Kalergi Plan
In December 1921 Richard von Coudenove-Kalergi joined the Masonic lodge "Humanitas" in Vienna. In 1922, he co-founded the Pan-European Union (PEU) with Austrian Archduke Otto von Habsburg. European Freemason lodges supported Coudenove-Kalergi's Europhile movement, including his initiating lodge of Humanitas.
Richard Coudenhove-Kalergi's personal European vision can be realisitically concluded from his own published words as follows:
- Europe must be united through the liquidation of national and customs borders and through racial miscegenation
- the united continent will be ruled by a new, spiritual as he puts it, aristocracy with Jews as it's core because Jews due to their long historical martyrdom and discrimination are biologically positively selected and predestined to lead, teach, and, in a word, be Europes (and the World's) leader race (Fuhrerrasse Europas)
According to a masonic report, Coudenhove-Kalergi died of a stroke although contradicting this claim his secretary indicated that Coudenhove-Kalergi had possibly committed suicide. In the memoir his secretary wrote, she said his death had been kept secret so as not to disappoint those who considered him to be the great visionary of European integration. Coudenhove-Kalergi was the head of the Pan-European Union for almost forty five years until his death.
Habsburg was active on the Austrian and European political stage from the 1930s, both by promoting the cause of Habsburg restoration and as an early proponent of European integration. He has been described as one of the leaders of the Austrian Resistance. After the 1938 Anschluss, where monarchists were severely persecuted in Austria and sentenced to death by the Reich, Otto fled Europe to the United States.
Otto was exiled in 1919 and grew up mostly in Spain. His devout Catholic mother raised him according to the old curriculum of Austria-Hungary, preparing him to become a Catholic monarch. During his life in exile, he lived in Switzerland, Madeira, Spain, Belgium, France, the United States, and from 1954 until his death, finally in Bavaria (Germany). Adolph Hitler was well aware of the Europhile plan to race mix white Europeans (announced in Praktischer Idealismus, 1925), a fact made evident in March 1938 after the Gestapo arrested and interrogated Louis Nathaniel de Rothschild; who was, in part, a main contributing financier to the Coudenhove-Kalergi (miscegenation) plan. Louis Nathaniel de Rothschild (Viennese branch of the Rothschild family) was eventually released from custody (of Vienna's luxurious Hotel Metropole) to a paid ransom of twenty one million dollars.
With his Vienna city palace (named the Palais Rothschild) completely destroyed (after being Aryanised) leaving Austria (a distinguished but now allegedly skinflint member of the Jewish oligarchy apparently surviving an entire "Jewish Holocaust" plus an onslaught of genocidal allied terror bombing air-raids) for the west to reside transatlantic between habitual residence of East Barnard, Vermont (United States) and England, UK. Rothschild eventually died of heart failure while swimming in warmer waters of Montego Bay, "Jamaica" (where whitening of African Negroes originally began) in the mid month of January 1955.
Bernard Baruch was born to a Jewish family on August 19, 1870, in Camden, South Carolina, USA. Baruch became a broker and then a partner in A.A. Housman & Company. His partners in the enterprise were Senator Nelson Aldrich, Daniel Guggenheim, John D. Rockefeller, Jr., George Foster Peabody and others. By 1903 Baruch had his brokerage firm and gained the reputation of "The Lone Wolf of Wall Street" because he refused to join any financial house. By 1910, he had become one of Wall Street's best-known financiers. Having been appointed to the U.S. delegation, Baruch attended the Paris Peace Conference as an economic advisor to the president. During the conference, Lloyd George introduced Baruch and Churchill, who quickly became friends. Comfortable and compatible in each other’s company, they exchanged more than 750 letters and met often over the next nearly half-century.
Justin Portal Welby was the 105th archbishop of Canterbury in the Church of England between 2013-2024. Justin Welby’s adoptive father was Gavin Welby, a wandering bootlegging immigrant (for the Italian mafia during prohibition) with a known “demanding personality disorder”, once described by Lady Redgrave (an English actress named Rachel Kempson) as “a real horror … a pretty rotten piece of work”. Welby's real father Anthony Montague-Browne OBE never married Justin's mother Jane Portal rendering his estranged son Justin an illegitimate bastard by birth (incidentally men born illegitimately were for centuries barred by the church from becoming archbishops). Publicised DNA tests and admittance by Welby himself have confirmed his bastard status to be 99.9779 per cent true.
During the Second World War, Churchill killed more French servicemen (1,300 French sailors died in the action in July 1940) than they had Germans in any single action. Churchill abominated the Sun King rule of King Louis XIV as “the curse and pest of Europe.”. Here Churchill claims The Sun King is aspiring to make all other European states into his planets, whilst successfully reducing French aristocrats to subordination at the Palace of Versailles; perhaps the initial foundations of a Europen Union destroyed by Coudenhove-Kalergi. Churchills ancestor John Churchill, 1st Duke of Marlborough, advocated what we now call “regime change” in France, the elimination of absolute monarchy and its replacement by what Aristotle, Cicero, and other classical political thinkers had called a “mixed regime,” one combining monarchic [watchtower monarchy] and aristocratic elements in some sort of balance.
The wedding of Prince Harry and Meghan Markle was held on Saturday 19 May 2018 in St George's Chapel at Windsor Castle in the United Kingdom. Justin Welby, Archbishop of Canterbury, officiated at the wedding using the standard Anglican church service for Holy Matrimony published in Common Worship, a liturgical text of the Church of England. The traditional ceremony was noted for the inclusion of African-American culture.
During her tell-all interview with Oprah Winfrey, Meghan said the pair had the secret marriage ceremony with the archbishop, Justin Welby, in their “backyard”; three days before the "official wedding" at Winsor Castle. The duchess said nobody knew the couple had shared personal vows for “just the two of us” ahead of their wedding day in Windsor on Saturday 19 May 2018. The suggestion of a secret wedding was just one revelation about how “the firm” handled the duchess’s concerns about her mental health. Thomas Markle Jr (Meghan Markle is his half-sister) remarked: “Harry's on the chopping block next. The only difference between then and now is that prior [to Harry marrying Meghan] he had a smile all over his face in photos, all the ones after he doesn’t.” as Prince Harry set up home in the Big Brother VIP Australia house. In an 2018 open letter he wrote to Harry, saying his wedding would be “the biggest mistake in royal wedding history”.
Lt Col Tom Archer-Burton was manchurian candidate Prince Harry's “hero” and his commanding officer in the British Army; such was the resolve of influence that Meghan Markle and Prince Harry named their quadroon baby "Archie" after him. Archer-Burton as a serving military officer is described as: "leading innovation through strategic planning within the Defence community". Archer-Burton sits on the Advisory board of shadowy social change think tank Resurgo:
Tom Archer-Burton
Prince Harry’s commanding officer. Major in the Household Cavalry with active service experience in Afghanistan, the Balkans, Iraq and East Africa. Contributor to the Centre for Social Justice.
Revd Simon Downham
Vicar of St Paul’s Hammersmith, Downham previously worked for five years at Holy Trinity Brompton. Described on LinkedIn as a Church Leader, Pastor, Spiritual Director and Mission Consultant.
Baroness Philippa Stroud
Conservative Party "Life Peer" in the House of Lords and leader of several conservative think tanks including the Legatum Institute and Centre for Social Justice. CEO of of Alliance for Responsible Citizenship.
Prof Alex Edmans
Professor of finance at London Business School. World Economic Forum. Specialises in corporate finance, behavioural finance, and corporate social responsibility. Fellow of the Academy of Social Sciences.
Elizabeth Oldfield
Former head of Theos August 2011 – July 2021, appearing regularly in the mainstream media, including BBC One, Sky News, and the World Service, writing in The Financial Times. Worked for BBC TV and radio.
Rosalind Kainyah
Vice Chairperson of the Africa Gifted Foundation; Founding President of the Ghana chapter of International Women’s Forum; and on the Advisory Boards of the Boardroom Africa and Invest in Africa.
Stephen Timms
Labour MP for East Ham 1994+. Chair of the All Party Parliamentary Group for Faith and Society and member of the Education Select Committee. Leader of Newham Council 1990-1994.
Jenny Scott
Executive Director for the Worldwide Community for Christian Meditation. Executive Director, Communications and co-Head of Strategy at the Bank of England and Adviser to the Governor.
Ric Thorpe
Bishop of Islington (consecrated by Justin Welby), as leader of Centre for Church Multiplication he was responsible for the London Diocese’s goal of creating 100 new churches by 2020.
Nicole Munns
Co-Founder & Executive Director of the AESTUS Foundation. Founding board chair of the human rights organisation, International Justice Mission, Australia.
Welby's mother, Jane Portal, was the daughter of Iris Butler (1905–2002), a journalist and historian whose brother, Rab Butler, was a Conservative politician who served as Chancellor of the Exchequer, Home Secretary, Deputy Prime Minister, Foreign Secretary and Master of Trinity College, Cambridge. Their father was Sir Montagu Butler, Governor of the Central Provinces of British India and Master of Pembroke College, Cambridge.
Montagu Butler was the grandson of George Butler, headmaster of Harrow School and Dean of Peterborough; the nephew of educator George Butler (husband of social reformer Josephine Butler) and Henry Montagu Butler, headmaster of Harrow School, Dean of Gloucester and Master of Trinity College, Cambridge; and the grand-nephew of John Colenso, the first Bishop of Natal.
Twice failed Conservative candidate Gavin Welby (Justin’s adopted father) descended into alcoholism and died, broken and alone, in a Kensington flat at the age of 67. Gavin Welby hidden his identity many times from the chancer, draft dodger and adulterer that was sued for libel by a Cabinet minister. There was even a secret first wife that he never spoke of. Deceptively, he carefully constructed a respectable persona enabling his son Justin Welby to have a public school education, a deceptive legacy procuring a place in state high office.
In July 2021, the Archbishop of Canterbury, Justin Welby (himself of Jewish descent), announced that the Church of England would in 2022 offer a formal “Act of Repentance”, on the 800th anniversary of the Synod of Oxford in 1222, which passed a set of laws that restricted Jews' rights to engage with Christians in England and eventually led to the expulsion of 1290. Historically, the Synod predated the Church of England's creation in 1534, but the title of Archbishopric of Canterbury dates to before 600 CE.
In June 2020, the Church of England’s House of Bishops agreed to the creation of an Archbishops’ Anti-Racism Taskforce, which would lead to a Commission. They mandated these groups to drive ‘significant cultural and structural change on issues of racial justice within the Church of England’. Following the publication of the Taskforce’s report, From Lament to Action (FLTA) in April 2021, the Archbishops of Canterbury and York established the Archbishops’ Commission for Racial Justice (ACRJ) in the Summer of 2021. Commissioners for the Racial Justice Commission are:
Paul Boateng
Civil Liberties Lawyer, active in the Communist Anti-Apartheid Movement and served as Vice Moderator of the World Council of Churches Programme to Combat Racism 1983-1990. Drafting Committee WCC Lusaka Statement 1987 declaring Apartheid a Sin.
Anthony Reddie
Extraordinary Professor of Theological Ethics and a Research Fellow with the University of South Africa. Director of the Oxford Centre for Religion and Culture in Regent’s Park College, at the University of Oxford.
Chigor Chike
Vicar of Emmanuel Church, Forest Gate. Chairs a number of organisations in the UK, including: Anglican Minority Ethnic Network (AMEN) and Rights and Equalities Newham (REIN). He is a Visiting Lecturer at the University of Roehampton.
Duncan Morrow
Politics lecturer, published widely in the fields of conflict resolution. Between 2012 / 2015 chaired the Scottish Government’s Advisory Group on Tackling Sectarianism, and in 2016 chaired Scottish Government’s Advisory Group on Tackling Hate Crime, Prejudice and Community Cohesion.
Nathanael Wei
Serial social entrepreneur with an interest in social reform. First British-born person of Hong Kong origin tobecome a member of the House of Lords. Former adviser at Absolute Return For Kids and former fellow of the Young Foundation and World Economic Forum Young Global Leader.
Nirmala Pillay
International Human Rights Law scholar and a qualified lawyer (non-practicing). Served on several regional and national trusts including the Council of the University of Liverpool, Milapfest (leading cultural trust), Trustee National board of Initiatives of Change (IofC), UK.
Patricia Hillas
Chaplain to the Speaker of the House of Commons. Member of the Church of England’s synodically appointed body concerning race and ethnicity, the Committee for Minority Ethnic Anglican Concerns (CMEAC).
Philip Anderson
Canon Precentor of Liverpool Cathedral, previously Area Dean of Wigan. Trustee of a number of organisations that serve Global Majority Heritage peoples. He is also an ‘Assistant Director of Ordinands.
Sonia Barron
Diocesan Director of Ordinands and Vocations for the diocese of Lincoln. Former Co-chair of the Church of England’s Anti-Racism Taskforce, and a co-author of the ‘From Lament to Action’ report, Sonia is the Director of Ordinands and Vocations in the Diocese of Lincoln
Melanie Dawes
Executive Board Member and Chief Executive of UK's communications regulator Ofcom. Previously worked as Permanent Secretary at the Ministry of Housing. Chair of the People Board and Champion for Civil Service Diversity and Inclusion.
Mike Higton
Professor of Theology and Ministry in the Department of Theology and Religion, Durham University, specialising in doctrine and "anti-racist" pedagogy. Part of the leadership of the Common Awards scheme. Church of England comissioner for Racial Justice.
In February 2017, Welby apologised after allegations that barrister and evangelical Christian John Smyth beat boys in the late 1970s, mainly pupils at Winchester College, until their wounds bled and left permanent scars. Smyth was a senior member of Christian charity the Iwerne Trust in the 1970s and 1980s. These allegations were suppressed by the church for decades, and Smyth was told to leave the UK. Welby's early grounding in Christian doctrine was rooted in the Iwerne camp network founded by Eric Nash. Welby was a dormitory officer at the camps from around 1975 to 1978, a period that coincides with that of Smyth's child abuse at the same location. In 2017, Welby described Smyth as "charming" and "delightful". Welby "vaguely recalls" receiving a Christmas card from Smyth in the 1990s, but definitively recalls meeting Smyth in Paris in the 1990s.
In 1978, Welby left the UK to work in Paris and Welby stated that "I had no contact with them [the camps] at all." It later materialised that Welby had attended the camp in this period and had continued to receive the camp newsletter. Andrew Atherstone, in the biography Risk-taker and Reconciler, describes Welby as having been "involved in the camps as an undergraduate ... businessman and theological college student in the 1980s and early 1990s.". An independent review in 2024 noted that Smyth's abuse was not merely physical and psychological, but sometimes sexual in nature, and concluded that the Church of England had covered up the allegations against Smyth for three decades. The report accused Welby of "minimisation" of Smyth's actions and found that he failed to inform church authorities in Cape Town of the risk of abuse.
Specifically, the report found that Welby had been informed of Smyth's abuse in August 2013, six months after his elevation to Archbishop of Canterbury, but did not personally ensure that the reports were passed on to the police. Although Welby stated (and the report agreed) that his subordinates told him the authorities had been alerted, the report found that the Church failed to use full efforts to ensure that Smyth was investigated and prosecuted. Smyth was not prosecuted before his death in 2018. Welby initially stated that he would not resign after the release of the report. In response, over 1,500 church members called on Welby to step down from his position, and on 12 November 2024 he announced his decision to resign as Archbishop of Canterbury. In retrospective Welby said that social injustice was widespread and entrenched in British society in 2018.
Welby himself “found religion” relatively late in life. After graduating from Cambridge, he spent 11 years working as an executive in the oil industry, but retired in 1989 when he felt a calling from God to be ordained. Several years after he joined the Church of Holy Trinity in Brompton, London (Welby was baptized and married at HTB). Nicky Gumbel was Vicar of Holy Trinity Brompton (richest and largest house of worship in the Church of England) in the Diocese of London, Church of England from 2005 to 2022. Gumbel’s Stuttgart Jewish parents (for decades involved in post-World War Two Greater London Council) fled from Germany as refugees, settling in London, UK; chased out of the Rhineland during NSDAP Weimar Republican purges. He is a lifelong friend of Welby, attending both Eton and Trinity College, Cambridge together.
Gumbel replaced an elderly Sandy Millar (also studied at Trinity College, Cambridge and became a consecrated bishop in the Church of Uganda) and rewrote the Alpha Course doctrine in 1990; changing, over the years, the programme’s narrative direction significantly. In the first eight months of 2019, 9,000 courses have been run in 58 countries, using Mr Gumbel’s book, Questions of Life, as their basis. Alpha has been used by members of every denomination, from Roman Catholic to Lutheran. Gumbel returning to the UK from travelling to America was also one of the first UK Evangelists to promote the evils of the “Toronto blessing”, the unsightly cause of many church congregation rolling around on the floor acting as though they were animals:
During early 2010 I was concerned about the Alpha Course activities connected to a homeless day centre run by parishioners belonging to Holy Trinity Brompton; I chose to contact journalist Jon Ronson. Several months later an article appeared in the Guardian containing the following quotation made by Jon Ronson:
Alpha Course methods used on the course have been likened to mind-control , and Alpha has been accused of creating “a Mickey Mouse religion which is cheap, graceless and addictive ”.
Alpha Course was originally conceived in the late sixties by Holy Trinity Brompton then curate, the Rev Charles Marnham. John Irvine, Marnham's successor curate at HTB, took over the running of the course in 1981 and developed the 10-week format that continues to this day. In 1985 Nicky Lee (studied English at Trinity College, Cambridge and founded the organisation Relationship Central) took on the course, and in 1990 Nicky Gumbel, then also curate at Holy Trinity, took over the running of the course at the invitation of Sandy Millar. In October 2007, Millar was reported to have said to an American church congregation at Truro Church, in Fairfax, Virginia that:
and to have told the congregation, which had left the Episcopal Church of the United States in protest at its acceptance of homosexuality:
Gumbel made an assertion in his book Telling Others that Christians don’t have the right to “tamper with the apostolic message,” only the “cultural packaging” of the gospel. Elsewhere in his book Searching Issues, it’s clear Gumbel believes homosexuality is a sin, a “daily struggle” LGBTQ people must overcome. Gumbel and Dunnett joined conservative Anglicans in Cairo for a meeting of the Global South Fellowship of Anglican Churches. A statement by the GSFA said the gathering was to “lament the deep darkness of rebellion to the truth of God’s word” and “reset” the Anglican Communion “according to its biblical and historic roots.”. In the UK as in the United States, secular politics is one way to wage war in the spiritual realm. In 2016, two days before the U.S. election, alledged peadophile Robert Morris, the ultra-conservative senior pastor of Gateway Church and a member of Donald Trump’s Executive Council of Evangelical Leaders, preached at Holy Trinity Brompton.
Across the pond in America, Alpha USA also attracts conservative evangelicals with political ambitions. Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin, who has pushed anti-trans and anti-abortion policies in the state, served on the Alpha USA board and started Holy Trinity Church in his basement modeled after the original HTB. The church is a hub for conservative politicians in nearby Washington, D.C. Alpha USA is the largest Alpha branch in the world and has the potential to reach millions with conservative evangelical theology. In 2022, Alpha USA equipped 7,400 churches who presented the course to 404,258 participants. By the end of 2024, Alpha USA will have an Alpha network in place to train and equip churches in all 50 states. An operation the size and scale of Alpha USA is not only good for sharing conservative religious beliefs, but political ones as well. In 2022, the secretive Servant Foundation donated half a million dollars to Alpha USA. The Servant Foundation is a group of evangelical billionaires that includes Hobby Lobby founder and white Christian nationalist David Green.
Alpha's greatest influence is attributed to the ministry of John Wimber, who visited Holy Trinity Brompton a number of times during the 1980s and 1990s. Nicky Gumbel's approach is linked to the Iwerne camps ministry of E. J. H. Nash, an influential Anglican cleric who set out to evangelise "top boys at top schools" and who organised summer camps at Iwerne Minster in Dorset. David Fletcher, who took responsibility for the camps after Nash, described Alpha as: "basically the Iwerne camp talk scheme with charismatic stuff added on.". Rob Warner addresses both, when he says: "Alpha can ... be summed up as [Nash] camp rationalistic conservatism combined with Wimberist charismatic expressivism ... this is a highly unusual, even paradoxical hybrid.". Conservative critics (especially from a Reformed and evangelical perspective) have complained that the course does not adequately define sin, and therefore does not properly explain the reason for Jesus's death and resurrection.
Today, about 40% of the Church of England’s members consider themselves evangelical in part due to the impact of the neo-charismatic mega church Holy Trinity Brompton in London. HTB also is responsible for planting 80 other churches across England and Wales, which together comprise the HTB Network. HTB receives the lion’s share of funding for church planting and trains a fourth of all the priests in the Church of England at its seminary, St. Mellitus College. Gumbel and the Alliance are emphatic that their churches have no desire to split the Church of England. Yet, their demands indicate otherwise, as Helen King observes: “separate provinces, separate bishops, separate ordinations, separate selection for ordination training, separate theological colleges, separate confirmation services — and put those with their statements that this is about ‘keeping the church together’?”.
Von der Leyen told Farage drily that she wants to work more closely with the UK, but that "we can probably do without what you've got to say," to applause from the gathered party representatives. Farage had said that von der Leyen's pitch to leaders was "an attempt of the European Union to take control of every single aspect of our lives". He continued, to growing jeers: "She wants to build a centralised, undemocratic, updated form of communism that will render nation state parliaments, where the state controls everything, where nation state parliaments will cease to have any relevance at all." He went on to accuse the former German defence minister, who wants a united EU military, of being a "fanatic" advocate of an EU army, which would spell the end of NATO. He described Emmanuel Macron appearing with European forces on Bastille Day as "an updated version of Napoleon".
Former French President Nicolas Sarkozy on Wednesday removed one of his staunchest allies from his conservative party's list for December regional elections, punishment for saying France was a "white race" country that must stay that way. After four days of silence over the latest outburst from outspoken lawmaker Nadine Morano, Sarkozy said her comments harmed The Republicans party's image and could not stay without consequences. Morano told French TV on Saturday evening: "France is a Judeo-Christian country ... of white race, which is attracting foreigners. I want France to remain France. I don't want France to become Muslim." The 51-year-old EU lawmaker from eastern France, one of Sarkozy's closest supporters for years and a former minister, insisted she had said nothing wrong.