Category: Globalism

  • Notre Dame (2019) Arson

    The Notre Dame (2019) Arson theory claimed that the April 2019 fire at Notre-Dame de Paris was not an accident associated with renovation conditions, but a deliberate act of symbolic destruction or cleansing tied to occult, globalist, or New World Order ritual. In this interpretation, the cathedral’s burning functioned as a public sacrificial image rather than a construction-era disaster.

  • The United Nations Agenda 21 (Early Roots)

    A long-running land-rights theory claiming that modern sustainability policy, especially Agenda 21, is part of a deeper plot to remove private land ownership and concentrate populations under managed environmental governance. In this version, the plot’s intellectual roots are pushed back into the environmental movement of the 1960s, which is recast as the cultural preparation phase for later land-control policy.

  • The Amero Currency

    A North American integration theory claiming that the U.S. dollar would eventually be replaced by a continental currency called the Amero after a planned or exploited economic collapse. The theory linked recession, trade integration, and fears of a “North American Union” into a single scenario in which financial emergency would be used to erase monetary sovereignty.

  • The Bush Sr. NWO Activation

    A geopolitical-esoteric theory claiming that George H. W. Bush’s repeated use of the phrase “new world order” in 1990 and 1991 was not ordinary foreign-policy rhetoric, but a coded activation message to transnational elite networks, signaling that the post-Cold War “end game” had begun. In this reading, the Gulf crisis and the collapse of bipolar politics were the public stage for a deeper program of global consolidation.

  • The Bilderberg Foundation (1954)

    A theory centered on the 1954 founding of the Bilderberg meetings, holding that an elite, off-the-record transatlantic network emerged to coordinate Western political and economic leadership behind closed doors and, in more specific versions, to preselect or heavily shape electoral outcomes such as the U.S. elections of 1956 and 1960. The secrecy of the meetings, the stature of attendees, and the recurring presence of future leaders made Bilderberg a permanent focal point for kingmaker narratives.

  • The Council on Foreign Relations

    In conspiracy literature, the Council on Foreign Relations is portrayed as a central private power nexus where bankers, diplomats, academics, media executives, intelligence-linked figures, and political insiders coordinate long-range policy direction for the United States and the wider international order. Rather than being treated as a simple think tank, it is framed as an elite planning institution whose publications, study groups, memberships, and revolving-door connections help shape wars, trade systems, global governance structures, and the boundaries of acceptable public debate.