Undermining the New World Order

Social networking and blogging are emerging on the Internet scene at a most serendipitous time. As the snare around our freedoms continues to tighten, ordinary people must start talking. Among ourselves, in public places, in forums like these. As we take stock of what’s happening around us and interpret it through common sense and independent thought, we break the hold of group-think imposed by mainstream media, political leaders, and unexamined dogma. This is true exponentially to the degree that we share what we learn with each another.

As the web of global fascism tightens and plans for the New World Order fall faster into place, freedom-loving people are creating their own web: a network of information and truth. This freedom-web spans the planet through independent blogs and websites and through quiet conversation, one person to another, in coffee shops and kitchens, at job sites and on hiking trails, across the world.

I choose to be part of this global conversation, and that is the reason for this blog. You’re invited to join me here, with comments, observations and knowledge. Download anything you see on this site and freely spread it around. Link to the referenced websites. Share blogs and sites you find that are good. Share information.

Social and political change happen when a group of people have quietly changed in their minds and collectively hold an emotional opinion. The American Revolution was fought and won by only one-third of the colonists. (Another third favored British rule, and the last third just didn’t care).

The black revolution in America began with a shared feeling among the people. Before Rosa Parks sat down in the front of the bus, flicking the domino that sent racial segregation tumbling, the blacks of the south had quietly been talking. They told each other they had had enough. Their group decision changed America.

And so we come together to talk and to listen. To share what we observe and the answers as they come to us.

Welcome to this web log. I’m glad we’ve found each other, and I’m proud to be part of your tribe.

Bronte Baxter

5 Comments

  1. Yathrib said,

    May 8, 2008 at 3:18 am

    Interesting site. What’s your agenda, precisely?

  2. Margaret Newson said,

    May 23, 2008 at 3:26 am

    Well spoken Bronte! Will the sleepwalking robots wake up?

  3. David said,

    June 4, 2008 at 10:37 am

    Bravo!

  4. Anthony said,

    June 10, 2008 at 11:19 pm

    Hello Bronte. I’ve been reading your Blog for a few weeks now and I would like to thank you and your readers for providing plenty of food for thought. Not only are you getting down to the core of many mysteries, but you are providing straightforward advice to people how to empower themselves and others and break free of the invisible chains that have bound us for generations.

    I was thinking of a declaration of independence from 4th Density interference.
    Let’s all say that we have had enough and that we will no longer tolerate this infringement of our universal rights.

    Despite awakening to the negative reality that is out there, I have personally never been happier, never been more constructive, never had more appetite for life. I am grateful for every day and I choose to see the beauty around me rather than dwell on the ugliness.

    Let’s all keep learning, growing and changing ourselves and our immediate surroundings. The trickle is becoming a flood!

  5. Cyndy said,

    April 27, 2009 at 10:13 pm

    As brave as Rosa Parks was to resist (and she truly was), let’s not forget she was not “just” a Negro seamstress that had had enough one particular evening. She and her husband had been active members and political leaders with the NAACP for more than twenty years prior. I think it was a concerted effort to make the civil rights movement go forward and a well orchestrated effort to use the propaganda technique of “bandwagoning” and “ordinary folk” to inspire change. Propaganda can work for the greater good as well as for bad. In this case, I believe it was for the greater good. But let’s not fool ourselves into believing that the civil rights movement flew in on a wing and a prayer. It took a tremendous amount of foresight and planning.


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