Science of government founded on natural law by Clinton Roosevelt, the direct inspiration of Karl Marx Manifesto

64

By thecounterpunch

Inside the book: the all-seeing-eye is used by Clinton Roosevelt; known member of the Illuminati Order

Clinton Roosevelt wrote this book in 1841 which contains most of what Karl Marx would write a few years later in 1848: in 1849, Horace Greeley, owner of the New York Tribune, the country's first national newspaper at that time mainly support of the Republican Party against the Democratic Party, and Clinton Roosevelt gave monetary support to the Communist League in London to assist the publication of Karl Marx's Manifest der Kommunistichen Partei or Communist Manifesto (1848). Greeley put Marx right on the newspapers' payroll. Other financial contributors were Stepney and Engels. Also in 1843, poet Heinrich Heine, revealed what he knew about this new group, when he wrote a book called Letece, which was a compilation of articles he wrote for the Augsburg Gazette from 1840-1843. A passage from that book read:

"Communism is the secret name of this tremendous adversary which the rule of the proletariat, with all that implies, opposes to the existing bourgeois regime ... Communism is nonetheless the dark hero, cast for an enormous if fleeting role in the modern tragedy, and awaiting its cue to enter the stage."

Clinton Roosevelt is an ancestor of Theodore and Franklin Roosevelt. He was also a well-known member of the Illuminati Order according to 33rd degree freemason Rojas who revived the Illuminati order in 1995 - Rojas is openly promoting his affinity for Communism for example by supporting Noth Korea Nuclear Program in a political letter.

"With many of Mr. Roosevelts remarks on the existing evils of our social arrangements, though containing nothing which is not entirely familiar to those whose reflections have run at all in that direction, we fully agree and warmly and strongly sympathize. Some of them are marked with force and feeling. Perhaps on behalf of Christianity, we ought to thank him for the flattering civility with which he treats it, though he takes pains to inform us that he has nothing more than a mere bowing acquaintance with it. Having neither time, space nor inclination at present to enter upon such a discussion, we shall not give any farther account of his views of social reform, than to state, that while he utterly repudiates that philosophy of FREEDOM to which we have always professed adhesion, he proposes to reorganize society on principles of military combination and martinet uniformity. Everything is to be discipline, control, direction, governmentascending and centralizing till it reaches a single all-paramount

individual command-in-chief. His new notion of a paper-money, immediately representing labor, seems to us the very crudest of all the crudities which have sprung from the inexhaustible source of that subject. The impracticability of his plans, fortunately, we regard as their best feature, for if carried into effect we have little doubt they would lead only to results far worse than those they aim to cure."

Political Science: 1-Creating Oder 2-Preserving Order 3-Refining Order

Comments

No comments yet.

Submit a Comment
Members and Guests

Sign in or sign up and post using a hubpages account.



    • No HTML is allowed in comments, but URLs will be hyperlinked
    • Comments are not for promoting your Hubs or other sites

    Please wait working