-Caveat Lector-

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-----
A Special Operation
Part II





The Existence of a High Cabal or Power Elite

Ratcliffe: You write in the Freedom magazine articles [which became the
initial "raw material" for the 1992 JFK book] about this High Cabal (others
have called them the Power Elite or the Cryptocracy): this group that people
like Buckminster Fuller and Winston Churchill have referred to as very real
and influential existing largely behind the scenes. We were discussing the
other day the significance of the philosophy that derived from knowing that
the world was finite, with the explorations of Magellan, who wanted to keep
going west to see what he would find -- and how such knowledge formed
institutions like the Haileybury College and then the British East India
Trade Company. Can you reiterate that marvelous description -- your sense of
this changing world view once it was known that the world was no longer flat,
that it was a closed unit.

Prouty: There is no shortage of experienced writers who, for various reasons,
allude repeatedly to, I like Churchill's term best, a "High Cabal." This is
attributed to Churchill by Lord Denning in his very good book, A Family Affair
. Lord Denning corresponds to our Chief Justice of the Supreme Court, the
senior law officer in the United Kingdom. In the book he recounts a story
about World War II and the heavy bombardment in England and in Europe.
Denning states that his brother, who was an officer with British Naval
Intelligence, was working on duty late at night in an underground
subterranean area that was between Ten Downing Street and an underground
shelter where Churchill used to stay during bombing attacks. The Navy, being
as alert as ever, stocked this area where Commander Denning was working, with
a few high-quality bottles of brandy.

When, on many occasions, Churchill would walk through their office, the
Commander would invite the Prime Minister to sit down and have a brandy. One
particular night, after there had been a heavy bombardment on London, and
they knew that Rotterdam was under attack, Churchill was sitting there
sipping his brandy and he said, almost as if speaking to himself, "You know,
an all-out battle on land, and heavy battles in the sea, and this total
bombardment over Rotterdam and over London, the High Cabal is operating
here". And he referred to this being the wishes of the High Cabal. Now
unfortunately, Lord Denning doesn't go any further with the reminiscences of
his brother. But maybe they didn't go any further. Maybe Churchill just said
that much.

I was at the Cairo Conference, where Churchill was. I was in his group; I was
close enough to directly witness some of what was going on. I flew the
British staff officers back and forth from where some of them stayed in
Palestine during the Cairo Conference and talked with them a lot about the
progress of the conference. Later I was at the Teheran Conference, where
Churchill was. I lived across the street from Churchill when he was
convalescing. (After these conferences he had a case of pneumonia in
Marrakesh, Morocco.) Now I can't say that Churchill was any intimate of mine,
but I was close enough to observe people that worked with him, and the
military people who worked for him. I talked with them a lot. And we had the
feeling that Churchill, certainly, is a senior person (as was Roosevelt, as
was Stalin) in the world, but that there seems to be a level that maybe he
listens to. Maybe this is what Denning was referring to -- because Churchill
describes a High Cabal.

He's not the only one. Buckminster Fuller, a rare individual, has spent more
time, at the invitation of Congress, before Congressional hearings than any
other individual, with the probable exception of Admiral Rickover, advising
Congress on different issues relating to the government. But interestingly
enough, he has spent more time in the Kremlin as an advisor to the Soviets
than he has in our own Congress. He worked with President Kubitschek in
setting up the new Brazil. A rare individual. A man who knows the world and
knows the leaders of the world. He writes about a "power elite," and that the
apparent leaders, as we see them throughout the world, are certainly national
leaders, but they're not the top echelon, the High Cabal.

In history you will find that the Chinese, as far back as 2,000 years ago,
speak of a High Cabal that they call the "Gentry" -- and that the Chinese
seem to have accepted that as a fact of life. Even though they had their
emperors and their monarchs and leaders, they realized there's an echelon
above that which directs some of the events that other people know nothing
about. It's Fuller who hits the nail on the head. He says that the secret of
the High Cabal is -- of course, it's control of power, but it is also the
understanding that their most valuable asset is anonymity: that nobody can
identify them. In that sense, you begin to talk, you begin to think: maybe
they're just like angels or like ghosts, people say they're there, but, are
they really?

I don't think it's that. In fact, I think that perhaps what people think of
in terms of ghosts or angels, may be the reality that there is an echelon
within our world, a small structure, that does really determine how things go.
 And I wouldn't argue the point. Because in my own experience in more than 80
countries -- and I have talked directly to presidents of countries and people
on their level -- I have this feeling that they're taking their instructions
from some other place. Now that may be personal, but I notice it in the
writings of others as well.

Magellan's Circumnavigation of the Globe:
The Philosophy That Derived
>From Knowing the World Was Finite
You wonder what is the source or the origin of this. I don't know how long we
want to say mankind has been on Earth, but let's say 30 or 40 thousand years
-- maybe longer in certain manifestations, but we'll settle for that. Over
this 30 or 40 thousand years, society has lived on an Earth that wasn't flat,
wasn't round, all it was was an expanse. Because there weren't enough people
to fill it up at any given location. They had no problem with space. They
didn't even think about the word "property," in the sense of real property,
real estate. They simply lived there.
If hostility grew between two communes, two villages, one or the other would
be forced to move a little bit. There's always some more space over there.
And they weren't bothered with our retroactive view of that: that they had a
flat-land approach and that we know the world is round and therefore they
were pretty stupid. It wasn't that. It's just that they had another place to
go. If they had to graze cattle, they'd move a little further. And if, on one
of these moves, they ran into some other people they had never met before,
then they accepted there were other people on Earth. But they were all on the
same expanse. They didn't know whether the expanse was flat or curved or what
it was.

They did know that it came to a shoreline, that there were oceans. And they
were prone to follow shorelines, as the South Asians did thousands of years
ago as they progressed north across Bering Straits (which at that time was a
land bridge), down through North America, and even into Central America. If
you dig in the mummies' tombs, in the burial grounds of Peru, you will find
that on their huacos -- the ancient bowls and jars that they made -- are
figures of people who have slant eyes, Oriental eyes. That meant, when a
person was making the jar, she made the jar in the image of the people that
she knew -- with slanted eyes. They didn't know there were any other people.

But, in all of this civilizing of mankind over these 30 or 40 thousand years,
there occurred finally an event that changed the entire prospect of their
history. And we can't always say, "Well, they didn't have written history."
Evidence from China is that their written history goes way back -- far, far
back -- much more so than we think. But that's not all of it. History forms
each generation as they remember the important things it distills. In the
voyages around the world, navigators -- especially, we think, in the area of
the islands of the South Pacific and around Indonesia and that area -- the
navigators began to be able to find their way across the Pacific to other
islands, to other lands, and then back again.

The leading, most important people in those countries in those days were the
navigators, because they could come and go, they could find their way. They
knew the stars, is what it amounted to; they understood the winds. And
gradually these navigators began to say that, perhaps we could go further
around the world and keep going. This became a prospect -- something they
could do -- like we think we can put a man on Mars and we know we can do it.
In Portugal one of these navigators was named Magellan. He got in trouble
somehow with his own government, or else he couldn't be supported by his own
government and he went over to Spain. The Spanish king decided he would
support Magellan's expedition in which he wanted to start out going to the
west and keep going to the west -- which seemed like a good idea -- he wanted
to try it anyway. Others had gone to the west, like Columbus, and they hit
shore and turned around and came back, so that we found "India," but he had
only gone part way. But the people didn't have the idea in those days that
they could keep going except going in a flat way, and when they hit land they
figured they'd been there. They didn't think of the Earth in terms of a
sphere. It's quite important.

So, not only did the royalty of Spain agree to finance Magellan's voyage (it
was several ships), but, interestingly enough, the bankers of Antwerp, in
Belgium, poured money into this because they could see it as a means of
taking over new lands, new wealth, gold, tin, silver, and all those spices
and other trade goods. So they financed his trip, and three ships took off.

Years later, in the same harbor back in Spain, one single ship named the Victo
ria returned. When the Victoria landed and they told how Magellan was killed
while they were in the Philippines, they also reported that they had
discovered new territories, all the way along their voyage. That they had
gone west all the time and had completely circumnavigated the earth which
must therefore be a round globe.  There's one fact about a sphere that
everybody knows: its surface is finite. If you have a basketball you can
measure to the nth degree how much surface area it has. And if you have an
8,000-mile-diameter globe you can measure to the degree how much surface it
has.

This majestic realization changed the mind of man as a group, more than any
other single event that happened in the 40,000 years we've been here. Because
from that moment on, these bankers in Antwerp, and their associates, and the
kings and queens of Europe, began to realize: If this earth is a sphere, it
is then finite. And if it's finite, there's only so much land, there's only
so much tin, so much gold, so much spice. And they looked at the world as some
thing that belonged to them -- if they got there first.

The Development of the East India Companies
and "Proprietary" Colonies
This started a significant train of thought in the educated, financial,
politically powerful groups of the world, particularly the European world. It
was expressed most easily in the terms of the East India Company development.
They had the British East India Company, the Dutch East India Company, there
was a Spanish East India Company -- I think there were eight of them -- and,
interestingly enough, there was a Russian East India Company. I forget what
they called it, but the Russians explored the coast of Alaska and California.
The Russians, in conjunction with shippers from Boston in the China trade,
carried out a sea otter business (in the fur of sea otters) from California
back to Canton, China, and on into Europe. It was one of the most valuable,
one of the most profitable, sea ventures of the time.

So all of these countries were doing this together. They all immediately set
out to explore the world, to inventory it and to own it. The leaders in this
were the British. And the British East India Company became dominant in this
worldwide exploration. They achieved this dominance by their view that
anything they discovered was theirs, and that the king could commission them
to set up a proprietary colony -- wherever they discovered land -- a British
proprietary colony. Now what that meant was, they could introduce their
religion to the colony and their armies to the colony -- and then do business
in the colony. But the word "colony" was not exactly accurate, because they
used everything from total slaughter of the people they ran into to total
friendship, depending on how they got along with those people.

But their idea was whatever part of the world they went to was theirs.
Property for the other guy was zero and property for them was total. As I
said previously, in an earlier day the navigators were the senior elite
people in the country. The elite people now became surveyors. If we think of
history in that period, we ask ourselves: What was George Washington's
business here in the United States? He was a trained surveyor. He worked for
Lord Fairfax and other landowners solely because the king had granted them a
charter, from London, to come to North America and take over land between one
fix on the beach and another. Then have men like George Washington, with
their surveying instruments, just draw lines heading for the west, not
knowing where the Pacific Ocean was but going in that direction.

The concept that everything in the world belonged to the East India Company
(or, to the King of England, or the King of Holland, or the King of Germany)
was really a strange development, arising from the realization that the Earth
was spherical and therefore finite and that they must acquire property.
Mankind was beginning to develop the concept of the ownership of property.
This continued for a century or more until it became an enormously big
business. These East India Companies were dominating countries like India,
even countries like China. They were dominating North America, and so on, as
they moved around the world. The British again led the others in training
people for these jobs. They created a college, called Haileybury College,
where they not only trained the people in the financial aspects of all this
business work all over the world, but in military -- special military, you
might say. They weren't trained to be world conquerors in the Alexander the
Great or Julius Caesar mold; they were trained to run a constabulary, to
control these countries they took over, and to help their business partners
(in the East India Company) carry out their business enterprises in those
countries.

In addition to that, they trained missionaries. Because they soon realized
that, in the rest of the world there was, from their point of view, no
religion: they were all just pagans. This reminds me of the Vietnam days --
that any Vietnamese was a mere gook. Well here these people all over the
world were mere pagans. And of course, you can't live in a world with pagans.
You have to bring your missionaries and convert them to Christianity.

So this became a role. And they used to go into these "proprietary colonies"
with their missionary leaders first and try to peacefully set up, their
arrangements for living with these people, for converting these people, and
actually taking over their land and taking over their businesses. But if the
missionary half of their business didn't work by itself (because they were
overwhelming these people anyway with their strength and their power and
their money and their imports), then they would bring in their military. So,
one way or the other, they just took over land all over the world, took over
business, took over people.

Inventorying Earth: Haileybury College
and the Roles of Malthus and Darwin
In the process, their masters (the top people, the governor of the East India
Company) realized that what they were really after was to learn what the
assets of the entire Earth were. And in a most interesting development, they
set up an economic studies department in the Haileybury College. Economics is
not an old profession (not an old science, as some people want to call it).
For Head of the Economics Department they installed a man named Thomas
Malthus. The interesting fact was that Malthus was given the job of
inventorying Earth -- an absolutely incomprehensible job when you figure that
this happened at the turn of the century, about 1800 (1800, 1805, somewhere
in there). The East India Company had been started around 1600. So for two
centuries they'd been doing this work, preparing themselves for this
business. They had become an extremely lucrative company. But now they were
getting serious: they wanted to inventory Earth. And Malthus was given that
job.

As he progressed in this study, Malthus came up with his theory that the
world was going to come to an end because mankind was increasing at a
geometric rate and food was increasing at an arithmetic rate, and that
mankind would overwhelm the production of food quantities not too far in the
future. That was a necessary theory for these people in this East India
Company because, as they inventoried Earth, it made it an incentive for them
to have the food, to have the resources for themselves but not for the other
people. It began to create almost what we have in the Cold War today: an "us
or them" mentality. The more friction there is in an "us or them" situation,
the more motivation there is on your side to get the job done, including
armies, missionaries, and all the rest of the powerful tools we have.

This moved along for another 30 or 40 years, and among the men that Malthus
sent out to help inventory Earth was Charles Darwin. Darwin went all over
Latin America and beyond, studying birds, butterflies, and everything he
found and then he came back. He began to report that there are all sorts of
life growing in and on this Earth. And he came back with picture books of all
the different birds he found, the fish that he found, and a great deal else,
from all over the world. Then he began to organize these species of the world.

As he began to tell this to his colleagues in the East India Company and at
Haileybury, they began to get formulate the question of what, after all, is
the origin of species? Where do they come from, and what keeps them going,
and how do we get one species here and another one there? We know that Darwin
wrote this book called The Origin of Species. The interesting point is that
he was rather reluctant to write this book. He was a true professional. He
saw his business in certain terms, but he knew he hadn't proved anything
about the origin of species; he didn't want to call it Origin of Species. In
fact if I remember, it's about page 53 before he gets into that part of his
book. But it's an interesting point. He did proclaim that, among all the
species, or among the internal groupings within the species, those that were
fittest survived and those that weren't presumably didn't survive. It was an
interesting observation that he came up with.

Looking at the situation of the East India Company, these two men played an
important role -- a very important role for them in their day and for us
150-200 years later. The first conclusion was that mankind is increasing too
fast and food is going to give out. Second, in the event there is this
conflict and that we can't all live, the fittest are going to survive. If you
put the two together and think about it, what it means is if you have the
better army, the better business, more power, and your people can conquer the
others -- even to the point of genocide -- that's perfectly all right.
Because they're going to die anyway and, because they died, they certainly
weren't the fittest, we're the fittest. What it did was to begin to inculcate
in the minds of these leaders, these top leaders and these extremely wealthy
people, that there's nothing wrong with genocide. Furthermore, they had their
own missionaries right along with them to show that all this is perfectly all
right: this was the plan, this was the way the world was made.

It's startling to see what conclusions were drawn from the realization that
the Earth is spherical, therefore finite; that it needed to be inventoried,
that certain powers needed to control all of the property of Earth. As we
progress through the years, we're talking about days that aren't too far
behind us. In all the thirty to forty thousand years of mankind, we're only
talking about that narrow little space between 1600 and 2000 -- 400 years.
And since new ideas spread very slowly, the first 200 of those 400 years
really don't count for much. Those were the years when they were exploring,
finding the Earth they didn't even know existed, getting used to the fact
that you could go to the west coast of California from England, and so on --
that there was a route, that you could make the trip. That took about 200
years.

By the time they got that organized, then they got themselves involved in the
Napoleonic Wars of Europe, much of which had to do with this business of
conquering Earth, inventorying Earth. And you're not too far from World War
I, and you're not too far from World War II. In other words, what I'm saying
is: this cycle is not over. We haven't finished the inventory of Earth, we
haven't finished who owns what.

But we have defined the idea of property. Property now, right down to the
last inch -- the middle of Tokyo, a square foot of ground is selling for
thousands of dollars. There are sections of this that are quite interesting.
I read in the newspaper not too long ago that some property in Africa had
been taken from native groups and they decided to give some of it back. And
the section of that property was called the Jesuit Square. As I recall what I
read (and I wish I had the figures here), I think the Jesuit Square is about
15,000 square miles. In other words, as these missionaries moved ahead in
this inventory process and just assumed ownership of this land, they were
taking over so much land that 15,000 square miles was just a square. Like,
what do we call a square mile? -- 640 acres is a square mile, a one-mile
square, isn't it?

This figure is the same figure that was used when the Spanish East India
Company began to go into what we now call New Mexico, Arizona, and Southern
California. In the old land titles it still speaks of Jesuit Square. This was
a formal application of the missionary role on into these so-called
unexplored countries. Everything was from the point of view of Europe. The
fact that there were hundreds of thousands of people living somewhere was not
acknowledged. It was called "unexplored." They simply ignored the fact those
people were there; it wasn't explored by British. Like the discovery of
America. We keep saying Columbus discovered America -- and the British
explorers came, and so on to the Pilgrims coming to America. My god, America
was overrun with people! But the Europeans discovered America. That's part of
the overwhelming significance of this discovery that the Earth was a sphere.

At present we are living in what might be called the apex of this big curve.
It certainly isn't over. We're still operating under the principles of
Haileybury College -- Malthus and Darwin -- even though both of them are
ridiculous. It's been proved today that our ability to produce food is 70
times greater per farmer than it was in the time of Malthus. It's been proved
that Darwin never did discover the origin of the species -- no scientist has
ever described the origin of any species. But those two doctrines were
implanted by the East India Company's mind-control techniques so thoroughly
that we still believe them.

It was in 1862 that Lord Oliphant came back from his job as the ambassador to
the Ottoman Empire in Turkey, imbued with the spirit that something happens
to men's minds in seances. In England he then created the British Society of
Psychic Research, which soon took over most of the higher positions in the
British government. In fact Lord Balfour, for over 30 years, was either the
head of the British Society of Psychic Research or one of his relatives or
close associates was. And it's the American wing of the British Society of
Psychic Research which created Stanford University and the University of
Indiana among others. For instance, Leland Stanford, the great railroad man
on the West Coast, claims that he was in a seance talking to his dead son
when his dead son told him to create a major university on the West Coast,
and there we have Stanford University.

That's something of a humorous little story until you put it in this context.
That these enormously powerful leaders, stemming from the East India Company,
got into this psychic research arena and even began to impress upon the
society of the United States, South Africa -- other parts of the world --
their own beliefs in the power of seances and in the power of mind control.

So to wind this up with a little anecdote: the governor of the East India
Company in Bombay, India, was a man named Elihu Yale -- Eli Yale. Yale heard
that a small college in New England, specifically in Connecticut, was having
trouble getting started. He donated something like $10,000 (which was a lot
of money in those days) to help found the college. And we have Yale
University (comparable to Harvard) as a result of a gift from the East India
Company, from Yale in Bombay, India. In his offices in Bombay (which still
exist), on the wall there is the flag of the British East India Company. That
flag has seven red bars and six white bars. In the corner it has a blue
square, and in that square (or rectangle) is the emblem of the East India
Company.

When the Bostonians attacked the ship Dartmouth and threw the tea in Boston
Harbor at the Boston Tea Party, they took the flag down off the Dartmouth. It
was the East India flag with the red and white stripes and the blue
rectangle. They saved it as a memento of that battle. When George Washington
went to Boston to assume command of the armies of the rebellion against
England, he asked Betsy Ross to take the emblem off the flag and to put stars
in its place. All Betsy Ross did that night was not create a flag. She simply
snipped out the East India emblem and put in 13 little white stars. And the
American flag is the East India flag. So when you hear people of what you
might call "ancestral backgrounds" in this country demanding that we pledge
allegiance to the flag, you may sometimes wonder if in their seances they
don't see the East India flag, instead of the American flag, as the driving
force.

They certainly did in the case of Cecil Rhodes, who became the controller of
all of the South African area, and a multimillionaire in his day. It was
Cecil Rhodes who decided to send emissaries of his own to this country so
that he could be sure that the teachings of the East India Company, and of
Haileybury College, and of Malthus and Darwin, would be properly inculcated
into the minds of Americans, by selecting Rhodes scholars year after year,
and having them go to British colleges where they could then come back into
our society and become leaders of the events.

All you have to do is look at the historical record to see that Cecil
Rhodes's plans were carried out very well. Cecil Rhodes, again, was motivated
by the same East India Company philosophy that since the world was a sphere,
you had to get property. If you could get the property you would then own the
world. And that is their driving force.

Ratcliffe: Pursuing one more step -- and wrapping this all up in the next
hour -- your last discussions on the British East India trade company and
their way of influencing thought exerted a central influence on the way
people thought about things and continue to think about things.
Two Books: The End of Economic Man
and The Road To Teheran

We were talking about some books the other day and I'd like to touch on two
that seem particularly relevant. One you mentioned is by Peter Drucker called
The End of Economic Man, written in the early thirties but not published
until 1938 or '39. Since then he has become synonymous with the idea of
management and capitalistic economics. Could you talk a bit about that?

Prouty: This is very interesting because most of us know Peter Drucker as an
advisor and consultant to the biggest businesses in this country. He's
synonymous with big business, with free enterprise, with multinational
corporations and he just has a new book out and the New York Times
scrupulously reviews many of the books he has written and overlooks entirely
his first book which is The End of Economic Man.

Peter Drucker I believe is an Austrian, schooled in Germany and Austria, who
grew up in the years during the growth of the Nazi Party in Germany, and I
believe -- I'm not absolutely sure -- but I believe his family was Jewish.
During that era, as a student in their major universities, he began to put
together his idea that this Nazism that was growing under Hitler would
destroy forever economic man. And his family left Germany and Austria, as
many did, and went to England where he published this book, The End of
Economic Man.

His premise has been made by others as well, but I don't think any have
stated it as clearly as he has: that what the Germans were doing was taking
the German society of post World War I (when most people wanted no more war)
and the Germany of the Weimar Republic -- reasonably democratic in terms of
Germany anyway -- and this Nazism began to turn the German people into
various classes of society most resembling a military structure, captains,
majors, colonels, generals and so on. So that everything in Germany was being
militarized -- boy scouts were militarized, girl scouts were militarized,
everything was militarized, and it was all being done with the money and the
approval of the very powerful and wealthy people.

He goes into this in great detail. I can't recommend the book highly enough.
Everybody should read it because he not only says this is what destroyed
Germany, but that it's replication in any other country, England or the
United States, would destroy those countries. I think anyone who reads The
End of Economic Man today is going to think Peter Drucker was writing about
the last decade of the United States as though next year was going to be the
beginning of American Nazism or the equal of it. The two things fit hand in
glove, but his book was written in 1939 not 1989. Difference in years
notwithstanding, no one should omit that book. It's most important and so
many things we are doing today appear to be running along that same current.
We have war on poverty, we have war in the streets, we have war against AIDS,
we have battles of this, we have everybody carrying automatic weapons up and
down the streets -- that's what he was talking about. So read the book.
-----
Aloha, He'Ping,
Om, Shalom, Salaam.
Em Hotep, Peace Be,
All My Relations.
Omnia Bona Bonis,
Adieu, Adios, Aloha.
Amen.
Roads End

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