The Tangled Web Icke Weaves: Who is Behind David Icke’s Freedom Foundation?
by Will BanyanSince then Icke
Such defenses are definitely an asset as Icke
The Freedom Foundation
Going to court is costly, even for a man who seems to believe the world we live in is, in fact, a hologram. In February 2007, Icke’s fundraising took an interesting turn with an announcement titled: “The Freedom Foundation: Funding the Truth Instead of the System.” Icke’s website gave U.S. citizens the opportunity to make a “charitable” tax-deductible donation to Icke’s Freedom Foundation through the International Humanities Center (IHC). The donee was offered the chance to, “support someone working full-time for up to 12 hours a day to expose those behind the global conspiracy
Tax-exempt foundations were first identified as a tool of New World Order
In the international field, foundations, and an interlock among some of them and certain intermediary organizations, have exercised a strong effect upon our foreign policy and upon public education in things international. This has been accomplished by vast propaganda, by supplying executives and advisors to government, and by controlling much research in this area through the power of the purse. The net result of these combined efforts has been to promote ‘internationalism’ in a particular sense; a form directed toward ‘world government’ and a derogation of American ‘nationalism.’
Numerous researchers drew on that report and the book, Foundations: Their Power and Influence (1958), written by the Committee’s general counsel, Rene Wormser, to conclude that such foundations were a problem. John A. Stormer’s path-breaking None Dare Call It Treason (1964), for example, devoted an entire chapter to explaining how “the money of American capitalists—Ford, Rockefeller, Carnegie, Guggenheim, etc.—has largely financed those working for the establishment of a ‘new world order’” (Stormer, 173).
Icke
See No Evil
According to its website, the mission of the IHC is to “work with other independent non-profit organizations and sponsored projects that are devoted to a vision of ecological and humanitarian stewardship that benefits all of creation.” Ultimately, the IHC seeks to “reverse the current situation of pollution, disease, and disconnection by focusing efforts on creating a civilization that is centered upon love, peace, and natural harmony.”
According to its recently issued Operations Manual, the IHC was established in 1988 as a “fiscal sponsorship program that deploys education, services and ecologically responsible technologies to the benefit of the general public.” The primary function of the IHC is to provide financial and administrative services to “grassroots projects.” As a 501[c](3) non-profit public charity, donors can be sure of retaining their tax-exempt status when they give money to a specific project via the IHC. In return, the IHC levies a “Minimum Annual Fee” of either $200, or 5% of the donations received by a member, whichever is larger.
Looking closer, one discovers a few interesting facts that should have piqued the interest of an analyst of Icke’s calibre. The IHC’s Financial Director, Catherine Carroll, was a co-founding director of the Renaissance Foundation, a “leadership organisation,” according to its website. One of its sub-programs is the “Renaissance Women” a group “whose goal is to give women an alternative voice from radical feminism.” Back in 2000 this was realised as “support for George W. Bush,” though we were assured this support was not given as a collective, but as “individuals” (WorldNetDaily, Aug. 2, 2000).
Board member Katherine O’Flahtery was once a trouble-shooter for Wal-Mart logistics. The IHC Operations Director, Dave Sanders, before going green fifteen years ago, spent seventeen years as a contractor for the U.S. Department of Energy, the U.S. Department of Defense and GE-Nuclear. IHC Executive Director Steve Sugarman, a professional psychologist, was a former Executive Director of the Social and Environmental Entrepreneurs (SEE), Co-Founder of the Bolsa Chica Stewardship Group, and author of The Blueprint for Planetary Evolution.
Prepared partly as a response to the events of 9/11, Blueprint is a “holistic
For people who like to throw themselves, or sharp objects, at the barricades that surround most Group of Eight meetings, this “ecosocial” agenda would seem familiar and admirable. Reader’s of Icke
Perhaps the least palatable aspect of Sugarman’s vision is his grim advice on the global population problem. According to Sugarman, a “decrease in global human population is absolutely necessary.” He noted that Thomas Malthus’ warnings about the dangers of overpopulation are “proving to be correct” with “[w]ar, hunger, disease and ecological devastation … the order of the day.” Exactly how this problem is to be resolved, Sugarman does not say, but he insists that a “conscious effort to stabilize the current level of human saturation is necessary,” after which a “steady decrease can be implemented.” Of course, Sugarman warns that he is “not suggesting this will be easy” and is unlikely to be popular, but it must be dealt with.
To sign up to a foundation directed by a man who advances such an agenda would seem courageous, especially if one had warned previously about how the overpopulation crisis owed much to the machinations of the sinister Club of Rome and the Rockefeller-founded and funded Population Council (Icke
Once again humankind has a choice to make. We can be sensible and limit our numbers voluntarily or we can go on until nature does it for us with disease and hunger. That will be deeply unpleasant for those around at the time…and the time isn’t too far off (Icke, 1990, 87).
And if you continue to show in your writings and other utterances that you haven’t quite let go of the idea that there’s too many people in the world:
It is plainly true, as the New World Order
On its website, the IHC makes clear that, “Once your project is reviewed and deemed in alignment with our charter…” support will be provided. Well, Icke’s project was deemed “in alignment” and they’re now helping him out.
In Esteemed Company
Before joining the IHC, Sugarman was Executive Director of Social & Environmental Entrepreneurs. Like the IHC, SEE is a “public charity” that provides start-up guidance and other services to its member groups. SEE describes its mission as being to “empower, encourage and catalyze individuals to facilitate progressive change in areas of social justice and ecological restoration.” The SEE Program was created in September 1994 by the EarthWays Foundation as an affiliate
The objective of EarthWays, according to Beath’s letter on its website, is to “find a deeper understanding of our relationship to the natural world,” and to “restore an appropriate balance” between our economic needs and the environment. At EarthWays, “We are crying for a vision that all living things can share,” claims Beath. “From this inward crying,” he continues, “comes personal awareness that gives direction to our desire to take action. Personal transformation is the first step to global change.” Readers who find these sentiments similar to Icke’s metaphysical ramblings can presumably find more insights in Beath’s book, Consciousness in Action.
In 1998, EarthWays received $50,000 from the Rockefeller Foundation for its role as an organizing partner of the 1999 World Festival of Sacred Music—an event billed by its organizers as a way to “transcend borders of all kinds—linguistic, national, cultural, ideological, racial and religious.” The Rockefeller Foundation gave EarthWays a further $42,837 in 2000 to film the festival; and in 2002 it granted EarthWays $100,000 to help with the costs for the 2002 World Festival of Sacred Music. Additional funds came from Rockefeller Philanthropy Advisors, which donated “$10,000 or more” to EarthWays between 2002 and 2004 (RPA, 2005, 16-17).
As for the SEE, which granted the IHC $338,689 in 2003 and $143,568 in 2004, where its funds ultimately come from is unknown, and few of its member groups bother to include details of their sponsors. However, among the plethora of seemingly fringe environmental and social justice projects it counts as members, the SEE provides support to groups with strong Establishment connections.
Consider the Truman Security Forum (TSF), an organisation that describes itself as a “non-partisan, national security institute dedicated to creating a strong principled alternative to conservative national security policies.” The Executive Director of the TSF is Rachel Kleinfeld, a Rhodes scholar and former consultant to the Centre for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), and member of the Board of Trustees of the Blue Fund, a body dedicated to securing corporate support for the Democrats. On the TSF’s seven-member Board of Advisers we find former Council on Foreign Relations (CFR) President Leslie Gelb, former Secretary of State, Madeline Albright, and former Secretary of Defense, William Perry.
As for the Rockefeller connection, it appears to have jumped the SEE and landed in the IHC. In its 990 form for 2005, the innocuous Philanthropic Collaborative (New York) is identified as donating $40,000 to the IHC. A search on the internet reveals the Philanthropic Collaborative to be an offshoot of Rockefeller Philanthropic Advisers, itself a non-profit offshoot of Rockefeller Financial Services (Strom 2002). Established in 2002, Rockefeller Philanthropic Advisers (on its board: Clayton Rockefeller, Sharon P. Rockefeller and Steven C. Rockefeller, Jr.) created the Philanthropic Collaborative so its clients can “make gifts inside and outside the United States, participate in funding consortia, and operate non-profit initiatives.”
Icke
According to Icke, Rhodes Scholars, such as Kleinfeld, are “selected by the Brotherhood,” in accordance with their “genetic history,” to be “indoctrinated into the ‘world government’ Agenda.” Icke notes that most Rhodes Scholars “return to their own countries and enter positions of overt or covert power” (Icke, 1999, 218). TSF Advisor Madeline Albright is a “Brotherhood initiate” and the “High Priestess of U.S. politics” who “knows about the U.S. government mind-controlled slaves and supports that policy” (Icke, 1999, 340). Her colleague, Leslie Gelb, is easily condemned given that the CFR controls U.S. foreign policy, and its goal is “to introduce world government” (Icke, 1997, 85). Secretary of Defense, William Perry, whom Icke identifies as a Bilderberger (Icke, 1999, 267), belongs to a secretive organisation that is part of “a highly effective network of manipulation which comprises a very significant element of the secret government of the world” (Icke, 1997, 138).
A Scaly Handout
Another donor of interest on the IHC’s 990 Form for 2005 is the Tides Foundation, which donated $55,000. According to its own records, the Tides Foundation actually gave nearly $90,000 in grants
Founded in 1976 by former activist Drummond Pike, the Tides Foundation styles itself as a vehicle for “positive social change through philanthropy,” organising donors in the cause of “strengthening community-based non-profit organizations and the progressive movement through innovative grant making.” Critics charge that the Tides Foundation is in the business of enabling big foundations to anonymously fund various radical and controversial groups. As Ben Johnson explains in 57 Varieties of Radical Causes:
Tides allows donors to anonymously contribute money to a variety of causes—and thereby avoid public accountability for their donations. The donor simply makes the check out to Tides and instructs the Foundation where to forward the money. Tides does so, often keeping as much as ten percent of the total amount for “charitable advisory fees.” This allows high-profile individuals to fund extremist organizations by “laundering” their money through Tides, leaving no paper trail (Johnson 2004).
The San Francisco Bay Guardian made a similar observation in a 1997 article: “Wealthy patrons give big chunks of money to Tides—and their names are kept confidential. The Tides donation is completely tax deductible. But the donor can discreetly designate an organization that he or she wants to see receive the money—and Tides will pass the donation along, minus a small administrative fee. Often, the recipient group doesn’t know where the money really came from. And there’s no way for the public to find out either (Cohen 2006, 2).
A look at the top funders of the Tides Foundation gives a sense of this. According to Activist Cash, the top funder was the Pew Charitable Trust, which provided Tides with $118 million between 1990 and 2002. Other key Establishment foundations also contributed: the Ford Foundation
Tides has used this money to help fund a variety of organisations, ranging from violent anarchists such as the Ruckus Society, to the Council for American Islamic Relations, the Union of Concerned Scientists, Greenpeace, and now three projects under the wing of the International Humanities Center.
Any reader of David Icke’s books would know the origins of the Tides Foundation’s money alone would make it a suspect institution. Most of these foundations, claims Icke, form part of the “network of so-called tax-exempt foundations started by the Carnegie, Rockefeller, and Ford families, which help to fund the New World Order
Bronfman is described in glowing terms on the Tides website and in its Annual Reports as a “long-time advocate for social justice and donor activism.” Bronfman has been identified by various sources as an “heiress to the Seagram whiskey fortune” (Noah 2001) and as a member of the “Old Money … Bronfman family” (Marcus, 1989, 266). A professional “wealth counsellor,” Joanie Bronfman has established herself as an expert helping the rich overcome the malicious social practice of “wealthism.” She explained this hitherto undiagnosed condition her 1987 PhD thesis, The Experience of Inherited Wealth: A Social-Psychological Perspective: “Wealthism includes those actions or attitudes that dehumanize or objectify wealthy people, simply because they are wealthy. The main attitudes of wealthism are envy, awe and resentment. . . . Wealthism differs from the other ‘isms’ in that racism and sexism are perpetrated by those who have power, whereas wealthism is directed at those who have power.”
Bronfman has devoted a lot of time to convincing the wealthy that being rich can be positive experience. The Tides Foundation website notes that Joanie Bronfman had previously “served on the boards of Tides Canada and the Threshold Foundation, where she was a founder of Threshold’s Social Justice Committee.” Tides Canada has made its contribution to our future by distributing copies of Al Gore’s doom-laden presentation on global warming, An Inconvenient Truth, to schools in Canada.
The co-founder of the Threshold Foundation—which describes itself as “a progressive foundation and a community of individuals united through wealth, who mobilize money, people and power to create a more just, joyful and sustainable world”—was Jeffrey Bronfman. According to the Vancouver Sun (Feb. 10, 2001), Jeffrey is the “second cousin to Edgar Bronfman Jr. and grandnephew to Seagram’s dynasty founder Samuel Bronfman.”
All of this would seem to be a trivial matter, except that David Icke
Tangled Web
David Icke
Icke
If true, this alleged dismissal of the IHC’s Rockefeller connection by Icke
This leaves open other, less palatable explanations for Icke’s current arrangement with the IHC. Is Icke now in the pay of the very forces he now claims to oppose? Has he been co-opted? Or do Icke’s actions prove that he does not believe what he says? Given Icke’s record of publicly opposing the “Illuminati” in its innumerable guises (and disguises), such suggestions may seem outrageous. But through the act of seeking assistance from the IHC, seemingly without regard to its “reptilian” connections, Icke does much to foster such conspiracy
©2007 Will Banyan. Will Banyan is a writer specializing in the political economy of globalization. His article “The Israel Lobby Controversy” appears in Paranoia, issue 44, and his article, “Neo-Con Counter-Conspiracy?” appears in Paranoia, issue 40. His article, “Outflanking the Nation-State” appears on the Paranoia website, and research papers
References
Cohen, Bonner, “The Price of Doing Business: Environmentalist Groups Toe the Line,” Foundation Watch (Capital Research Center), July 2006.
Courtney, Kent & Phoebe, America’s Unelected Rulers, Conservative Society of America, 1962.
Gurudas, Treason: The New World Order, Cassandra Press, 1996.
Hoar, William P., Architects of Conspiracy
Icke, David, It Doesn’t Have To Be Like This: Green Politics Explained, Green Print 1990.
Icke, The Robots’ Rebellion: The Story of the Spiritual Renaissance, Gateway Books, 1994.
Icke, …and the truth will set your free: The most explosive book of the 20th century, Bridge of Love, 1997.
Icke, The Biggest Secret: The book that will change the world, Bridge of Love, 1999.
Icke, Children of the Matrix: How an interdimensional race has controlled the world for thousands of years, Bridge of Love, 2001.
Icke, Tales from the Time Loop: The most comprehensive expose of the global conspiracy
Icke, Infinite Love is the Only Truth Everything Else is Illusion: Exposing the dreamworld we believe to be ‘real’, Bridge of Love, 2005.
Icke’s Freedom Foundation: www.ihcenter.org/groups/freedomfoundation.html
International Humanities Center, Project Operations Manual, IHC, PO Box 923, Malibu, CA, 2007.
Jasper, Willam F., “Conspiracy
Johnson, Ben “Tides Foundation and Tides Center” (excerpt from 57 Varieties of Radical Causes), 09/04, www.discoverthenetworks.org/.
Marcus, George E., ”The Making of Pious Persons within Contemporary American Notable Families ” Nelson W. Aldrich, Jr., Sociological Perspectives, (Summer, 1989).
Marrs, Jim, Rule By Secrecy, HarperCollins, 2000.
Noah, Timothy, “Pathologies of the Idle Rich – Part 3,” Slate, March 12, 2001.
Randall, Gretchen & Tom, “The Tides Foundation: Liberal Crossroads of Money and Ideas,” Foundation Watch (Capital Research Center), December 2003.
Stang, Alan, The Actor: The True Story of John Foster Dulles, Secretary of State 1953 to 1959, Western Islands, 1968.
Strom, Stephanie, “Rockefellers Starting Service for Would Be Philanthropists,” New York Times, April 29, 2002, p.B3.
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