Orwell laid down the dictum that slogans must be in Newspeak, ''War is Peace, Freedom is Slavery, Ignorance is Strength''. This is the program of the hegemony of parasitism through the World Order. The program of the World Order remains the same; Divide and Conquer. Orwell concludes ''1984'' with a denial that the victims of the World Order have any hope. He claims the World Order will always triumph, which is a great propaganda achievement for the hegemony of parasitism. He writes, ''If you want a picture of the future, imagine a boot stamping on a human face - forever.'' He disposes of his ''hero'', a citizen who had vainly tried to oppose the Party, by ending the book with the ''hero'' whimpering that ''He loved Big Brother''. The peoples of the world not only will never love Big Brother, but they will soon dispose of him forever.
Eustace Mullins was born in Roanoke, Virginia in 1923, and is a descendant of the Lees, Randolphs and Oakes. He has studied at Washington and Lee University in Virginia, New York University, Escuela des Rellas Artes in Mexico, and the Institute of Contemporary Arts in Washington, D.C. It was in Washington that Mullins met and was befriended by Ezra Pound, the better part of his education in those years being daily visits between “Old Ez” and “The Mulligator,” as Pound dubbed them both.
Mullins is a painter, poet, photographer and sculptor. He has given a one-man show of his photographs at the Institute of Contemporary Arts, and has founded and edited several little magazines, among them Three Hands in Washington, D.C., and Nix in New York. His hobby, says Eustace Mullins, is the American millionaire.
Author(s): Eustace Mullins
Edition: 2
Year: 1992
Language: English
Commentary: no index
Pages: 309
Tags: History, Economics, Politics, CIA, Rothschild, globalism, Banking, International finance, hidden rulers, illuminati, cabal
1. The «New» World Order
2. The Rothschilds
3. Soviet Russia
4. Franklin Delano Roosevelt
5. The Business of America
6. The CIA
7. The Bechtel Complex
8. The Foundations
9. The Rule of the Order
About the author