Massoni | 8- United for Globalization

Chapter 8: United Freemasons for Globalization, Part Two (1992-2001)

This chapter narrates the development of the Masonic pact United Freemasons for Globalization and lists key powerful figures, with their Masonic affiliations, implicated in the political and economic crises in Europe. It covers ideological clashes, the unfolding of political-economic doctrines, and the oligarchic interests driving globalization.



The Religion of the Market

Friedrich von Hayek (1899-1992)

  • A neo-aristocratic Mason affiliated with high-level Ur-Lodges such as Edmund BurkeThree Eyes, and White Eagle 

  • His death on March 23, 1992, marked not a mere physical passing but an apotheosis within Masonic mysticism, akin to that described by Dan Brown in The Lost Symbol about George Washington.  

  • His ideological legacy, coupled with that of fellow Mason Milton Friedman (associated too with the Three Eyes), profoundly influenced Euro-Atlantic governance from 1979 until the 1992 Maastricht Treaty and spread later to post-Soviet states.  

  • Key point: Their neoliberal doctrine was conservative and reactionary, underpinning a neo-aristocratic Masonic oligarchy.  



The Democratic and Liberal Socialism

Progressive Masonic Thinkers and Ur-Lodges:

  • From Thomas Paine (1737-1809), John Stuart Mill (1806-1873), to the Fabian Society affiliated with the Thomas Paine Ur-Lodge.  

  • Later figures like Eduard Bernstein, Carlo Rosselli, John Maynard Keynes, Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt, William Beveridge, Altiero Spinelli, John Rawls, Amartya Sen, and others contributed to a liberal-socialist and progressive Masonry.  

Key Features:

  • Emerged mainly from Great Britain, blending liberal and socialist ideals with constitutional democracy.  

  • Rejected class war, violent revolution, and dictatorship in favor of gradual, democratic, constitutional reforms.  

  • Emphasized Welfare State development with equality and rights universalization.  

  • Example: Britain’s post-WWII Labour program, inspired by William Beveridge, and Sweden’s social-democratic “welfare revolution” under Tage Erlander.  

  • Social democracy was criticized by communists as a bourgeois stratagem.  

  • Sociologist Thomas Marshall analyzed citizenship as a three-dimensional concept (civil, political, social rights).  




Market Fundamentalism: The U.S. Model

Neoliberal Masonic Figures and Thinkers:

  • Friedrich von Hayek, Ludwig von Mises, Milton Friedman, Robert Nozick.  

  • Ideology includes reduction of welfare state (“big brother” state), tax cuts to stimulate trickle-down growth.  

  • Emphasizes minimal state allowing market efficiency, rejecting enforced social justice, which Hayek labels a “mirage.”  

  • Resulted in deregulation, privatization, precarious labor markets, inequality, and social disintegration.  

  • U.S. healthcare system inequities spotlighted with millions uninsured.  

  • George Soros condemned the dominant value of money chase and egoism.  

  • Jeremy Rifkin contrasted the U.S. “American Dream” with the European “European Dream,” praising Europe’s more humane capitalism.  

  • Hayek contrasted Taxis (planned social order) and Cosmos (spontaneous order via market), advocating predominance of the latter.  

  • However, internal inconsistencies exist: Hayek conceded the need for minimal social protection, implicitly acknowledging social justice.  

  • Democratic society entails shared goals and social solidarity absent in neoliberal idealism.  




The Very Venerable Mario Draghi

  • Mentioned by sociologist Luciano Pellicani as a key figure in neoliberal dismantling post-2011.  

  • Affiliations: Three EyesCompass Star-Rose/Rosa-Stella VentorumEdmund BurkeDer Ring, and Pan-Europa.

  • In 2012, Draghi advocated austerity, labor market flexibility, privatizations, and diminishing welfare under the Economic and Monetary Union framework.  

  • His actions contributed to deconstruction of Europe’s social model and deepened recession in Southern Europe.  

  • Example: Favoring liquidity for banks but not real economy, reinforcing financialization and recession.



United Freemasons: The Development

  • The pact united progressive-democratic and neo-aristocratic-conservative/reactionary Masons globally, a collaboration not seen since the revolutionary 18th century.  

  • Example: Cooperation with Deng Xiaoping (b. 1904, Three Eyes) enabled the 1984 Sino-British Joint Declaration over Hong Kong’s future.  

  • Deng and other Chinese Masons split into reformist groups linked with Thomas Paine (progressive Masonry) and conservative groups (Three Eyes).  

  • The 1989 Tiananmen protests illustrated the conflict between political liberalization desires and the neo-aristocratic-controlled repression.  

  • Following suppression at Tiananmen, Deng expanded Masonic affiliations (notably the Three Eyes lodge) among Chinese Communist Party elders, establishing the autonomous Tao Lodge in China in 1990.  

  • This complex Masonic political scenario mirrors broader forces controlling transitions in the USSR and Russia, including Mikhail Gorbachev (Golden Eurasia) and Boris Yeltsin (Lux ad Orientem).




The Economic and Political Reorganization

  • The Washington Consensus, articulated by John Williamson (progressive Mason of Newton-Keynes lodge), became the standard neoliberal doctrine from the 1980s onward: fiscal discipline, deregulation, privatization.  

  • Boris Yeltsin and associates, many Freemasons, imposed shock therapy, causing economic collapse and social disintegration in Russia.  

  • Major treaties (Maastricht 1992, Schengen 1985, etc.), largely directed by neo-aristocratic lodges (Pan-EuropaBabel TowerCompass Star-RoseThree EyesEdmund Burke), cemented neoliberal Europe.  

  • British political shifts: Margaret Thatcher opposed joining SM; her successors, particularly Tony Blair (Edmund BurkeHathor Pentalpha), drove a neoliberal “Third Way,” aligning with Clinton-era neoliberals and maintaining economic orthodoxy.

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