Where will it end?
What if the Balfour Declaration of 1917 was really about a Zionist
world government?
“On April 25 [1917] I went into the matter thoroughly with Lord Robert Cecil, the Assistant Secretary for Foreign Affairs, one of the great spirits of modern England, and a prime factor in the creation of the League of Nations. Like Balfour, Milner, Smuts and others, Lord Cecil was deeply interested in the Zionist ideal; I think that he alone saw it in its true perspective as an integral part of world stabilization. To him the re-establishment of a Jewish Homeland in Palestine and the organization of the world in a great federation were complementary features of the next step in the management of human affairs.
— Chaim Weizmann*, Trial and Error: the Autobiography of Chaim Weizmann (Schocken Books, New York, 1949; 1966 paperback with a new Introduction).
Weizmann was writing about the Balfour Declaration of 1917, a letter addressed to international banker, Baron Walter Rothschild, by which Great Britain promised to deliver Palestine as a future Jewish homeland. Chaim Weizmann, first President of the state of Israel in 1948, 6 years after the 1942 Map showing Hebrewland in the midst of a great world federation of communist unions. The Map apparently reflects precisely Weizemann’s two “complementary features” of the “Zionist ideal” as understood between the lines of Arthur Balfour’s letter to Baron Lionel Walter Rothschild, of the Rothschild banking family (bank: N.M. Rothschild & Sons in London) in 1917. One is left to presume that by the stroke of a pen some British statesman ceded not just Palestine, but the entire PLANET to the future ownership and control of certain international bankers. And one is left to ask, if only rhetorically: “the management of whose human affairs” and by whom?
Ben Gurion predicts a world government over federated continents under Israel (1962)
Jacques Attali predicts a world government
stationed in Jerusalem, Israel
“Jerusalem … It’s a nice spot for a World Government,” says Jacques Attali