A Clip From a 1981 Sitcom Explains the NWO

Vigilant Citizen

A short clip from the 1981 sitcom Barney Miller features a “kooky” man describing the entire NWO agenda to a police officer who clearly thinks he’s crazy.

In this clip, a man who was arrested for entering the offices of the Trilateral Commission, goes into a diatribe about the great power of the Rockefeller family and the elite’s goal to create a one world government. However, the police officers clearly think he’s crazy as the studio audience laughs at his claims. Here’s the clip.  

This clip is rather astonishing because the man’s claims, which seemed outlandish in 1981, are now easily verifiable. Furthermore, looking back at how the world evolved, it is difficult to deny that the agenda went exactly as he described. In his 2002 memoirs, David Rockefeller himself wrote:

“Some even believe we are part of a secret cabal working against the best interests of the United States, characterizing my family and me as ‘internationalists’ and of conspiring with others around the world to build a more integrated global political and economic structure – one world, if you will. If that’s the charge, I stand guilty, and I am proud of it.”
-David Rockefeller, “Memoirs of David Rockefeller” p.405

Displeased with the fact that Japan was not admitted at the Bilderberg meetings, Rockefeller did indeed create the Trilateral Commission, which still holds within its ranks the most powerful people in the world, including several state leaders.

The man in the clip mentions George H. W. Bush, who became Vice President in 1981 (the year the show aired), claiming that Rockefeller “made a call” to make it happen. As you might know, Bush went on to become President of the United States in 1989 … and his son was became President in 2000 … and his other son is working hard to become President as we speak.

But the Trilateral Commission does not only work with Republicans. Obama was strongly endorsed by the co-founder of the Trilateral Commission, Zbigniew Brzezinski. He stated that Obama “recognizes that the challenge is a new face, a new sense of direction, a new definition of America’s role in the world.” He added: “What makes Obama attractive to me is that he understands that we live in a very different world where we have to relate to a variety of cultures and people.” In September 2007 during a speech on the Iraq war, Obama introduced Brzezinski as “one of our most outstanding thinkers”.

In short, this video is full of facts. But these facts were given by man who’s under arrest … with kooky literature … while a studio audience laughs at him. That’s how mass media spins the truth.

Vigilant Citizen

10 thoughts on “A Clip From a 1981 Sitcom Explains the NWO

  1. And what part of this was a fictitious sit-com? I used to watch Barney Miller. I actually remember this episode (barely, but I do because I remember Jeffery being on the show). None of this made any sense to me at the time. I thought it was just comedy. Little did I know Jeffery was way ahead of his time. If only we all had listened back then and taken action THEN. Things may still be roughly the same as they are now, but at least WE would have had a better head start on taking care of business.

    1. Nobody listened back then, not at all. Back in those days I got called every name in the book for trying to wake people up and get the word out. Much worse than it is today, although today is very bad too. The sheep don’t want to know and don’t care. They will defend this evil, corrupt system to the point of physical violence if you push them too hard.

  2. “Jewish” Hollywood does NOT warn us of a GD thing, they intentionally tell us of their plans in a mocking fashion.

    Our apathy because of disbelief, as it is presented in a “comical” manner is purposely designed to make us perceive it in a laughable, lunatic way, thus causing rejection through making anyone who believes it to be true is also a lunatic and ultimately outcast.

    Humans are social beings, by nature, and no one wants to be the “odd man out” or pariah, so in the very least silence is achieved.

    Tptb see our apathy as approval, thus absolving them of any guilt for ANY crime they commit. See kapparot.

    VC is an interesting sight, but NEVER names the joo, to my knowledge, so he does fall right in line with many of his espoused observations.

  3. Don’t remember this episode, but I do think I would have believed it, at least to some extent, because back in 1971 after Nixon took the dollar completely off the gold standard my dad told me that the Federal Reserve was a PRIVATE bank owned by (among others) the Rockefellers. I did not understand the implications of this (I was 18 at the time), but from then on for sure I did not trust the Rockefellers (BTW Nelson Rockefeller was gov. of my home state, NY, at the time)…basically my dad hated his job (foreign exchange trader at Bankers Trust) from that point on.

    Thanks for posting this!

  4. Bobby Fischer [genius], World Champion (chess 1972–75) was made out as absolutely crazy because of his beliefs. Beliefs strongly against the jews and the NWO / Bankster groups. He despised many other types of people too.

    He dropped out of society by large never reversing his position.

    Read up on the man, most here would find his words very accurate

  5. Barney Miller was one of my absolute favorite sitcoms. I only have the first 2 seasons on dvd, but I remember this episode well.

  6. This is an example of them telling us exactly what they’re doing. The lines were “prophetic”. Who wrote the script?

  7. I also almost remember the episode, but seeing it again brought it all back. At the time, the John Birch society had a magazine called “New American” (now a website) and they had quite a few covers with CONSPIRACY boldly printed on them and articles on the Trilateral Commission and the Council on Foreign Relations. I’m pretty sure that they were the one of the targets.
    Yes, it was a sitcom and this WAS done in a mocking and condescending manner. Possibly another early attempt to condition the masses, just like the early attempts to “normalize” certain behaviors through comedy. Here you had a “whacko” conspiracy theorist committing a crime (vandalism) against a (legitimate) group of like minded “philanthropists” done in a slightly comical manner. Did you hear the canned laughter?
    Sitcoms since the 70’s were the perfect vehicle get the general population to question their morals and beliefs. TV conditioned people to “laugh” at the old bigot (Archie Bunker) or the prancing gay man. Remember? Archie Bunker was almost always put into an uncomfortable situation in which he either looked foolish or had some kind of an epiphany. Jack on “Three’s Company”, while not actually gay, always acted like a prancing fairy around Mr. Roper, much to the delight of the studio audience. Next thing you know, we start to see actual “gay” characters on sitcoms. At first they acted like the prancing fairy character, then slowly they “evolved” and became the normal one or “ALPHA” of the group. Nowadays there’s absolutely no hiding the agenda, and those “whackos” who disagree, question, or debate are no longer considered funny, but “dangerous” .

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