Connecting the Agenda published a video in 2016 describing the significant connections between the Rockefellers and the United Nations.

John D. Rockefeller Jr. provided $2 million to the League of Nations in 1927, which later became part of the United Nations Office in Geneva.

Additionally, the Rockefellers purchased the land for the United Nations Headquarters in New York, with John D. Rockefeller Jr. donating $8,515,000 in 1946, and Nelson Rockefeller negotiating the deal with the landowner, William Zeckendorf.

David Rockefeller, Nelson’s brother, benefited financially from the deal, as he owned land in the area that increased in value after the UN Headquarters was built, and he also invested in a building project across from the UN building through the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.

The Rockefeller family has continued to support the United Nations, with the Rockefeller Foundation providing grants and the Rockefellers Brothers Fund funding the United Nations Foundation.

According to David Rockefeller’s autobiography, the family’s ultimate goal is to build a “more integrated global political and economic structure – one world,” which aligns with the United Nations’ Agenda 21 programme.


Connecting the Rockefellers to the United Nations

By Connecting the Agenda, 8 May 2017

Connecting the Agenda: The Rockefeller – United Nations Connection, 30 October 2016 (8 mins)

Transcript

[Note from The Exposé: Many of the hyperlinks contained in the original transcript are no longer available or have changed.  We have kept these original links in the text below so that researchers can trace them on archive websites or elsewhere.]

In this analysis, the direct connection between the Rockefellers and the creation of the United Nations organisation will be made.

First, it should be noted that the organisation that preceded the United Nations, the League of Nations, received a significant amount of support from Rockefeller-related organisations.  In 1927, John D. Rockefeller Jr. provided the League of Nations with $2 million to “enhance its international relations library and promote peace through knowledge and understanding”.  This Library of the League of Nations later became known as the United Nations Office at Geneva (“UNOG”) when the league transferred its assets to the United Nations.  According to UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, in a statement praising the Rockefeller family’s past and present support of international organisations, the interest from that original $2 million loan still provides approximately $150,000 every biennium to the United Nations.

The Rockefeller Foundation was also heavily involved with transition from the League of Nations to the United Nations as documented in the article ‘The Rockefeller Foundation and the Transition from the League of Nations to the UN’ by Ludovic Tournes of the University of Geneva. Further connections could be drawn between the Rockefellers and the League of Nations but for the sake of brevity, we will move on to the United Nations.

It is no secret that the land that the United Nations is built upon today was purchased with money donated by the Rockefellers.  The official Rockefeller Archive Centre has this to say on the matter:

This land where the United Nations Headquarters now sits in New York was originally owned by a prominent real estate developer named William “Bill” Zeckendorf.  As the story goes, Nelson Rockefeller, on behalf of the United Nations, went to Zeckendorf with an offer to buy the property, Zeckendorf agreed, and Nelson’s father, John D Rockefeller, Jr., donated the money to the United Nations in order to finance the purchase of the land.  While this story is usually presented as just another selfless act of charity by the Rockefellers, there is some evidence to suggest that there were ulterior benefits associated with this donation.

Because the United Nations was set to transform the area, which was mostly old buildings and abandoned slaughterhouses, if someone were to own property in the area they would see a massive increase in value.  As luck would have it, David Rockefeller was one of those ownership interests that would benefit financially.  In his own autobiography titled ‘Memoirs’, David Rockefeller describes how after becoming a board member of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, the Endowment bought the land across from where the UN building would be erected, and how they profited greatly.

David Rockefeller conveniently leaves out of this passage that it was the same Bill Zeckendorf who sold the land to the United Nations, through the funding of David’s father John D. Rockefeller Jr, that was selling the endowment the land near the United Nations off of his “prediction” that the land values would skyrocket.  I am not sure of the extent that insider information was involved in this deal, but, in the least, this proves that a Rockefeller did seemingly benefit financially from the creation of the United Nations in that location.

(As a side note: Wikipedia also twice refers to the Rockefellers owning land in another area around the United Nations known as Tudor City.  The sources for the information in those two entries seem to be of questionable origin so I cannot yet present that information as fact.)

Another family connection to the founding of the United Nations is David’s brother Nelson Rockefeller being a member of the US delegation at the gathering that marked the founding of the United Nations, the 1945 Conference on International Organisation.  Nelson would also go on to fund The United Nations World magazine in an effort to promote the UN.

It should be noted, the designers of the United Nations Headquarters were working out of an office in Rockefeller Centre.  The chief architect of the project was Wallace K. Harrison, a man with interesting Rockefeller connections himself.   Charlene Mires, author of the book ‘Capital of the World: The Race to Host the United Nations’, describes Harrison as “one of the designers of Rockefeller Centre, a Rockefeller relation by marriage, a confidant of Nelson Rockefeller and a member of the booster committee that had been working to bring the UN to New York.”

This Rockefeller support of the United Nations continued after the creation of the UN and continues to this day.  It would be too much to list all of the ways that Rockefeller-related organisations contribute to the United Nations today but their influence can be seen through examples like the Rockefeller Foundation providing grants to the United Nations, or the Rockefellers Brothers Fund funding the United Nations Foundation.

More important, though, than the motive to make some money off of a land deal was the Rockefeller vision of a one world government as revealed on pg. 405 of David Rockefeller’s autobiography ‘Memoirs.  It is in this passage that David reveals his family’s ultimate goal:

The United Nations fits well into the Rockefeller family’s goal “to build a more integrated global political and economic structure – one world.”  Through United Nations programs such as Agenda 21, local decision-making power is being eroded and being replaced by regional governments that continue to become more centralised.  In the analysis titled ‘The Problems with Connecticut Climate Change Policy – Part 4: The Rockefeller Connection’, the connections between Agenda 21, the Rockefellers, and current events taking place in Connecticut are detailed.  Through these connections, a pattern emerges of a system being created that is designed to reduce the decision-making power of individual towns, cities and states, transferring that power over to large, centralised, non-elected bureaucracies.

Source:  https://expose-news.com/2025/01/24/connecting-the-agenda-rockefellers-and-the-un/

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