First a little background on the book.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carroll_Quigley#Quigley_and_the_Round_Table_groupThis was frequently cited in the early days of the Internet (1990s to 2000s) by those who wanted everyone to know governments are meaningless and global events are shaped by insiders who make decisions on behalf of their own interests, not those of sovereign nations or even, God forbid, their citizens. Very few people have actually read it, but I recommend getting a copy for your library. Here's a digital copy for you.
https://annas-archive.org/md5/dfb4e65a5cdc1df360a7fd47575e2948Quigley was an academic at Georgetown University and allowed to see insider documents describing their activities, and was even allowed to say he was given access to them. He was frank about that, but was very clear that he approved of their means and methods. So few people today actually read, and fewer still actually read books, so this will likely go down the memory hole in another generation.
[ + ] yesiknow
[ - ] yesiknow 2 points 4 hoursJun 8, 2025 08:31:53 ago (+2/-0)*
The jewpedia page says he taught at Georgetown one of the most globalist corruptions on Earth. That and Columbia was the starting point for the jews;s transfer of critcal theory fron Germany to here after the Nazis had enough of their luciferian cult.
Bill Clinton and Nancy Pelosi both took his class, and those two should have been crucified a long time ago.
[ + ] FreeinTX
[ - ] FreeinTX 1 point 4 hoursJun 8, 2025 08:26:06 ago (+1/-0)
[ + ] beece
[ - ] beece 0 points 1 hourJun 8, 2025 11:19:56 ago (+0/-0)
https://www.colchestercollection.com/titles/T/tragedy-and-hope.html
[ + ] beece
[ - ] beece 0 points 1 hourJun 8, 2025 11:23:20 ago (+0/-0)
"Introduction By Michael L. Chadwick
In 1965 one of the nation's leading professors quietly finished the last draft of a 1311
page book on world history. He walked over to his typewriter and secured the last pages
of the book and placed them into a small box and wrapped it for mailing. He then walked
to the Post Office and mailed the final draft to his publisher in New York City. The editor
was somewhat overwhelmed and perhaps even inhibited by the scholarly treatise. The
last thing he wanted to do was to read the huge draft. He knew and trusted the professor.
After all, he was one of the leading scholars in the western world. They had been
acquaintances for several years. He had already signed an agreement to publish the book
before it was finished. He had read several chapters of the early draft. They were boring,
at least to him. He decided to give the book to a young editor who had just been
promoted to his assistant. The young editor was also overwhelmed but happy to oblige
the Senior Editor. The young editor was unaware of the importance of the manuscript and
of the revelations which it contained. To the young editor this was just another textbook
or so he thought.
Somehow one of the most revealing books ever published slipped through the editorial
of offices of one of the major publishing houses in New York and found it way into the
bookstores of America in 1966."