Club of Rome President tried to stop approval of my dissertation
But first, a brief history of the club, their vision of a technocratic dictatorship, and tight connections to the elites of the world
I was in Rome in the middle of September to meet with my family and celebrate one of my sisters who turned 60.
She had dreamt of having her birthday party in Rome. The trip also gave me the possibility to explore the cityâs rich history and visit some well known places.
One of those places were Academia dei Lincei. A prestigious scientific institution, claimed to be the oldest in the world, that is located in the Palazzo Corsini in the Trastevere district.
As a strange coincidence we found out that the botanical garden of Rome, a place that my other sister, a florist, had expressed her wishes to visit, was located in the garden of the same palace.
I also learned that this was the place where Queen Christina of Sweden set up her âAcademy of Arcadiaâ after her abdication from the Swedish throne in 1654. 1
After her death in 1689, the Pontifical Academy of Arcadia was established in her memory.
My main reason to visit the institution was that it was the birthplace of the elitist environmental think tank Club of Rome. An organisation that has had a huge influence on the global agenda. In this case we also find Swedish connections.
On April 7-8, 1968, 30 European economists and scientists gathered in the nearby Villa Farnesina to discuss a framework for initiating systems-wide planning on a global scale. At this meeting they couldnât agree on what should be done, but a little core group was created in the aftermath to carry on with the agenda.
This group took the name Club of Rome and began preaching the gospel of doom.
Club of Romeâs mission has since been âto promote understanding of the global challenges facing humanity and to propose solutions through scientific analysis, communication and advocacyâ.
When I started my studies in Geography in 2004, I genuinely believed in their doomsday messages and dire projections, but as I climbed higher on my learning ladder I began to question the validity of their claims.
It was due to the warnings of a dramatic drop in oil production in the years after the millennium shift that I had returned to the university to learn more about energy. I was worried about what would happen if the worldâs oil supply would run out and Club of Rome was one of the main proponents of the Peak Oil Theory.
But as they also claimed that the burning of ‘fossil fuels’ would cause catastrophic ‘climate change’, I started doubting the narrative. Wouldnât this problem be solved if there was no oil to be burned?
How could they sound the alarm on both issues? And what was their solution?
I sensed that there were âsomething rotten in the state of Denmarkâ. As I was writing my Masters thesis in Geography in 2007, I became aware of the disturbing connections to the elites of the world and the real goals of the club.
The seed money to establish Club of Rome came from Italyâs richest man at the time. The head of the automobile manufacturer FIAT, Gianni Agnelli.
The founders were the Italian industrialist Aurelio Peccei, formerly of FIAT, Olivetti and AlItalia, and British scientist Alexander King (both pictured below), Director-General for Scientific Affairs at OECD. They were both connected to NATO.
The background was that Peccei had held the keynote speech at the banking organisation ADELAâs first meeting at Buenos Aires National Military College in 1965.
ADELA (Atlantic Development of Latin America) was an international consortium of bankers with the aim of supporting industrialisation and economic integration in order to achieve a common Latin American market.
Peccei was one of the founders together with David Rockefellerâs close alley, US Senator Jacob Javits. Other notable participants were Emilio Collado (Standard Oil of New Jersey), Warren Wilhelm (Texaco Oil), Gianni Agnelli and the Swedish banker Marcus Wallenberg Sr. 2
Peccei talked about the future technological revolution, artificial intelligence and âthe close interdependence between man and the machineâ that would change everything. He advocated that this development had to be centrally guided and that it required unification of Europe and later the world.
Otherwise the control of the future would be lost. 3
His speech caught the attention of US Secretary of State Dean Rusk (previously the president of The Rockefeller Foundation) as well as Jermen Gvishiani from the State Committee on Science and Technology of the Soviet Union. This started a chain of events that led to the meeting in Rome three years later.
The ball really started rolling after a meeting at Rockefeller Foundations Bellagio Center in Italy in October 1968 with several of the Clubs members attending and other participants joining. The meeting was a joint OECD and Rockefeller Foundation venture that produced the outcome document “The Bellagio Declaration on Planning”.
Aurelio Peccei outlined his philosophy in the book The Chasm Ahead in March 1969. The ideas had similarities to Columbia Professor Zbigniew Brzezinskis Technetronic Society that were presented in the book Between Two Ages in 1970.
The prescribed solution was a Technocratic Dictatorship for Crisis Management that was to be sold to the public with nice fuzzy words about saving the earth and preserving wildlife. Pecceiâs environmental rhetoric had been inspired by his hero Julian Huxley, the founder of the WWF and UNESCO.
With aid from international philanthropy and support from US and Soviet governments, Club of Rome then became an international venture, with participants from both sides of the Iron Curtain with offshoots like International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA), located in the castle Schloss Laxenburg, Austria (1972), and International Federation of Institutes for Advanced Study (IFIAS), initially located at Ulriksdal Castle in Stockholm (1972).
I later learned that the originator of the Peak Oil Theory, M King Hubbert, was a member of Club of Rome. Hubbert was an enthusiastic technocrat that had co-founded Technocracy Inc. in 1933 together with Howard Scott.
Hubbert was the main author of the manual to technocracy, Technocracy Study Course, which principles were taught in the basement of Colombia University, New York. 4
These technocratic ideas of system wide planning and scientific management techniques were incorporated into the Club of Romeâs philosophy.
As chief geologist at Shell Oil, Hubbert had projected that US oil production would peak in 1970. This prediction was presented at the American Petroleum Institute in 1956. His theory â which was falsified when United States oil production surpassed the 1970 peak in 2018 â was then used to further Club of Romeâs technocratic vision for the world. 5
This was also the case with the Anthropogenic Global Warming (AGW) theory.
Probably the biggest scientific fraud of all ages.
Former Rockefeller Panel Report member Carrol L. Wilson (a close friend of Nelson Rockefellerâs) incorporated âman made climate changeâ in Club of Romeâs agenda in the early seventies and commissioned MIT and Jay Forrester to make suitable data projections about the future.
These projections were included in Club of Romeâs most well-known report Limits to Growth (1972), which was published with big fanfares three months before United Nations Conference on the Environment and Development in Stockholm, sparking a debate on the link between population growth and resource scarcity.
Fittingly, Club of Rome member and Rockefeller Foundation trustee Maurice Strong was secretary-general of the conference, with Wilson as his advisor.
Global management of the planet and zero growth were prescribed as the grand solutions. These solutions have since been repeated over and over in reports to the Club of Rome such as Mankind at the Turning Point (1974), Reshaping the International Order (1976), Goals for Mankind (1977), The First Global Revolution (1991), Bankrupting Nature (2011), and the latest, Earth for All (2022).
Aurelio Peccei presented this plan to Klaus Schwab and the global business elite at Schwabâs newly founded European Management Forum in 1973. That same year David Rockefeller and Zbigniew Brzezinski founded the Trilateral Commission with the same goal in mind.
The plan was also discussed by futurists and global planners during World Future Societyâs conference âThe Next 25 Years: Crisis & Opportunityâ in 1975, with US Vice President Nelson Rockefeller as the opening speaker.
It was called for a crisis that would have the ability to unite humanity and achieve the desired outcome. 6
In 1978, a meeting was held at Grand Hotel in Saltsjöbaden, Sweden, with heads of state and government to discuss how the problems highlighted by Club of Rome could be solved.
At this meeting, the main obstacles to the fulfillment Club of Romeâs utopian vision were identified as
a) democracy;
b) labour unions; and
c) the striving of individuals to create a better lives for themselves.
Therefore, both persuasion and fear would have to be used. 7
As ministers, we have received a great deal of information, forecasts and the results of analysis. What is lacking is political decision. Most politicians are aware of the nature of the problems, but no decisions are taken. Why?
The man in the street is not prepared to make sacrifices and the politician will not fight this attitudeâindeed he cannot without risking his political life. Sacrifice is against trade union principles.
There are two possible approaches: One is to try to build up an ethic which substitutes satisfaction for material reward. The other is to frighten people to the point where they will make sacrifices in order to avoid catastrophe.
Both methods must be attempted.
(from Dr. Whiteheadâs notes from the Club of Rome meeting in Saltsjöbaden, Stockholm, 1978)
In 1980, World Future Society arranged the âFirst Global Conference on the Futureâ with the motto âThink Globally, Act Locallyâ with Strong and Peccei as attendees. The futurist Warren Wagar proclaimed that technocracy was âthe highest stage of capitalismâ and prophesied that it soon would be implemented.
Three years later, Trilateral Commission member Gro Harlem Brundtland headed the UN commission, together with Maurice Strong, which developed the concept of Sustainable Development.
It was presented in their report Our Common Future (1987) and was the trojan horse that would make the technocratic dictatorship a reality.
In 1991 the Trilateral Commission presented an action plan on how to achieve this in Beyond Interdependence â The Meshing of the worlds Economy and the Earths ecology. Maurice Strong and David Rockefeller wrote the foreword. 8
Strong then took the role as secretary-general during the Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro in 1992. The major outcomes was the adoption of UN Agenda 21 and the UN Framework Convention for Climate Change (UNFCCC). The plan was put in place.
Strong also headed the Earth Charter commission together with honorary Club of Rome-member Mikhail Gorbachev, and with Steven Rockefeller as coordinator. The outcome was sixteen principles, or commandments, for a âjust, sustainable and peaceful worldâ.
They were launched at the Peace Palace in the Hague in 2000. 9
Scenarios on how the desired âplanetary civilisationâ could be achieved were presented in the Global Scenario Groups The Great Transition – The Promises and Lures of Our Times in 2002. This report listed crisis like environmental degradation, ‘climate change’, social polarisation, and terrorism as possible triggers for the transformation.
The main author, Paul Raskin, had been a member of the Earth Charter Commission and is currently a member of the Club of Rome. 10
Funding came from Rockefeller Foundation and the UNEP.
The World Economic Forum became the main vehicle to realise their vision, in tandem with the United Nations. This was manifested through the merging of UNs Agenda 21/Agenda 2030 and WEFs Fourth Industrial Revolution, with the signing of a partnership in June 2019. 11
The Club of Rome is now one of the leading advocates for a declaration of a âPlanetary Emergency âby the UN General Assembly during the Summit of the Future in 2024. 12
This could trigger the set up of an Emergency Platform to establish the envisioned Technocratic Dictatorship. âFĂŒr ihre sicherheit.â
Reactions to my thesis
I presented parts of these findings in my doctoral thesis about the political history of biofuels in the European Union 2012. The Club of Romeâs tentacles were everywhere, including in the European Parliament. 13
They even had a foothold at my university.
During my examination it became obvious that one Club of Rome member, a rapporteur for the Renewable Energy Directive, was working to insert the Club of Romeâs agenda into European Union legislation, and not for the polices of the party he represented.
It was, however, not appreciated that I uncovered his connections to powerful international networks and actors. Someone sent him a copy of my thesis, after which he decided to intervene by trying to influence the grading committee’s judgement of my thesis.
His efforts were unsuccessful but it gave me an unpleasant experience.
He had actually been awarded an honorary doctorate at my university in 2011 and had for some years been involved in energy related courses at my institution. This enabled me to conduct a recorded interview with him in the fall of 2010. 14
Two months before my dissertation defense in December 2012, he had also been appointed as the president of Club of Rome. His connections made it possible for him to pull some strings in order to try to destroy my reputation and undermine my career.
Some colleagues stopped talking to me and the climate suddenly became very chilly at my institution. Half of my department was outraged.
The press department didnât publish any press release as customary, as they deemed the dissertation âtoo controversialâ, and my former supervisor made a public declaration that he would never have approved a thesis like mine.
One of the press officers, a Greenpeace activist, wrote on her blog (widely read by environmental science students) that she was ashamed that the university had let my thesis pass.
Their combined efforts did, however, backfire as the interest in my work instead skyrocketed.
One year after my thesis was approved, the book Domedagsklockan was released with a chapter authored by me about the climate agenda and Club of Rome. 15
It was widely distributed to editorial boards in Sweden and we even managed to get an opinion piece published in Swedenâs leading newspaper Dagens Nyheter, with a reference to my doctoral thesis Ordo ab Chao. 16
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Header image: Times of Israel
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