Thursday, March 03, 2011

Rolling Stone Magazine Article On Alex Jones Reveals His Ties To The John Birch Society

From http://www.roguegovernment.com/Rolling_Stone_Magazine_Article_On_Alex_Jones_Reveals_His_Ties_To_The_John_Birch_Society/24895/0/23/23/Y/M.html


 

Rolling Stone Magazine Article On Alex Jones Reveals His Ties To The John Birch Society

March 3, 2011

A new Rolling Stone Magazine article written about talk show host Alex Jones set to be published this month reveals how he has been heavily influenced by the John Birch Society. Before we get into some of the quotes from the article, here is a quick primer on the many questions surrounding the credibility of this organization. The John Birch Society is essentially a controlled opposition front group that was started by people tied in with globalist institutions including the Council on Foreign Relations, the Federal Reserve and the Internal Revenue Service.  The late author and researcher Eustace Mullins who was the first to expose the fraud and criminal nature of the Federal Reserve stated on several occasions that the John Birch Society was actually started by money from the Rockefeller family who of course have been major promoters of globalist ideologies.  Robert Welch who was the primary founder of the John Birch Society was sympathetic to the National Association of Manufacturers which has historically promoted fascism.  The political stances of the John Birch Society on the attacks of 9/11 and the phony terror war have been in lock step with establishment mainstream rhetoric which raises even more questions.  Their long term promotion of anti-Communist rhetoric throughout the Cold War was used to give credibility to the fake Communist threat which enabled the expansion of the military industrial complex which is now being used to push ahead the New World Order agenda in a big way.  There are also many questions about early John Birch Society members and their links to the secret society of the Freemasons. 

Here are some quotes from the Rolling Stone Magazine article outlining the influence the controlled opposition John Birch Society has had and still to this day has on Jones.

Home life was intellectual, but not overtly political. "My parents were careful not to give me political views almost as an experiment to see what I'd turn into," he says. "The closest thing to a childhood political training was some neighbors who were members of the John Birch Society. They'd come over for dinner and I'd be exposed to those ideas, starting at around age two."

The most enduring influence, though, was a 1971 bestseller he found on his father's bookshelf: None Dare Call It Conspiracy. Authored by Gary Allen, a spokesman for the John Birch Society, the book provided the cornerstone for New World Order conspiracies. According to None Dare, the federal income tax is nothing but a plot by a cabal of megarich "insiders" who work to suck the middle class dry and transfer its wealth to the Ford and Rockefeller foundations. As a teenager, Jones read the book twice. "It's still the easiest-to-read primer to the New World Order," he says.

Jones has even had John McManus the Jesuit trained leader of the John Birch Society in studio for an interview on his radio show which ended with McManus mentioning how he hoped that their relationship with Jones would continue.  This of course indicated a previously existing relationship Jones had with the John Birch Society.  It is these ties that Jones has and continues to have with the John Birch Society that should raise a number of questions about his credibility.

Despite this, it is doubtful that he has any credibility left considering that he has been caught putting original video footage from a Council for National Policy meeting in his documentary film EndGame 1.5.  The Council for National Policy is a secretive networking group of powerful right wing figures in politics, religion and business that promotes globalist ideologies.  Even Charlotte Iserbyt a former Assistant Secretary of Education in the Reagan Administration mentioned on Jones radio show that the Council for National Policy was a globalist organization.  On top of that, the Charlie Sheen fiasco which has dominated the corporate media cycle over the past several days should speak for itself.  Jones has been at the center of the number one distraction used by the corporate media and his association with this event has been incredibly hypocritical.  We will get into this topic in more detail in a future article, but for the time being, please consider the many questions surrounding his association with the John Birch Society.

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