October 3, 1998
Dear Editor,
The conspiratorial stooges of the New World Order have noticed that the general
American Populace is leery of the term "New World Order." It sounds too
Orwellian (because it is).
When George Bush began using that term flagrantly and repeatedly during the Gulf War,
the public outcry against U.S. entanglements in this global socialist institution was
enough for its promoters to put the kibosh on being so brazen.
Apparently now they are trying other more supposedly non-threatening approaches,
including turning the idea into a game.
For example, looking like just another
beer commercial, professional wrestler Hollywood Hulk has been staging himself as Mr.
"NWO," or "New World Order." He wears the name boldly on his attire,
and the action figures modeled after him likewise loudly display "NWO."
Now Capital One
MasterCard is "issuing new credit cards depicting the faces of some of the World
Champion Wrestlings most popular wrestlers." (Daily Herald, 10/3/98, p.
B-8.) Our local paper has gotten in on the act by featuring a 1/4-page photo of Hulk Hogan
shaking hands with Nigel Morris, president of Capital One,
promoting a new Credit card that has
"NWO" splashed in bold letters across the front.
According to Time magazine, the story-line plot, created by Ted Turner, of the
World Champion Wrestling crew is that "Hogan leads the New World Order faction
against a splinter group, the Wolfpack." (June 29, 1998, p.68.)
I dont think this is cute. Rather, this subtle move to encourage the
publics acceptance of the idea of the New World Order, and our local medias
buying into it and perpetuating that propaganda is utterly frightening. It is political
pornography.
Wake up, folks; this is not a game. The New World Order is the antithesis of the
Constitutional Republic given us by our Founding Fathers. Dont give in to these
deceptive tactics. Let your voices of outrage be heard. Boycott, protest, petition, rally
to stave off this global dictatorship. Once our freedoms are taken, it will be a long,
gory struggle to restore them.
Sincerely,
Sterling
D. Allan; Mapleton, Utah
Brian J. Gibson; Provo, Utah