any of you may already know
that the book "Atlas Shrugged" by Ayn Rand, is the blueprint for
the New World Order (see below). In fact it is little
known habit of the elite to place a copy this book like the one
below (35th anniversary gold embossed) on their coffee tables.
If you are one of "them" you will be able to quickly identity
that these people (who process this book) are "in the know".
This is really no different than a Freemason using a secret
handshake to identify a fellow Mason.
ATLAS
SHRUGGED
In
1957, a 1,168 page book by
Ayn Rand,
called
Atlas Shrugged, was published. According to one source,
Rand was alleged to be a mistress to
Philippe Rothschild, who instructed her to write
the book in order to show that through the raising of oil
prices, then destroying the oil fields and shutting down the
coal mines, the Illuminati would take over the world. It also
related how they would blow up grain mills, derail trains,
bankrupt and destroy their own companies, till they had
destroyed the economy of the entire world; and yet, they would
be so wealthy, that it would not substantially affect their vast
holdings. The novel is about a man who stops the motor of the
world, of what happens when “the men of the mind, the
intellectuals of the world, the originators and innovators in
every line of industry go on strike; when the men of creative
ability in every profession, in protest against regulation, quit
and disappear.”
If we are to believe that the
book represents the Illuminati’s plans for the future, then the
following excerpts may provide some insight to the mentality of
the elitists who are preparing us for one-world government.
One of the characters,
Francisco d’Anconia, a copper industrialist and heir to a great
fortune, the first to join the strike, says:
“I am destroying d’Anconia
Copper, consciously, deliberately, by plan and by my own hand. I
have to plan it carefully and work as hard as if I were
producing a fortune- in order not to let them notice it and stop
me, in order not to let them seize the mines until it is too
late ... I shall destroy every last bit of it and every last
penny of my fortune and every ounce of copper that could feed
the looters. I shall not leave it as I found it- I shall leave
it as Sebastian d’Anconia found it- then let them try to exist
without him or me!”
A bit later, d’Anconia says:
“We produced the wealth of the world- but we let our enemies
write its moral code.” Still later, he says: “We’ll survive
without it. They won’t.”
Dagney Taggart, the main
character of the book, is the head of the Taggart
Transcontinental Railroad. Her goal was to find out who John
Galt was. She discovered that he was a young inventor with the
Twentieth Century Motor Company, who said he would put an end to
the regulations which bound a man to his job indefinitely.
Before disappearing, he said: “I will stop the motor of the
world.” He told her:
“Dagney, we who’ve been
called ‘materialists’ ... we’re the only ones who know how
little value or meaning there is in material objects ... we’re
the ones who create their value and meaning. We can afford to
give them up ... We are the soul, of which railroads, copper
mines, steel mines, and oil wells are the body- and they are
living entities that beat day and night, like our hearts, in the
sacred function of supporting human life, but only so long as
they remain our body, only so long as they remain the
expression, the reward and the property of achievement. Without
us, they are corpses and their sole product is poison, not
wealth or food, the poison of disintegration that turns men into
hordes of scavengers ... You do not have to depend on any
material possessions, they depend on you, you create them, you
own the one and only tool of production ... leave them the
carcass of that railroad, leave them all the rusted nails and
rotted ties and gutted engines- but don’t leave them your
mind.”
Later in the book, Galt says:
“And the same will be
happening in every other industry, wherever machines are used-
the machines which they thought could replace our minds. Plane
crashes, oil tank explosions, blast furnace breakouts, high
tension wire electrocutions, subway cave-ins, and trestle
collapses- they’ll see them all. The very machines that made
their life so safe- will now make it a continuous peril ... You
know that the cities will be hit worst of all. The cities were
made by the railroads and will go with them ... When the rails
are cut, the city of New York will starve in two days. That’s
all the supply of food its got. It’s fed by a continent three
thousand miles long. How will they carry food to New York? By
directive and ox-cart? But first, before it happens, they’ll go
through the whole of the agony- through the shrinking, the
shortages, the hunger riots, the stampeding violence in the
midst of the growing stillness ... They’ll lose the airplanes
first, then their automobiles, then their trucks, then their
horsecarts .. Their factories will stop, then their furnaces and
their radios. Then their electric light system will go.”
Francisco d’Anconia, who blew
up all the copper mines in the world, said of Galt:
“He had quit the Twentieth
Century. He was living in a garret in a slum neighborhood. He
stepped to the window and pointed at the skyscrapers of the
city. He said that we had to extinguish the lights of the world,
and when we would see the lights of New York go out, we would
know that our job was done.”
Galt led the men of the mind,
on strike, and they retired to a self-supporting valley, where a
character, Midas Mulligan, says that “the world is falling apart
so fast that it will soon be starving. But we will be able to
support ourselves in this valley.” Galt said: “There is only one
kind of men who have never been on strike in human history ...
the men who have carried the world on their shoulders, have kept
it alive, have endured torture as sole payment ... Well, their
turn has come. Let the world discover who they are, what they do
and what happens when they refuse to function. This is the
strike of the men of the mind.”
The book describes what
resulted from the strike: “But years later, when we saw the
lights going out, one after another, in the great factories that
had stood like mountains for generations, when we saw the gates
closing and the conveyer belts turning still, when we saw the
roads growing empty and the streams of cars draining off, when
it began to look as if some silent power were stopping the
generators of the world and the world was crumbling quietly...”
And the culmination of their efforts: “The plane was above the
peaks of the skyscrapers when suddenly, with the abruptness of a
shudder, as if the ground had parted to engulf it, the city had
disappeared from the face of the earth. It took them a moment to
realize that the panic had reached the power stations- and the
lights of New York had gone out.” The men of the mind had taken
over the world.
Ayn Rand, author of Atlas
Shrugged, which was a bestseller; had previously written
We the Living (1936); The Fountainhead (1943), which
became a 1949 movie starring Gary Cooper as an architect willing
to blow up his own work, rather than see it perverted by public
housing bureaucrats; and Anthem (1946). She later wrote
For the New Intellectual (1961), Capitalism: The
Unknown Ideal (1966), and The New Left: The
Anti-Industrial Revolution (1970). She also published a
monthly journal (with Nathaniel Branden, a psychological
theorist) called The Objectivist.
Rand based her novel on her
philosophy which she calls Objectivism. As she puts it: “We are
the radicals for capitalism ... because it is the only system
geared to the life of a rational being ... The method of
capitalism’s destruction rests on never letting the world
discover what it is that is being destroyed.” She also said
about the book: “I trust that no one will tell me that men such
as I write about don’t exist. That this book has been written-
and published- is proof that they do.”
In the book Capitalism:
The Unknown Ideal, in a chapter titled “Is Atlas Shrugging”
she wrote that “the purpose of this book is to prevent itself
from being prophetic.” She also quoted several news stories
which seemed to indicate that the world was indeed being
depleted of its brains and intellectuals.
Is Atlas Shrugged a
coded blueprint for the Illuminati’s plans of bringing this
world to a point where they can institute a one world
government? It certainly is thought provoking, and it is
included only for the sake of conjecture. Being that the
Illuminati is destroying our economy, and they do control the
corporate structure of the United States, if not the world,
there just may be something to this book, and maybe we should
consider it a warning.