Conspiracy

books/bki.jpg The Insiders
$1.95

by John F. McManus

Updated by popular demand! From the Carter administration through our current George W. Bush years, get the story behind the Insider groups in the Council on Foreign Relations, Trilateral Commission, Rhodes Scholar Program, and Bilderberger Movement. Quantities selling fast! Order yours today! (2004ed, 224pp, pb)


books/bkpc.jpg Proofs of a Conspiracy
$3.95

by John Robison

Originally published in 1798, Proofs of a Conspiracy documents the founding of a secret organization with the goal of destroying all religions, overthrowing the world’s governments, and abolishing private property. Author John Robison, one of Europe's leading intellectuals of the time, provides the foundation for understanding the connection between the French Revolution, communist movements, and the current drive for a new world order. (1967ed, 304pp, pb)


books/bkgd.jpg The Great Deception
$19.95

by Christopher Booker & Richard North

This book tells for the first time the inside story of the most audacious political project of modern times: the plan to unite Europe under a single 'supranational' government. From the 1920s, when the blueprint for the European Union was first conceived by a British civil servant, this meticulously documented account takes the story right up to current moves to give Europe a political constitution, already planned 60 years ago to be the 'crowning dream' of the whole project. (2005ed, 643pp, pb)


books/bkmij.jpg Memoirs Illustrating the History of Jacobinism
$58.00

by Augustin Barruel

Originally published in 1797, this definitive account of the rise of the Illuminati and its influence in shaping the murderous French Revolution is an invaluable resource for history fans and defenders of the Constitution. (2002ed, 846pp, hb)


bkbur.jpg Blowing up Russia
$8.95

by Alexander Litvinenko and Yuri Felshtinsky

The Secret Plot to Bring Back KGB Terror Blowing Up Russia contains the devastating attack of ex-KGB officer Alexander Litvinenko against his former superiors. In association with academic Yuri Felshtinsky, he exposes how lethal KGB methods were used to catapult Vladimir Putin into power as one of the most popular Russian leaders ever to be elected. Banned in Russia, based on Litvinenko’s twenty years of insider knowledge of Russia’s secret campaigns, eloquently written, Blowing up Russia shows how the successors of the KGB were able to survive after being cut loose from communism. Returning to old-style terror and war, they claimed a ‘Russian way’ of government. Yuri Felshtinsky writes how he contacted Alexander Litvinenko asking for help investigating the Moscow apartment-block bombings in 1999. While they pursued their research, three people who assisted them in Russia were violently killed-two were shot, one was poisoned. (2007, 316pp, pb)