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Novus Ordo Seclorum: The Final Warning
FOR ALL THE CRITICS:I took a audio recording of a little over an hour long and edited all the Jesus and the more bland bible teaching stuff out of the sermon Hagee had done and choreographed the video and audio with the background music and pics I found on the web.I have absolutely no experience or training in filming,video editing,or any other media art,which a lot of you have been more than eager to point out.You have to know a little about John Hagee and his belief of world events to understand why I chose some of the images that I did.I know novus ordo seclorum means new order of the ages,but many researchers and history buffs seem to link the two.You know this to be true if you know about this subject. I find it amusing with the empire strikes back theme music.The dramatic tone it set fits.I thought it made a good story.I'm not promoting it.If anything I am exposing it.I'm not a religious person.I think religion is a fraud perpetrated on the masses for control.That doesn't mean I don't have faith or believe in God and/or a Creator!
Modern History of the term
New world order is an integrative that attempts to expose and explain the widespread collusion between business and political leaders and their agenda towards the restriction of personal freedoms.
Many believe the idea of the "new world order" originated in the early 1900s with Cecil Rhodes, who advocated that the British Empire and the United States should jointly impose a Federal World Government (with English as the official language) to bring about lasting world "peace". In order to facilitate this, Rhodes founded the Rhodes Scholarship as a global brotherhood of future leaders. Lionel Curtis, who also believed in this idea, founded the Rhodes-Milner Round Table Groups in 1909, which led to the establishment of the British-based Royal Institute for International Affairs in 1919 and the U.S.-based Council on Foreign Relations in 1920.[citation needed] The concept was further developed by Edward M. House, a close advisor to Woodrow Wilson during the negotiations to set up the League of Nations (it is unclear whether it was House or Wilson who invented the actual phrase). Another important influence was the futurist H.G. Wells, a vigorous advocate for world government. Theres a large number of history scholars that say Hitler coined the term new world order.
One official mention which has garnered attention was in Gerald Ford's "Declaration of Interdependence" on October 24th, 1975; according to the ex-general counsel of the Export-Import Bank of the United States, the Declaration of Interdependence states that: "we must join with others to bring forth a new world order....Narrow notions of national sovereignty must not be permitted to curtail that obligation"[2].
Elements are present in the populism of the nineteenth century. In present form this can be traced to the collapse of the Soviet Union and President George H. W. Bush's new world order speech of 11 September 1990. In it he described the United States' objectives for post-cold-war cooperation with the former Soviet Union, using the phrase "new world order "The American Christian right extremists want to foment a war that will lead to Armageddon - and for them the sooner the better. " There leader is Paster John Hagee. He wants Nuclear war and he wants it with IRAN. He has the ear of the White House.
Few Americans understand the real reasons for the alliance between Christian fundamentalism and the most extreme segments of right wing Israeli political life. Grace Halsell has written an important book, "Prophecy and Politics" (Lawrence Hill and Co) on this very subject. Halsell worked as a White House speechwriter during the Johnson administration.
During two of Jerry Falwell's Holy Land tours, the author interviewed fundamentalist members of the Moral Majority, all of whom believed that the biblical prophecy of fighting World War 3 must be fulfilled before Christ can return to earth.
The cult of "Dispensationalism" spread throughout America largely through the efforts of Cyrus Ingerson Scofield, born in 1843.




