those about the Rhodes-Milner banking and non-ferrous (precious) metals and commodities aspects.
Anyway, there is an interesting interview given by Quigley in 1974 HERE.
He speaks about Arnold Toynbee's role in the Kintergarden. Toynbee was, in addition, a member of Britain's Secret Intelligence Service.
Quigley also very briefly, discusses Alfred Zimmern's explanation why he left the Roundtable in 1923, mainly because he disagreed with their aim to build and develop Germany after WWI to act as a counterweight against France. But Quigley very quickly gets off this subject as he realises it is very sensitive.
On Toynbee and Allen Dulles, there is also this little interesting snippet, circa 1947 and 1942:
Quote:Meanwhile, one of the more intriguing pieces of information regarding the Dulles brothers is their interest in the Council on Foreign Relations, an elite group of policy makers that sprang out of the 1919 Paris Peace Conference. The CFR was formed as the sister organisation of the British Royal Institute of International Affairs (RIIA), which was founded by those closely associated with the aims of the Rhodes-Milner group.Moreover, according to Peter Grose in his all-too-flattering biography of Allen Dulles,Gentleman Spy, Dulles travelled to Europe in 1947, where he "… paused in London for meetings with Alan Toynbee and took a leisurely side trip to Oxford at its loveliest' for mellow conversations in the common room of All Souls, where matters of import could be considered over port and cigars." [v]
The name Arnold Toynbee, naturally raises interest, for he was one of that small and close band of disciples of John Ruskin at Oxford that included Cecil Rhodes, Lord Alfred Milner and others who became principal architects of the Rhodes-Milner group that sat at the very heart of the RIIA-CFR, Anglo-American relationship. Peter Grose also references what is portrayed as an almost chance encounter between Dulles and Arnold Toynbee (the nephew of the Toynbee the older) on board a Pan American Clipper "Flying Boat" in 1942. This was during Dulles's extended journey to Switzerland for the purpose of taking up residence as the senior OSS man. Toynbee, in addition to his Oxford connections, was also a member of Britain's secret intelligence service.
Quigley also explains in this interview that the main man in the All Souls Round Table Group was Lionel Curtis. His Wiki entry is HERE and is worth a read because it shows that Curtis was the originator of a new world order easing to world state that he stylised as a Federal World Government (as I recall the first reference he made to this was around 1898 ish?).
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