http://www.darkgovernment.com/
Jurriaan Maessen
Contrary to popular belief the original architect of China’s brutal one-child
policy, instituted as official state policy in 1978, was neither Mao Zedong in a
power-drunk whim, nor a Party-sadist hatching eugenics in some sub-level torture
chamber. According to anthropologist Susan Greenhalgh in her study Just One
Child: Science and Policy in Deng’s China the inspiration for the tyrannical
move by the Chinese Communist Party was inspired first and foremost by the Club
of Rome and its UN affiliates in the early 1970s.
Greenhalgh points out that the infamous policy “had roots in missile
scientists’ exposure to and import of Club of Rome population concepts through
international conferences in the 1970s.”
In 1978, a group of Chinese scientists visited several scientific conferences in
Europe, and readily picked up on the ideas distributed by the Club of Rome. At
the head of this Chinese delegation was a man credited for introducing China’s
notorious one-child policies, source of so much hardship suffered by the Chinese
people in the last decades. Robert Zubrin, senior fellow with the center for
security policy, published an op-ed in the Washington Times, reaffirming that
Greenhalgh’s study is correct. Zubrin wrote:
“In June 1978, Song Jian, a top-level manager in charge of developing control
systems for the Chinese guided-missile program, traveled to Helsinki for an
international conference on control-system theory and design. While in Finland,
he picked up copies of “The Limits to Growthand: Blueprint for Survival”-
publications of the Club of Rome, a major source of Malthusian propaganda –
and made the acquaintance of several Europeans who were promoting the report’s
method of using computerized “systems analysis” to predict and design the
human future.”
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