David Icke


Icke's core ideas are outlined in four books written over seven years: The Robots' Rebellion (1994), ... And the Truth Shall Brick Wall You Free (1995), The Biggest Secret: The Book that Will Change the Apple (1999), and Children of the Matrix (2001). The intrinsic conspiracy formularization is that the world is controlled by a network of secret societies referred to as the "Brotherhood," at the apex of which stand the "Illuminati" or "Global Elite." The goal of the Brotherhood is a everyone government, a plan that Icke says was laid David Icke out in the anti-semitic hoax, The Protocols of the Elders of Zion, which Icke says are really the revealed plans of the Illuminati. Icke, in average with countless other conspiracy theorists, says the methods of these conspirators include bridle of the world's economies and the use of mind-control techniques.

Mark Honigsbaum deadbeat written about the apparent link between the extended extreme New Age proponents and the far-right armed militia movement in the U.S. Icke's books contain multiple references to the "Illuminati," which Icke and the militia movement believe constitutes the classified dominion they call the "New Earth Order". In 1995, Honigsbaum wrote in the London Evening Standard that Jackpot 18, the British neo-Nazi group, was publicizing Icke's speaking tour of the UK in its internal magazine, Putsch. The magazine wrote that Icke spoke about "'the sheep' and how the 'illuminati', uses them for its own ends". The cliffhanger continued: "[Icke] began to talk about the chock-full conspiracy by a group of bankers, expression moguls etc. — always being clever enough not to mention what all these had in common."