Rating:  Summary: Holds truth for those without scales over their eyes Review: A great primer to allow you enter the inner world of REAL power, as opposed to the theatrical power the media wants you to believe is real. Holds up well against what is happening around us today. I'd trust Gary Allen a lot sooner than I'd trust Dan Rather or Limbaugh or O'Reilly or any other prostitute of the MIC. Too many books have been written by the very people Allen warns you about--books by Carroll Quigley and Zbignew Brzinski, etc. You'd have to really be a brainwashed prole at this point to not see the noose of totalitarian power closing over the head of the US Constitution and the world right now.
Rating:  Summary: An eye opener, an ear opener, dammit, THE TRUTH! Review: I first heard about the clique of super rich one-worlders who foment wars and other disasters from a reverand at a church gathering in the late 70s. He recommended this book, and I'm glad he did. Anyone whose mind hasn't been irreversibly polluted by what the controlled mass media calls "news" will have a hard time denying the plausibility of Mr. Allen's argument. In fact, after reading this excellent, gutsy book, it's impossible to think that any other "explanation" for what has gone wrong in the world could suffice.
Mr. Allen approaches this conspiracy from a purely secular viewpoint. Whether that was because he himself was not a Bible student or simply a desire to reach an audience that may scoff at references to Scripture isn't clear, but for anyone who knows the truth of Bible prophecy, it's clear the plans outlined in this book are going to fulfill a whole lot of the prophecies related to the end-times. After reading "None Dare Call It Conspiracy" you'll likely read some Bible passages from a new perspective. Case in point: "The love of money is the root of all evil." This book shows you the root of the evil at work in the world today. And don't overlook the Bible's warning that we fight not against flesh and blood, but against principalities, powers, against "spiritual wickedness in high places." Those "high places" include the government, no matter how many self-proclaimed "Christians" are elected to the White House.
Read this book with an open mind and it may change your life and the way you look at the "news" and the world in general. You shall know the truth and the truth will set you free.
Rating:  Summary: None Dare Call It America - Anymore. Review: I first read this at age 15 in 1975, and it profoundly altered my view of what I thought was America. This book is a perfect starting place for those who want the real story on our country and what its final destiny is likely to be. Highly recommended.
(For a more up-to-date view of the real America, consider looking at the material at www.raven1.net, www.mindjustice.org or http://aches-mc.org.)
You'll stop waving the flag and may even get upset after you read the book. If you do, there's hope that things can change for the better.
Rating:  Summary: In its day......... a great primer Review: I first read this book over 3 decades ago and it was heartening for me to read it. I wasn't alone! :-) It certainly with a little publicity could have run better than "Men Are From Mars etc.." Though the bulk of the information is now very available thanks to the Great Equaliser, or Internet, the more important factor is that the laziest reader can today,verify all of the well-presented, but dismaying information, without leaving the comfort of their PC chair. Thus, what I find strangest of all, is the number of people focussing on "negatising" the word "conspiracy" and being totally blind to the reality. OF COURSE THERE IS A CONSPIRACY. Not a "conspiracy theory", but something any person able to read and add up a few figures could not deny...... unless being paid to, or a vested interest. If you have "only heard about these sort of things" this is a great starting point for you and would fit neatly with reading this potted, easy to grasp essay: http://www.xat.org/xat/history1.html Nothing has changed since the '70's - only accelerated, with Allan's predictions fulfilled. Only the absolutely psycho-conditioned could not fully grasp the immensity of the tiny cartel that owns all of us today, after reading these two items.
Rating:  Summary: In its day......... a great primer Review: I first read this book over 3 decades ago and it was heartening for me to read it. I wasn't alone! :-) It certainly with a little publicity could have run better than "Men Are From Mars etc.." Though the bulk of the information is now very available thanks to the Great Equaliser, or Internet, the more important factor is that the laziest reader can today,verify all of the well-presented, but dismaying information, without leaving the comfort of their PC chair. Thus, what I find strangest of all, is the number of people focussing on "negatising" the word "conspiracy" and being totally blind to the reality. OF COURSE THERE IS A CONSPIRACY. Not a "conspiracy theory", but something any person able to read and add up a few figures could not deny...... unless being paid to, or a vested interest. If you have "only heard about these sort of things" this is a great starting point for you and would fit neatly with reading this potted, easy to grasp essay: http://www.xat.org/xat/history1.html Nothing has changed since the '70's - only accelerated, with Allan's predictions fulfilled. Only the absolutely psycho-conditioned could not fully grasp the immensity of the tiny cartel that owns all of us today, after reading these two items.
Rating:  Summary: A Conspiracy ? I think Not!!! Review: Mr. Allen's book is a great barometer and indicator that in the last thirty five years nothing has changed. Few informed people talked about conspiracy then, and the very few still talk about it now. As the late Dr. Carroll Quigley (an official elite historian) stated once in his book Tragedy and Hope, that "nothing can be done about it (the conspiracy) it was too big and too late to stop it, and the best way to deal with it is to accept it." It was too late to use this word "conspiracy" when this book was written, because, these conspirators have been the lawful rulers of the world for years, and what might have started as a conspiracy has become legitimate, because these elites write the laws that behoove them and advance their agendas.They have legitimized their powers ranging from banking, to politics, to the media, to the military industrial complex, and they even intermarried to keep the bondage power and wealth among themselves. The same elitist families (Mafia like), their children, and their grand children continue to rule today and will also rule tomorrow. Different faces but the same process. The media and the propagandists have always liked to capitalize on the word conspiracy, in order to negate it and to nullify any valid argument from the believers or the new discoverers of their plot, and that in turn discredit these believers and makes them look like conspiracy nuts bordering insanity.
Mr. Allen's book was a great reading when it was published over thirty years ago, and still is a great book that elucidates the process of elitism.
Rating:  Summary: Read This Book To Understand What's Happening in America Review: None Dare Call it a Conspiracy was a favorite amongst the anti-Viet Nam war movement and conspiracy theorists of an earlier generation. The book tries to explain and examine the powerful economic forces that brought the U.S. to war in southeast Asia in the 1960s and 1970s. It tries to demonstrate that it's more than just political blundering and other mis-steps that brought about the Viet Nam War; that it was in fact a coordinated conspiracy by the American elites for profit.
Since this book was published in the early 1970s, the conspiracy of the rich has shown it's ugly face many many times. From the 1980 hostage crisis in Iran, in which the plutocracy made a deal with the Iranians to keep Americans in captivity until after their man Reagan was elected, to the Gulf War in 1991, which was a well coordinated and designed war from start to finish. The conspirators built Saddam Huessein up, just to tear him down again, as an excuse for more war profits and to control the region's oil supplies. Now, we have organizations like Project for a New American Century, who have spoken of the need for a new Pearl Harbor, and once again conspired to bring the U.S. to war in the Middle East for profits and oil.
Next time you're wondering why so much is neglected in this country, while we spend $150 Billion on overseas war, read None Dare Call it a Conspiracy. It will answer this question and more about how the U.S. is little more than a launching pad for the wealthy elites in their quest to control the world's resources.
Rating:  Summary: Holds truth for those without scales over their eyes Review: Perhaps the great purpose of this book, whatever its faults, is its ability to generate a different stream of thought. During the 70s, it was no less than revolutionary. It deserves the credit as the first effort in opening the eyes of the people to the possibilities behind the news, or what we call "facts". It does not claim to be objective---and no one believes it is---but it deserves our respect for daring to see and think through the occurrences in history. It strives to support its argument well enough, although it tries too hard to make its conclusions and assumptions meet. There is a great deal of truth in its basic precepts. And yes, I do agree about the early assumptions of how the governments were initially formed,corrupted and controlled. The sweeping ideas about Communism, however, are a little too much for my taste. There is a constant weeding out of the implausible as one reads on. We may have our own conclusions, and our view of a conspiracy may differ from the author's, but I believe in a conspiracy nonetheless... one that is not quite as concerted and single-minded as this book projects---in fact, a large ball of conflicting conspiracies that constantly brush one another and manifest their disagreements as the inconsistencies written in history, reported in the news. It is always a struggle among multifarious forces that is too difficult to see at once; for that, the author, at times seems to be hinging on the impossible. But this is recommended reading for young people, students of history, or anyone who is critical of the news... if only to remind us that there is something, always, lurking behind it.
Rating:  Summary: Well written and intriguing Review: This book makes fascinating reading, even if you disagree with it. The authors make very strange assumptions, like the fact that the conspiracy they denounce prevents free enterprise from working properly, instead of being the natural fulfillment of a non-existent free enterprise, as I would rather tend to think (if you leave people free to accumulate capital, sooner or later they will want to be the "masters of universe"), or the naive admiration they declare for a clique of land and slave owners whom they call "founding fathers". In another passage, they blame the conspirators for the death of 50,000 American soldiers and do not mention the 2,000,000 Vietnamese who went with them, mainly killed by American bombs and chemical weapons, but this is typical of American scholarship. However, with some shortcomings, it was a very enjoyable book to read that I will recommend to others.
Rating:  Summary: Excellent primer for New World Order Conspiracy Review: This is a good overview for the beliefs of the New World Order conspiracy. Naysayers may say that it isn't technically a conspiracy, it is just the rich and powerful trying to influence the political process to their own benefit. Technically, this may be true, but it shows how our government is not responsive to the electorate. This book sheds light on some little known facts, such as the influence of Wall Street during the Bolshevik Revolution in Russia, Rockefeller manipulation of the Republican convention, the influence of international bankers on our economy and government, and the existence and influence of groups like the Council on Foreign Relations and Bilderberg. Both groups remain as influencial as ever, and both get practically no attention from "mainstream" media, which the author also points out. You may not agree with the conclusions of the author, but for any person interested in how our political process actually works, and how it is influenced, it puts forth some points and evidence worth considering.
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