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The Free State

Monday, October 3, 2011

The John Birch Society: ‘Robert Welch Predicts Insiders’ Plans to Destroy America (1974)’

Source:John Birch Society- founder Robert Welch in 1974.

"Robert Welch understood the Insiders’ plans to destroy America in 1958 when he founded The John Birch Society. In his 1974 speech to members, he exposed the Globalist agenda and predicted the problems America would face today with uncanny accuracy.
 
Find out for yourself not only his predictions, but also his solution to protect American sovereignty and stop the New World Order before its too late!"

From The John Birch Society

The New-Right movement didn’t start in 2009 with the Tea Party movement. Certainly not in 2000 with George W Bush, who had a neoconservative presidency, or in 1994 with the Gingrich Revolution. Or in 1980 with the Reagan Revolution or in 1964 with the Goldwater Campaign. 

The current thinking of New-Right (Nationalists and religious fascists) goes back to the early 1900s or longer, when waves of non-Anglo-Saxon Europeans started immigrating to America: the Irish, Poles and other Slavs, the Jews and Italians, all started immigrating to America. 

Thanks to President Roosevelt’s New Deal agenda and then the New-Right saw the growth of the United Nations and other international organizations post-World War II and of course the New-Right didn’t like that and then with President Johnson’s Great Society agenda in the 1960s, the New-Right (Far-Right, really) saw their America disappearing and looking less American. (According to them) 

Richard Nixon wasn't a fascist or a racist, but he was a great politician and political operative who still wanted to be President in 1966-67 and believed that the only way he was going to be able to that was with a much larger Republican Party. And that meant bringing in new voters who weren't Republicans before, who voted for John F. Kennedy, Lyndon B. Johnson, and a whole host of other Democrats. 

Nixon's coalition included Northeastern Progressive Republicans (he was a Center-Right Progressive as well) but he needed culturally, as well as religiously conservative voters, if he had any shot at winning the presidency in 1968. Which is where his Silent Majority emerges in 1967-68, which included what what's called the Christian-Right today, people who are blue-collar, small town, religious fundamentalist voters, who believed their America was disappearing thanks to the Counter-Culture, immigration, and integration.

The New-Right has people who are called Religious Conservatives (Christian-Conservatives) in it, who  have at least some influence on the Tea Party movement, especially Religious-Conservatives.

The John Birch Society and other New-Rightists (Nationalists and religious fascists) have influenced the Tea Party movement in a negative way and have tried to move the Republican Party past-George W Bush’s neoconservatism. And try to get the Republican Party past this and back to being about the Culture-War and taking back America. (As the Tea Party puts it) And if they don’t believe the Republican Party is about the Cultural-War, they'll try to defeat them even within the Republican Party, even if it costs the Republican Party seats. 

You can also see this post on WordPress

You can also see this post at The Daily Post, on WordPress. (No pun intended)

2 comments:

  1. You can also see this post on WordPress:https://thefreestateplus.wordpress.com/2011/10/03/the-john-birch-society-robert-welchs-amazingly-accurate-1958-predictions-the-forerunner-for-the-tea-party/

    ReplyDelete
  2. You can also see this post at The Daily Post:https://thedailypostplus.wordpress.com/2011/10/03/the-john-birch-society-robert-welchs-amazingly-accurate-1958-predictions-the-forerunner-for-the-tea-party/ on WordPress. (No pun intended)

    ReplyDelete

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