Category: Globalism & New World Order
- Council on Foreign Relations (CFR)
Overview The CFR is a real nonprofit think tank specializing in U.S. foreign policy. Its high-profile membership—including former presidents and CIA directors—means it is the true source of American p
- Brotherhood of the Snake
The theory of the Brotherhood of the Snake presents it as the oldest and most important secret society in human history. According to this narrative, it began thousands of years ago as a covert order
- 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 Denver Airport Murals (1995)
A major airport-conspiracy theory claiming that the murals installed at Denver International Airport on its opening in 1995 were not simply public art about war, peace, and environmental devastation, but prophetic or programmatic images of plague, depopulation, mass conflict, and the rise of a New World Order. The murals’ imagery of masked figures, burning cities, dead animals, and eventual reconciliation made them especially vulnerable to apocalyptic reinterpretation.
- 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 Great Reset of 1945
A theory that World War II did not truly end one power order and replace it with another, but instead reorganized a shared corporate and financial structure operating across both Allied and Axis worlds. In this telling, 1945 was not victory versus defeat so much as a global rebranding: cartels were broken up on paper, empires were restyled, and the same industrial interests continued under new legal, political, and national labels.
- 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 New World Order of 2020: That The 2020 Reset Was The Final Contract
This theory claimed that the economic and political language of “reset” that spread during the COVID-19 crisis was not rhetorical or reformist, but the final binding stage of a long-planned New World Order. In its strongest form, the “2020 Reset” was described as a contract imposed without consent: a merger of pandemic governance, corporate power, digital identity systems, behavioral controls, and post-property economics. The phrase “Final Contract” does not appear as an official World Economic Forum label, but it became a useful conspiratorial shorthand for the belief that 2020 converted global crisis management into a permanent order.
- The UAP (UFO) Disclosure as Blue Beam
This theory claimed that the surge of official UAP reporting, congressional hearings, and public discussion in 2023 was not genuine transparency, but part of a staged buildup toward Project Blue Beam—a supposed false-flag alien crisis meant to unify humanity under centralized global rule. In this reading, “disclosure” is not revelation but narrative preparation, with UAP hearings and government statements functioning as psychological conditioning for a future simulated invasion or manufactured extraterrestrial emergency. The documented record confirms that Congress held a high-profile UAP hearing in July 2023 and that the Pentagon’s All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office later reported finding no empirical evidence of extraterrestrial technology. The Blue Beam layer belongs to a much older conspiracy tradition associated with Serge Monast in the 1990s, not to the official UAP record itself.
- Final Countdown to 1990
This theory treated 1990 as a threshold year in which hidden political and spiritual realities would be revealed to the public. In some versions, 1990 would unveil the New World Order through the collapse of the Cold War and new global governance language. In others, it was an explicitly apocalyptic date associated with prophecy movements, nuclear-war expectations, and religious preparation for an imminent unveiling of world truth. The historical basis for this theory is composite rather than singular: President George H. W. Bush’s September 11, 1990 “New World Order” speech gave conspiracists a highly quotable political marker, while figures such as Elizabeth Clare Prophet created a surrounding prophecy culture in which 1990 became a charged revelatory year. The phrase “Great Unveiling” belongs more to later synthesis than to one canonical movement, but the underlying 1990 revelation mood was real.
- The Great Reset of 1939
The Great Reset of 1939 was the belief that the coming war decade would not merely reorder borders and alliances but abolish the nation-state itself and culminate in some form of world republic. The label is retrospective, but the underlying fear was real enough in the late 1930s, when world-federalist proposals, League disillusionment, and new plans for transnational political union were circulating openly. In the strongest version of the theory, war was the mechanism by which sovereignty would be burned away and replaced with a central global authority. The conspiracy interpretation treated world-federalist thought not as peace advocacy but as advance planning for the end of nations.
- The Zionist World Fair (1939)
The Zionist World Fair (1939) theory held that the New York World’s Fair—publicly framed as the “World of Tomorrow”—was not just a showcase of technology, design, and international display, but a symbolic and political map of a future world order. In its strongest form, the theory claimed that the fair’s architecture, the Trylon and Perisphere, the Temple of Religion, international pavilions, and especially the Jewish Palestine Pavilion together formed a coded roadmap toward Masonic technocracy and One World Government. The theory drew power from several real features of the fair: its openly utopian planning language, its global representation, its strong symbolic architecture, and the documented presence of Zionist advocacy through the Jewish Palestine Pavilion. The conspiracy version fused those elements into a single totalizing design.
- 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.