60 Years Ago Aldous Huxley Predicted How Global Freedom Would Perish
Dylan Charles
– The author of Brave New World left a warning for those who love liberty.
Dylan Charles
– The author of Brave New World left a warning for those who love liberty.
Dylan Charles – Psychotropic slavery is essential to an agenda big enough to control the entire population of the world.
John W. Whitehead & Nisha Whitehead – Time to buckle up your seatbelts, folks. We’re in for a bumpy ride.
Cynthia Chung – Huxley makes it crystal clear that he considers the world to be overpopulated, and that science and progress cannot be free to advance without limits.
Cynthia Chung – No wonder that the Tavistock Institute and the CIA became involved in looking at the effects of LSD and how to influence and control the mind.
Jon Rappoport – For the past 150 years, genetics has been emerging and taking center stage as the pre-eminent philosophy of life on planet Earth.
Dr. Mercola – Huxley argues that in order to create the dystopian future presented in his book, you have to centralize wealth, power and control.
Alex Pietrowski – Should doctors recommend that patients take antidepressants to prevent depression?
Ethan Indigo Smith – War is politically motivated violence… terrorism.
Jon Rappoport – This vision of technocracy clarifies the agenda.
Dylan Charles – This is the foundation of the Brave New World.
Jon Rappoport – Pregnant women are a “lucrative market,” and that’s all that counts.
Jon Rappoport – More and more, education is entraining children to think of themselves as part of a group.
Lewis Herridge, Contributor Waking Times In Aldous Huxley’s enduring master piece Brave New World, you find that world controllers have created an ‘ideal’ society. They cleverly use genetic engineering, brainwashing, recreational drugs and sex to keep all it members happy consumers. Many people draw comparisons as to where our society presently is and where it …
Julian Rose, Contributor Waking Times “We can, if we so desire, refuse to cooperate with the blind forces that are propelling us.” –Aldous Huxley So here we are, moving into 2014. And no doubt with that sense of expectancy and promise which comes with all ‘New Years’. But maybe also with that nagging sense which …