Subject: Charlotte Iserbyt on Secret Societies Wed 03 Feb 2010, 10:57 pm
Time Out Productions presents Charlotte Iserbyt and a look at secret societies and their history in the United States.
Her father and grandfather we members of the infamous Skull & Bones Society at Yale University in New Haven, Connecticut. ]my note: I've always liked Charlotte, but I did not know this until now (so watch with a critical eye)]
Charlotte Iserbyt is the consummate whistleblower! Iserbyt served as Senior Policy Advisor in the Office of Educational Research and Improvement (OERI), U.S. Department of Education, during the first Reagan Administration, where she first blew the whistle on a major technology initiative which would control curriculum in America's classrooms. Iserbyt is a former school board director in Camden, Maine and was co-founder and research analyst of Guardians of Education for Maine (GEM) from 1978 to 2000.
She has also served in the American Red Cross on Guam and Japan during the Korean War, and in the United States Foreign Service in Belgium and in the Republic of South Africa. Iserbyt is a speaker and writer, best known for her 1985 booklet Back to Basics Reform or OBE: Skinnerian International Curriculum and her 1989 pamphlet Soviets in the Classroom: America's Latest Education Fad which covered the details of the U.S.-Soviet and Carnegie-Soviet Education Agreements which remain in effect to this day. She is a freelance writer and has had articles published in Human Events, The Washington Times, The Bangor Daily News, and included in the record of Congressional hearings.
_________________ "For every thousand hacking at the leaves of evil, there is one striking at the root." David Thoreau (1817-1862)
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ScoutsHonor
Posts : 1360 Join date : 2009-10-20
Subject: Re: Charlotte Iserbyt on Secret Societies Thu 04 Feb 2010, 1:03 pm
Another one of those puzzling scenarios... Like G. Edward Griffin.
G. Edward gave us a vast amount of truth, and a magniicent unmasking of the Federal Reserve, (The Creature from Jekyll Island).
Yet his solution is to steer his readers in the direction of political activism as a remedy for our problems. And THAT gets us nowhere fast, as that environment is *hopelessly corrupt.*
So does Charlotte give us a magnificent work on the evils of our education system. Yet I wonder: nowhere does she explain how she feels about having a corrupt father, nor does she explain, but simply hurries over, how she rose to such a high position with the Reagan administration. In addition, she is allowed to speak freely about how Evil the Globalists are...
Bottom line is, I'm not willing to bet one way or the other on her authenticity.
C1 Admin
Posts : 1611 Join date : 2009-10-19
Subject: Re: Charlotte Iserbyt on Secret Societies Thu 04 Feb 2010, 4:00 pm
Yup, I agree with your assessment.
However, with respect to G Edward Griffin, if I recall the book correctly, he does not really tell us that the monetary system scam started long before those guys got on the train to Jekyll Island. I mean, it wasn't like they invented this system during their little get-together. These techniques had been in place a long time. So, he certainly runs a containment-vector and keeps his audience from researching the matter further, even though he exposes how the monetary system works to many who did not understand it before.
By the way, the reason I always enlarge the G is because its part of their stupid Masonic code programming. You'll see that stupid G everywhere now. It's just another layer of programming for the people who get to "manage" the system.
_________________ "For every thousand hacking at the leaves of evil, there is one striking at the root." David Thoreau (1817-1862)
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Ben Steigmann
Posts : 114 Join date : 2010-05-21
Subject: Re: Charlotte Iserbyt on Secret Societies Fri 04 Jun 2010, 5:52 pm
Does Eustace mullins' book "Secrets of the Federal Reserve" explain the monetary system, or does it just explain the conspiratorial nature of the FED? I've heard Griffin plagiarized from Mullins, so I'd like to go back to the original source. Do you recommend his book?
Also, the carnegie endowment document that she mentions is NECESSARY reading. It covers the whole agenda up until the information age: http://americandeception.com/index.php?action=downloadpdf&photo=PDFsml_AD2/Report_On_The_Commission_On_Social_Studies-Krey-Counts-Kimmel-Kelley-1934-179pgs-EDU.sml.pdf&id=395
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Subject: Re: Charlotte Iserbyt on Secret Societies