The conservative dilemma

Angelo Codevilla wrote a piece in 2010 outlining the dilemmas of conservatives, America’s Ruling Class — and the Perils of Revolution, published in The American Spectator.

We think it’s worth a read because it’s representative of current conservative thinking.

Students of New World Order studies will find a few points of its historical analysis to argue with. There is no mention of secret societies, or the role of the central bank, or directives from Communists inside the United Nations setting U.S. federal policies. The author cites no documents outlining plans for global integration and undermining national sovereignty. No mention of a population control agenda. The author blames secular humanism for the intellectual divide in America, without recognizing that secular humanism is a front for the controllers’ true worldview, theosophical occultism.

But Codevilla nails it when he describes the technocratic and bureaucratic classes as working against the interests of ordinary Americans. And he is correct in describing the difficulties of organizing varying interests and viewpoints into a coalition that can govern.

Codevilla wrote a book called The Ruling Class, which we have not read and do not intend to read because his analysis is not quite on the mark. Nevertheless, his analysis is appealing enough to rally conservatives to identify their elite enemies, and that is probably the most we can hope for from a professor.

In the 1950s C. Wright Mills wrote a book called The Power Elite, which we read in college. As we recall, the book had little effect beyond motivating the left-wing students to infiltrate the establishment. The Cultural Marxists of the 1960s offered similar analyses reinforcing “liberal” political views. We don’t believe conservatives can sort out one elite from another without a proper historical understanding of the global takeover agenda and the worldview behind it.

But political action does not require a sophisticated historical analysis to form a guide for action, and perhaps Codevilla can serve as this generation’s Tom Paine. The conservatives need a guiding light at this stage of the takeover, when the Democrats’s totalitarian agenda lays clear and electoral victories are possible.

 


About The Author

I read over 500 books on the history of the New World Order, but you only need to read one book to make up for the poor education they gave you in the public schools. The Hidden Masters Who Rule the World is a scholarly history that will take you beyond all parties, all worldviews, all prophecies, and all propaganda to an understanding of the future that the global controllers have planned for us.

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