BOOK I
WORLD WAR III AGAINST
THE MONEY TRUST?
WILL
THE PEOPLE EXORCIZE
THE MONEY TRUST
AND CAST THEM OUT?
" . . . Where the
market-place begins, there begins the uproar of the great actors and the buzzing of the
poisonous flies . . . The people have little idea of greatness, that is to say:
creativeness . . . The actors possess spirit but little conscience of the spirit . . . The
market-place is full of solemn buffoons . . . They want blood from
you in all innocence, their bloodless souls thirst for blood . . . Flee my friend .
. . "
Friedrich
Nietzsche1
" . . . Other cases of wrong are invariably attributable to my compelling another
individual to serve my will instead of his own . . . On the path of violence I attain this
end through physical causation, but on the path of cunning I achieve it by means of
motivation, i.e., by means of causality that has passed through knowledge. For I present
to the other man's will fictitious motives, on account of which he follows my
will while believing that he is following his own. . . and this is the lie."
Arthur
Schopenhauer2
" . . . It
became obvious that I had lived in a fool's paradise. Human nature, even among those who
had thought themselves civilized, had dark depths that I had not suspected."
Bertrand
Russell3
" . . . Either
we shall passively suffer our situation of economic domination,
and then it would be better to be annexed outright to the United States, rather than be a
colony exploited without limit. Or else we shall interfere vigorously in the game of
economic forces . . . "
Pierre Elliott
Trudeau4
"This barbarous
dominion stinks in the nostrils of every one."
Niccolò
Machiavelli5
"[F]reedom
is the noblest of man's faculties."
Jean-Jacques
Rousseau6
"'[Servant,]
obey me.' Yes, my lord, yes."
Ancient Near
Eastern Text7
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