TECHNOCRACY RISING
The Trojan Horse of Global
Transformation
by Patrick M. Wood
The dark horse of the
New World Order is not ,
Socialism or
Fascism.
It is Technocracy
PREFACE
The dark horse of the New World Order is not Communism,
Socialism or Fascism: It is Technocracy. I don’t know anyone who follows the news who doesn’t say that
the world seems to be crumbling before his eyes. The American
dynasty has seemingly hit a brick wall in every conceivable direction.
Wealth is shrinking, record numbers are on welfare, our political
structures are dysfunctional, regulations are suffocating the economy,
personal privacy has been shattered, foreign policy disasters are
everywhere, racial conflict is the highest in decades and on and on.
Don’t think that these changes are merely some strange twist of fate
or that they are somehow all unrelated. They are not!
In fact, the world is being actively transformed according to a very
narrow economical/political/social philosophy called Technocracy, and
it is impacting every segment of society in every corner of the world.
Furthermore, Technocracy is being sponsored and orchestrated by a
global elite led by David Rockefeller’s and Zbigniew Brzezinski’s
Trilateral Commission. Let the evidence speak for itself. [Note:
Trilateral Commission member names are in bold type.] [I have just got done reading the first two chapters, and realized how important this information is for having the ability to bring clarity to people about just how important it is to understand where technology wants to take us. dc ]
Originally started in the early 1930s, Technocracy is antithetical to
every American institution that made us into the greatest nation on
earth. It eschews property rights, obsoletes capitalism, hates politicians
and traditional political structures, and promises a lofty utopian dream
made possible only if engineers, scientists and technicians are allowed
to run society. When Aldous Huxley penned Brave New World in 1932,
he accurately foresaw this wrenching transformation of society and
predicted that the end of it would be a scientific dictatorship unlike
anything the world has ever seen.
Indeed, Technocracy is transforming economics, government, religion
and law. It rules by regulation, not by Rule of Law, policies are dreamed
up by unelected and unaccountable technocrats buried in government
agencies, and regional governance structures are replacing sovereign
entities like cities, counties and states. This is precisely why our society
seems so dislocated and irreparable.
Still say you’ve never heard of Technocracy? Well, you probably have
but under different names. The tentacles of Technocracy include
programs such as Sustainable Development, Green Economy, Global
Warming/Climate Change, Cap and Trade, Agenda 21, Common Core
State Standards, Conservation Easements, Public-Private Partnerships,
Smart Growth, Land Use, energy Smart Grid, de-urbanization and depopulation. In America, the power grab of Technocracy is seen in the
castrating of the Legislative Branch by the Executive Branch, replacing
laws and lawmakers with Reflexive Law and regulators, and
establishing regional Councils of Governments in every state to usurp
sovereignty from cities, counties and states.
Technocracy Rising: The Trojan Horse of Global Transformation
connects the dots in ways you have never seen before, taking you on a
historical journey that leads right up to the current day. It will show you
how this coup de grĂ¢ce is taking place right under our noses and what
we might do to stop it. [ he is not lying at all about this ! dc]
When Americans saw through Technocracy in the 1930s, they
forcefully rejected it and the people who promoted it. If Americans are
able to recognize this modern-day Trojan horse, they can reject it again.
Indeed, they must!
Patrick M. Wood
Author
FOREWORD
That which has been is what will be,
That which is done is what will be done,
And there is nothing new under the sun.
Is there anything of which it may be said,
“See, this is new?” It has already been in
Ancient
It has already been in
Ancient times before us.
(Ecclesiastes 1:9-10)
Modern Technocracy and Transhumanism are both products of the
notion that science and technology can somehow fulfill the utopian
dream of perfecting society in general and humanness in particular.
Furthermore, the rapid advancement of science and technology is
leading its practitioners to believe more strongly than ever that final
and total deliverance from their unenlightened past is but a
hairsbreadth away. They see wars being eliminated, poverty being
eradicated and society living in perfect harmony thanks to their careful
scientific management. However, as you shall see, the desire to reform
society and humanity is hardly new but is deeply rooted in both history
and in religious substitution; in history, because there are many
examples of an elite using their control over some form of technology to
subjugate others; in religious substitution, because traditional faith in
God as the sole provider of redemption and transcendence has been
replaced by a reliance on science and technology to provide the same benefits.
The religious foundations for technological advancement have been
either ignored or hidden away from the view of most Westerners
during most of the past two centuries. As long as modernity’s
Positivism – the principal philosophy of what would later undergird the
technocratic worldview – held sway over the minds of its adherents, the
conscious recognition of a reality other than what naturalism offered
could be denied. Postmodernity’s recognition of the futility to wilfully
suppress the knowledge of technology’s religious aspects has not
necessarily generated a more realistic view of its advantages and
limitations in the world of physical reality. Quite the contrary, the
present-day acolytes of technology who serve in the corporate and
academic temples of research and development are even more
committed than their forebears to achieve the impossible: perfection
in each and every aspect of human existence. The ideals of Utopia have
never been more widely hailed as the foundation stones of modern
living than by the proponents of a communitarian and technocratic
world society. [ yep fanatics of their Utopia are the most dangerous, because they hold within their own hands the key to destruction... technology dc ]
It should be noted that while the lure of technology appeals to the
would-be captains of global hegemony, it also appeals to the lowest
echelons of humanity as well. For instance, the philosopher Michael
Heim wrote once, “Our fascination with computers... is more deeply
spiritual than utilitarian. When on-line, we break free from bodily
existence.” We then emulate the “perspective of God”, an all-at-oneness
of “divine knowledge”. Once again, technology is being promoted as a
means to transcendence and redemption. For some, this is a nontraditional religious transcendence of the body and material limitations
in the ephemeral, ineffable realm known as “cyberspace”. For others, it
is a spiritual quest to transcend our limitations and reacquire personal
divinity. On a larger scale, the developers of nuclear weapons, space
exploration and artificial intelligence, for instance, may be propelled by
religious desires, but they are sustained by military financing and the
results of their labours are totalitarian governments ruled by an elite of
technocrats. [ keep it personal, keep it divine, we grow together, invade my space, you use the power in vain dc [
The reader is urged to make careful study of this book and its primary
message, that in the name of science and scientism, technocracy is on
the rise world-wide, that it is an age-old deception of the greatest
magnitude, that it is not what it appears to be and that it cannot make
good delivery on its fantastical promises. [amen dc ]
Dr. Martin Erdmann,
Director
Verax Institute
INTRODUCTION
Technocracy is the science of social engineering, the scientific operation of the entire social mechanism to produce and distribute
goods and services to the entire population…2
Let me be clear about the intent and scope of this book. My
premise is that when it was founded in 1973, the Trilateral
Commission quietly adopted a modified version of historic Technocracy
to craft what it called a “New International Economic Order”. This has
been largely unrecognized even to this day. With the combined weight
of the most powerful global elite behind it, Technocracy has flourished in the modern world and has perhaps reached the tipping point of no
return.[ their ' new ' economic order really means it is THEIR order overtaking the old, which I imagine did not go over well with the ' old ' bunch, yeah your war of fighting over an idol, broke into public a few times along the way, with a black Friday, and a public meltdown in the 21st Century has brought us to the brink of finding out who controls this chaos....the $$$ or the information? dc ]
This book will explain Technocracy in detail, demonstrate the
methodology that has been used to implement it, document the control
over power centers that allowed the methodology to be used, and most
importantly, expose the perpetrators who are responsible for it. If the
reader does not see the importance of these connections, then neither
will he see the economic and political dangers in such things like
Sustainable Development, Agenda 21, Public-Private Partnerships,
Smart Growth, Green Economy, Smart Grid, Common Core State
Standards, Councils of Governments, etc. The creation of all of these
programs will be laid at the feet of the Trilateral Commission, in the
name of Technocracy. Indeed, the Trilateral Commission and its
members were simultaneously the philosophical creators of modern
Technocracy as well as the implementers as they occupied key
positions in governments, business and academia since 1973. [ yep, all in on the exposing dc ]
I can already hear the Trilaterals and Technocrats howling in protest
after reading just this first paragraph. “Not so!”, “Foolishness!”,
“Lunacy!” I’ve heard this lame defense for almost 40 years. One of the first lessons learned about liars in my early days, when the Cold War
was in full play - and the Soviets were also consummate liars - was to
“Watch what they do, not what they say.” So, to all you elitists who
might perchance be reading this book, you stand naked before the
evidence.
To the rest of the inquiring world, you may not like what you discover
here, but if you follow along to the end, you will see all the dots finally
connected in a way that makes perfect sense.
The term technocracy was first used publicly by W.H. Smythe in his
1919 article, “Industrial Management”. During that time in history,
academics and professionals were fervently debating various aspects of
the industrial and technological revolutions and their impact on society,
economy and government structures.
The word itself is derived from the Greek words “techne”, meaning
skilled and “kratos”, meaning rule. Thus, it is government by skilled
engineers, scientists and technicians as opposed to elected officials.
Technocracy was generally considered to be exclusive of all other forms
of government, including democracy, communism, socialism and
fascism, but as we shall see, there was some ideological blending of
ideas when it suited the person or group doing the talking.[ Yep the system that will not tolerate others, definitely the one that that needs to be shut down, for the good of all, this technology should have been used for the good! Not control! dc ]
In any case, whenever you hear the word Technocracy, this minimum definition will always apply. As the movement progressed and ideas
were expanded, some of those additional ideas were branded backward
into the original definition as modifying clauses, but they only added to
the original meaning without necessarily changing it.
My interest in globalism and the activities of the global elite started in
1976 when I was a young financial writer and securities analyst. I later
teamed up with Antony C. Sutton to study and write about the Trilateral
Commission, its policies and members, and their plans for global
hegemony. Sutton taught me how to to “Follow the money. Follow the power.” which has proven an invaluable aid in getting to the heart
of a matter. Although I would like to write a follow-up book to our
Trilaterals Over Washington, Volumes I and II, the subject of
Technocracy now trumps all others. If there is a holy grail (or, unholy
grail) of understanding on the New World Order, this is it. [That's a good place to start dc ]
In a nutshell, historic Technocracy is a utopian economic system that
discards price-based economics in favor of energy or resource-based
economics. Technocracy is so radically different from all current
economic norms that it will stretch your mind to get a grasp of what it
actually means and what it implies for a global society. [ maybe the word green will wake one dc ]
However, in order to properly integrate Technocracy into the total
picture, I will briefly address some other important and related topics
along the way, such as Scientism, Transhumanism and Scientific Dictatorship. That these are not dealt with in full at present is not to
diminish their importance in any way; perhaps follow-up works will
allow for a more detailed and complete treatment of those topics.
In the 1930s, there was a popular movement called Technocracy that
spawned a large and zealous following of hundreds of thousands of
members in the United States and Canada. Sadly, history books reveal
little about this movement, and so my study of it required a significant amount of time-consuming original research at significant personal
expense. As I dug deeply into historical archives and old media, I was
increasingly shocked by the impact that Technocracy had then and is
having on the world today.
There have been many small crackpot movements throughout history
to which we might say, “Who cares?” When a hundred people get
together to talk about UFOs, utopian philosophy or whatever, it’s just a
hundred people getting together. If nothing comes of it, all the folks
eventually pass and history forgets that they were ever alive. This is not
so with Technocracy for many reasons:
*By the 1930s there was at least a 100 year backdrop of
philosophical justification for Scientism and Technocracy.
*The organizers were top tier engineers and scientists of their
day, many of whom were professors at prestigious
universities such as Columbia University.
*Their plans were meticulously detailed, documented and
openly published.
*The impact of their policies and philosophy on the modern
global society is gargantuan.
Technocracy is about economic and social control of society and
persons according to the Scientific Method. Most of us think about the
so-called scientific method when we think back on the carefully crafted
experiments in high school chemistry or biology class. That is not what
I’m talking about here. Technocracy’s Scientific Method dates back
mostly to philosophers Henri de Saint-Simon (1760-1825) and Auguste
Comte (1798-1857).
According to the global-minded New School,
Henri de Saint-Simon is renowned as the founder of the “Saint Simonian” movement, a type of semi-mystical “Christian-Scientific”
socialism that pervaded the 19th Century. Saint-Simon envisaged the
reorganization of society with an elite of philosophers, engineers and
scientists leading a peaceful process of industrialization tamed by
their “rational” Christian-Humanism. His advocacy of a “New
Christianity” -- a secular humanist religion to replace the defunct
traditional religions -- was to have scientists as priests. This priestly
task was actually taken up by two of his followers -- Barthelemy Prosper Enfantin (1796-1864) and Saint-Amand Bazard (1791-1832)
-- who infected the whole movement with their bizarre mysticism and
ritual.3
Saint-Simon, along with Comte, is considered a father of so-called
“social science” studies in universities world-wide. He was the first philosopher to bring psychology, physiology, physics, politics and
economics to the study of humanity and human behavior and the first to suggest that the Scientific Method could be used in the process to
discover what made man and society tick. As such, he had no regard for
what “little people” thought and highest regard for those enlightened
ones of superior intellectual abilities. Human nature was merely an
object of dispassionate research and objective analysis.4
Auguste Comte was the founder of the discipline of Sociology and the
doctrine of Positivism, and many regard him as the first philosopher of
science. He was heavily influenced by Saint-Simon. Comte promoted the
notion that the only authentic knowledge is scientific knowledge and
that the Scientific Method was the only way to arrive at such truth.
If you want to learn more about Saint-Simon, Comte and their
followers, there are a multitude of good resources in your public or
university library and on the Internet. The point of invoking their
names here is to point out that Technocracy’s elite way of thinking had
been brewing for a long time and was hardly original with modern
technocrats. However, since science was rapidly advancing during the
1920s and 1930s (and the Great Depression falsely convinced many
that capitalism and free enterprise were dead), they believed that they
alone possessed the knowledge to make a scientific society operate
successfully and efficiently. Further, bolstered by the supposed death of
capitalism during the Great Depression, they figured that their ship had finally come in, and it was time for them to take over, restructure
society along scientific lines, and thereby save the world: no more
depressions, no more war, no more poverty.
You will soon learn everything about Technocracy that you wish you
did not know, and yet there is one more important point that you need
to understand to put it all in context. In order for Technocracy to
succeed, it is necessary to have in place a comprehensive system for the
orderly management of all humans and all facets of societal operation.
This includes the economic, political, social and religious. Furthermore,
these areas must not be merely compatible; they must be so thoroughly
entangled with each other that distinctions among them will not be
obvious to their subjects. Indeed, this is the “holistic” approach to
global governance. [Note: Governance is a process of regulatory
management and does not refer to representative government, as it is
commonly understood. The regulators are unelected “experts” who
answer to no one, as is the case with the European Union, for instance.]
This is an important point to grasp because it permeates the thinking
of all historical and modern Technocrats alike. It is, so to speak, the
“glue that binds” these concepts together, rendering them inseparable,
interdependent and symbiotic. Unfortunately, in order for you to really
get into the Technocrat’s mind, I must digress into one more
philosophical discussion, but I promise it will be short!
The Greek word for whole is “holos”, from which we have a number of
modern words such as holistic, holism, holon, holarchy and so on. The
philosophical concepts that have grown up around these words have as
much to do with metaphysics and religion as they do with politics or
economics.
In 1926, Jan Christian Smuts (1870-1950) wrote a political treatise
called Holism and Evolution. Who was Smuts? As a statesman, military
commander, politician and philosopher, Smuts advocated the founding
of the League of Nations and later was a leading figure in the creation of
the United Nations Covenant. In 1917, he was chosen to be a member of
the Imperial War Cabinet in England, during which time he helped to
found the Royal Air Force. In his native South Africa, Smuts was twice
elected Prime Minister after holding several lesser elected positions.
In Holism and Evolution, Smuts proposed the “Theory of the Whole”
which states, in part, that “what a thing is in its sum is of greater
importance than its component parts.”
5 Thus, the city is more
important than its inhabitants, the state is more important than its
cities, and the whole of humanity is more important than cities, nationstates and all the humans therein. The individual is seen relinquishing
his or her rights, privileges and aspirations to the greater good. Smuts
viewed evolution as an integral part of the holism phenomenon as
towns grow into cities, cities into states, states into countries and
countries into a global society. From every sub-atomic particle to the
entire universe, each smaller part is integral and subservient to the
larger. This is an early-modern scientific notion of the earth as a
complete organism (whole) that has many interdependent parts
(smaller wholes) that are subservient to the larger organism. Holism is
also the rationale for regionalism of all magnitudes, whether Councils
of Governments within states, or country groupings within continents,
such as the European Union.
The philosophy of holism has since matured. Fast forward to 1967
when Arthur Koestler coined the word “holon” in his book, The Ghost in
the Machine.6 Koestler suggested that a holon is a stable unit within a
larger system that is controlled by other holons greater than it, all of
which are in a continuous state of evolution to a higher, more complex
form. Such a complete system of holons is referred to as a holarchy.
Accordingly, “The entire machine of life and of the Universe itself
evolves toward ever more complex states, as if a ghost were operating
the machine.”
7
Personally, I reject this thinking altogether because man is the
pinnacle of creation and not a mere holon that must serve the holarchy.
In other words, I believe that man is not to be the servant of nature, but
rather nature is to be the servant of man. In the balance of this book, I
will make the case that Technocrats, from the 1930s until the present,
view all of the holons in the world as little more than engineering
projects to be analyzed, debugged and re-engineered according to their Scientific Method. They are an egotistical bunch, to be sure, thinking
that they alone have the technical abilities to save the rest of us from
our ignorance and archaic beliefs such as Christianity, liberty, and
personal freedom. [ here here, I second that dc ]
The Devil in the Details
It is no mistake that there is a decidedly religious aspect to
Technocracy. Saint-Simon’s “New Christianity” saw a pressing need to
replace historical Christianity with a secular humanist religion where
scientists and engineers would constitute the new priesthood.
This is in stark contrast to New Testament Christianity where the
Bible speaks of the church, for instance,
But you are a chosen generation, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, His
own special people, that you may proclaim the praises of Him who
called you out of darkness into His marvelous light. (1 Peter 2:9)
Saint-Simon’s New Christianity not only redefined the object of
worship - science instead of God - but also the priesthood that would
serve this new god. However, this same scenario has played itself out
innumerable times in the Old and New Testament. When the One God of
the universe was seen as abandoned, idols and false gods were created
to replace Him and to provide various ill-defined benefits to would-be
worshipers. Some prominent examples in the Old Testament include
Marduk, Baal, Bel, Molech, Ashtoreth, Tamuz, Dagon, etc. In the early
period of the New Testament church, competing idols included Apollo,
Zeus, Helen, Athena, Pluto, Hermes and so on. Each of these idols had
its own attendant priesthood, that is, those who were allowed to
approach their god and who alone were allowed to relay what their god
had to say to his/her followers.
To say that Christianity and idolatry are mutually exclusive is easily
seen in the New Testament where Christians are simply told to “flee
from idolatry” (1 Corinthians 10:14). The apostle Paul goes on to say,
…the things which the Gentiles sacrifice they sacrifice to demons and
not to God, and I do not want you to have fellowship with demons. You
cannot drink the cup of the Lord and the cup of demons; you cannot
partake of the Lord’s table and of the table of demons. Or do we
provoke the Lord to jealousy? Are we stronger than He? (1 Corinthians
10:20-22)
Here is the crux of the matter: There is a Devil in the details of
Technocracy. We must be very careful in our examination of
Technocracy to see this undercurrent of religious substitution because
it proves to be the basis for global deception greater than anything the
world has seen to date.
Technocracy will be shown to be thoroughly anti-Christian and
completely intolerant of Biblical thought. This has always been the
hallmark sign seen in idolatrous religions and practices!
As stark as the contrast might be upon careful examination, we will
also see how threads of Technocracy, Scientism and Transhumanism
are interweaving themselves into the modern Christian church. Many
modern Bible-believing Christians are quite disturbed and perplexed by
this intrusion into historic Christianity. For technocrats who see
Technocracy as salvation for both political and economic structures,
then certainly it can be salvation for your soul as well. This is very
dangerous thinking and is leading many Christians and churches into a
state of active apostasy, a falling away from traditional Biblical
doctrines, teachings and practices.
Trilateral Commission
In 1978 when I co-authored Trilaterals Over Washington Volumes I
and II with the late Antony C. Sutton, we wrote extensively about a
newly formed elitist group called the Trilateral Commission that was
co-founded by David Rockefeller and Zbigniew Brzezinski. They
chose about 250 elitists from North America, Europe and Japan in order
to create a “New International Economic Order” (NIEO). The
membership consisted of people from academia, industry, finance,
media and government.
Sutton and I interpreted the NIEO as a reshuffling of conventional
economic theory, such as Keynesianism, in order for their members to
game the system for their own benefit. After all, the elite have been
known for this type of crass manipulation to accumulate money to
themselves at the expense of every one else in society. We thought this
was the case with the Trilateral Commission.
Brzezinski’s 1968 book, Between Two Ages: America’s Role in the
Technetronic Era, was written when he was a professor at Columbia
University, yet it was this book that originally endeared him to
Rockefeller and other elitists. Sutton and I wrote extensively on
Brzezinski’s philosophy and conclusions as revealed in Between Two
Ages, but neither of us had any inkling that the word “Technetronic”
might have been a knockoff for the word “Technocratic”. Why? Because
at that time neither of us had any knowledge of Technocracy or its
doctrines. However, as I was researching the history of Technocracy the
thought occurred to me to go back and re-read Between Two Ages to see
if there were any parallels or conceptual connections to early
Technocracy. Needless to say, I was shocked: throughout his book,
Brzezinski was loating the party line of Technocracy.
Thus, it became increasingly clear to me that the Trilateral
Commission’s original goal of creating a New International Economic
Order might actually mean abandoning status quo economics in favor
of a completely different economic system of Technocracy. If this is the
case, then it has escaped virtually everyone’s attention for the last 40-
plus years!
Well, better late than never, I suppose…. I therefore hope that you will
make a careful and detailed reading of this book from beginning to end
and then do some digging on your own to see if these things are true or
not.
In 2009, when I had formalized my research on Technocracy to the
point that I could adequately communicate it to others, I contacted a
few of my professional colleagues, all of whom are very well educated
on various aspects of economic globalization, global religion, science
and world politics. Not only was there general acceptance of the
research, but the most common response was, “This connects all the
dots that we could not previously connect.” In other words,
Technocracy really is the glue that binds together disparate events,
movements and concepts.
On the whole, if this new knowledge collectively drew alarm from
them, then I realized that Technocracy was much bigger than I had
originally thought. They not only encouraged me to continue this work,
but they also put themselves to the task of further research as well. In
this sense, I am not writing this book alone or in a vacuum but rather
with the concurrence of disciplined minds from different academic
genres.
Understanding Technocracy will help you to understand and connect
seemingly unrelated topics like
*Agenda 21 and Sustainable Development
*Land and water grabs by Federal agencies
*ICLEI, Smart Growth and Public-Private Partnerships
*Communitarianism, the Third Way
and Communitarian Law
*Global Warming/Climate Change
*Smart Grid, Carbon Credits, Cap & Trade
Indeed, all of these modern phenomena have their roots firmly planted in the doctrines of early Technocracy as far back as the 1930s
and beyond!
CHAPTER 1
The Backdrop For Technocracy
Technocracy did not spring out of nowhere. Rather, there were a
host of philosophies co-mingling with each other from at least
the mid-1800s through the turn of the century. This cauldron initially
produced more discussion than action, but it was inevitable that some
strains of thoughts would solidify into society-changing movements.
And indeed, they did: Darwinism spawned the eugenics movement;
Marxist philosophies led directly to the Communist overthrow in
Russia; Fabian socialism was identified with colonialism in southern
Africa; the Technocracy movement took off in the 1920s, and so on.
The fact is, “Ideas matter!” What seems like a crazy idea today could
just as easily change the world tomorrow. In that sense, the period
between 1890 and 1930 was a pivotal time for the future of the world.All notions of Biblical inerrancy and historical accuracy had been
discarded by the intellectual elite. Radical new inventions created by
scientists and engineers were revolutionizing both the physical and
social world. The engineered and mechanized slaughter during World
War I sent shockwaves to every corner of the world.
The purpose of this book is to explain Technocracy and not the
broader experience of world history. Thus, the following abbreviated
statements about prominent philosophies and philosophers of the
period can only serve as a reminder for what people were processing in
their minds at the time. For the curious desiring more detail, there are a
myriad of works available in your local or university library.
Positivism
The Frenchman Auguste Comte (1798-1857) is known as the father of
modern sociology and was the founder of Positivism,a philosophy that
was very popular in the late 1800s. Comte was considered the first philosopher of science as he elevated science by claiming that the only
authentic knowledge is scientific knowledge. This naturally discarded
all notions of absolute truth based on the Bible and metaphysical truth
based on man’s imaginations. Comte believed that his “science of
society” could be discovered and explained by applying the Scientific Method in the same manner as it was applied to physical science.
Scientism
Scientism takes Positivism to an extreme by claiming that science
alone can produce truth about the world and reality. As such, it is more
radical and exclusionary than Positivism. Scientism rejects all
philosophical, religious and metaphysical claims to understand reality,
since the truth it portends cannot be validated by the Scientific Method.
Thus,science is the absolute and only access to truth and reality.
Scientism is often seen overstepping the bounds of provable science by
applying the Scientific Method to areas that cannot be demonstrated,
such as evolution, climate change and social science.
Progressivism
According to one historian, progressivism is a
political movement that addresses ideas, impulses, and issues
stemming from modernization of American society. Emerging at the
end of the nineteenth century, it established much of the tone of
American politics throughout the first half of the century.
8
Industrialization was enabled by science, technology and invention.
As knowledge increased, it was surmised that society must change
along with it, or at least adapt to it.Progressives called for bigger
government run by qualified managers with diminishing personal
liberty and national sovereignty, but they simultaneously fought to
reduce waste and increase efficiency in government. The emphasis on efficiency drove many progressives into Technocracy since science
appeared to be the only pathway to achieve it.
Darwinism
The philosophy of Darwinism grew out of Charles Darwin’s book The
Origin of Species, published in 1859, which proposed that all life
naturally evolved over long periods of time from the most simple
creature to the most complex. It specifically rejected the Biblical
account of creation and in general all thoughts of intelligent design. By
the early 1900s, the concept of Darwinism had expanded to use
evolution to describe social change and eugenics theories.Eugenics
proposed the artificial manipulation of the human “gene pool” via
selective breeding and “cleansing”, as ultimately seen in Hitler’s
genocidal rampages during WWII. With today’s advancement in various
technologies such as genetic engineering and nano-technology,
Transhumanists (Transhumanism and Technocracy both rely on
Scientism) are boldly claiming that they are now firmly in control of the
evolutionary process and will direct the creation of Humanity 2.0.
Fascism
Merriam-Webster defines Fascism as
a political philosophy, movement, or regime that exalts nation and
often race above the individual and that stands for a centralized
autocratic government headed by a dictatorial leader, severe
economic and social regimentation, and forcible suppression of
opposition.
What differentiates Fascism from Communism is its protection of
businesses and land-holding elites. Indeed, corporate entities during
Hitler’s war years were virtually merged with state interests. Today, the
term Fascism has multiple nuances, but all point to a totalitarian
system where corporatism and the state are seen as functionally
equivalent.
Socialism
The doctrines of Karl Marx are seen as the original basis for Socialism
as an economic and political model. Socialism eschews private property
and the accumulation of wealth through state-ownership of all
productive resources and distribution based on “to each according to
his need.” As with Marxism, Socialism is described differently
depending on the angle of observation,but the common denominator
in all cases is a high level of social and economic control through state ownership and management with authoritarian control over
production, distribution and consumption.
Fabianism
The Fabian Society was formed in England in 1884. It held to a form of
Socialism (thus often referred to as Fabian Socialism) that promoted a
slow and indirect transformation of society instead of a more radical
approach. It was named after the Roman General Fabius Maximus who
used delaying tactics against the Carthaginian army led by the famous
general, Hannibal. Over the decades, many famous individuals became
members of the Society, including H.G. Wells, Bernard Shaw, Virginia
Woolf and Bertrand Russell. Social activist Beatrice Webb played a key
role in forming the Society and later founded the London School of
Economics.The Fabian Society has had a profound inluence in many
nations and continents around the world, including Great Britain, the
United States, Europe and southern Africa.
The Influencers
Henri Saint-Simon (1760-1825)
Saint-Simon was recognized as the father of Technocracy by the
Technocrats themselves. He could also be considered the philosophical
father of the so-called “emerging church” that is becoming prominent
around the world today. Saint-Simon was born into an aristocratic
family in France, fought in the American Revolution and later turned to
a life of writing and philosophical criticism. He developed many radical
strains of thought that influenced people after him, including Karl Marx,
Jean-Jacques Rousseau and Auguste Comte among others. He proposed
a Christian socialism where everyone would be part of the
“brotherhood of man”,and suggested that private property should give
way to societal management by experts, or technocrats. His New
Christianity also called for churches to be administered by experts who
would direct their parishioners into social programs designed to
reform the world and alleviate poverty.
10
Auguste Comte (1798-1857)
Comte was Saint-Simon’s most famous student and was the founder of
Positivism which was popular in the second half of the 1800s. As the first “philosopher of science”, Comte is also credited as being the father
of modern sociology. Like Saint-Simon, Comte also placed a large focus
on religion by creating the “Religion of Humanity”, which some called
“Catholicism plus science” and others called “Catholicism without
Christ”.11 Comte also followed Saint-Simon’s concept of evolutionary
history by formulating three stages of societal development:
Theological, Metaphysical and Positive, with the later meaning that the
laws of science that control the world are fully known and understood.
Thorstein Veblen (1857-1929)
Born in America, Veblen was an economist and sociologist who
followed Saint-Simon’s and Comte’s theory of evolutionary history by
combining Darwinian evolution with his own institutional economics.
As a prominent figure in the progressive movement, he was fiercely critical of capitalism while he championed a leadership of a “soviet of
engineers”. In 1919, Veblen helped found the New School For Social
Research (today called The New School) that became a seedbed of
radical thought. The New School is where Veblen met Howard Scott,the
soon-to-be leader of the Technocracy movement in the U.S. In the early
1920s, Veblen, Howard Scott and M. King Hubbert were all members of
the Technical Alliance, a precursor to the Technocracy movement. Early
Technocrats universally credit Veblen as a leader of their early efforts to define and organize a technocratic movement. Ironically, Veblen died
three months before the stock market crash in 1929, which proved to
be the catalyst for wide-spread public interest in Technocracy.
Frederick Taylor (1856-1915)
Taylor was an American mechanical engineer who became fixated on
ways to increase efficiency in manufacturing processes and worked for
years studying and making improvements. In 1911, he published his
seminal work, Principles of Scientific Management 12 and changed the
world of business management forever.Because of his expertise and
problem-solving skills, Taylor also inadvertently invented the
profession of business consulting. As his notoriety spread, the word
“Taylorism” became a synonym for Scientific Management. Taylorism
was widely adopted in the USSR as a means of increasing production
without having to increase education and training.
Edward Bellamy (1850-1898)
The writings and activism of Edward Bellamy, a dedicated socialist,
were widely received by the Technocracy movement after his death. His
most famous literary work, Looking Backward,
13 was a Rip Van Winkle
sort of tale where the hero wakes up in the year 2000 and is then
shown how society has changed (looking backward) in the intervening
100 plus years; it describes a Utopia where the state owns one hundred
percent of the means of production, run by experts,and everyone in
society has all his needs met while living in harmony with each other.
The book was an immediate best-seller and created an enthusiastic
social movement that lasted over 10 years. The Nationalist Clubs, which
promoted the socialist idea of nationalizing all business, ultimately had
162 chapters across the U.S., with 65 of them originating in California.
Not incidentally, California later became a hotbed for Technocracy
meetings and organizations.
The Cauldron
Were these the only philosophies and people contributing to the
buildup to Technocracy? Absolutely not. These are standouts, however,
that help us to understand the complex mix out of which Technocracy
arose. Starting with Saint-Simon, it took over 100 years for Technocracy
to congeal and finally arise as serious academic and social movements.
Today, 80-100 years later,Technocracy has increased its grip and influence over the affairs of men. All of this is to say that Technocracy
was not some poorly thought out whim of an uneducated crackpot. To
the contrary, the progenitors of Technocracy include academic
professors, philosophers, inventors, social activists and prominent
members of society.
Setting differences aside, one can easily identify some common
threads: rejection of capitalism, distributed wealth, state-ownership of
industry, rule by experts instead of politicians, historical and societal
evolution as guides for the future, the preeminence of science and the
exclusion of Biblical Christianity.
If utopian scientists and engineers were thoroughly hooked on the
evolutionary progress of man and society by the 1920s,how much
more clever are they today as they strive to take evolution into their
own hands to create their own destinies? As the prestigious
Smithsonian Magazine stated in 2012,
Adherents of “transhumanism”—a movement that seeks to transform
Homo sapiens through tools like gene manipulation, “smart drugs”
and nanomedicine—hail [scientific] developments as evidence that we
are becoming the engineers of our own evolution.14 [Emphasis
added]
CHAPTER 2
From Passion to Meltdown (1920-
1940)
The basic problem was that the technocrats’
social analysis lacked a political theory of
action.
15
The 1920s were not conducive to public acceptance of
Technocracy, nor was it even aware that prominent educators,
scientists and engineers were zealously laying the groundwork for it.
The interlude between the catastrophes of World War I, which ended in
November 1918, and the September 1929 stock market crash was a
mere 11 years. During that time, all sorts of societal changes would take
place that would taint the entire landscape for the next 100 years.
During the Great War, over 9 million combatants died. This shocked
the entire world, not only because of the number of dead, but the
means by which they died. It was the first technology-driven war in the
history of the world: ships, tanks, airplanes, high explosives, machine
guns, radio, chemical warfare, etc.
The public got over it quickly enough and threw themselves into the
reckless Roaring 20s that were full of hedonistic abandon. Before the
crash in 1929, pretty much everyone believed that prosperity and good
times would last forever. They had assurances from all quarters that the
world was done with war, that everyone had learned his lesson and
would never let it happen again. With 10 years of economic boom
behind them, they also had assurances that economic prosperity was a
permanent fixture. Life was good. Capitalism was great. Peace and
prosperity for all. America was living the dream!
However, because of the technology used in the Great War, the
engineering profession was suffering from a mixture of guilt and
societal angst. Technology that they had collectively invented had gone
terribly wrong and resulted in the mechanized death of millions.
Furthermore, they reasoned, society had been fundamentally changed
with the inclusion of technology, and politicians were obviously
incapable of managing the resulting hybrid society. In their view,
technology was certain to continue its transformative pace and if they -
scientists, engineers and technicians - were not allowed to run it, then
the outcome would most certainly be further disasters. Thus, as
theories of engineering blended with various shades of Comte’s
positivism, the brainchild of Technocracy was born.[Or in other words, the 'experts' of Tom, Dick and Harry became. dc]
The intellectual and philosophical stew that fed this brainchild was
seasoned with progressive thought, Positivism, Taylorism and Taylor’s
Scientific Method of management, Darwinism and eugenics. (According
to the American Journal of Sociology, “Eugenics is the science which
deals with all influences that improve the inborn qualities of a race;
also with those that develop them to the utmost advantage.”)16 [Eugenics? The 'experts' on population control, and the herd misses the double meaning of 'control', as it involves much more then just numbers dc ]
Furthermore, thanks to Auguste Comte and his “science of society”,
the early Technocrats believed that they could engineer society by
applying the Scientific Method in the same manner as it was applied to
physical science. This was a mistake, but one that was never recognized
as such, even to this day. To them, the simple fact that the world was
becoming even more techno-centric only fueled the urgency of their
discussions and planning for Technocracy. They alone could save the
world from itself while politicians were certain to just make it worse.[ this crap was doomed to failure because of the division, yeah politicians suck, but putting yourself above them, only adds to the confusion, to both their enterprise, and the outside viewer(you& me) dc]
By 1921, Frederick Taylor’s masterpiece, The Principles of Scientific
Management (1911), had 10 years to influence business, government
and society. The essence of Scientific Management was
Science, not rule of thumb.
Harmony, not discord.
Cooperation, not individualism.
Maximum output, in place of restricted output.
The development of each man to
his greatest efficiency and
prosperity.
17
Taylor’s theories not only captivated the U.S. but the entire world,
including the U.S.S.R and Germany. Taylor’s famous time-and-motion
studies proved that workers could be driven to a level of efficiency and
production never before realized.
One historian concluded that Taylor
…asked the public to impose scientific management on reluctant
businesses and unions for the good of the whole. Taylorites began to
argue that the system promised a shift from arbitrary power to scientific administration not only in the factory but in society as well.
Such a shift would bring about the realization of social harmony
through, as one young Taylorite engineer wrote, “the organization of
human affairs in harmony with natural laws”… Such ideas were heady
stuff for engineers.18
When the Great War started in 1914, Taylorism was reaching its
initial nadir just in time to be applied to wartime economies. Factories
cranked out weapons with precision assembly lines staffed by robot like humans performing the same repetitive tasks up to 16 hours per
day. Taylor had leveled the playing field, however, because all the
various combatants had learned and implemented the same
techniques.[what the reader needs to understand here is that we are witness to the opposite here of what the Rockefeller/ Vanderbilts types were about, monopoly and scarcity, with this Taylorism set loose on us dc]
Indeed, engineers had a lot to think about in the early 1920s. In the
end, they essentially concluded that it was not their fault that
technology had failed the world, but rather the fault of ignorant and
corrupt politicians who did not know how to handle what they did not
understand. [ blame instead of taking responsibility for their ideas dc]
By the fall of 1919, it was Thorstein Veblen who began to call for a
revolution of engineers. As co-founder and professor of The New School
in New York, Veblen’s ideas were not yet well-known by many
engineers, but they caught the attention of a radical young upstart by
the name of Howard Scott, who would remain an advocate for
Technocracy for the rest of his life. In fact, it was Scott who later
founded Technocracy, Inc. in early 1934.
Thus, in 1919, Veblen and Scott started a group they called the
“Technical Alliance” to organize a “soviet of technicians”. The Alliance
failed miserably to attract many like-minded engineers, but Veblen
continued to sponsor discussions about his proposed revolution at The
New School. By 1921, Veblen was ready to try again and did so with the
release of his Engineers and the Price System that took all the blinders
off. He plainly stated,
If the country’s productive industry were competently organized as a
systematic whole, and were then managed by competent technicians
with an eye single to maximum production of goods and services
instead of, as now, being manhandled by ignorant business men with
an eye single to maximum profits; the resulting output of goods and
services would doubtless exceed the current output by several hundred
percent.
19 [ What these people did not understand is that The State was already established, and was always going to usurp their plan at some point, history had established that by the 18th Century already, they should have learned the lesson of the Church , and what happens when you compromise yourself with The State. These are no better off in the 21st Century then the Priests of The Church dc]
Howard Scott was truly a disciple of Veblen at this point but not
without even more radical ideas of his own. It was Scott who first proposed that an energy-based value system would eliminate profit motives and provide a purely functional basis for the organization of
society. [ green? hmm...dc]
By 1922, as the early organizing efforts came to an end, Veblen
moderated his activism and Scott essentially dropped out of sight. He
continued to stump for his radical theories in restaurants, coffeehouses
and speakeasies in his hometown of Greenwich Village in Lower
Manhattan. Nobody took him very seriously, and many considered him
a boorish, yet flamboyant, blowhard. Greenwich Village, known as a
bohemian artist and non-conformist community, was perfectly it for
Scott and even led some to call him the “Bohemian Engineer”.
Columbia University
In 1932, Walter Rautenstrauch was a professor at Columbia
University and headed the Department of Industrial Engineering which
he had previously founded as the first such department in the nation. It
is not certain how Scott and Rautenstrauch met, but it was immediately
clear to both of them that they shared a common interest in promoting
a system of Technocracy run by engineers, scientists and technicians.
Scott, being a minor figure from Greenwich Village, latched onto the
prestigious Rautenstrauch as his ticket to stardom.
Rautenstrauch approached Nicholas Murray Butler, the president of
Columbia, for a green light to complete an industrial survey of North
America, which Scott had started years before with his failed Technical
Alliance. Both Columbia and Butler prided themselves for being on the
cutting-edge of progressive radicalism, and Technocracy was appealing.
Thus, with one stroke of the pen, Scott had Columbia’s facilities at his
disposal as well as its prestigious reputation. It was later revealed that
Scott had misrepresented his own academic credentials, never having
graduated from a recognized university, so it is understandable why
Scott viewed this new association as the biggest break of his life. [Ah the Jeffrey Epstein of his time . dc]
In the early fall of 1932, Rautenstrauch and Scott hastily formed the
Committee on Technocracy to supervise the industrial survey project.
Its members were drawn from other Columbia University educators
and included another soon-to-be key player in Scott’s life, M. King
Hubbert. Scott became the “consulting technologist” on the Committee,
and it was his methodology that would be used to conduct the survey.
Financial resources were hard to come by during The Great Depression,
so one of Scott’s colleagues convinced the Architects’ Emergency Relief
Committee of New York to fund the project by making dozens of
unemployed architects available to work on the survey at Columbia.
This engineering workforce was likely housed in the basement of
Hamilton Hall at Columbia where other temporary projects had been
located in previous years.[ You know the same folks right now in 2022 are in some basement right now working on a project to save their misguided selfs, and save themselves from what is to come. dc ]
In a 2006 biography on Nicholas Murray Butler, Michael Rosenthal
revealed what happened next:
Enthralled by Scott’s messianic fervor, Butler invited him in 1932 to
come to Columbia, working in the Department of Industrial
Engineering, to conduct research into the history of American
industrial development as seen through a complex series of energy
measurements. When it became known in August that Scott and his
fellow technocrats were established at Columbia, interest in
Technocracy exploded. A dance was named after it, Scott became a
sought-after speaker, and The Nation proclaimed his theories
revolutionary. Butler tried to dampen expectations about its
potential… but it was clear that he was excited to have captured it for
Columbia.20 [ bottom line the tech is the downfall of man, just the truth dc]
This instant notoriety had a drug-like effect on Scott who already
suffered from an over-inflated view of his own importance. After his
death in 1970, a Canadian paper ran a feature on the Technocracy
movement and Scott’s role in it:
Howard Scott, the messiah-like originator of Technocracy, a graduate
of Columbia University, acted as Director-in-Chief until his death in
1970 at the age of 80.
He was a genius, Service says with the same touch of awe in his voice.
He was a man for another world, a man who spoke to the sum total of
conditioned brains in the price system. Scott was the irst of many on
earth to co-relate the symbols of technology, science and energy into a
working system.21
It may not have been Scott’s idea to position himself as a messiah, but
neither did he do anything to discourage it. He was also not a graduate
of Columbia University but apparently did nothing to correct that
assumption either. Scott was much more the promoter than the
engineer, and promoters are often known to bask in accolades and
unsolicited attention.
Just three months later in January 1933, the Committee on
Technocracy abruptly fell apart. Although the industrial survey was still
incomplete, Scott began to reveal his preconceived ideas on
Technocracy as a social system, being fully convinced that the results of
his survey would completely support his conclusions.
It is important to
remember that Scott’s radical ideas about Technocracy were developed
and tempered at the feet of his mentor, Thorstein Veblen.
Rautenstrauch had taken a different path, studying and applying
Taylor’s scientific management principles and those of Henry Gantt,
who had worked closely with Taylor in the 1890s. Gantt also had
experience with Veblen, but not to the extent of Scott. Second,
Rautenstrauch was a well-educated and highly respected engineer with
a splendid reputation.
Scott didn’t have a degree at all which also
explained the serious laws in his design skills and methodology. As Rautenstrauch confidence in Scott was shaken, he was doubly
alarmed by Scott’s radical ideas being expressed even before the
Industrial Survey was completed.
For Rautenstrauch, prescribing
application for any project was never proposed until all the “evidence”
was gathered and analyzed. Third, Rautenstrauch was uneasy with the
blazing limelight that Scott brought to the project.
Some reporters began to more closely investigate Scott’s background
and educational credentials, and their negative findings proved to be
the proverbial straw that broke the camel’s back. The press
subsequently turned on Scott and, hence, Columbia University. The
head of Columbia, Nicholas Murray Butler, cherished a positive
limelight, but Scott was giving the whole university a very large black
eye. The entire project was summarily forced to leave the campus. [from messiah to false prophet dc ]
It is important to note that there were two forks of Technocracy at
this point. Scott would go on to create the more radical Technocracy,
Inc., in late 1933 while Rautenstrauch and the other professors stayed
on at Columbia with a less-radical form of academic Technocracy that
continued the core concepts but not the name; to them, the word
Technocracy had become toxic and simply was not used again for fear
of being re-associated with Howard Scott.
This hush-hush was
reinforced by the press when Randolph Hearst, who controlled a significant portion of the nation’s media at the time, released a memo
forbidding staff reporters from mentioning the word “Technocracy”
under penalty of being immediately ired. Scott did salvage one
relationship with a young geophysics instructor at Columbia who had
been eager to join the Committee when it was first announced: M. King
Hubbert. [this guy appears to be a loser in the 33 rebellion, that they teach did not happen, we got dumbed down with The New Deal, these folks almost took over. dc]
By early 1933, humiliated and accused, Scott’s personal life went from
bad to worse, hitting bottom in March 1933. An unpaid judgment of
$1,640 that had been levied against him in 1923 came home to roost,
and he was called to account. Still unable to pay, Scott testified before a
judge that he owned no significant property and that he was currently
living at the apartment of M. King Hubbert in Greenwich Village. He also
admitted to the judge that he did not have a college degree.22
Casting personal defeat aside, Scott saw opportunity when he realized
that he had raised a significant following of radicals around the U.S. and
Canada who were enthralled with his vision for Technocracy and didn’t
care whether Columbia University was involved or not. Neither did they
care that Scott was personally bankrupt and an incompetent business
manager. They wanted change, even radical change, now! [promoting,
During the latter part of 1933, with Scott still imposing on M. King
Hubbert for living arrangements, they made their move. Hubbert was a
brilliant and well-educated geophysicist who was willing to work with
Scott and provided a continuing semblance of credibility to Scott’s
radicalism. Under Scott’s direction, Hubbert’s scientific skills and
knowledge of engineering could further educate him and provide a
solid base from which to travel the country stumping for Technocracy.
As they conspired to carry Technocracy further, Scott and Hubbert
compiled articles of incorporation in late 1933 and subsequently iled
them in early 1934 in New York to create a membership organization
called Technocracy, Inc. [ I can see how this gets really bad for Scott dc]
Society was ripe for Technocracy during the depths of the Great
Depression. It certainly appeared that capitalism was dead. Joblessness,
delation, hunger, anger at politicians and capitalists, and other social
stresses had people begging for an explanation as to what went wrong
and what could be done to ix it. Technocracy, Inc. had both: Capitalism
had died a natural death, and a new Technocracy-oriented society
would save them. The engineers, scientists and technicians who would
operate this Technocratic Utopia would eliminate all waste and
corruption, people would only have to work 20 hours per week, and
every person would have a job! Abundance would be everywhere. The
only price for this was that they had to get rid of the politicians and the
political institutions and let the technocrats run things instead. Nobody
protested because most already wanted to throw the politicians out,
whom they had already blamed for the Depression.
This sentiment was reinforced in a book by Harry A. Porter released
in later 1932 titled Roosevelt and Technocracy, where he assured that
Just as the Reformation established Religious Freedom, just as the
Declaration of Independence brought about our Political Freedom,
Technocracy promises Economic Freedom.23
Porter’s plan included abandoning the gold standard, suspending the
stock exchanges and nationalizing railroads and public utilities.
Freedom notwithstanding, Porter then called for President-elect
Franklin D. Roosevelt to be sworn in as Dictator rather than President
so that he could overturn the existing economic system in favor of
Technocracy:
Drastic as these changes from the present order of things may be, they
will serve their purpose if only to pave the way for the Economic
Revolution – and Technocracy.
24
Roosevelt didn’t take Porter up on declaring himself dictator, but he
did abolish the gold standard, confiscated all the citizens’ gold, and
nationalized certain industries. Otherwise, the egocentric Roosevelt
was happy enough to implement many of Technocracy’s other ideas,
but there was no way he was going to hand the country over to
Technocracy’s technical cadre.
Technocracy, Inc.
Depression notwithstanding, Howard Scott presented a utopian
dream that technology held the key to relieve man from the drudgery of
labor. Other critics might think that he merely used that promise to
deceive more people into becoming members of his almost cult-like
following. After all, a free lunch sounds mighty pleasing to someone out
of work and with a family to feed.
Second, he knew perfectly well how
to leverage the public’s increasing anger against politicians, bankers
and industrialists to his own advantage.
Finally, there was the smoke-and-mirror aspect of the incomplete and faulty science that Scott used
to convince people that Technocracy could actually work to everyone’s benefit.
Such a phenomenon was reminiscent of the “magic elixir”
medicinal cure-alls sold during the 1800s that promised to cure any
and all diseases that one could possibly have.
With the memory of the Great War still fresh in the minds of many, the
beginning of World War II on September 1, 1939 was earth-shaking.
Germany’s invasion of Poland all but guaranteed to involve all of
Europe. Japan and China were already at war with each other, adding to
the risk of an all-out World War.
Thus, the momentum and impact of
Technocracy, Inc. sharply waned into the 1940s, and it never regained
its former attraction again. However, during those intervening years,
between 1933 and 1939, the march of Technocracy, Inc. left an indelible
mark on history. [this is where 'Intelligence' grabbed the Technology, and when underground with it, think Military Industry Complex and the end of Scotts Promotion of their Of. dc ]
Unfortunately, historians recorded very little of this
era because of the previous Hearst editorial moratorium on the word
“Technocracy”. [in other words the press was censored into silence, which worked to our disadvantage since, and therefore most are ignorant to the dangers of technology for humans. dc]
Immediately upon incorporation of Technocracy, Inc. in 1934, Scott
and Hubbert recognized that they needed to create a manifesto that
would clearly communicate their vision to the public.
Working
feverishly to meet the public’s demand for more information, they
completed and published the 280 page Technocracy Study Course 25
that
same year.
It established a detailed framework for Technocracy in
terms of energy production, distribution and usage. Under Scott’s close
supervision, it was actually Hubbert who penned most of the pages.
As
far as Scott was concerned, this was the first full expression of what he
really had in mind for Technocracy; previously, only bits and pieces had
been revealed here and there in speeches and newspaper articles.
The
public demanded more, and independent of Scott’s organizational
efforts, many study groups had spontaneously popped up around the
nation and in Canada.
The word Technocracy was on the lips of literally
hundreds of thousands of people. Scott knew that he had a limited
amount of time to convert these groups into the membership rolls of
Technocracy, Inc. To more fully understand what Scott and Hubbert had
to offer, we must look carefully at the Technocracy Study Course.
Technocracy Study Course
This treatise was specifically designed as a study course to fulfill the
needs of individual groups that were meeting in homes, halls, churches
and granges across the U.S. and Canada. Without top-down guidance,
different groups were headed in different directions. The big question
is, what was the ideology that Scott and Hubbert intended to implant?
The Preface of the Study Course details some basic elements of the
organization itself:
Technocracy, Inc. is a non-profit membership organization
incorporated under the laws of the State of New York. It is a
Continental Organization. It is not a financial racket or a political
party.
Technocracy, Inc. operates only on the North American Continent
through the structure of its own Continental Headquarters, Area
Controls, Regional Divisions, Sections and Organizers as a self disciplined self-controlled organization…. [ they might regret this dc]
Technocracy declares that this Continent has a rendezvous with
Destiny; that this Continent must decide between Abundance and Chaos within the next few years. Technocracy realizes that this
decision must be made by a mass movement of North Americans
trained and self-disciplined, capable of operating a technological
mechanism of production and distribution on the Continent when the
present Price System becomes impotent to operate….
Technocracy offers the specifications and the blueprints of Continental
physical operations for the production of abundance for every
citizen.26
Here we see, first, an organizational structure with an intensive
hierarchy that roughly resembles a para-military organization:
Headquarters, Controls, Divisions, Sections, etc. Second, it is interesting
to note that they had to assure readers that Technocracy, Inc. was “not a financial racket or political party”; apparently they had been accused of
both.
Third, the Study Course is a blueprint for the future. As such, a
blueprint normally contains diagrams of various elevations and details
such as are necessary for the complete and forthwith construction of a
building or structure. Thus, we should treat the Technocracy Study
Course with due respect that its purpose is very clear;
Scott and
Hubbert intended to build a new society that did not currently exist.
In the Preface, a glimpse into the scope of Technocracy is seen:
Technocracy is dealing with social phenomena in the widest
sense of the word; this includes not only actions of human beings, but
also everything which directly or indirectly affects their actions.
Consequently, the studies of Technocracy embrace practically the
whole ield of science and industry. Biology, climate, natural
resources, and industrial equipment all enter into the social picture.27
[Emphasis added]
There is no doubt that Technocracy, Inc. intended to be an agent of
change for a new social structure, although there was nothing that qualified either Scott or Hubbert to play the role of sociologists.
That
did not hinder them in the slightest. Simply put, they believed that the
actions of human beings, both direct and indirect, were the root cause
of societal problems and that they were directly related to biology,
climate and natural resources.
The absence of enlightened scientific management would doom mankind to certain destruction.
It is not
coincidental that the most visible and manipulative modern agents of
change
- Sustainable Development, Agenda 21, global warming, the
U.N.’s green economy and the modern ecology movement, etc. - all hold
to the same underlying assumptions.
Scott’s version of Technocracy was intensely focused on energy.
Whether human or mechanical, all work involves the expenditure of
energy. Humans and beasts of burden eat food, and machines consume
electricity, gas, oil, etc. This emphasis on energy was most certainly fine-tuned by the presence of M. King Hubbert who was a well educated and aspiring geophysicist trained in energy-related science.[ and they are at it again. dc ]
In
1955, Hubbert went on to create his “Peak Oil Theory”, commonly
known as Hubbert’s Peak, that stated that known reserves of oil would
peak and go into decline as demand and consumption increased to an
unsustainable level. It is also not coincidental that Hubbert is often
revered as a “founding father” of the modern environmental and
Sustainable Development movements.[ peak oil debunked long ago dc]
According to Scott and Hubbert, the distribution of energy resources
and the goods they produce must be monitored and measured in order
for their system to work. Every engineer knows that you cannot control
what you cannot monitor and measure. Both Scott and Hubbert were
keenly aware that constant monitoring and precise measuring would
enable them to control society with scientific precision.[remember Scott lost, not the technology dc ]
It is not surprising then that the first five out of seven requirements
for Technocracy were:
*Register on a continuous 24 hour-per-day basis the total net
conversion of energy.
*By means of the registration of energy converted and
consumed, make possible a balanced load.
*Provide a continuous inventory of all production and
consumption.
*Provide a specific registration of the type, kind, etc., of all goods
and services, where produced and where used.
*Provide specific registration of the consumption of each
individual, plus a record and description of the individual.
28
In 1934, such technology did not exist. Time was on the Technocrat’s
side, however, because this technology does exist today, and it is being
rapidly implemented to do exactly what Scott and Hubbert specified,
namely, to exhaustively monitor, measure and control every facet of
individual activity and every ampere of energy delivered and consumed
in the life of such individual. The end result of centralized control of all
society was clearly spelled out on page 240:
The end-products attained by a high-energy social mechanism on the
North American Continent will be:
(a) A high physical standard of living,
(b) a high standard of public
health,
(ç) a minimum of unnecessary labor,
(d) a minimum of
wastage of non-replaceable resources,
(e) an educational system to
train the entire younger generation indiscriminately as regards all
considerations other than inherent ability - a Continental system of
human conditioning. [ well they are slightly wrong about this on all counts dc ]
The achievement of these ends will result from a centralized
control with a social organization built along functional lines…29
[Emphasis added]
A word must be said about the above mention of the North American
continent. Both Scott and Hubbert viewed the entire continent, from
Mexico to Canada, as the logical minimum unit for Technocracy. They
never specified how such a merger might take place. If Roosevelt had
become dictator as proposed by Porter 30
, perhaps he might have led a
military campaign to conquer our two closest neighbors. Whatever the
case, it was presumptuous from the start to assume that Canada and
Mexico would willingly participate in Technocracy’s utopian scheme,
giving up their respective political systems simply because a group of
radical engineers suggested it.
What is particularly disturbing is Scott’s
and Hubbert’s total disregard for the nation-state and national
sovereignty; they would have wiped away both with the stroke of a pen.
It is not coincidental that today’s call for a New World Order is
predicated on the same assumed necessity of eradicating national
sovereignty and the structure of the nation-state.
The Technocracy Study Course also called for money to be replaced by
Energy Certificates which would be issued to all citizens at the start of
each new energy accounting period. These certificates could be spent
for goods and services during the defined period but would expire just
as a new allotment for the next period would be sent. Thus, the
accumulation of private wealth would not be possible. [ talk about f*#king hypocrites!!! to boot dc ]
Neither Scott nor
Hubbert viewed private property or accumulated wealth as allowable
in a Technocracy. After all, it was capitalism that caused all the trouble
in the first place, and the accumulation of wealth due to ownership of
private property was the primary culprit.
In a Technocracy, then, all
property, resources and the means of production would be held in a
public trust for the benefit of all. They reasoned that since all needs for
work, leisure and health were to be so abundantly met, people would
willingly trade private property for the utopian dream.
By 1937, the topic of Technocracy had been discussed, analyzed,
argued over, rehashed and regurgitated. This was an inevitable
outcome given the complex implications of trading one economic
system for another. People’s fears were ignited by the prospect of such
change, and so there was never an end to heated interchanges. By this
time, however, Technocracy, Inc. finally produced a concise definition that adequately revealed what it was really all about:
Technocracy is the science of social engineering, the scientific operation of the entire social mechanism to produce and distribute
goods and services to the entire population of this continent. For the first time in human history it will be done as a scientific, technical,
engineering problem.31 [Emphasis added]
William Knight
It is not certain how William Knight was originally introduced to
Howard Scott, but it was likely through the Technical Alliance that was
created by Veblen and Scott in 1919. Scott thought highly enough of
Knight to appoint him to be Director of Operations of Technocracy, Inc.
Knight was attributed to have been an associate of the famous
electrical engineer and radical socialist, Charles Steinmetz, who is
largely credited for his theory and development of alternating current
that helped to enable the industrial revolution. Steinmetz was born in
Germany but was forced to lee because of his radical essays on
socialism, making his way to Greenwich Village in time to join
ideological forces with Thorstein Veblen, Howard Scott and the other
members of the Technical Alliance in 1919.
Steinmetz was definitely a radical player and decidedly pro communist. According to one historian, Steinmetz
...saw electrification as the chief agency of Socialism and on Lenin’s
seizure of power he offered to assist “in the technical sphere and
particularly in the matter of electrification in a practical way, and
with advice.” Lenin replied regretting that he could not take
advantage of his offer but enclosing his picture, which Steinmetz
promptly placed in a place of honor in his laboratory.
32
If Knight were present at meetings of the Technical Alliance, it would
have been Steinmetz, Veblen and Scott who shaped his views of
Technocracy. Even though there were differences of opinion on the
implementation of Technocracy, Knight apparently remained a loyal
underling for the rest of his life, in spite of Technocracy’s decline in
popularity after the 1930s. However, there is more to Knight’s
involvement, as one historian notes,
Scott placed a man named William Knight in charge of political
organization. Knight was an aeronautical engineer who had been
employed by various American subsidiaries of the German aircraft
industry. Knight was clearly a Hitler supporter, and steered
Technocracy, Inc. toward the Nazi model. Scott began to wear a
double breasted black suit, gray shirt and blue neck tie. The
Technocracy, Inc. rank and file, in turn, donned gray uniforms and
adopted fascist style salutes of greeting. They also deployed leets of
metallic gray automobiles and rigid marches and formations. Knight
was convinced that for Technocracy to move forward it would have to
recognize that it was a revolutionary movement. Despite Scott’s
embrace of his new authoritarian image, however, Knight was
frustrated at Scott’s lack of charisma and the decisiveness needed in a
modern “Leader”.
33 [Emphasis added]
Original photographs of Technocracy, Inc.’s meetings and activities confirm the rigidly enforced dress code, and while sympathizers may
have thought it to be clever, it was very disconcerting to non Technocrats. Making a visual connection between Technocrats and the
rise of Hitler in Nazi Germany was not difficult for most Americans.
Knight lobbied Scott to turn Technocracy, Inc. into a revolution, but
Scott refused believing that the certain collapse of capitalism would
automatically launch Technocracy into power. In any case, Scott hated
politicians and the political system and viewed a “political revolution”
as just another expression of politics. Historian William Aiken had this
to say about Knight:
He thought Scott the “greatest prophet since Jesus Christ” but was also
certain that “he will never lead a revolution except in Greenwich
Village.” In Knight’s view “Howard is not made out of the stuff of a
Lenin, a Mussolini or a Hitler. We must have men who know what a
revolution means and how to bring it about.”
34
History does not record much more about Knight, but we can be
thankful that his strategy did not prevail and that he remained a loyal
follower of Scott, not otherwise attempting an end-run around him to
promote open revolution. Technocracy might well have succeeded if
Scott had adopted Knight’s political theory for action.
In any case, American democracy was found to be unwilling to
entertain Technocracy, and it was soundly repudiated for all of these
reasons:
National sovereignty and the Constitutional form of
government were not dispensable.
Nobody was willing to give up private property or the
possibility of accumulating private wealth.
The apparent similarities between Technocracy, Inc. and Nazi
fascism were abhorrent to most Americans.
The grandiose promises of Technocracy were seen as so
much “free lunch”, and toward the end of the Great
Depression, everybody knew from experience that there was
no such thing.
Nevertheless, major portions of the Technocracy platform quietly
made their way into Roosevelt’s New Deal 35 and as World War II
progressed, the American public quickly forgot about Technocracy, Inc.
and Howard Scott. During WW II from 1940-1943, Technocracy, Inc.
was banned in Canada due to accusations of subversive activity. As M.
King Hubbert’s career advanced with major oil companies, he found it
in his own interest to formally disassociate himself from Technocracy
although he never renounced its principles. William Knight followed his
“messiah” until his death. The current offices of Technocracy, Inc. are
located in the remote town of Ferndale, Washington state, where many
remaining historical documents are stored.
At Columbia University, however, the radical tenets of Technocracy
continued in the halls of academia. Columbia has always prided itself
for academic interaction among professors, departments and
disciplines, and interact they did. Some 40 years later in 1973,
Technocracy was destined to reemerge at Columbia under a new name,
a new sponsorship and an expanded strategy to dominate the world
rather than just the North American continent.
Technocracy and the Third Reich
In both ideology and practice, Technocracy found better soil in Nazi
Germany than it did in the United States. At the time, the word
“Technocracy” was not yet anathema to the nation’s press. For instance
in 1933, the New York Times correctly tied together Technocracy and
Nazi leaders:
A strong but non-imperialistic Germany rising to the heights of
prosperity through the proper application of technocracy was
pictured to the German masses in the usual week-end barrage of
speeches by Nazi leaders today.
36
[Emphasis added]
It has been noted that Technocracy in America did not succeed due to
a lack of a social strategy with which to implement itself. This was not
the case in Germany where Technocracy had grown at the same pace
and for the same reasons as in the U.S. The German industrial machine
was well acquainted with Taylorism and the application of Scientific Management. Engineering, science and research were highly esteemed
as a gateway to future prosperity and strength. Germany felt the pain of
the Great Depression to a worse degree than the U.S. because it had
never fully recovered from the dislocations and consequences of World
War One. Thus, Germany was driven to excel in all areas of
advancement. Its technocratic movement that had started in the 1920s
was fully asserting itself by the time Hitler ascended to power.
Dr. Gottfried Feder, secretary to the Minister of the Economy, echoed
Technocratic thinking in a 1933 speech before the National Socialists of
Danzig:
The liberal-capitalistic age long ago exhausted the possibility of
consuming production made possible by great technical
developments. Thereupon man became the slave of the machine.
National socialism, on the other hand, realizes that mighty technical
tasks and possibilities have remained which can be solved only by the
planned mobilization of technique for the battle against
unemployment… the wealth of every people is measured by its
capacity to organize its resources.37 [ no they were not exhausted and I do not care if they still are not, and I always thought the capitalist was a Conservative to be honest, wanting to mind his own business dc ]
An earlier New York Times article documented some similarities and
differences between the German and American Technocracy
movements:
Germany has her own technocratic movement in the Technokratisch Union with headquarters in Berlin. Although it has taken its name
from its American counterpart, it is not an offshoot of the latter but an
indigenous growth. Nevertheless, German technocracy, which has just
taken organized form, agrees with the American brand on all but two
major points.38
First, the Germans didn’t buy into Scott’s system of energy credits,
which they termed “electric dollars”. Second, they stressed humanism
as the religion of technocracy, whereas Scott wanted nothing to do with
any kind of religion. However, the points of agreement are revealing:
“Like their American economic kin, they are against capitalism, against
the profit system and against the gold standard.”
39 These commonalities
gave reason for more-than-casual communications between Scott and
his German counterparts: [technology= the religion of humanism dc]
The German technocratic union is in touch with Howard Scott in New
York and dreams of creating an international technocratic
organization, which, indeed, its leaders deem indispensable for
realizing the technocratic ideal.40
Although there was no internal record of Scott’s conversations with
German technocrats, it is clear that they existed. However, since the
Germans were proud inventors and rabid nationalists, extensive effort
was expended to position themselves as the sole arbiters of rational
Technocracy, even though they worked in the mostly irrational system
of National Socialism.
The German version needed to be sold to its
citizens as “made-in-Germany”. [what America needs in it's economics right now in 2022....made in USA dc]
The facts undermined the reality of the
matter. Three years of the German journal of Technocracy, Technokratie,
was surveyed and found to contain a heavy concentration of translated
reprints from Technocracy journals in America.41 As a submerged
movement, Technocracy lived on in Germany, but as a public movement,
it was summarily axed by the German government in 1935:
The journal Technokratie and with it the German Technocratic Society
came to a sudden end in 1935, ironically just when opportunities for
technocrats within the Nationalist State began to improve. The Third
Reich had room for individual technocrats, but not for a technocratic
movement.
42
Thus, as in America, when the movement of Technocracy collided with
the existing political structure, it was rejected. In the United States, it
was Roosevelt and his New Deal, and in Germany it was Hitler and Nazi
Socialism. Political rejection had no impact on Technocracy because
technocrats believed that their vision of the future was all but
guaranteed, regardless of political resistance. If Technocracy could be
likened to a submarine, it simply closed the hatch and submerged in
order to continue its mission unseen and undetected. Of the former
members of the formal movement, there is no record of any repudiation
of their technocratic ideology, methodologies or practices; they simply
continued on as before, communicating in private but without a
meeting hall. [I can see this system as a subverious one when left to the shadows, as too much in the open gives away it's ability for abuse by it's creators dc]
Renneberg and Walker’s detailed study on Technocracy and National
Socialism concluded with this blunt statement:
Technocracy, like technology, is fundamentally ambivalent and proved
compatible with the most extreme aspects of German Fascism.
Without technocracy, the most barbaric, irrational and backward looking policies of the Third Reich, including, “euthanasia”,
involuntary sterilization, the brutal repression of the Socialist movement, ruthless imperialism, ideological warfare on the Eastern
front, genocide and efforts to create a “master race” would have been
impossible .43
After Germany’s defeat in WWII, many of the direct perpetrators of
“crimes against humanity” were brought to justice during the famous
Nuremberg trials. The Technocrats, however, as indirect enablers were
not seen as ones who should be held accountable for anything, and
indeed, they became an important part of the war reparations process
and were carted off to other Western nations to resume their scientific
and engineering duties in the service of other governments. [and busy little beavers have they been. dc ]
Indeed, American technocrats and sympathizers within the U.S.
Government were quick to rescue and provide cover for their German
counterparts. A top-secret program called Operation Paperclip
commenced in 1944 that sought to bring top Nazi scientists to America
under secret military contracts while white-washing their past and
high-ranking connections with Nazi Socialism. Annie Jacobson notes in
her recent 575-page book on Operation Paperclip,
The program had a benign public face and a classified body of secrets
and lies. “I’m mad on technology,” Adolf Hitler told his inner circle at a
dinner party in 1942, and in the aftermath of the German surrender
more than sixteen hundred of Hitler’s technologists would become
America’s own.44 [ keep telling yourself America won WW2 dc ]
These were the same technologists who eagerly gave Hitler almost
total victory over all of Europe!
The famous rocket scientist Wernher von Braun, for instance, was a
prominent member of the Nazi party and also a member of Hitler’s SS.
Under Hitler’s command, he ran an underground slave labor facility
where his rockets were being built. After his relocation (along with
other members of his engineering team) to the U.S. via Operation
Paperclip, von Braun went on to design the rockets that put America’s
spaceship on the moon, but not before becoming a naturalized citizen
in 1955.
In another example, the inventor of the ear thermometer, Dr. Theodor
H. Benzinger, worked at the Naval Medical Research Institute from 1947
to 1970. He ultimately held 40 patents on his inventions. When
Benzinger passed in 1999 at the age of 94, he was eulogized in glowing
terms by the New York Times, but not one word was mentioned about
the work he performed on concentration camp prisoners in Nazi
Germany during WWII.
In a more transparent setting, devoid of Operation Paperclip cloaking,
both men would have likely stood trial at Nuremberg with the rest of
their war criminal associates. Instead, the European brand of
Technocracy quietly melded back into its American counterpart and
continued on as if nothing had happened. [ The current ' fad ' with technology and the war for control of the human mind, is nothing new in America, nor is the war with technology for our minds the first time this has happened, some 90 years ago, the war for the minds of Americans was first struck by Technology via the State, Clearly Americans did not know what hit them. dc ]
Rebirth
Whatever Technocracy represented in the 1930s and earlier, it was
cleverly regurgitated in Zbigniew Brzezinski’s book Between Two
Ages: America’s Role in the Technetronic Era. This book was never a
“best seller” on any literary list, but it was the book that caught the eye
and admiration of David Rockefeller. The Rockefeller dynasty, and
David in particular, had always had a difficult time maintaining good
public relations with the American public. Collectively, the Rockefellers
represented the global-minded Eastern Establishment that was bent on
selling American sovereignty to international interests. Simply put,
Rockefeller needed a young blood academic like Brzezinski in order to
justify his own globalist dreams.[The Rockefeller 'global dream' is not the One who goes global, that can only be Christ. dc ]
The fact that Brzezinski was a professor at Columbia University opens
up a necessary side note regarding the connection between the
Rockefeller family and Columbia. In 1928, John D. Rockefeller, Jr. leased
the ground to develop the future Rockefeller Center in New York City -
from Columbia University. In fact, Rockefeller took on a 27 year lease
with three 21-year options to renew, for a total of 87 years lease. The
lease was cut short in 1985 after 52 years when Columbia agreed to sell
the 11.7 acres of land under the Rockefeller Center to the Rockefeller
Group for a tidy all-cash sum of $400 million. It was a record price for
any single parcel ever sold in New York City. To put this windfall into
perspective, the total value of Columbia’s existing endowment at the
time was reported to be only $683 million. When adding to that sum 52
years of lease payments, reported to be $11.1 million per year in 1973
onward, the Rockefeller clan can be seen as a major benefactor of
Columbia University, if not the major benefactor in the 20th
century.
But Rockefeller family involvement with Columbia predated the
Rockefeller Center leasing arrangement by at least several years. In
1919, John D. Rockefeller financed the building of Teachers College
Columbia University with a $1 million one-time gift, which was noted at
the time as being the largest gift ever made to an institution for training
teachers.45
Understanding these connections may explain why Rockefeller turned
to Columbia when he picked Brzezinski to be his principal ideologue for
the next 40 plus years. It is inconceivable that both were unaware of the
history of Technocracy at Columbia during the 1930s. In his book,
Between Two Ages, Brzezinski expanded upon the original Technocracy
that was originally limited to the North American continent, to one of a
global nature but with virtually identical ends: [ I am going to guess we have located the main frame, of the(A) Major System, set up to harm the human race, readers take note and search the emphasized above. dc]
[The technetronic era] involves the gradual appearance of a more
controlled and directed society. Such a society would be dominated by
an elite whose claim to political power would rest on allegedly
superior scientific know-how. Unhindered by the restraints of
traditional liberal values, this elite would not hesitate to achieve its
political ends by using the latest modern techniques for influencing public behavior and keeping society under close surveillance and
control.46 [ the author is right, it is so right in front of our faces , and most will still not believe!!! amazing dc ]
Brzezinski gave a succinct background that led up to his Technetronic
Era. He wrote that mankind had moved through three great stages of
evolution and was in the middle of the fourth and final stage. The first
stage he described as “religious”, combining a heavenly “universalism
provided by the acceptance of the idea that man’s destiny is essentially
in God’s hands” with an earthly “narrowness derived from massive
ignorance, illiteracy, and a vision confined to the immediate
environment.”
47[lucky for us all 4 run together, I flat out reject Brzezinski's delusional rude vision. dc ]
The second stage was nationalism, stressing Christian equality before
the law, which “marked another giant step in the progressive redefinition of man’s nature and place in our world.” The third stage
was Marxism, which, said Brzezinski, “represents a further vital and
creative stage in the maturing of man’s universal vision.” The fourth and final stage was Brzezinski’s Technetronic Era, or the “ideal of rational
humanism on a global scale - the result of American-Communist
evolutionary transformations.”
48
In considering our current structure of governance,
Brzezinski stated,
Tension is unavoidable as man strives to assimilate the new into the
framework of the old. For a time the established framework resiliently
integrates the new by adapting it in a more familiar shape. But at
some point the old framework becomes overloaded. The newer input
can no longer be redefined into traditional forms, and eventually it
asserts itself with compelling force. Today, though, the old framework
of international politics - with their spheres of influence, military
alliances between nation-states, the fiction of sovereignty, doctrinal conflicts arising from nineteenth century crises - is clearly no longer
compatible with reality.
49 [ just a reminder governance does not equal government, the more you privatize the less like government you become in affect and appearance. dc ]
One of the most important “frameworks” in the world, and especially
to Americans, is the Constitution of the United States. It was this
document that outlined and enabled the most prosperous nation in the
history of the world. Was our sovereignty really “fiction”? Was the
American vision no longer compatible with reality? Brzezinski further
stated,
The approaching two-hundredth anniversary of the Declaration of
Independence could justify the call for a national constitutional
convention to reexamine the nation’s formal institutional framework.
Either 1976 or 1989 - the two-hundredth anniversary of the
Constitution - could serve as a suitable target date culminating a
national dialogue on the relevance of existing arrangements....
Realism, however, forces us to recognize that the necessary political
innovation will not come from direct constitutional reform, desirable
as that would be. The needed change is more likely to develop
incrementally and less overtly...in keeping with the American tradition
of blurring distinctions between public and private institutions.50 [ all of this combined with what I have seen in public from late 2019 to currently early August of 2022 is leading me to see at the bottom line control , the hand of military control particularly in the United States. That idiot can not be in charge. dc ]
In Brzezinski’s Technetronic Era then, the “nation-state as a
fundamental unit of man’s organized life has ceased to be the principal
creative force: International banks and multinational corporations are
acting and planning in terms that are far in advance of the political
concepts of the nation-state.”
51
Brzezinski’s philosophy clearly pointed forward to Richard
Gardner’s Hard Road to World Order that appeared in Foreign Affairs in
1974, where Gardner stated,
In short, the “house of world order” would have to be built from the
bottom up rather than from the top down. It will look like a great
“booming, buzzing confusion”, to use William James’ famous
description of reality, but an end run around national sovereignty,
eroding it piece by piece, will accomplish much more than the old fashioned frontal assault.
52 [ This is the problem with their long term plan, it is built on suffering and despair, and too many have already paid the price, to let it go on indefinitely, no I object. dc ]
That former approach which had produced few successes during the
1950s and 1960s was being traded for a velvet sledge-hammer. It would
make little noise but would still drive the spikes of globalization deep
into the heart of nations around the world, including the United States.
Indeed, the Trilateral Commission, jointly established by Brzezinski and
Rockefeller, was the chosen vehicle that finally got the necessary
traction to actually create their New International Economic Order.
In over 40 years since the founding of the Trilateral Commission, the
historical record clearly testifies to its success. The applied doctrines of
Agenda 21, Sustainable Development and the energy Smart Grid that
have resulted from Trilateral interactions testify to their ideological
grounding in historic Technocracy.
notes-55s
Preface
1 Patrick M. Wood, “Technocracy’s Endgame: Global Smart Grid”, August Forecast & Review, 2011
Foreword
2.“What Is Technocracy?”, The Technocrat, Vol. 3, No. 4, 1938.
3. Quoted from The New School website, as of 10/5/2012
4 The Great Debate web site, http://www.thegreatdebate.org.uk/Saint-Simon.html
5 Dr. Paul Moller, Holism and Evolution, (College of European and Regional Studies, 2006).
6 Arthur Koestler, The Ghost in the Machine, (Macmillan, 1968), p. 48.
7 Piero Mella, The Holonic Revolution, 2009. (Pavia University Press, 2009).
8 Alonzo L. Harriby, “Progressivism: A Century of Change and Rebirth,” in Progressivism and the New Democracy, ed.
Sidney M. Milkis and Jerome M. Mileur (University of Massachusetts Press, 1999).
9 Charles Darwin, The Origin of Species, (London: J. Murray, 1859).
10 Henri Saint-Simon, The New Christianity, (London: B.D Cousins, 1825).
11 Arthur, Religion without God and God without religion, (London: Bemrose & Sons, 1885), p. 142.
12 Frederic Taylor, Principles of Scientific Management, (Harper & Brothers, 1911).
13 E. Bellamy, Looking Backward, (Boston: Ticknor, 1888).
14 Abigail Tucker, “How to become engineers of our own evolution”, Smithsonian Magazine, April 12, 2012.
15 William E. Akin, Technocracy and the American Dream, (University of California Press, 1977), p. 112.
16 Galton, Francis, “Eugenics: Its Definition, Scope, and Aims”, American Journal of Sociology, (July 1904).
17 Frederic Taylor, Principles of Scientific Management, (Harper & Brothers , 1911).
18 Akin, p. 10
19 Thorstein Veblen, Engineers and the Price System, (BW Huebsch, 1921), pp. 120-121.
20 Michael Rosenthal, Nicholas Miraculous: The Amazing Career of the Redoubtable Dr. Nicholas Murray Butler
(Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2006), p.422.
21 “No Government, No Politicians, No Taxes”, The Montreal Gazette, Sept. 14, 1974.
22 New York Times, March 5, 1933.
Harry A. Porter, Roosevelt and Technocracy, (Wetzel Publishing Company,1932)
24 ibid., p.63
25 Note: The Technocracy Study Course is readily available on the Internet in a scanned format.
26 Scott and Hubbard, Technocracy Study Course, (Technocracy, Inc., 1934), p. vii.
27 Ibid., p. x.
28 Ibid., p. 232.
29 Ibid., p. 240.
30 Porter, Roosevelt and Technocracy, (Wetzel Publishing Company, 1932).
31 “What Is Technocracy?”, The Technocrat, Vol. 3, No. 4, 1938.
32 Routledge and Paul, The Rise of the Technocrats: A Social History, (W.H.G. Armytage, 1965,1965,) p. 238.
33 Patrick Glenn Zander, Right modern technology, nation, and Britain’s extreme right in the interwar period (1919-
-1940), (Proquest UMI , 2009), p. 83.
34 Aiken, p. 111.
35 Armytage, p. 240.
36 “Hitler Demands Troops Lead Reich,” The New York Times, August 21, 1933.
37 Ibid.
38 “Germans Modify Our Technocracy,” The New York Times, January 22, 1933.
39 Ibid.
40 Ibid.
41 Monika Renneberg and Mark Walker, Scientists, engineers and National Socialism, Science, Technology and
National Socialism (Cambridge University Press, 1994), p.5.
42 Ibid.
43 Ibid., p. 11.
44 Annie Jacobsen, Operation Paperclip, (Little Brown & Co., 2014).
45 “Rockefeller Gifts Total $530,853,632”, New York Times, May 24, 1937.
46 Zbigniew Brzezinski, Between Two Ages: America’s Role in the Technetronic Era, (Viking Press, 1970), p 97.
47 Ibid.
48 Ibid., p. 246.
49 Ibid.
50 Ibid.
51 Ibid.
52 Richard Gardner, “The Hard Road to World Order”, Foreign Affairs, (1974), p. 558.
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