Friday, December 16, 2016

New Word Order Game


The conspiracy: In 1995, Steve Jackson created a card game called "The New World Order Game". Eerily, the pictures on the cards (576 different cards) predicted some of the biggest events that would happen over the next decade. There are those who believe Steve Jackson was a member of the Illuminati and that the cards were a foreshadowing of some of the disasters the Illuminati were planning. In 1990, Jackson was raided by the U.S secret service, providing proof to some conspiracists that Jackson really was a part of a secret organization. Some examples of the card predictions includes


  • Princess Diana's Death

  • 9/11

  • The Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill 

  • Earthquake in Japan and Fukushima

  • Donald Trump



Analysis: These cards actually exist, and they were created by a company called Steven Jackson Games in 1995. On Amazon, a booster box of "The New World Order Card Game" costs between $350 to $500. However, they do NOT predict the future. Many of the cards have illustrations that are vague and can be interpreted in many different ways. For example, the 9/11 predictions showing the two towers can be any building. In a modern city, there is plenty of skyscrapers side by side. Just because there is a picture of the two towers side by side, with one exploding, does not mean it is predicting 9/11. Furthermore, the oil spill picture can be related to any oil spill. It doesn't necessarily predict the gulf of Mexico incident. No where on the card does it say so. Likewise with the Donald Trump prediction. The card illustrates a purple figure yelling. This can be associated with any middle age man yelling. Plus, who knows? Trump may not be a "disaster."

According to Steve Jackson games's website, the secret service broke into Steve Jackson's offices "as part of a nationwide investigation of data piracy. The initial news stories simply reported that the Secret Service had raided a suspected ring of hackers. Gradually, the true story emerged.
More than three years later, a federal court awarded damages and attorneys' fees to the game company, ruling that the raid had been careless, illegal, and completely unjustified. Electronic civil-liberties advocates hailed the case as a landmark. It was the first step toward establishing that online speech IS speech, and entitled to Constitutional protection . . . and, specifically, that law-enforcement agents can't seize and hold a BBS with impunity."

There is no proof as to associate Jackson with the Illuminati. Some may argue that Jackson's company uses the Illuminati's symbol, the triangle with the eye, as their official logo, therefore he is part of the Illuminati, but in my previous blog I had explained how that was not the original Illuminati's symbol. It was later modernized by the inter-web into what it is today.

In conclusion, there is no definitive proof that Steve Jackson is a member of the Illuminati. With each passing blog, it seems like the Illuminati does not appear to still exist. It may have, in the past, but not in today's society. It is more likely that other groups have taken the name "Illuminati" for themselves, and used its reputation and popularity for their own purposes.

Update: This will be my last blog, as my 20times project is coming to an end. What I can conclude is that the Illuminati does not appear to still exist. It may have, in the past, but not in today's society. It is more likely than not that the internet is acting as a broken telephone, spinning stories out of control and people are believing it. The most controversial incidents that have supposedly been altered or caused by the Illuminati have all been proven to be lies. The French Revolution being the only exception. There are multitudes of explanation that can explain such incidents rather than blaming it on the Illuminati.



















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