Category: Global Governance

  • The United Nations New World Order (1975)

    A theory claiming that the World Heritage system and related United Nations cultural-landscape initiatives were never merely about preservation, but about identifying, internationalizing, and ultimately reserving strategic land for a future world government or Antichrist kingdom. In this reading, protected heritage becomes pre-administered sacred territory for a coming global regime.

  • The "Great Reset" Ritualism

    A metaphysical branch of Great Reset conspiracy thinking that treats global economic shocks, summit choreography, elite language, and synchronized policy shifts as components of a large-scale occult rite. In this interpretation, the “reset” is not simply political or economic but spiritual: a ceremonial attempt to alter the vibration, consciousness, or symbolic order of the planet.

  • The League of Nations as One World Religion

    The League of Nations as One World Religion theory held that the Geneva-based international order created after World War I was not merely a diplomatic mechanism but the beginning of a secular church for humanity. In this theory, the Covenant of the League functioned as a kind of substitute scripture, Geneva became a quasi-sacred center, and the Council embodied a new moral authority intended to supersede national confessions, traditional churches, and inherited sovereignties. The theory drew power from the League’s unusual status as both legal framework and moral aspiration, as well as from contemporary language that sometimes invested internationalism with quasi-religious expectation. Opponents transformed that moral vocabulary into a warning that the League was building a secular Bible and a world creed.

  • The "World State" Plot

    The "World State" Plot is the belief that powerful political, financial, and intellectual elites are working to dissolve national sovereignty and replace independent nations with a centralized global authority. In conspiracy literature, this alleged project is often described as a staged process carried out through war, crisis, finance, treaties, regional unions, international organizations, and elite policy networks. The theory draws energy from real public advocacy for forms of world government, especially in the interwar and postwar periods, but interprets those ideas not as open idealism or internationalism, but as evidence of a long-term hidden plan for one-world rule.