
A new spirit is hailed in the world- the spirit of Common- ism. All the major powers of the New Europe and the New Americas have entered into a political- spiritual alliance to bring about this new specter. Yesterday’s “isms” are Communism and Capitalism. The “ism” of tomorrow is Common-ism.
From the jacket cover of “The Coming Century of Common-ism”, by Philip C. Bom
The Two Meanings of Democracy
“…The common use of the word ‘democracy,’ together with the contradictory interpretations of the meaning of the word, is a semantic symbol of a civil war in the heart of Western civilization, in which a fanatical equalitarian creed has been pitted against a libertarian one.” – Reinhold Niebuhr, 1977
“We have to develop the process of democratization in all areas – political, economic and in the sphere of reconstructing our federation. We have to move ahead democratically in all areas and this movement toward greater justice and greater liberty, that is the same thing as the movement to socialism and to the implementation of the socialist idea.” – Mikhail Gorbachev, 1991
“In politics and ideology we are seeking to revive the living spirit of Leninism… based on the principle of more socialism and more democracy… consolidating our internationalist community of nations.” – Mikhail Gorbachev
Communism = Common-ism
“We are saying this honestly, without trying to fool our own people or the world. Any hopes that we will begin to build a different, non-socialist society and go
over to the other camp are unrealistic and futile. Those in the West who expect us to give up socialism will be disappointed. It is high time they understood this, even more importantly, proceed from that understanding in practical relations with the Soviet Union.” – Mikhail Gorbachev, 1987
“More than once he (Lenin) spoke about the priority of interests common to all humanity over class interests. It is only now that we have come to comprehend the entire depth and significance of these ideas. It is they that are feeding our philosophy of international relations, and the new way of thinking.” – Mikhail Gorbachev, 1987
The United Nations The Center of Common-ism
“As long as the child breathes the poison of nationalism, education in world-mindedness can produce only precarious results. As we have pointed out, it is frequently the family that infects the child with extreme nationalism. The school should therefore use the means described earlier to combat family attitudes that favour jingoism… We shall presently recognize in nationalism the major obstacle to development of world-mindedness. We are at the beginning of a long process of breaking down the walls of national sovereignty. UNESCO must be the pioneer.”
-William Benton, Assistant U.S. Secretary of State, UNESCO meeting, 1946
“Creating an effective global level of governance and management is clearly the biggest challenge we face in the next century…” – Maurice Strong, 1987
“Given the common stand that the Soviet Union and the United States have taken at the United Nations, it seems to me that we should be as forthcoming as we possibly can in terms of economics and I plan to do that… This remarkable cooperation… gets me inclined to recommend as close cooperation in the economic field as possible.” – President George Bush, September 9, 1990, USSR/US Summit, Helsinki
Using the Schools to Spread Common-ism
“Assisting the child in becoming an intergrated individual who can deal with personal experience while seeing himself as a part of ‘the greater whole.’ In other words, promote growth of the group idea, so that group good, group understanding, group interrelations and group good – will replace all limited, self-centered objectives, leading to group consciousness.” – Robert Muller, former Secretary- General, UN’s Economic and Social Mo Council, 1995
Using the Environment to Spread Common-ism
“I have come to believe that we must take bold and unequivocal action: we must make the rescue of the environment the central organizing principle for civilization… Adopting a central organizing principle – one agreed to voluntarily – means embarking on an all- out effort to use every policy and program, every law and institution, every treaty and alliance, every tactic and strategy, every plan and course of action – to use, in short – every means to halt the destruction of the environment and to preserve and nurture our ecological system.” – Vice President Al Gore, Earth in the Balance
Final Word
“When Communism finally hangs Capitalism, a Capitalist will sell us the rope.”
– Paraphrasing Lenin
COMMISSIONING COMMON-ISM
During the early and middle part of the Twentieth Century, international Socialist David Multrany pioneered the path to Common-ism using the common cause approach to find global “common security” and “common future.” His ideas were fully entrenched in international policy through a series of four UN-sponsored international commissions in the early 1980s. The four international commissions were led by prominent European international socialists and dealt with the interconnection, integration, and “democratization” of economic development, disarmament, environment, and communications.
A NEW AMERICA IN THE NEW GLOBAL ORDER
In the wake of the euphoria following the fall of both the Soviet Union and the Berlin Wall, Socialists wasted little time implementing their plans. The former Soviet Empire gave birth to a hoard of Socialist democracies. These “democracies” do not operate under the idea that political decisions are made within the framework of a free society and in a free market, as we define democracy in the West. To the contrary, they operate under the scheme that if property, wealth, choice or communications need to be taken from one group in order to create “equality” for another, then that is social democracy. The concept is right out of the Brundtland Commission and the other defining Common-ism commissions of the 1980s.
Today, in the United States the Common-ist agenda is moving forward in the same direction, faster than any Socialist could ever have hoped. Of course the effort was greatly advanced under President Clinton’s Executive Order pen as he began the full implementation of Common-ism as official U.S. policy. That brought the United States into much closer compliance with the UN’s Agenda 21 agreement, first signed by former President George H.W. Bush in 1992 at the UN Earth Summit in Rio.
Politicians, political parties and public spokesmen regularly talk of supporting the “Principles of freedom.” Often, however, their proposals and actions lead in the opposite direction, resulting in destruction of freedom.
STEP-BY-STEP IMPLEMENTATION
One world, one media, one authority for development, one source of wealth. One international army. Envisioned was the construction of a “just society” with political and social equality – rather than a free society with the individual as the sole possessor of rights. It’s all wrapped up in nothing more that Orwellian single-think and double-talk – exclusive and universal power in the newly reformed United Nations. Welcome to the world of Common-ism.
