The Genesis of Modern Globalization (1978-1979)
Formerly unpublished text by Antony C. Sutton and Patrick M. Wood
I’m going to blow the lid off globalization by releasing Trilateral Observer issues penned by Professor Antony Sutton (1928-2002) and me between 1978 and 1982. These were our eyewitness accounts and testimony in the early days of the Trilateral Commission, the undisputed founder of modern globalization. If Americans had taken heed back then, we would not be in the mess we are in today; with Sutton gone, I alone remain to tell the story and issue the warnings.
The Kindle version was released on Easter and is available immediately; the print version will follow shortly.
If you purchase the Kindle version, please give it a 5-star review as soon as possible. Don’t carp over punctuation, style, or spelling—the text is unabridged; this was our original research, raw as it was!
Preface to Kindle Version: 2024
Professor Antony C. Sutton passed in 2002, and all of his research was unfortunately lost. Tragic. Throughout his career, he served as a professor of economics at UCLA and then as a research fellow at Stanford’s prestigious Hoover Institution on War, Peace & Revolution. At the time, he was considered to be the top scholar in the world on the transfer of technology from the West to the East. His works are legendary to this day.
Then, it all started to unravel for Sutton when he started researching the Trilateral Commission in 1976. By then, his colleagues at Hoover had already nicknamed him the “Hoover Vacuum Cleaner” for his tenacity in digging into a story; nothing escaped his attention. He was like Sherlock Holmes, who could demonstrably solve any mystery.
Hoover Institution was overseen by Stanford University, whose President happened to be David Packard (the co-founder of Hewlett-Packard) and a member of the Trilateral Commission. Packard knew that Sutton could not be stopped, so he was subsequently drummed out of Hoover before he got too deep into his exposé.
Subsequently, our chance meeting at a gold conference in New Orleans was fortuitous for me because I was also interested in the Trilateral Commission. Within thirty minutes of meeting, Sutton and I both knew we were sitting on the powder keg story of the century: THE BIRTH OF A PLOT TO TAKE OVER THE WORLD.
I was a publisher, printer, and budding writer, and Sutton was a master, world-class researcher, and scholar.
For several years thereafter, Sutton was my Sherlock Holmes. I was his Watson.
Together, we exposed the Trilateral Commission, its members, and its nefarious plot to subvert all the world’s resources into their collective pockets.
We were censored at every turn. Our magnum opus, Trilaterals Over Washington, Volumes I and II, was ultimately banned by B. Dalton Bookseller as it sent a libelous letter to all its stores in the United States stating that “The publisher was out of business and the books were out of print.” A bald-faced lie. But it worked.
It crushed our book sales, my publishing business and, most importantly, our partnership that had brought all of this to light in the first place.