Carroll Quigley - Tragedy And Hope pdf
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Comments:CARROLL QUIGLEY - TRAGEDY AND HOPE - A HISTORY OF THE WORLD IN OUR TIME<br /> New York: The Macmillan Company, 1966<br /> <br /> (FINALLY IT IS AVAILABLE ONLINE! (All I ask is that you seed this torrent for a very long time, it's only a 5MB file).)<br /> <br /> Want to know how the world really works behind the scenes? Want to read true world history the way it is never taught in schools and universities (except for the select elite)? Well Professor Quigley was on the "inside" and taught the future elite leaders in Georgetown University for a generation. He was obscure to the public until 1992 when Bill Clinton paid fond tribute to him in his nomination acceptance speech. Quigley then, 15 years after his death, became instantly world famous, and his brilliant works, especially this one, always intended to be largely secret and in low circulation, began to be scrutinized by people everywhere. The result? Shock, after the realization we've been lied to all our lives, the New World Order is real and this book besides being a fascinating historical work in itself, helps connect those dots like no other. It is not speculative but authoritative. That is why this book typically sells for $80 to over $1000 in Amazon, depending on the edition. It's a deeply scholarly historical work written in a powerful compelling style, and relevant.<br /> <br /> Carroll Quigley, Georgetown University history professor (deceased), in Tragedy and Hope: A History of the World in Our Time, 1966, made this claim: <br /> <br /> "There does exist and has existed for a generation, an international Anglophile network which operates, to some extent, in the way the radical Right believes the Communists act. In fact, this network, which we may identify as the Round Table groups, has no aversion to cooperating with the Communists, or any other groups, and frequently does so. I know of the operations of this network because I have studied it for 20 years and was permitted for two years, in the early 1960s, to examine its papers and secret record.<br /> <br /> "In addition to these pragmatic goals, the powers of financial capitalism had another far-reaching aim, nothing less than to create a world system of financial control in private hands able to dominate the political system of each country and the economy of the world as a whole. This system was to be controlled in a feudalist fashion by the central banks of the world acting in concert, by secret agreements arrived at in frequent private meetings and conferences. The apex of the system was the Bank for International Settlements in Basle, Switzerland, a private bank owned and controlled by the world's central banks which were themselves private corporations. The growth of financial capitalism made possible a centralization of world economic control and use of this power for the direct benefit of financiers and the indirect injury of all other economic groups.''<br /> pp. 950 and 324<br /> <br /> Table of Contents<br /> Introduction<br /> Preface<br /> Part One—Introduction: Western Civilization In Its World Setting<br /> Chapter 1—Cultural Evolution in Civilizations<br /> Chapter 2—Cultural Diffusion in Western Civilization 2<br /> Chapter 3—Europe's Shift to the Twentieth Century<br /> Part Two—Western Civilization to 1914<br /> Chapter 4—The Pattern of Change<br /> Chapter 5—European Economic Developments<br /> Chapter 6—The United States to 1917<br /> Part Three—The Russian Empire to 1917<br /> Chapter 7—Creation of the Russian Civilization<br /> Part Four—The Buffer Fringe<br /> Chapter 8—The Near East to 1914<br /> Chapter 9—The British Imperial Crisis: Africa, Ireland, and India to 1926<br /> Chapter 10—The Far East to World War I<br /> Part Five—The First World War: 1914: 1918<br /> Chapter 11—The Growth of International Tensions, 1871-1914<br /> Chapter 12—Military History, 1914-1918<br /> Chapter 13—Diplomatic History, 1914-1 918<br /> Chapter 14—The Home Front, 1914-1918<br /> Part Six—The Versailles System and the Return to Normalcy: 1919-1929<br /> Chapter 15—The Peace Settlements, 1919-1923<br /> Chapter 16—Security, 1919-1935<br /> Chapter 17—Disarmament, 1919-1935<br /> Chapter 18—Reparations, 1919-1932<br /> Part Seven—Finance, Commercial and Business Activity: 1897-1947<br /> Chapter 19—Reflation and Inflation, 1897-1925<br /> Chapter 20—The Period of Stabilization, 1922-1930<br /> Chapter 21—The Period of Deflation, 1927- 1936<br /> Chapter 22—Reflation and Inflation, 1933-1947<br /> Part Eight—International Socialism and the Soviet Challenge<br /> Chapter 23—The International Socialist Movement<br /> Chapter 24—The Bolshevik Revolution to 1924<br /> Chapter 25—Stalinism, 1924-1939<br /> Part Nine—Germany from Kaiser to Hitler: 1913-1945<br /> Chapter 26—Introduction<br /> Chapter 27—The Weimar Republic, 1918-1933<br /> Chapter 28—The Nazi Regime<br /> Part Ten—Britain: the Background to Appeasement: 1900-1939<br /> Chapter 29—The Social and Constitutional Background<br /> Chapter 30—Political History to 1939<br /> Part Eleven—Changing Economic Patterns<br /> Chapter 31—Introduction<br /> Chapter 32—Great Britain<br /> Chapter 33—Germany<br /> Chapter 34—France<br /> Chapter 35—The United States of America<br /> Chapter 36—The Economic Factors<br /> Chapter 37—The Results of Economic Depression<br /> Chapter 38—The Pluralist Economy and World Blocs<br /> Part Twelve—The Policy of Appeasement, 1931-1936<br /> Chapter 39—Introduction<br /> Chapter 40—The Japanese Assault, 1931-1941<br /> Chapter 41—The Italian Assault, 1934-1936<br /> Chapter 42—Circles and Counter-circles, 1935-1939<br /> Chapter 43—The Spanish Tragedy, 1931–1939<br /> Part Thirteen—The Disruption of Europe: 1937-1939<br /> Chapter 44—Austria Infelix, 1933-1938<br /> Chapter 45—The Czechoslovak Crisis, 1937-1938<br /> Chapter 46—The Year of Dupes, 1939<br /> Part Fourteen—World War II: the Tide of Aggression: 1939-1941<br /> Chapter 47—Introduction<br /> Chapter 48—The Battle of Poland, September 1939<br /> Chapter 49—The Sitzkrieg, September 1, 1939-May 1940<br /> Chapter 50—The Fall of France, (May-June 1940) and the Vichy Regime<br /> Chapter 51—The Battle of Britain, July-October 1940<br /> Chapter 52—The Mediterranean and Eastern Europe, 1940) June 1940-June 1941<br /> Chapter 53—American Neutrality and Aid to Britain<br /> Chapter 54—The Nazi Attack on Soviet Russia, 1941-1942<br /> Part Fifteen—World War II: the Ebb of Aggression: 1941-1945<br /> Chapter 55—The Rising in the Pacific, to 1942<br /> Chapter 56—The Turning Tide, 1942-1943: Midway, E1 Alamein, French Africa, and<br /> Stalingrad<br /> Chapter 57—Closing in on Germany, 1943-1945<br /> Chapter 58—Closing in on Japan, 1943-1945<br /> Part Sixteen—The New Age<br /> Chapter 59—Introduction<br /> Chapter 60—Rationalization and Science<br /> Chapter 61—The Twentieth-Century Pattern<br /> Part Seventeen—Nuclear Rivalry and the Cold War: American Atomic Supremacy:<br /> 1945-1950<br /> Chapter 62—The Factors<br /> Chapter 63—The Origins of the Cold War, 1945-1949<br /> Chapter 64—The Crisis in China, 1945-1950<br /> Chapter 65—American Confusions, 1945-1950<br /> Part Eighteen—Nuclear Rivalry and the Cold War: the Race for H-Bomb: 1950-1957<br /> Chapter 66—"Joe I" and the American Nuclear Debate, 1949-1954<br /> Chapter 67—The Korean War and Its Aftermath, 1950-1954<br /> Chapter 68—The Eisenhower Team, 1952-1956<br /> Chapter 69—The Rise of Khrushchev, 1953-1958<br /> Chapter 70—The Cold War in Eastern and Southern Asia, 1950-1957<br /> Part Nineteen—The New Era: 1957-1964<br /> Chapter 71—The Growth of Nuclear Stalemate<br /> Chapter 72—The Disintegrating Super-blocs<br /> Chapter 73—The Eclipse of Colonialism<br /> Part Twenty—Tragedy and Hope: the Future in Perspective<br /> Chapter 74—The Unfolding of Time<br /> Chapter 75—The United States and the Middle-Class Crisis<br /> Chapter 76—European Ambiguities<br /> Chapter 77—Conclusion
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