Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.jpg

Carnegie Endowment for International Peace

Founded 14 Dec 1910 by Andrew Carnegie

Norman Dodd … A confidential message was sent to President Wilson, ‘that the War (WW1) not end too quickly.’(55min20sec)

If they could get control of education in the United States, they would be able to prevent a return to a away of life as it had been prior to the war (WW1). And they recruited the Rockefeller Foundation to assist in such as the monumental task’.

According to Dodd, they divided the task in parts, giving to the Rockefeller Foundation the responsibility of alternating education as it pertains to domestic subjects. But Carnegie retained the task of altering our education for Foriegn affairs and international relations.

The foundations decided that the most effective method of achieving this goal was by changing American history, so they awared grants, fellowships and scholarships to those professors and historians who would rewrite American history and prommote one world’ism, human’ism and social’ism. By 1930’s the well laid plans had reached flueinitation and a Reece committe staffreport concluded:

1) There had been a non-bloody revolution in American between 1933 and 1936.

2) There was a certain few foundations that had funded efforts to change the beliefs of the American people through education and by propoganda’.

3) That these revolution changes had been accepted without resistance.”(57min20secs)

William H. Donaldson (S&B 1953)
1999 to 2003 - Chairman, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.

Thomas Lowe Hughes (Rhodes Scholar)
Since 1991, President Emeritus, Honorary Trustee, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.
1971 to 1991 - President, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. Stepfather of Charles P. Stevenson Jr. (S&B 1979)

Robert Warren Barnett (Rhodes 1934)
After his retirement 1970, Barnett joined the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace as a resident associate and wrote several books on Asian affairs.
1963 to 1970 - Deputy Assistant U.S. Secretary of State for East Asian and Pacific Affairs to Dean Rusk (Rhodes 1931) by President John F. Kennedy, Lyndon B. Johnson and Richard Nixon (Bohemian)
WW2 - Chief combat intelligence offcier, Army Air Force.

John F. Kerry (S&B 1966)
Former Visiting Distinguished Statesman. John Kerry was a visiting distinguished statesman at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, where he focused on conflict resolution and global environmental challenges.

Robert Kagan,
Former Senior Associate

Joseph Samuel Nye, Jr. (Rhodes 1958)
1968 - Visiting Professor, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, Institut Universitaire des Hautes Etudes Internationales, Geneva.

Charles Guy Bolte (Rhodes 1947)
1966 to 1971, Vice President, 1971 to 1973, Counsellor, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, New York City.

Harvey Hollister Bundy (S&B 1909. Oversaw Manhattan Project)
1952 to 1958 - Chairman.Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.

William Marshall Bullitt (Son of William Christian Bullit Jr. S&K)
1933 - Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.
Preceded by John W. Davis (Freemason. Adopted Son Cyrus Vance S&B 1939).

William Allison Peters (S&B 1880)
1926 to 1929 - Trustee, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. (Up to Great Depression)

Nicholas Murray Butler (CFR)
1925 - President, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.(Studied both in France and in Germany. He became friend of Kaiser Whilhelm II, and later of President Theodore Roosevelt (Freemason).)

Elihu Root (Eucleian)
1910 - Became President of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. Carnegie Institution of Washington, and the Carnegie Corporation of New York.

Andrew Dickson White (S&B 1853)
1910 to 1918 - Chairman, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.

Sir John W. Davis (Freemason. CFR. Rockesfeller Foundation)
Member of the board of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace

Nelson Strobridge Talbott (Rhodes 1968)
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace

Michael Sam Teitelbaum (Rhodes 1966)
Member of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.

Charles William Maynes (Rhodes 1960)
Editor in Chief, FP for Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.

William W. Waymack (Freemason)
- Served on many national quasi-givernmental commissions including Resources Planning Board, War Labour Board, International Economic Reconstruction, Farm Tenancy, Rural Housing.
- Member of the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission.
- Member board of directors Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago
- Carnegie Endownment for International Peace

Andrew J. Montague (Freemason) - Trustee of the Carnegie Institution, Washington D.C.
- Trustee of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.

Thomas E. Green (Freemason. Sigma Delta Chi. Shriner.)
- Special Lecturer for Carnegie Endownment for International Peace.
- Delegate at large to the 4th American Peace Conference of 1913.

Search mind map … Edward Cox, Noman Dodd (Foundation planning opportunites inc WW1 / Education) and Charlotte Iserbyt (Author of ‘The Deliberate Dumbing Down of America’. Her father and grandfather were members of the Skull and Bones)

Andrew Carnegie

Scottish-American Industrialist, business magnate and philanthropist.

Carnegie and Rockefeller were pioneers in “bricks-and-mortar” philanthropy.

After Carnegie sold his steel company to J. P. Morgan in 1901, he plowed his nine-figure fortune into limestone. He built the Carnegie Institute in Pittsburgh and the Carnegie Institution in Washington and seeded the nation with more than 2,800 libraries. “His focus was to uplift humanity, and libraries for him were the best way to reach the broadest spectrum of the people,” said Peter Krass, author of “Carnegie.”.[3]

Known for: Founding and leading the Carnegie Steel Company,

  • Carnegie Endowment for International Peace

  • Founding the Carnegie Inistitution of New York (aka Corporation of New York)

  • Carnegie Institution for Washington (aka Institute for Science)

  • Carnegie Mellon University

  • Carnegie Trust for the Universities of Scotland

  • Carnegie Library and the Carnegie Hero Fund.

Died 11 Aug 1919, from TBC. Age 83.

NOTE: The books placed in university, public and private libraries would be written by members of our world community, who have been through the academic system ([Skull and Bones] … see mind map).

Note: Rockefeller Family Cementery, Sleepy Hollow, NY, US

[0] - Carnegie Endowment for International Peace Website

[0b] - FYI - Wiki - Carnegie Endowment for International Peace

[1] - Video - Charlotte Iserbyt: Societies Secrets

[2] - Video - Charlotte Iserbyt: Societies Secrets - reference to Carnegie Endownment for International Peace

[3] - Video - Norman Dodd, 2nd Chief Investigator to the Reece Committee investigation into Tax Exempt Foundations

[4] - Video - The Truth About Cancer: A Global Quest - Episode 1 - reference to Carnegie and Rockefeller Foundations (History)

[5] - Book - Andrew Carnegie’s Peace Endowment : the tycoon, the president, and their bargain of 1910 by Fabian, Larry L (1985)

[6] - Book - 1915 Annual report / Carnegie Endowment for International Peace by Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.

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