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243 lines
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Conspiracy Nation -- Vol. 1 Num. 68
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======================================
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("Quid coniuratio est?")
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ARCHITECTS OF FEAR
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Review by Brian Francis Redman, Editor-in-chief, Conspiracy Nation
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Copyright (c) 1994 -- All Rights Reserved
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[Note, you may distribute this freely, but please don't alter it.]
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*Architects of Fear* by George Johnson (Los Angeles: Jeremy P.
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Tarcher, Inc., 1983. ISBN 0-87477-275-3) is like Vankin's
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*Conspiracies, Cover-ups and Crimes* in that it offers a
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compendium of a wide area. It is unlike Vankin's work in that
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Johnson believes, basically, that conspiracy theorists are nuts.
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Or at least I surmise that's what he thinks, due to his reliance
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on that time-honored crutch which "debunkers" of such theorists
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routinely rely on: that they are "paranoid."
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But what is "paranoia"? It is "...excessive or irrational
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suspiciousness." It's O.K. to be suspicious, but if it's
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"excessive" or "irrational" then you are "paranoid." So we have
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Johnson saying that conspiracy theorists are wrong because they
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are irrational. And who decides they are irrational? Johnson and
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whoever he decides *is* rational, that's who.
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Of course, Johnson dresses up his arguments with many variations
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on the theme of paranoia. He manages to take that old "you're
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paranoid" rejoinder and permute it so that it flows elegantly and
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not too obviously through his 200-page book. In this he is like
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another great "debunker" of note, C. Berlet, in that he
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constantly amazes one with the abundance of permutations on one
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theme: In Berlet's case, "fascism"; in Johnson's, "paranoia."
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But (and here I offer this freely to all "debunkers" of
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conspiracy theorists) Johnson actually offers a *new* anti-
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conspiracy theories argument. For all of you who are constantly
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informing me that I am wrong because I am "paranoid," "crazy,"
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etc., I offer you this new ammunition in the deep hope that you
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will make a big change in your responses from "you are crazy" to
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this new rejoinder. Johnson believes that there is a sort of
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incestuous footnoting in books of the conspiracy genre. He thinks
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that what we have got is a sort of pyramid scheme of conspiracy
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theorists. After the first few books of the genre were written,
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along came other conspiracy theorists who began to offer some of
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the original books as sources for their books. Then later, still
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other conspiracy theorists had even more written material they
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could use as references in their own books.
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So, according to Johnson, the original errors of conspiracy
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theorists have had a snowball effect and now we have so much
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literature in this area (much of it relying on other literature
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in this area) that it is now pretty much impossible to sort it
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all out.
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I offer this to all future "debunkers" because I would like to
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see them come up with something new in their "debunking."
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For the record, I will add that so-called "respectable,"
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"reasonable," "rational," etc. researchers can also be blamed for
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the above-mentioned incestuous footnoting. Johnson himself
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includes a variation on this theme when he offers the following
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quote from conspiracy theorist Claire Chambers (*The SIECUS
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Circle, A Humanist Revolution*):
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Judging by the evidence at hand, it seems reasonably
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certain that among the major components of this
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worldwide conspiracy are Humanism, Socialism, Communism,
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the Council on Foreign Relations, the tax-exempt
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foundations, and occultism... Humanism is now engaged in
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a militant religious war, its Godless army having by now
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reached into almost every phase of our national
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existence... Little known to the public is their most
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cunning tactic: the art of labeling and quoting each
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other as "experts."
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What is *good* about *Architects of Fear* is that it does give a
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good overview of various conspiracy theories, and it gives a good
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list of sources (included at the end of this essay) for persons
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interested in studying the escalating conspiracy phenomena.
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Here are some of the theories covered, sure to fry your brain:
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*** Recently, since the Industrial Revolution, we have come to
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believe that by gaining more knowledge we will progress. "But in
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medieval Europe, truth was more often considered something
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mankind had lost. Seekers looked to the past instead of the
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future."
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*** Conspiracy researcher Des Griffin, asks, "[paraphrasing
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Griffin] If experts are so great, then why are we in such a
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mess?" Griffins thinks that what we are always told is "a
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complexity" is just part of a smoke-screen used to hide the
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truth. "It started, he believes, with the priests of ancient
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Babylon, who controlled the masses by presenting themselves as
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keepers of divine knowledge... Now, he believes, we are enslaved
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by the priests of reason..."
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*** Alberto Rivera claims he is a former Jesuit priest. He says
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that the Catholic church is the Antichrist's one-world kingdom.
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One of the tapes he sells is entitled "Escape From a Catholic
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Convent, 'Sister Charlotte's Testimony'". "Sister Charlotte"
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tells of torture and murder in the "dungeons of her cloistered
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order."
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*** In 1966, the John Birch Society (JBS) magazine, *American
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Opinion* printed an article by founder Robert Welch which
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summarized JBS thought at that time: The "Insiders" had
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established the Federal Reserve and were the originators of the
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income tax. The middle class is robbed by this tax and the
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Insiders shelter "their own wealth with tax-exempt
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organizations... which [are] also used to fund social programs to
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mollify the masses."
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*** Mary Stewart Relfe, author of *When Your Money Fails... the
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'666' System is Here*, believes that technology and occultism are
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working together to bring about the New World Order.
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*** Phyllis Schafly's 1964 book, *A Choice Not an Echo*, claims
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that presidential nominees are chosen by "a small group of secret
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kingmakers using hidden persuaders and psychological warfare
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techniques." (Also by Schafly, *The Gravediggers*)
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*** Information (a whole chapter) of a startling nature regarding
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that American original, the man that I call "The Wacky
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Frenchman," Lyndon LaRouche. For example, one night a team of
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professional assassins [CN -- Could they perhaps have been the
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same 6 Cuban assassins who later were chasing Perot?] came to
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LaRouche's door, "...and, through a comedy of errors, another
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assassin showed up." Final result? The various assassins scared
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each other off.
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Here are some more of the sources mentioned in *Architects of
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Fear: Conspiracy Theories and Paranoia in American Politics*:
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+++ Samuel Morse, inventor of the telegraph, also wrote a book
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(ca. 1835) called *Foreign Conspiracy Against the Liberties of
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the United States*.
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+++ An interesting organization called "The Duck Club" which
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does and/or did publish a periodical called the "Duck Book."
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+++ *Horrible Pacts between the Devil and the Pretended Invisible
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Ones*, published in Paris in 1623 by the Catholic church.
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+++ In 1738, Pope Clement issued a papal denunciation of
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Freemasonry.
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+++ This one is a classic: *Memoirs of Jacobinism* by Abbe
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Barruel. French, ca. 1790s.
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+++ Another classic: *Proofs of a Conspiracy Against All the
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Religions and Governments of Europe, etc.* by John Robinson.
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Circa 1790s. May be available from the John Birch Society.
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+++ *Adam Weishaupt, A Human Devil* (pamphlet) by the Reverend
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Gerald B. Winrod, ca. 1930s.
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+++ *Fourth Reich of the Rich* by Des Griffin, ca. 1980s.
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+++ *Secret Societies and Subversive Movements* by Nesta Webster,
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first published in 1924 and considered a classic of anti-
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Illuminism. Also by Webster, *World Revolution* and *The
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Socialist Network*.
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+++ Anti-Illuminati literature available through firms such as
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Angriff Press of Hollywood, California; Alpine Enterprises of
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Dearborn, Michigan (publishers of a journal called *Conspiracy
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Digest*); and Omni Publications of Hawthorne, California.
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+++ *The Wandering Jew*, an international best-seller published
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in 1844, an anti-Jesuit thriller.
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+++ *Female Convents: Secrets of Nunneries Disclosed*, ca. 1830-
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1840.
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+++ *Jesuit Juggling: Forty Popish Frauds Detected and
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Disclosed*, ca. 1830-1840.
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+++ *Awful Disclosures of the Hotel Dieu Nunnery of Montreal*, by
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Maria Monk, ca. 1850s. A bestseller from that time, rivalled
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*Uncle Tom's Cabin*.
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+++ *Fifty Years in the Church of Rome* by a former Catholic
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priest. Circa 1870s. Jesuits blamed for Lincoln's assassination.
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+++ *Conspiracy Against God and Man* by Father Clarence Kelly,
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(apparently) circa 1980s.
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+++ *Imperium: The Philosophy of History and Politics* by Francis
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Parker Yockey. According to Johnson, Yockey was Willis Carto's
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mentor.
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+++ *The Occult and the Third Reich*, MacMillan, 1974.
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Translation of a book by 2 French authors using the joint
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pseudonym Jean-Michel Angebert.
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+++ *Gods and Beasts -- The Nazis and the Occult* by Dusty Sklar.
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+++ *The Myth of the 20th Century* by Alfred Rosenberg.
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+++ *To Eliminate the Opiate* by Rabbi Marvin S. Antelman, 1974.
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+++ *None Dare Call It Conspiracy* by Gary Allen. A classic.
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Possibly available from the John Birch Society.
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+++ The Scofield Reference Bible. King James Bible, footnoted and
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cross-referenced by fundamentalist scholar C. I. Scofield. The
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end-time sequence developed. A classic.
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+++ The "End-Time Digest," periodical by Jim McKeever. Also his
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book, *Christians Will Go Through The Tribulation -- And How To
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Prepare For It*. Also, the "McKeever Strategy Letter".
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+++ *Whatever Happened to the Human Race?* by former U.S. Surgeon
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General C. Everett Koop. Attacks the influence of secular
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humanism. Co-authored by Francis Shaeffer.
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+++ *The SIECUS Circle, A Humanist Revolution* by Claire
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Chambers. Published 1977 by the John Birch Society.
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+++ (Fiction) *Illuminatus!* by Robert Anton Wilson and Robert
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Shea. Three volumes: Book 1 -- *The Eye In The Pyramid*; Book 2
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-- *The Golden Apple*; Book 3 -- *Leviathan*.
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Aperi os tuum muto, et causis omnium filiorum qui pertranseunt.
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Aperi os tuum, decerne quod justum est, et judica inopem et
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pauperem. -- Liber Proverbiorum XXXI: 8-9
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