Nation Builders: US State Department’s
Post-War World
Source: Irish Mirror. DATE required. Ask an Irish librarian for the details. Maybe I can get the two articles re-scanned, on FULL PAGES, for context, and see if other Irish papers mentioned the map around the same time.
Foreword
An Irish historian can’t tell the difference between Maurice Gomberg and the U.S. State Department! Did Moriarty mistake the map for an official State Department project, just because it is catalogued in the Library of Congress? Or perhaps he assumed it was the State Department’s map on account of the excerpt on the Gomberg map from President Roosevelt’s “Four Freedoms” speech. Did he not see that it’s a Communist world-planning map? Obviously, Thomas Moriarty is not the Moriarty who worked with Sherlock Holmes. And Moriarty’s sidekick, newsman Tom Prendeville, doesn’t seem to catch on, either.
Bordering on psychic? It’s not “psychic”. It’s proof that referendums are meaningless. The “people” did not plan this new world order, but they were conned into voting for it … “democratically”. I’m speaking both of Europe and the Quebec referendums of 1980 and 1995 whose real object is not the sovereignty of French Canadians, but a pretext to “negotiate” dismantling Canada for merger into the Gomberg Map’s “United States of (North) America”.
The Gomberg Map explains why the Irish were forced to “vote” until they stopped saying “No” and said “Yes”. Because it isn’t “democratic”. It has long been planned.
Transcript of the Irish Sun article
BORDERING ON PSYCHIC
By TOM PRENDEVILLE
news@irishmirror.ie
An Irish historian has stumbled on an amazing world map predicting the borders of new countries — 70 years before they were drawn up.
The eerily-accurate 1941 chart reflects American thinking during the Second World War and shows plans for the creation of the EU, dubbed the United States of Europe by map makers.
And the state of Israel, which did not come into being until 1948, is also marked as Hebrewland on the US State Department map.
Eastern Bloc countries such as Poland, Hungary, Czechoslovakia, Romania and several others are colour coded to link them with communist USSR.
These nations were not invaded and occupied by the Soviets until 1945. Historian Thomas Moriarty, who is researching a book documenting the US’s wartime global ambitions, said:  “Either the US State Department had someone who could see into the future or they meticulously planned to redraw the world.
“The latter is the most likely explanation. What is known historically is that Roosevelt and Churchill handed over Eastern Europe to Stalin at Yalta in 1945.
“The other aspects of the plan such as a proposed United States of Europe including Germany are also well documented in various declassified US government documents.”
The map –titled Post-War New World Map –showed US’s radical proposals for a post-war world and include a North American Union comprising USA, Canada and Mexico.
Such an entity already exists under NAFTA which stands for North American Free Trade Area [sic].
The US government proposed an [sic] UN-style assembly as well as a “World Court”.
It describes the latter as “possessing punitive powers of absolute boycott, quarantine, blockade and occupation by international police (UN peacekeepers) against lawbreakers of international morality”.
Another project mooted was an African Union. There now exists an African Union, but not like the EU-type political entity envisaged by the State Department.
Post-war Britain becomes part of a new territory — ruled from London — comprising far-away Australia and New Zealand.
Less successfully, the analysts predicted Irish reunification.
The accompanying notes propose: “The area known as Eire and Northern Ireland shall be unified as a demilitarised republic of Eire.”
“Either the US State Department could see
into the future or they planned to redraw the world.”
— Historian Thomas Moriarty
SIDEBAR
United States of Europe
AMERICAN post-war predictions included the setting up of a “United States of Europe” — Winston Churchill actually used the phrase in a speech in 1946. A Council of Europe — the later European Union in embryo — was set up in 1949 — seven years after the State Department analysts dreamt up the US of E.
SIDEBAR
Hebrewland
SEVEN years before the creation of the state of Israel, the map-makers considered the concept of a Jewish homeland they dubbed “Hebrewland”. But Zionist ideas had been around for at least 50 years before 1941. In 1917 former Conservative PM Arthur Balfour voiced Britain’s approval for the setting up of a Jewish homeland in Palestine.