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“Technocracy Rising” by Patrick M. Wood offers a detailed examination of the modern globalization plan and its historical roots in the 1930s Technocracy movement. Reinvigorated by the Trilateral Commission in 1973, Technocracy aims for a scientifically controlled society. Wood connects this ideology to global initiatives like Agenda 21 and Sustainable Development. With meticulous research, over 250 footnotes, and an extensive bibliography, this book reveals the clear and present danger of Technocracy, challenging readers to understand and reject this push towards Scientific Dictatorship.
Author: Patrick M. Wood
With meticulous detail and an abundance of original research, Patrick M. Wood uses Technocracy Rising to connect the dots of modern globalization in a way that has never been seen before so that the reader can clearly understand the globalization plan, its perpetrators and its intended endgame.
In the heat of the Great Depression during the 1930s, prominent scientists and engineers proposed a utopian energy-based economic system called Technocracy that would be run by those same scientists and engineers instead of elected politicians. Although this radical movement lost momentum by 1940, it regained status when it was conceptually adopted by the elitist Trilateral Commission (co-founded by Zbigniew Brzezinski and David Rockefeller) in 1973 to be become its so-called “New International Economic Order.”
In the ensuing 41 years, the modern expression of Technocracy and the New International Economic Order is clearly seen in global programs such as Agenda 21, Sustainable Development, Green Economy, Councils of Governments, Smart Growth, Smart Grid, Total Awareness surveillance initiatives and more.
Wood contends that the only logical outcome of Technocracy is Scientific Dictatorship, as already seen in dystopian literature such as Brave New World by Aldous Huxley (1932) and Nineteen Eighty-Four by George Orwell (1948), both of whom looked straight into the face of Technocracy when it was still in its infancy.
With over 250 footnotes, an extensive bibliography and clarity of writing style, Wood challenges the reader to new levels of insight and understanding into the clear and present danger of Technocracy, and how Americans might be able to reject it once again.
Weight | 15.5 oz |
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Dimensions | 5.5 × 0.65 × 8.5 in |